Leibnitz

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Leibnitz
Coat of arms Location
Wappen or image_coa
Leibnitz (Austria)
Leibnitz
Administration
Country Flag of Austria Austria
State Styria
District Leibnitz
Mayor Helmut Leitenberger (SPÖ)
Basic statistics
Area 5.96 km² (2.3 sq mi)
Elevation 275 m  (902 ft)
Population 7,395  (31/12/2005)
 - Density 1,241 /km² (3,214 /sq mi)
Other information
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Licence plate LB
Postal code 8430
Area code 03452
Website www.leibnitz.at

Coordinates: 46°46′59″N 15°32′42″E / 46.78306, 15.545

Leibnitz (Slovenian: Lipnica) is a town in the Austrian province of Styria and at the 2001 census had a population of approximately 6,892. It is located to the south of the city of Graz, between the Mur and Sulm rivers.

The town is capital of the Leibnitz political district, which extends to about 681 km², within which more than 75,000 people live. Leibnitz acts as a cultural, educational, judicial and economic focus for the surrounding district.

Contents

[edit] History

Although the center of the current city is only about 3 km away from the archaeological site of Flavia Solva, Leibnitz cannot claim direct successorship to this Roman municipium which was founded in the 1st century A.D., and was finally destroyed early in the 5th century. When Bavarian settlers moved into the area during the 9th century, superseding and gradually absorbing the Slavic population that had established itself during the past half-millennium, all recollection of the Roman city had faded long ago.

The first documented version of the name Leibnitz reads Lipnizza and can be found in a scroll issued by emperor Otto the Great dated March 7, 970. However, a different settlement - the civitas Zuib (or Sulb; both names recall the Roman Solva) - was actually closer to the site of the present city than the civitas Lipnizza which was located on the nearby Frauenberg hill, where human occupation had persisted since the neolithic age. Later, when the civilian settlement moved back and down to the Mur valley while the dwelling on the hill remained a fortified place, the name was transformed to Libniz and Libenizze (12th century), Leibentz and Leybencz (13th and 14th century), and finally Leybnitz (14th and 15th century).

During the 12th century the settlement and its surrounding area, including the Sulm valley west of it, became territories of the church-state of Salzburg and remained so for more than 400 years. The relocation of the civilian settlement was initiated (or at least heavily supported) by archbishop Konradin of Salzburg, probably by 1130. In March 1170, emperor Barbarossa discussed matters associated with Salzburg’s authority in Leibnitz, and an imperial document dated June 14, 1178 granted full jurisdiction to Salzburg. Although the right to fortify Leibnitz – which in medieval times would have amounted to an elevation to city rank – was granted in 1296, conflicts with the emerging duchy of Styria, and later with the new masters (the Austrian Habsburg dynasty) prevented this.

The transition decades from the Middle Ages proved extremely turbulent and destructive to the area around Leibnitz, as it was to all the Southeast of today’s Austria. The fact that Leibnitz was not fortified certainly contributed to the decision of archbishop Bernhard von Rorer in 1479 to hand the township over to the invading Hungarians; their occupation collapsed in 1490 and Austria quickly reclaimed Leibnitz, severely punishing those leading citizens who had collaborated with the Hungarians.

In the 18th and early 19th century, when Leibnitz had about 1,000 occupants, the town burned to the ground twice, on May 29, 1709 and again on September 8-9, 1829. By 1883 the population had risen to 2,471 and on April 27, 1913 Austro-Hungarian emperor Franz Josef I of Austria formally elevated Leibnitz to city rank.

By January 1, 1968 the population of Leibnitz had reached 6,641 but its relative importance and vitality had severely declined since Lower Styria had fallen to Yugoslavia in 1919 as a consequence of World War I, severing the city’s vital connections to the South and effectively making it all but a "dead-border township." From the 1970s onward, when it became easier for Yugoslav citizens to travel to Austria, Leibnitz started to experience a marked economic reinvigoration which gained momentum with the establishment of Slovenia as a separate state in 1991, and its entry into the European Union in 2004.

[edit] Main sights

  • The ruins of the Roman settlement of Flavia Solva near the village Wagna
  • Seggau Castle (Schloss Seggau), situated above the town on the Seggauberg. Founded in the 12th century by Archbishop Konrad I of Salzburg, now harbors a conference center
  • The church on the Frauenberg on the hill (381 m) of the same name
  • The Leibnitz abbey

[edit] Culture

Leibnitz has a cinema, an ice rink located in the center, and an open-air swimming pool with campsite and tennis courts. These facilities are enjoyed both by locals and passing tourist traffic on its way to the Adriatic.

Interesting annual events include a fall festival with harvest thanksgiving procession, Leibnitz "wine week" and a "Perchtenlauf".

The vineyard-rich hilly countryside is home to many traditional wine-drinking establishments known as "Buschenschenke", where the local produce can be readily tasted.

The area is also crisscrossed by cycle trails, which are particularly popular in summer and fall. Leibnitz is situated on a branch of the cycle track which runs alongside the Mur river from Graz to the Slovenian border.

[edit] Economy

The area surrounding Leibnitz (known as the "Leibnitzer Feld") is extensively cultivated, the main crops being maize and pumpkin. The latter is used in the production of the black-green colored pumpkin seed oil, a Styrian speciality. Several small to medium-sized industrial companies and also some smaller hotels and boarding houses are located within the town.

The areas of hilly countryside around the town support many vineyards, which itself is a renowned center of wine production.

[edit] Transportation

Leibnitz lies on the main southern railway line, connecting Vienna to Slovenia and the Balkans via Graz. The journey from Graz main station to Leibnitz takes approximately 30 minutes using trains travelling to Spielfeld-Straß, Maribor or even Ljubljana or Zagreb. There are also several taxi firms based in Leibnitz.

Leibnitz is also served by the A9 motorway, the main route to Slovenia, via Spielfeld.

[edit] Famous people

[edit] Twin towns

[edit] Gallery

[edit] External links