It comes from the Latin word Germania. Many English words come from Latin.
Leipzig is in Deutschland, called Germany in English.
This is because the German title for Germany is dieBundesrepublik Deutschland only in English is it called the Federal Republic of Germany
The Germans called their country Deutschland.
The Kaiser called the unified German states Deutschland, which we english-speakers called Germany. That was the first time there was a Germany. It was also known as the Second Riech, the Holy Roman Empire being the first.
In informal usage Germans called their country Deutschland. The full, official name is DieBundesrepublic Deutschland - the Federal Republic of Germany.
Deutschland is the German word for Germany.
It depends on the language talking. English: German French: Allemange Spanish: ? etc. etc.
Germany was divided in the Federal Republic of Germany (Bundes Republik Deutschland) also called West-Germay and the German Democratic Republic (Deutsche Demokratische Republik) , East-Germany
Because most of the books are in English. That why it is called library language.
The word Germania was used by the Romans to describe the region now known as Germany. Because English contains some Latin roots, the name Germany has continued to be used.
EARLY MODERN ENGLISH is what it is really called.
West Germany's official title was " die Bundesrepublik Deutschland" (the Federal Republic of Germany) this was often abbreviated to BR Deutschland (official abbreviation) or BRD (FRG in English). Following re-unification in 1991, the re-unified German state kept the name. At the same time, the name of the East German state, die Deutsche Demokratische Republik (DDR, German Democratic Republic, GDR) was consigned to history.