Burghausen, Altötting

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Burghausen
Coat of arms Location
Coat of arms of Burghausen
Burghausen, Altötting (Germany)
Burghausen, Altötting
Administration
Country Flag of Germany Germany
State Bavaria
Admin. region Upper Bavaria
District Altötting
Town subdivisions 33 Ortsteile
Mayor Hans Steindl (SPD)
Basic statistics
Area 19.85 km² (7.7 sq mi)
Elevation 421 m  (1381 ft)
Population 18,108  (31/12/2006)
 - Density 912 /km² (2,363 /sq mi)
Other information
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Licence plate
Postal codes 84489 8263
Area code 08677
Website www.burghausen.de
Location of the town of Burghausen within Altötting district
Map

Coordinates: 48°10′00″N 12°50′00″E / 48.166667, 12.833333

Burghausen is the largest city in the Altötting district of Oberbayern in Germany. It is situated on the Salzach river, near the border with Austria. Its castle, atop a ridge, is the longest castle in Europe (1,043 meters).

[edit] History

Panoramic view at night
Panoramic view at night
View of the city
View of the city

It is thought that Burghausen was founded between the 6th and 8th centuries on the banks of the Salzach river as a toll station for the castle. The castle continued to be extended until the 16th century, when it was Europe's longest castle complex.

The first documentary mention of Burghausen was in the year 1025, when it was listed as Imperial real property. Emperor Conrad II would later appoint the Counts of Burghausen as the financial administrators of the locality.

In 1164, Duke Henry the Lion took possession of the castle. The Wittelsbachs took possession of the castle in 1180 and the surrounding valley settlements in 1229. The conferral of town status was presumed at some point, but is not supported by sources. Starting in 1255, after the first division of Bavaria, Burghausen gained political and economic prominence as the second residence of the Lower Bavarian dukes.

Burghausen's main source of income was the trade in salt from Hallein, (modern-day Austria). The salt was brought ashore in Burghausen and transported further overland. The landing spot was at the Mautner castle, which now houses the city's education and cultural centre, hosting adult education classes in photography and jazz as well as crafts and jazz events.

In 1307, the pre-existing local law was codified as municipal law, and in the first half of the 14th century, Emperor Louis IV granted the town further important privileges. By the end of the 14th century, Burghausen had become an administrative center as the site of the area's revenue office.

Under the last three Lower Bavarian dukes, Henry XVI the Rich (1393-1450), Louis IX the Rich (1450-1479) and George the Rich, (1479-1503), Burghausen experienced an expansion and golden age as the second capital of Bavaria. In 1505, after the Landshut War of Succession, Burghausen was one of the four revenue offices in reorganized Bavaria.

The income from the salt trade was lost in 1594 because of the establishment of the ducal salt monopoly.

Following this, Burghausen experienced more than 300 years of administrative and commercial decline:

By the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th, Burghausen had become an impoverished provincial town with barely 2,500 inhabitants. However, an economic upturn began in 1915 with the establishment of Wacker Chemical Enterprises, Inc:

  • The new city has developed alongside the old town, with a coherence of design, reorganization and increased security from the construction of the flood control dam and the Uferstraße from 1969-71.
  • The population has increased from 2,500 in 1910 and 5,000 in 1946 to 19,000 (2005).
  • Burghausen gained regional fame through the SV Wacker Burghausen Soccer Sports Association and the annual international jazz festival.
  • In 2004, the National Horticultural Show received approximately one million visitors.
  • In the winter of 2005-2006, the town gave Christmas benefits to all of its unemployment benefit recipients, gaining nationwide attention in all news media, including the Bild tabloid newspaper.


[edit] Images of the castle

Panoramic view of the castle (view from east)
Panoramic view of the castle (view from east)
Panoramic view of the castle (view from west)
Panoramic view of the castle (view from west)