Telephone numbers in East Germany
Location | |
---|---|
Country | East Germany |
Continent | Europe |
Type | Open telephone numbering plan |
NSN length | 8 |
Format | 2-xxx xxxx (Berlin)[1] xxx-xx xxxx xxxx-xxxxx xxxxx-xxxx xxxxxx-xxx |
Access codes | |
Country code | 37 |
International access | 06 |
Long-distance | 0 |
East Germany was assigned telephone country code 37 by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). Despite its common telecommunication history with West Germany, the country operated its own telephone network and telephone numbering plan.
Telephone calls between East and West Germany required international dialling with the international call routing prefix 00 and country code for calls from West Germany to East Germany,[2] and 06 49 from East Germany to West Germany.[3]
Canonical numbers and local shortcuts
[edit]The East German telephone network did not only consist of a strictly hierarchic star topology, but had additional links connecting (usually neighbor) areas directly (similar to the UK). Thus, each area had one "canonical" prefix (00x... or 09x..., with x denoting the district, e.g. 005... for Saxony) involving the central offices and a number of shortcut prefixes 02... through 05... bypassing those and reducing toll charges. For example, Zwickau had the canonical prefix 0074 (37-74), but had different "shortcut" prefixes" from other areas, valid only in those - e.g. 036 from East Berlin. These "shortcuts" were not ported to the West German numbering plan.[4]
Berlin
[edit]Because both parts of the divided Germany did not consider any location in Berlin a part of a "foreign country", both parts of the city had special prefixes for each other: West Berliners could call East Berliners (from East German 002-... or +37-2-...) with the prefix 0372 (just like another city/area, instead of 00-37-2).[5][6] Similarly East Berliners could call West Berliners using the prefix 8-49, as if they were calling a local number.[7]
Integration into West German telephone network
[edit]On 15 April 1992, area codes were integrated into the West German numbering plan, with permissive dialing in effect for the old codes including the old country code until 1 June 1992.[8][9] East Berlin had already been reassigned with 030 (the former West Berlin) area code.[3] All area codes (except Berlin's) had the second digit (0 or 9) into the "canonical" code replaced by 3 (e.g. Erfurt's former 0061 (globally +37-61) area code[10] became 0-361 or globally +49-361).[11] In places, the code was changed entirely.
The retirement of country code 37 permitted the use of numbering block 37x as country codes. Some of the newly independent countries which were created following the dissolution of the Soviet Union and which had previously used that country's code 7 used such a code, e.g., Lithuania adopted the code 370.[12] This included some European microstates that had previously used the networks of the countries surrounding them. For example, Monaco adopted 377, replacing 33, which it had shared with France.[13]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ IUPAC Handbook, Pergamon Press, 1987, page 2
- ^ DDR: ein Reisebuch in den Alltag, Per Ketman, Andreas Wissmach, Rowohlt, 1986, page 419
- ^ a b Vorwahl — Wenn ja, wie viele?, Tageszeitung, 16 April 1992
- ^ de:Telefonvorwahl (DDR)
- ^ Die halbe Hauptstadt: Stadtführer zum Mitnehmen, Christa Mörstedt-Jauer, Oberhofer, 1987, page 133
- ^ 0372 – der Anschluss des Ostens, Die Vorwahl fürs andere Berlin führte oft ins Leere, Der Tagesspiegel, 2 October 2005
- ^ Rieseln lassen, Der Spiegel, 27 August 1972
- ^ Alte Auslandsvorwahl der DDR gilt weiter, Neues Deutschland, 11 March 1992
- ^ Neue Nummern für FNL, Tageszeitung, 15 April 1992
- ^ Eastern Europe: a directory and sourcebook, 1992, Euromonitor Publications Limited Euromonitor, 1992, page 241
- ^ Supplement to the Official Journal of the European Communities, Volume 39, Issues 113-119, Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, 1996, page 16
- ^ Eastern Europe with the Baltic Republics: On the Loose, on the Cheap, Off the Beaten Path, Jewlia Eisenberg, Fodor's Travel Publications, 1996, page 60
- ^ Hydrographic Review, Volume 73, International Hydrographic Bureau, 1996, page 179