Augsburg
is a city in the south-west of Bavaria in Germany. It is a College town and home of the Regierungsbezirk Schwaben and the Bezirk Schwaben. Augsburg is an urban districts and home to the institutions of the Landkreis Augsburg. It is, as of 2008, the third-largest city in Bavaria with a population exceeding 264,000 citizens. After Trier, Augsburg is Germany's second oldest city.
Augsburg is the only German city with its own legal holiday, the Peace of Augsburg, celebrated on August 8 of every year. This gives Augsburg more legal holidays than any other region or city in Germany [1].
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History
The city was founded in 15 BC by
Drusus and
Tiberius as
Augusta Vindelicorum
, under the orders of their stepfather
emperor Augustus. This garrison camp soon became capital of the Roman province of
Raetia.
Early development was due to 400-year affiliation with the
Roman especially due to its' excellent military and economic geographic position sited at the convergence of the
Alpine rivers
Lech and
Wertach and with direct access to most important Alpine passes. Thus, Augsburg was the intersection of many important European east-west and north-south connections, which later evolved as major trade routes of the
Middle Ages [2].
Around 120 AD Augsburg became the capital of the Roman province
Raetia. Augsburg was sacked by the
Huns in the fifth-century CE,
Charlemagne in the eighth-century CE and
Welf of Bavaria in the eleventh-century CE; but arose each time to greater prosperity.
Augsburg Confession
Augsburg was decreed an
Imperial Free City on March 9, 1276. Augsburg also held its own
bishop at this time. With a strategic location as intersection of trade routes to
Italy, it became a major trading centre. Augsburg produced large quantities of
woven goods,
cloth and
textiles. Augsburg became the base for the
Fugger banking empire, who donated the
Fuggerei part of the city devoted to housing for needy citizens in 1516 and remains in use today.
In 1530, the
Augsburg Confession was presented to the
Holy Roman Emperor at the
Diet of Augsburg. Following the
Peace of Augsburg in 1555, after which the rights of religious minorities in imperial cities were to be legally protected, a mixed Catholic–Protestant city council presided over a majority Protestant population;
see Paritätische Reichsstadt
.
Thirty Years' War
Religious peace in the city was largely maintained despite increasing Confessional tensions until the
Thirty Years' War (1618–1648). In 1629,
Ferdinand II issued the
Edict of Restitution, which restored the legal situation of 1552 which again curtailed the rights of the Protestant citizens. The inequality of the
Edict of Restitution was rescinded when in April 1632, the Swedish army under
Gustavus Adolphus captured Augsburg without resistance.
In 1631, the Swedish army was routed at nearby
Nördlingen. By October 1634, Catholic troops had surrounded Augsburg. The Swedish garrison refused to surrender and a siege ensued through the winter of 1634/35 and thousands died from hunger and disease. This ruinous siege, followed by the discovery and available travel to the
America and a new route to
India via the
Cape, resulted in a rapid decline in Augsburg's prosperity.
Nine Years' War
In 1686,
Emperor Leopold I, formed the
League of Augsburg
, termed by the English as the "Grand Alliance" after England joined in 1689: a
European
coalition, consisting (at various times) of
Austria,
Bavaria,
Brandenburg,
England, the
Holy Roman Empire, the
Palatinate of the Rhine,
Portugal,
Savoy,
Saxony,
Spain,
Sweden, and the
United Provinces. It was formed to defend the
Palatinate from
France. This organization fought the
War of the Grand Alliance against
France in the
Nine Years War.
Augsburg's peak boom years occurred during the 15th and 16th centuries via the bank and metal businesses of the merchant families Fugger and Welser, who held a local near total monopoly on their respective industries. Augsburg's wealth attracted artists seeking patrons and rapidly became a creative center for famous painters, sculptors and musicians notably birthplace of : the
Holbein painter family, the composer
Leopold Mozart and the playwright
Berthold Brecht.
Rococo became so prevalent that it became known as “Augsburg style” throughout Germany.
Industrial Revolution Revival
In 1806, when the
Holy Roman Empire was dissolved, Augsburg lost its independence to become part of the
Kingdom of Bavaria. In 1817 Augsburg became an administrative capital of the
Oberdonaukreis
, then administrative capital in 1837 for the district
Swabia and Neuburg.
During the end of the eighteenth-century, Augsburg's textile industry again rose to prominence followed by the attached machine manufacturing industry.
Military
Augsburg was historically a militarily important city due to strategic locale.
During the German re-armament prior to
World War Two, the Wehrmacht enlarged Augsburg's one original Kaserne (barracks) to three: Somme Kaserne ((housing Wehrmacht Artillerie-Regiment 27)); Arras Kaserne ((housing Wehrmacht Infanterie Regiment 27)) and Panzerjäger Kaserne (housing Panzerabwehr-Abteilung 27 (later Panzerjäger-Abteilung 27). Wehrmacht Panzerjäger-Abteilung 27 was later moved to Füssen.
Reichswehr Infanterie Regiment 19 were located in Augsburg.
Reichswehr Infanterie Regiment 19 became the base unit for the Wehrmacht Infanterie Regiment 40, a sub-set of the Wehrmacht Infanterie Division 27 (ehich later became Wehrmacht Panzerdivision 17). Elements of Wehrmacht II Battalion of Gebirgs-Jäger-Regiment 99 (especially Wehrmacht Panzerjäger Kompanie 14) was composed of parts of the Wehrmacht Infanterie Division 27.
Infanterie Regiment 40 remained in Augsburg until the end of the war surrendering to the
United States.
The three Kaserne changed hands confusingly between the
Soviet Red Army,
American and Germans, finally ending in US hands for the duration of the
Cold War.
During
World War II, one sub-camp of the
Dachau concentration camp was located outside Augsburg, supplying approximately 1300 forced labourers to local military-related industry, most especially
Messerschmidt.
[3] [4]
In 1941
Rudolf Hess without
Hitler's permission secretly took off from a local airport and flew to
Scotland to meet the
Duke of Hamilton, and crashed in
Eaglesham in an attempt to mediate the end of the European front of
World War II and join sides for the upcoming Russian Campaign.
In 1945, the
U.S. Army occupied the heavily damaged city. An American military presence in the city started with the
11th Airborne Division, followed by the
24th Infantry Division, US Army
Seventh Corps Artillery, and finally the
66th Military Intelligence Brigade, which returned the former Kaserne to German hands in 1998. Originally the Heeresverpflegungshauptamt Südbayern and a Officers' casion existed on or near the location of Reese-Kaserne, but was demolished by the occupying Americans. The former Wehrmacht Kaserne became the three main US barracks in Augsburg: Reese;, Sheridan and FLAK. US Base FLAK was an anti-aircraft barracks since 1936 and US Base Sheridan "united" the former infantry barracks with a smaller Kaserne for former
Luftwaffe communications units.
Politics
Municipality
From 1266 until 1548, the terms
Stadtpfleger
(head of town council) and
Mayor
were used interchangeably, or occasionally, simultaneously.
In 1548 the title was finally fixed to
Stadtpfleger
, whom officiated for several years and then awarded the title for life (though no longer governing), thus resulting confusingly, in records of two or more simultaneous
Stadtpfleger
.
After the transfer to
Bavaria in 1806, Augsburg was ruled by a
Magistrate with two mayors, supported by an additional council of "Community Commissioners": the
Gemeindebevollmächtige
.
As of 1907, the Mayor was entitled
Oberbürgermeister, as Augsburg had attained a population of 100,000, as per the Bavarian
Gemeindeordnung.
Town Council
Election results of the Town Council since 1972 in percent
|
Year
| CSU
| SPD
| FDP
| Grüne
| ödp
| DKP/PDS
| REP
| NPD
| other
|
1972
| 44,9
| 46,5
| 2,3
| –
| –
| 0,7
| –
| 0,9
| 4,7
|
1978
| 46,8
| 44,5
| 2,7
| –
| –
| 0,4
| –
| 0,6
| 4,9
|
1984
| 32,9
| 44,9
| 1,3
| 4,2
| –
| 0,2
| –
| 0,7
| 15,8
|
1990
| 43,1
| 28,4
| 2,5
| 10,8
| –
| –
| 10,0
| –
| 5,2
|
1996
| 44,1
| 29,4
| 1,7
| 10,5
| –
| –
| 2,8
| –
| 11,5
|
2002
| 43,5
| 36,4
| 3,5
| 8,7
| 1,8
| 1,2
| –
| –
| 4,9
|
2008
| 40,1
| 30,1
| 2,7
| 10,3
| 1,5
| 3,5
| –
| –
| 11,8
|
Seats 20081
| 25
| 19
| 1
| 6
| –
| 22
| –
| –
| 73
|
1 Local elections on March 2, 2008
22008:
Die Linke 3 Pro Augsburg: 6,
Freie Wähler: 1
Members of the Bundestag
Augsburg is located in the
Wahlkreis 253 Augsburg-Stadt
constituency, which includes
Königsbrunn and the District of Augsburg (
Landkreis Augsburg).
Christian Ruck of the
CSU was directly elected to the
Bundestag with 49.2% of the vote in the
16th German Bundestag.
Indirectly elected to the Bundestag to adhere to the
Landesliste were
Miriam Gruß for the
FDP,
Heinz Paula for the
SPD and
Claudia Roth for
Bündnis 90/Die Grünen.
Main sights
Image:Goldene Saal.jpg|thumb|right|200px
|The
Goldene Saal
(Golden Hall)
- Town Hall, built in 1620 in Renaissance style
- Perlachturm, a bell tower built in 1182
- Fuggerei
(see above)
- Bishop's Residence, built about 1750 in order to replace the older bishop palace; today the administrative seat of Swabia
- Cathedral, founded in the 9th century
- Augsburger Puppenkiste, a very famous marionette theater
- Eiskanal, the world's first artificial whitewater course (venue for the whitewater events of the 1972 Munich Olympics).
- Dorint Hotel Tower
- Der Goldene Saal
- St. Ulrich and St. Afra—one church is Roman Catholic, the other Lutheran, the duality a result of the Peace of Augsburg concluded in 1555 between Catholics and Protestants
- Mozart Haus Augsburg (where composer father Leopold Mozart was born there and Mozart visited several times)
- Childhood home of Bertolt Brecht
- The Augsburg Botanical Gardens Botanischer Garten Augsburg
Incorporations
Year
| Municipality
| Area
|
July 1, 1910
| Meringerau
| 9.5 km²
|
January 1, 1911
| Pfersee
| 3.5 km²
|
January 1, 1911
| Oberhausen
| 8.6 km²
|
January 1, 1913
| Lechhausen
| 27.9 km²
|
January 1, 1913
| Hochzoll
| 4.4 km²
|
April 1, 1916
| Kriegshaber
| 59 km²
|
July 1, 1972
| Göggingen
|
|
July 1, 1972
| Haunstetten
|
|
July 1, 1972
| Inningen
|
|
Historical population development
Year
| Population
|
1635
| 16,432
|
1645
| 19,960
|
1806
| 26,200
|
1830
| 29,019
|
December 1, 1871 ¹
| 51,220
|
December 1, 1890 ¹
| 75,629
|
December 1, 1900 ¹
| 89,109
|
December 1, 1910 ¹
| 102,487
|
June 16, 1925 ¹
| 165,522
|
June 16, 1933 ¹
| 176,575
|
May 17, 1939 ¹
| 185,369
|
September 13, 1950 ¹
| 185,183
|
June 6, 1961 ¹
| 208,659
|
May 27, 1970 ¹
| 211,566
|
June 30, 1975
| 252,000
|
June 30, 1980
| 246,600
|
June 30, 1985
| 244,200
|
May 27, 1987 ¹
| 242,819
|
June 30, 1997
| 257,300
|
December 31, 2002
| 259,231
|
December 31, 2003
| 259,217
|
December 31, 2004
| 260,407
|
December 31, 2005
| 263,804
|
December 31, 2006
| 269,449
|
¹ Census result
Partner cities
- Inverness, Scotland, United Kingdom since 1956
- Amagasaki, Japan, since 1959
- Nagahama, Japan, since 1959
- Bourges, France, since 1963
- Dayton Ohio, United States, since 1964
- Liberec, Czech Republic, since 2001
- Jinan, People's Republic of China, since 2004
Information on the partner cities can also be found at
Commerce and infrastructure
Transport
The main road link is
autobahn A 8 between
Munich and
Stuttgart.
Public transport
Public transport is very well catered for. It is controlled by the
Augsburger Verkehrsverbund (Augsburg transport union, AVV) extended over central Swabia. There are seven rail
Regionalbahn lines, four
tram lines, 27 city bus lines and six night bus lines, as well as, several taxi companies.
The tram network is now 35.5 km-long after the opening of new lines to the
university in 1996, the northern city boundary in 2001 and to the Klinikum Augsburg (Augsburg hospital) in 2002. Two more tram lines are under construction, planned to be completed in 2011.
Rail services
Augsburg has seven stations. The
Hauptbahnhof (main station) built from 1843 to 1846 is Germany’s oldest main station in a large city still providing services in the original building. It is currently being modernized and an underground tram station is built underneath it.
Hauptbahnhof is on the
Ulm–München line and is connected by
ICE and
IC services to
Munich,
Berlin,
Dortmund,
Frankfurt,
Hamburg and
Stuttgart. As of December 2007, the French
TGV connected Augsburg with a direct High Speed Connection to
Paris. In addition
EC and night train services connect to
Amsterdam,
Paris and
Vienna and connections will be substantially improved by the creation of the planned
Magistrale for Europe.
The AVV operates seven
Regionalbahn lines from the main station to:
- Mammendorf
- Schmiechen
- Aichach/Radersdorf
- Meitingen/Donauwörth
- Dinkelscherben
- Schwabmünchen
- Klosterlechfeld.
Starting in 2008, the regional services are planned to be altered to
S-Bahn frequencies and developed long term as integrated into the the
Augsburg S-Bahn.
Economy
thumb in Augsburg
Augsburg is a vibrant industrial city. Many global market leaders namely
MAN,
EADS or
KUKA produce high technology products like printing systems, large diesel engines,
industrial robots or components for the
Airbus A380 and the
Ariane carrier rocket. After Munich, Augsburg is considered the high-tech centre for Information and Communication in Bavaria and takes advantage of its lower operating costs, yet close proximity to
Munich and potential customers.
Major Companies
- Boewe Systec
- EADS
- EMCON Technologies (former Zeuna-Staerker)
- Fujitsu Siemens Computers
- KUKA Robotics / Systems
- MAN (Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg)
- manroland
- MT-Aerospace
- NCR
- Osram
- Siemens
- UPM-Kymmene (former Haindl)
- Verlagsgruppe Weltbild
- WashTec (former Kleindienst)
Education
Augsburg is home to the following universities and colleges:
- University of Augsburg, founded in 1970 [5]
- Fachhochschule Augsburg
Media
The local newspaper is the
Augsburger Allgemeine
first published in 1807.
Notable citizens
- died 304 Saint Afra
- c.890-973 Saint Ulrich
- 1070-1127 Saint Wolfhard
- 1459–1525 Jakob Fugger Noted banker and financial broker. An area within the city, called the Fuggerei was set aside for the poor and needy. Founded in 1519.
- 1460–1524 Hans Holbein the Elder, a pioneer in the transformation of German art from the Gothic to the Renaissance style.
- 1517–1579 Paulus Hector Mair, martial artist.
- 1573–1646 Elias Holl, architect
- 1580–1627 Julius Schiller, lawyer and astronomer.
- 1704–1767 Johann Jakob Haid, engraver
- 1719–1787 Leopold Mozart, father of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
- 1898–1956 Bertolt Brecht, famous German writer.
- 1858–1913 Rudolf Diesel, inventor of the diesel engine.
- 1933 Ulrich Biesinger, a former German footballer, part of the team that won the 1954 FIFA World Cup.
- 1939 Helmut Haller, a footballer who represented West Germany at three World Cups.
- 1957 Bernhard Langer, famous professional golfer.
- 1959 Bernd Schuster, a German football coach and former player.
- 1983 Philipp Kohlschreiber, a German tennis player.
Miscellaneous
thumb with
City Hall
The patron
saints of Augsburg are
Saint Ulrich and
Saint Afra. Saint Afra was killed (either beheaded or burned at the stake, accounts differ) by the Romans at Augsburg in 304. An earlier patroness was
Zisa, referenced in the 11th century, feast day September 28), possibly an early Germanic goddess and originally the consort of
Tyr.
A key family tourist attraction is the large annual children's party and festivities of 29 September (Michaelmas or St. Michael's Day) held at the
Turamichele, where (
Archangel Michael) appears in a window on the west side of the city tower (
Perlachturm) and fights with the
devil.
Augsburg's
Lech River White Water Canoeing hosted the
1972 Summer Olympics events and are now open to the public.
Augsburg holds year-long German Mozart Festival concerts and hosts the International Leopold Mozart Violin Competition.
Sports
The city is home to a
DEL (first-division) ice hockey team, the
Augsburger Panther. The original club, AEV, was formed in 1878, the oldest German ice sport club and regularly draws around 4000 spectators, quite reasonable for German ice hockey. Home games are played at the
Curt Frenzel Stadion: not truly an indoor rink as the sides are open, though a new stadium is in the process of planning.
For the
1972 Olympic Games in
Munich, a
Lech River dam protective diversionary canal for river ice was converted into the world's first
artificial whitewater slalom course: the
Eiskanal and remains a world-class venue for whitewater competition and served as prototype for two dozen similar foreign courses.
The
FC Augsburg is a
2nd Bundesliga football team based in Augsburg and plays in the
Rosenaustadion. A new stadium called impuls arena was opened in July 2009 and it is planned to host games of the
2011 FIFA Women's World Cup.
Local City Nicknames
While commonly coined
Fuggerstadt
(Fuggers' city) due to the Fuggers residing there, within Swabia it's also often referred to as
Datschiburg
: which originated sometime in the 19th century refers to Augsburgs favorite sweet: the
Datschi
made from fruit, preferably prunes, and thin cake dough.
[6].
The
Datschiburger Kickers
charity football team founded in 1965 keenly this as its name.
[7] [8]
See also
- List of civic divisions of Augsburg
- League of Augsburg
- Augsburg College A private Lutheran College in the United States that takes its name from the Augsburg Confession.
- List of mayors of Augsburg
- Rudolf Diesel, inventor of the Diesel engine, who also used biodiesel
Notes
- http://www2.augsburg.de/
- http://www2.augsburg.de/index.php?id=12356
- Wolfgang Sofsky, William Templer, ''The Order of Terror: The Concentration Camp'': Princeton University Press: 1999, ISBN: 0691006857: 352 pages: pp 183
- Edward Victor. ''Alphabetical List of Camps, Subcamps and Other Camps.'' http://www.edwardvictor.com/Holocaust/List%20of%20camps.htm
- http://www.uni-augsburg.de
- Augsburger Stadtlexikon - ''Datschiburg'' {{de icon}} accessed: 18 November 2008
- ''Datschiburger Kickers'' website accessed: 18 November 2008
- Augsburger Stadtlexikon - ''Datschiburger Kickers'' {{de icon}} accessed: 18 November 2008
References
- http://www2.augsburg.de/
- http://www2.augsburg.de/index.php?id=12356
- Wolfgang Sofsky, William Templer, ''The Order of Terror: The Concentration Camp'': Princeton University Press: 1999, ISBN: 0691006857: 352 pages: pp 183
- Edward Victor. ''Alphabetical List of Camps, Subcamps and Other Camps.'' http://www.edwardvictor.com/Holocaust/List%20of%20camps.htm
- http://www.uni-augsburg.de
- Augsburger Stadtlexikon - ''Datschiburg'' {{de icon}} accessed: 18 November 2008
- ''Datschiburger Kickers'' website accessed: 18 November 2008
- Augsburger Stadtlexikon - ''Datschiburger Kickers'' {{de icon}} accessed: 18 November 2008