Aue

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Aue
Coat of arms Location
Coat of arms of Aue
Aue (Germany)
Aue
Administration
Country Flag of Germany Germany
State Saxony
Admin. region Chemnitz
District Aue-Schwarzenberg
Mayor Heinrich Kohl (CDU)
Basic statistics
Area 20.94 km² (8.1 sq mi)
Elevation 320-564 m
Population 18,065  (30/06/2007)
 - Density 863 /km² (2,234 /sq mi)
Other information
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Licence plate ASZ
Postal code 08280
Area code 03771
Website www.aue.de

Coordinates: 50°35′17″N 12°42′2″E / 50.58806, 12.70056

Aue is a small town at the outlet of the river Schwarzwasser into the river Mulde in the Ore Mountains, and has roughly 18,000 inhabitants. Aue is the administrative seat of the district of Aue-Schwarzenberg in Saxony, and belongs to the Silberberg Town League (Städtebund Silberberg)

The mining town has been known for its copper, titanium, and kaolinite. The town was a machine-building and cutlery manufacturing centre in East German times and is now developing tourism, as the Silver Road (Silberstraße) runs through town. The town is also known for the football club FC Erzgebirge Aue, which made it into the Second Bundesliga in 2003.

Aue was until 1991 a centre of the Sowjetisch-Deutsche Aktiengesellschaft Wismut (“Soviet-German Wismut Corporation”, or SDAG Wismut).

Contents

[edit] Geography

[edit] Neighbouring communities

Bordering communities are Bad Schlema, Bernsbach, Bockau, Zschorlau, the towns of Lauter, Lößnitz and Schneeberg in the district of Aue-Schwarzenberg as well as the town of Hartenstein in the Zwickauer Land.

[edit] Climate

Climatic diagram of Aue
Climatic diagram of Aue[1]

Aue’s average air temperature is 8.0 °C, and the yearly precipitation is 790 mm.

Bridges over the Zwickauer Mulde
Bridges over the Zwickauer Mulde

[edit] History

The town’s first mention came in 1219 when it was named in a document as Bertoldus prepositus de Owa. Owa, later also Awe or Aw referred to the meadow (although Aue in German actually means “floodplain”) at the forks of the Schwarzwasser und Zwickauer Mulde, where the first settlers had their homes next to the small monastery of Zelle, founded in 1173. In 1479, tin and silver mining began, leading to an upswing in the town’s fortunes. In 1526, the Auerhammer (ironworks), later called Eisenwerk and now a constituent community of Aue, had its first documentary mention. In 1627, Aue was granted market rights by Elector Johann Georg I of Saxony for a yearly market on Saint Bartholomew’s Day (27 August), and in 1632 for a second, the Katharinenmarkt, on 25 November. In 1635, Veit Hans Schnorr founded the first blue dye works in Saxony in Niederpfannenstiel, now also a constituent community of Aue. From 1711 kaolin was also delivered to Meißen for preparing porcelain. Since the mid 18th century, documents have referred to Aue as a town. In 1897, Zelle was amalgamated with Aue, and Alberoda followed in 1929. Already by 1901, the royal Amt court had taken up its function in the town.

One of Saxony’s oldest artworks is the painting from the east wall of the little monastery, which shows Emperor Friedrich I Barbarossa, Mary and a bishop. In the 1930s, it was removed for reasons of restoration, and is now found in the St.-Annen-Kapelle near the cathedral in Freiberg. A copy by H. Beck is found in the Friedenskirche Aue-Zelle (“Peace Church”).

During World War II, a subcamp of the Flossenbürg concentration camp was located here. [2]

Like Schwarzenberg, the town remained unoccupied for a while after the Second World War ended in 1945.

Until 1994, the town was the administrative seat of the district of Aue. With district reform in Saxony that year, Aue became the administrative seat of the newly formed district of Aue-Schwarzenberg.

Since 1996, there has been a Silberberg Town League (Städtebund Silberberg), to which, besides Aue, also belong Schneeberg, Schwarzenberg, Bad Schlema, Lauter and Lößnitz. In November 2006 the mayors of Aue, Lößnitz, Schneeberg and Bad Schlema expressed the intention of amalgamating their respective municipalities into a united town of Silberberg.

[edit] Population development

Development of population figures (from 1960 on 31 December):

1839 to 1939

1946 to 1984

1995 to 2002

2003 to 2006

Source as of 1998: Statistisches Landesamt des Freistaates Sachsen

1 29 October
2 31 August

[edit] Politics

[edit] Town council

  • CDU/FDP: 7 members
  • FBA/SPD: 5 members
  • PDS: 5 members
  • FWA: 3 members
  • LdU: 2 members

[edit] Coat of arms

The town’s arms show two wooden bridges, one over the other, in gold on blue over a wavy silver watery surface, each bridge with two little flags on the balustrade flying left.

[edit] Town partnerships

Partnerships have existed since 1990 with the town of Solingen and since 30 November 2003 with the Czech town of Kadaň.

[edit] Famous people

[edit] Honorary citizens

  • Ernst Papst (b. 1843), factory owner, founder of the public gymnastic club and the volunteer fire brigade
  • Fürst Otto von Bismarck (1815–1898), Imperial Chancellor, honorary citizen since 1 April 1895
  • Gustav Hiltmann (1850–1931) joint owner of the Hiltmann & Lorenz (HILO) factory with great dedication to his homeland, town councillor honorary citizen since 1920
  • Emil Teubner (1877–1958), woodcarver and sculptor
  • Peter Koch, company director of Nickelhütte Aue GmbH (nickelworks)
  • Alexander Bauer, former partner in the Curt Bauer KG factory

[edit] Sons and daughters of the town

  • Melchior Lotter (1470–1549), book printer and publisher
  • Kurt Teubner (1903–1990), painter and graphic artist
  • Ernst Hecker (1907–1983), painter, lithographer and impressionist
  • Dietmar Vettermann (b. 1957), chief mayor of the city of Zwickau
  • Thomas Colditz (b. 1957), CDU politician, member of the Saxony Landtag

[edit] Other celebrities

  • Ernst August Geitner (1783–1852), chemist, physician, botanist and inventor of German silver, founded Auerhammer German silver works in 1829, forerunner of today’s Auerhammer Metallwerk GmbH thereby laying the groundwork for the town‘s development into a centre for German silver cutlery manufacture.
  • Clemens Winkler (1838–1904), German chemist, discoverer of the chemical element germanium, spent his youth in the constituent community of Niederpfannenstiel; Aue’s Gymnasium is named for him.

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ Deutscher Wetterdienst, Normalperiode 1961-1990
  2. ^ Christine O'Keefe.Concentration Camps.www.tartanplace.com/tartanhistory/concentrationcamps.html

This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.

[edit] External links

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