Forchheim (Oberfranken)

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Coordinates: 49°44′N 11°4′E

Forchheim
Coat of arms of Forchheim Location of Forchheim in Germany

Country Germany
State Bavaria
Administrative region Upper Franconia
District Forchheim
Population 31,024 (01/08/2005)
Area 44.95 km²
Population density 691 /km²
Elevation 265 m
Coordinates 49°44′ N 11°4′ E
Postal code 91291-91301 (old: 8550)
Area code 09191
Licence plate code FO
Mayor Franz Stumpf (CSU/WUO)
Website Stadt Forchheim

Forchheim is a large district city in Franconia in northern Bavaria, and also the seat of the administrative region of Upper Franconia (Oberfranken in German). Forchheim is a former royal city, and is sometimes called the “Gateway to the Franconian Switzerland”, as the region is known. It is part of the Landkreis of the same name. Its population, as of August 2005, was 31,024, and its land area is 44.95 km². Its position is 49° 44' N, 11° 04' E, and its elevation is 265 m above sea level.

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[edit] Forchheim today

In 2005, Forchheim celebrated its 1,200th anniversary of first documentary mention, on the occasion of which the Deutsche Post (German Post) issued special commemorative stamps worth 45 cents. In 2004, the city played host to the Bavarian provincial Exhibition. There were about 199,100 visitors.

[edit] Name and coat of arms

At the time when the coat of arms was conferred on the town at the beginning of the 13th century, people wrongly believed that their town’s name, "Vorchheim" came from the Old High German word vorhe (“trout”). This resulted in the coat of arms showing two trout (above). Although the rivers around the town were surely home to a great many trout in those days, it seems likelier that the town’s name actually came from the Old High German word vorha (“pine”). So it means “Pine-home”.

The name most likely originates in the 7th century, when Frankish settlers first arrived in the region. They established many riverside towns with names ending in –heim.

[edit] Transport connections

Forchheim is directly connected to the Autobahn network by way of the A 73.

Through Forchheim run Federal Highways (Bundesstraßen) B 470 and B 4.

Rail traffic from the station goes towards Bamberg, Nuremberg and Ebermannstadt. The abandoned railway line to Höchstadt is still occasionally used. Within the next few years, Forchheim is also to be connected to the Nuremberg S-Bahn.

Local public transportation, such as buses and hailed shared taxis, is incorporated into the Greater Nuremberg transport area.

The city lies right on the Rhine-Main-Danube Canal and lies roughly 30 minutes from Nuremberg Airport.

Hauptstraße (pedestrian precinct)
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Hauptstraße (pedestrian precinct)

[edit] Neighbourhoods

  • Buckenhofen (on the left bank of the Regnitz; first mentioned in documents in 1251, but likely older; has about 4,500 inhabitants)
  • Burk (likely older than the town itself; known for its Dreikönigskirche {“Three King Church”}, the only one so dedicated in the whole diocese of Bamberg.
  • Kersbach with Sigritzau
  • Reuth
  • Serlbach (northeast of Forchheim; its name is a corruption of an older name, “Zum Erlebach”)

[edit] History

In the 8th century, a royal court and a palace were built in Forchheim.

In 805, the town was mentioned in the Diedenhofener Kapitular, a capitulary (royal order) from Charlemagne forbidding the two towns that it named – Magdeburg was the other – to trade weapons with the Slavs, issued at Diedenhofen (now Thionville, France). This is the first documentary evidence of the town’s existence.

Travel map from 1912 with Forchheim near bottom
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Travel map from 1912 with Forchheim near bottom

In the following centuries, Forchheim saw many imperial diets and princely gatherings. On 10 November 911, Konrad I was elected and crowned the first “German” king.

On 1 November 1007, Emperor Heinrich II granted Forchheim, then under Crown ownership, the Archbishopric of Bamberg. By 1039, however, Emperor Heinrich III had brought the town back under Imperial administration until it was finally made part of the Bishopric of Bamberg on 13 July 1063, a status which lasted up until the secularization in 1802-1803.

In Heinrich IV’s time, Rudolf von Rheinfelden was chosen to be the Gegenkönig (“anti-king”) on 15 March 1077, in Forchheim.

Sometime between 1200 and 1220, Forchheim was raised to city, and was given its current coat of arms.

Owing to Forchheim’s fortifications, it got through the Thirty Years' War without being overrun even once. The Prince-Bishop of Bamberg fled the Swedes in this war, seeking shelter for himself, and also for his cathedral treasure, in the strongly defended fortress town of Forchheim. The Swedes laid siege to the town several times from 1632 to 1634. It was also in this era of Forchheim’s history that some of the townsfolk earned the rather unflattering nickname Mauerscheißer (“wall shitters”). This came from their practice of defecating over the city walls during the siege, to demonstrate to the Swedes that there was still enough to eat in the city, and that their siege was ineffective and pointless.

On 6 September 1802, Forchheim was occupied by Bavarian troops and annexed to the Electorate of Bavaria.

In 1889, Forchheim became a kreisfreie Stadt, conferring on it certain enhanced local powers. It lost this status in 1972 under Bavarian regional government reform, and was united with Landkreis Forchheim, the local district.

The local lore has it that Forchheim was Pontius Pilate’s birthplace.

[edit] Things to see

Rathaus (City Hall)
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Rathaus (City Hall)
  • Rathaus (City Hall), 14th–16th centuries with décor by Hans Ruhalm, 1523.
  • Kaiserpfalz, prince-bishop’s palace, 14th century.
  • Martinskirche (church), 12th–15th centuries.
  • Marienkapelle (chapel), 12th century.
  • Festungsmauer (fortification wall), 1560-1750 with mediaeval Saltorturm (tower).
  • Kammerersmühle (a quaintly leaning old mill, now used as a wine bar), 17th century.
  • Katharinenspital (hospital), 1611 and Spitalkirche (hospital church), 1490
  • Klosterkirche and Kloster (monastery church, and monastery) 17th century.
Martinskirche
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Martinskirche

[edit] Regular events

  • April/May: Theatertage (“Theatre days”)
  • June: Altstadtfest (Old Town Festival)
  • July/August: Annafest
  • December: "Schönster Adventskalender der Welt" (“World’s loveliest Advent calendar”)

[edit] Economy

Forchheim is shaped mainly by its proximity to Nuremberg.

[edit] Established enterprises

  • Huhtamaki (disposable packaging)
  • Kimberly-Clark (hygiene articles) closed as of 31 August 2006
  • Piasten (chocolate factory)
  • Pohl (international shipping)
  • Siemens (high-tech medical systems)
  • Schweizer (optics, optical devices)
  • Waasner (transformers)
  • Weber & Ott (ladies’ and men’s fashions)
  • Wellpappe Forchheim (packaging)

[edit] Twinned cities

[edit] External links