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Messe Frankfurt gets back to business in its 780th year

As Europe gets back to work following the COVID-19 pandemic, trade fair organiser Messe Frankfurt is celebrating a special anniversary

13th July 2020

Knitting Industry
 |  Frankfurt am Main

Knitted Outerwear

© Messe Frankfurt.

As Europe gets back to work following the COVID-19 pandemic, trade fair organiser Messe Frankfurt is celebrating a special anniversary. “On 11 July 1240, Emperor Frederick II granted trade fair rights to Frankfurt am Main, marking the birth of Messe Frankfurt. Now, 780 years later, the company can look back on an eventful history in which the Frankfurt trade fair developed from a medieval marketplace into a global player – experiencing many successes and mastering various crises,” Messe Frankfurt said in a press communication.

Peter Feldmann, Mayor of Frankfurt am Main and Chairman of the Messe Frankfurt Supervisory Board, had this to say about Messe Frankfurt’s anniversary: “Trade fairs have driven our city’s development. Nowhere else are trade fairs such an integral part of a city’s history as they are in Frankfurt. Emperor Frederick II’s official grant of trade fair rights marks the historical origin of a success story that started around Frankfurt’s City Hall (Römer) 780 years ago and continues to this day. From these beginnings, Messe Frankfurt evolved over the centuries into the world’s largest operating trade fair company. Yet even after 780 successful years, it remains true to the tradition of trade and internationality that is firmly rooted in its home city of Frankfurt.”

But as soon as Messe Frankfurt has celebrated its 780-year anniversary, it will be getting straight back to business. Following a global lockdown lasting multiple months, Messe Frankfurt is once again holding trade fairs. It all kicks off with Intertextile Shenzhen Apparel Fabrics on 15 July 2020 in China. The trade fair is part of a network of some 50 international textile events in Messe Frankfurt’s portfolio, which has included the brand-new Frankfurt Fashion Week since June.

Trade fairs are also resuming business in many German cities, in strict compliance with an extensive protection and hygiene concept. Smaller events are already underway at the Frankfurt exhibition grounds, and trade fairs will be joining them soon. Nordstil will be leading the way in Hamburg in September, followed by the Frankfurt Book Fair in October.

Wolfgang Marzin, President and Chief Executive Officer of Messe Frankfurt, comments: “We are delighted that our events will once again be serving as platforms for personal interaction. Our resumption of event operations worldwide demonstrates Messe Frankfurt’s flexibility in responding to challenges. We are able to offer our customers around the world the platforms they need, regionally, nationally, at a European level and globally, while satisfying today's new local regulations and requirements. The past 780 years have demonstrated time and again just how important trade fairs are for promoting economic recovery in times of crisis, and our customers have been making it clear to us that face-to-face encounters and dialogue are irreplaceable.”

“A look at history shows that trade fairs, as mirrors of the economy, have been repeatedly confronted with crises. Even back in 1635, for example, Frankfurt’s Spring Fair had to be cancelled on account of fallout from the Thirty Years’ War and an outbreak of the bubonic plague in Frankfurt,” Messe Frankfurt explains.

“Already, the measures taken to help thwart the spread of disease included border closures, health certificates, passport systems, entry and exit checks and quarantines. Trade fairs’ central role in economic development was clear even then.”

“No sooner had the First World War ended than plans began for the International Import Fair in October 1919 and the Spring Fair in 1920. 95% of the exhibition grounds were destroyed during the Second World War, and their immediate reconstruction sent a clear signal about Frankfurt’s importance as a trade fair centre. Trade fair operations resumed with the Frankfurt Fair in October 1948, relying in part on provisional lightweight constructions, tents and open-air spaces.”

72 years later, the global coronavirus pandemic has been challenging the event industry since the start of 2020. Wolfgang Marzin continues: “The trade fair landscape will change as a result of the coronavirus crisis, and topics such as digitalisation, safety and security will have a key role to play. Yet the trade fair industry's most important success factor remains personal encounters – something that Messe Frankfurt’s platforms have been making possible for 780 years now. Because the demand for face-to- face encounters is even greater today than it was before.”

www.messefrankfurt.com

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