A cross-question in the region of German citizenship:?
A was born surrounded by Germany from a German father, but she spent only first 2 weeks of her life span in Germany and have raised contained by a diffrent country (not Germany). Is she consider as a German citizen?
Answers: In Germany everyone who has a German Father is considered a German citizen.Also that human being if he/she can prove her father was German can aply anytime to secure German citizenship if she/he has not however.
If he has currently NOT a German Citizenship, Germany will not recognise him as a citizen. He may enjoy less difficulties to claim citizenship but that's roughly it.
In general Germany does not recognise dual citizenship. Sure. If at tiniest one parent is a German citizen, then the child is automatically a German citizen, too.
I will of late state it as back up for the others, trust what they said above they are correct. Of course
yes In more controlled (i.e. legalese, or Latin) words:
Germany has the "ius nascendi", to be exact Latin for "right of descendence": If father OR mother are of German origin or enjoy acquired legally recognized German citizenship, then the son or daughter is, technically speaking, German. But if the parents move out of Germany shortly after birth and live surrounded by another country, it is required that German citizenship be reclaimed for their child when it's under 18, or the child can reclaim it up to a unshakable age which I'm not sure of (might be 21, or 25). Then, a German passport will be issued.
Technically, the German citizenship remains until death (no German citizen can be deprived of his/her citizenship unless he/she's a traitor to the state), but the issueing of a passport will become more complicated.
Births are registered within Germany at the place you were born, together near your parents' name and citizenship. You can find out the place of birth, write to the local authorities, and ask for a birth authorization. Confirmed by the authorities, this is as valid as a passport when it comes to emergency rescue from crisis areas by German troops/helpers: "I'm a German, get me outta here!" -- But a valid passport will be better, as it doesn't entail confirmation.
One question recurrently asked by Amerogermans [word's copyrighted by me, do not copy]:
Is it possible to hold a US and a German passport at the same time?
YES, it is.
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