Siemens: A global technology leader driving innovation in industry, infrastructure and mobility through digital transformation.
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1847–1899
Siemens & Halske
Werner von Siemens and Johann Georg Halske founded the company in Berlin on October 1, 1847, initially as a telegraph equipment maker. The early wordmark reflected its full partnership name, Siemens & Halske, in a serif typeface consistent with Victorian-era commercial lettering.
1899–1928
Oval badge
Around the turn of the century, the company adopted a more compact oval badge treatment, dropping the partner name in favor of a stylized monogram. The mark signaled a shift in corporate identity as Siemens expanded from telegraphy into electrical engineering and power transmission.
1928–1936
Interwar logotype
The late 1920s redesign replaced the ornate badge with a cleaner horizontal logotype, reflecting the influence of modernist typography spreading through German industry during the Weimar period. The simplified letterforms aligned with contemporary sans-serif conventions emerging from type foundries of the era.
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<img src="https://img.logo.dev/siemens.com?token=YOUR_API_TOKEN" alt="siemens.com logo" />1936–1991
Mid-century wordmark
A more rationalized wordmark emerged in 1936 and persisted through decades of corporate change, including the 1966 reorganization that consolidated subsidiaries under Siemens AG. The long-running mark spanned the postwar recovery, the company's expansion into semiconductors, and the early computer era.
1991–present · current
Current logotype
Introduced in 1991, the current logotype uses a custom sans-serif typeface with a characteristic cut on the capital S. The mark has remained consistent through major portfolio changes, including the spin-offs of Infineon Technologies (1999), Epcos (2000), and Siemens Energy (2020).
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