Lorsch
Lorsch | ||
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Town hall | ||
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Lorsch | ||
Location of Lorsch within Bergstraße district | ||
Coordinates: 49°39′14″N 8°34′3″E / 49.65389°N 8.56750°ECoordinates: 49°39′14″N 8°34′3″E / 49.65389°N 8.56750°E | ||
Country | Germany | |
State | Hesse | |
Admin. region | Darmstadt | |
District | Bergstraße | |
Government | ||
• Mayor | Christian Schönung (CDU) | |
Area | ||
• Total | 25.24 km2 (9.75 sq mi) | |
Population (2013-12-31)[1] | ||
• Total | 13,170 | |
• Density | 520/km2 (1,400/sq mi) | |
Time zone | CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) | |
Postal codes | 64653 | |
Dialling codes | 06251 | |
Vehicle registration | HP | |
Website | www.lorsch.de |
Lorsch is a town in the Bergstraße district in Hessen, Germany, 60 km south of Frankfurt. Lorsch is well known for the Lorsch Abbey, which has been named a World Heritage Site. In 1991, the town hosted the 31st Hessentag state festival.
Geography
Location
Lorsch, which is described as "The Gateway to the Bergstraße", actually lies about 5 km west of the Bergstraße in the Rhine rift just west of the Odenwald between Darmstadt to the north and Mannheim to the south. The town lies not far from the Weschnitz’s lower reaches. In the town’s southeast is found the Weschnitzinsel conservation area.
Neighbouring communities
Lorsch borders in the north on the community of Einhausen and the town of Bensheim, in the east on the town of Heppenheim, in the southeast on the community of Laudenbach and the town of Hemsbach (both in Rhein-Neckar-Kreis, Baden-Württemberg), in the south on the town of Lampertheim and in the west on the town of Bürstadt.
History
The Lorsch Abbey was founded in 764 by the Frankish Count Cancor and his mother Williswinda. The abbey was one of the greatest centres of Carolingian art. Several Carolingian kings of Germany were buried there. The monastery was settled by Benedictines from the Gorze monastery near Metz. In a document from 885, the abbey is mentioned as Lauressam, from which, over the course of time, came the town’s current name. In the Early and High Middle Ages, the abbey was a powerful Imperial monastery with holdings in the nearby Odenwald, on the Bergstraße and in Rhenish Hesse, and also in Alsace and Lorraine.
In the civil war resulting from the Investiture Controversy in the 11th century, the abbey sustained great losses in holdings to the nobility.
In the late 12th century, with the record of the old deeds, there was an attempt to reorganize the administration (Lorsch codex). Nevertheless, in 1232, Lorsch was awarded to the Archbishopric of Mainz and newly settled by Premonstratensians. Thereafter, Mainz and the Electorate of the Palatinate found themselves at odds over who should hold the vogt rights. Of the Carolingian Benedictine abbey, which in parts has been unearthed, the gatehall (from about 800) has been preserved. It is today a UNESCO-protected World Heritage Site.
See also: Lorsch codex, Franconia, Ripuarian Franks, Electoral Mainz, Electorate of the Palatinate
Politics
Community council
The municipal election held on 26 March 2006 yielded the following results:
Parties and voter communities | % 2006 |
Seats 2006 |
% 2001 |
Seats 2001 | |
CDU | Christian Democratic Union of Germany | 44.4 | 16 | 43.1 | 16 |
SPD | Social Democratic Party of Germany | 23.8 | 9 | 31.1 | 11 |
GREENS | Bündnis 90/Die Grünen | 12.4 | 5 | 9.6 | 4 |
FDP | Free Democratic Party | 4.7 | 2 | 1.6 | 1 |
PWL | Parteilose Wählerschaft Lorsch | 14.7 | 5 | 14.7 | 5 |
Total | 100.0 | 37 | 100.0 | 37 | |
Voter turnout in % | 44.6 | 50.9 |
The town executive (Magistrat) is made up of seven councillors. Three seats are allotted to the CDU, two to the SPD and one each to the PWL and the Greens.
Mayor
From 1993 to 2011, the mayor has been Klaus Jäger (independent). He was re-elected on 7 February 1999 with 85.2% of the vote, and again on 13 February 2005 with 70.6%. Since 2011 the mayor is Christian Schönung (PWL).
Coat of arms
Lorsch’s arms might be described thus: Party per fess, above sable the King’s Hall Or, below party per pale, argent a cross pattée fitchy gules and azure the Lion of Hesse springing.
The King’s Hall (Königshalle), the building declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1991, is borne as a charge in the town’s arms. The red cross pattée fitchy (that is, cross with “flattened” ends to three of the arms, and a point on the bottom one) is the coat of arms formerly borne by the Lorsch Abbey in its heyday. The Lion of Hesse, shown here springing (with both hindfeet on the ground) rather than rampant (with only one hindfoot on the ground), comes from Hesse’s coat of arms (in which he is rampant) and symbolizes Lorsch’s status as part of Hesse.
Town partnerships
- Le Coteau, Loire, France since 1988
- Zwevegem, West Flanders, Belgium since 1973
- Thal, an outlying centre of Ruhla, Thuringia since 1990
There is also a friendship arrangement with:
This came about through the sponsorship arrangement for those ethnic Germans driven out of the communities of Jívová (formerly Giebau), Pohorsch, Weska and Hraničné Petrovice (Petersdorf bei Giebau), who then settled in Lorsch.
Culture and sightseeing
Theatre
- Kleinkunstbühne Sapperlot (cabaret)
- Musiktheater Rex
Museums
- Museumszentrum Lorsch (“Lorsch Museum Centre”) with its departments of monastic history and folklore, and its tobacco museum.
Buildings
- Lorsch Abbey with the Königshalle
- Benedictine herb gardens at the Lorsch Abbey
- Lorsch’s Town Hall (built between 1714 and 1715) - Current location of the Tourist Information and the Adult Education Center
- Lorsch’s oldest timber-frame house at Stiftstraße 19
- Lorsch’s oldest guesthouse, the Weißes Kreuz
- Wattenheimer Brücke (bridge)
Culinary specialities
- Original Lorscher Welschbrot
Economy and infrastructure
Transport
Through the town’s municipal area run Autobahn A 67 and Bundesstraßen 47 and 460.
Lorsch’s DB railway station lies on the Nibelungenbahn (railway) between Bensheim and Worms. Furthermore, there are bus connections with Lampertheim/Bürstadt, Heppenheim, Einhausen and Bensheim.
Lorsch lies on Hesse’s cycle path R9, which leads from Worms by way of Bensheim to Höchst im Odenwald.
Established businesses
The firm TrekStor GmbH & Co.KG was founded in 2001 in Lorsch and has its head office here. It has USB flashdrives, external hard drives and MP3 players made in Asia. Development and quality control, however, are located in Lorsch.
Lorsch’s homepage gives a more exhaustive list of the businesses in town.
Media
Lorsch has two regional daily newspapers, the Bergsträßer Anzeiger with its regional Lorsch/Einhausen edition, and the less widespread Starkenburger Echo.
Public institutions
- Geo-Naturpark Bergstraße-Odenwald
- Im Birkengarten (big playground)
- Catholic public library
- Waldschwimmbad: The Lorsch “Forest Swimming Pool” was built in the 1970s. The technology was thoroughly overhauled and expanded in 1994 and 1995.
Regular events
In Lorsch on Thursday during Carnival – locally known as Fastnacht – there is a Carnival parade with more than 100 attractions, which every year draws thousands of Narren – jesters – to the old monastery town.
Education
- Wingertsbergschule – primary school. The Wingertsbergschule lies on a former sand dune in the Rhine rift on the northeastern edge of its feeder area, the town of Lorsch. Right nearby is found the widely known former Lorsch Abbey. The Wingertsbergschule was founded as a Bergstraße district primary school on 9 January 1974. It is a successor to the Karolinger Volksschule, which until 1972 was sponsored by the town of Lorsch. About 540 children nowadays attend the school and are taught by 31 teachers.
- Werner-von-Siemens Schule – Hauptschule-Realschule. The Werner-von-Siemens Schule gets its name from the Berlin inventor Werner von Siemens. After the Hesse Ministry of Education and the Bergstraße district decided to build a new Hauptschule-Realschule in the town’s south (Lagerfeld) in 1971, the Werner-von-Siemens Schule was inaugurated. In November 1973, the school administration decided, along with the parents’ advisory committee to bestow the name Werner-von-Siemens Schule upon the school, which was then announced during an official ceremony on 24 June 1974.
Famous people
Honorary citizens
- Friedrich Wilhelm Freiherr von Dörnberg (b. 5 July 1781 in Mansfeld; d. 21 January 1877 in Darmstadt), forest master, honoured 1844.
- Heinrich Johannes Heinstadt (b. 19 August 1872 in Oppershofen; d. 8 April 1956), clergyman, honoured 1946.
- Friedrich Behn (b. 14 February 1883 in Neustrelitz; d. 20 August 1970 in Mainz), archaeologist and archaeological monument caretaker, honoured 1965.
- Albert Ohlmeyer (b. 31 October 1905 in Münster, Westphalia; d. 5 December 1998), abbot, honoured 1965.
- Karl Minst (b. 26 April 1898 in Triesen, Liechtenstein; d. 10 June 1984), monastery administrator, honoured 1972.
- Dr. Ekkehard Lommel (b. 14 December 1913 in Weilburg; d. 1 October 2006), district administrator (retired), honoured 25 January 2001.
- Paul Schnitzer (b. 5 November 1934 in Lorsch; d. 21 September 1995), senior lecturer, honoured posthumously 25 January 2001.
Sons and daughters of the town
- Michael Meister (born 1961), CDU politician
- Ernst-Dieter Suttheimer, opera singer
References
- ↑ "Die Bevölkerung der hessischen Gemeinden". Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt (in German). September 2014.
Further reading
- Heinrich Diehl: Lorsch. Geschichte und Geschichten. Lorsch: Verlag Laurissa, 1991, ISBN 3-922781-17-9
- Wilhelm Weyrauch: Zu den Ursprüngen von Lorsch – Die erste Kirche in Lauresham. In: Geschichtsblätter Kreis Bergstraße Bd. 33/2000, S. 11 – 64.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lorsch. |
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Lorsch. |
- Town’s official webpage (German)
- Lorsch at DMOZ (German)
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