Welcome to Ludwig Bamberger Haus

in Mainz

On this website we have compiled all the information for you to make it easier to settle in and live in our Felixx student Homes. We wish you a wonderful and exciting time at Ludwig Bamberger Haus and a successful study or training with many new experiences.

When you move in, you will receive an email with a link to the WhatsApp group and the contact details of your tutor team. The names and numbers of your tutor team, who are responsible for community life in the house and are available to answer any questions or suggestions you may have, can also be found on the notice board.

News and Events

Study in Mainz:

You can find helpful information and tips here:

Important names & addresses

Property management

Manuela Markazin
Phone: 09131 6180 747
Mail: manuela.markazin@felixx-student.de

Janitorial service

Holger Specht
Phone: 0162 10 45 11 8
Mail: mainz-lbh@felixx-student.de
Working hours: Monday – Friday: 7:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m.

Accounting

Celine Kufner
Phone: 09131 6180 753
Mail: celine.kufner@felixx-student.de

Internet provider DS-Networks

Phone: 09131 927 013 10
Mail:info@DS-networks.de

Service provider launderette

RentWash
Phone: 089 74 59 00 1
Mail:info@rentwash.de
Website: rentwash.de

Emergency key service

Tresor&SchlüsselProfi Mainz
Phone: 06131 498 496 3
Website: tresor-schluesselprofi.de

Who was Ludwig Bamberger?

Born 1823 in Mainz, died 1899 in Berlin,

The man who gave our Mainz house its name has gone down in history as the “father of the German mark. Ludwig Bamberger studied law, but was also interested in philosophy and economics. He was a convinced democrat at an early age and in 1848, enthusiastic about the revolutionary movement, promoted a republic based on the French model. After the failure of the revolution, he escaped to Switzerland and was sentenced to death in absentia. In exile, he advanced to become a successful banker and in 1870 was one of the founders of Deutsche Bank. After the founding of the German Reich, Bamberger, who had in the meantime been pardoned, was one of Bismarck’s most influential liberal financial politicians and advisors. In 1879, however, he broke with the Reich Chancellor, whose economic protectionism he rejected as much as his social policy. From then on, as a member of the Reichstag, he was one of Bismarck’s most important opponents and also campaigned for a strengthening of parliament.