Laa an der Thaya

Laa an der Thaya

Town hall

Coat of arms
Laa an der Thaya

Location within Austria

Coordinates: 48°43′N 16°23′E / 48.717°N 16.383°ECoordinates: 48°43′N 16°23′E / 48.717°N 16.383°E
Country Austria
State Lower Austria
District Mistelbach
Government
  Mayor Manfred Fass
Area
  Total 72.89 km2 (28.14 sq mi)
Elevation 183 m (600 ft)
Population (1 January 2014)[1]
  Total 6,222
  Density 85/km2 (220/sq mi)
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 2136
Area code 02522
Website www.laa.at

Laa an der Thaya is a town in the Mistelbach District of Lower Austria in Austria, near the Czech border. The population in 2013 was 6185.

Geography

Laa Castle

The town is located in the northern Weinviertel region, near the Thaya river, directly at the border with South Moravia. The municipal area includes the cadastral communities of Hanfthal, Kottingneusiedl, Pernhofen, Ungerndorf, and Wulzeshofen.

History

A settlement at a ford across the Thaya existed already in the 12th century, before the estates were acquired by the Babenberg dukes of Austria about 1190. Duke Leopold VI of Austria about 1230 had the walled town of Laa laid out as a strategic outpost at the border with the Kingdom of Bohemia in the north. His successor Duke Frederick the Warlike used it as a military base for his Bohemian campaigns, until he was finally killed in battle in 1246. The erection of the St Vitus parish church was begun about 1240, it is today one of the largest preserved Romanesque church buildings in Lower Austria.

Laa's town privileges were confirmed when the Austrian lands had passed to King Ottokar II of Bohemia, and again in 1281 by the Habsburg ruler King Rudolph I of Germany after his victory in the Battle on the Marchfeld. Nevertheless the town's significance decreased over the following decades, it was devastetad by the troops of Margrave Jobst of Moravia in 1407 and again in 1426 by Hussite forces. According to legend, the later Pope Pius II (Enea Silvio Piccolomini) worked as a priest at the Laa parish church from 1442, actually he served as papal legate to the Imperial Diet and counsellor of Emperor Frederick III. To improve Laa's economy, the citizens were granted the privilege of brewing in 1454.

St Vitus Church

During the Thirty Years' War, the town was first occupied by Bohemian troops until the 1620 Battle of White Mountain, late by Swedish forces, who left Laa in a desolate condition. It had remained a sedate county town, when Napoleon marched through in 1809 during the War of the Fifth Coalition; however, Laa's development was decisively promtoted by the opening of a railway connection to Austria's capital Vienna in 1869, a branch line of the Eastern Railway, which further led to Hevlín and Brno (Brünn) in Moravia. Another branch via Pulkau to Zellerndorf with access to the Vienna-Znojmo railway line opened in 1873.

Laa again became a border town after World War I with the establishment of the First Czechoslovak Republic. Upon the end of World War II it laid immediately at the Iron Curtain dividing Europe. In June 2005, about 250 townspeople and 80 visitors from the US, Israel and Europe with historical family links to former Jewish citizens of Laa an der Thaya assembled with Mayor Fass to dedicate a memorial to the members of 33 Jewish families of Laa murdered by the SS in Auschwitz. This memorial is perhaps only the second official memorial dedicated to the memory of Austria's Jews.

Politics

Seats in the municipal assembly (Gemeinderat) as of 2010 elections:

Twin towns — sister cities

Laa an der Thaya is twinned with:

Notable people

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Laa an der Thaya.