Sankt Wendel

"St. Wendel" redirects here. For other uses, see Saint Wendel (disambiguation).
Sankt Wendel

Coat of arms
Sankt Wendel
Coordinates: 49°28′N 7°10′E / 49.467°N 7.167°E / 49.467; 7.167Coordinates: 49°28′N 7°10′E / 49.467°N 7.167°E / 49.467; 7.167
Country Germany
State Saarland
District Sankt Wendel
Government
  Mayor Peter Klär (CDU)
Area
  Total 113.54 km2 (43.84 sq mi)
Population (2013-12-31)[1]
  Total 25,890
  Density 230/km2 (590/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 66606
Dialling codes 06851, 06854, 06856, 06858
Vehicle registration WND
Website www.sankt-wendel.de

St. Wendel is a town in northeastern Saarland. It is situated on the river Blies 36 km northeast of Saarbrücken, the capital of Saarland, and is named after Saint Wendelin of Trier. Regarding to a survey by the German Association for Housing, Town Planning and Land Use Regulation, St. Wendel is known to be one of the wealthiest regions in Germany, behind Starnberg.

Geography

Panorama of St. Wendel

St. Wendel is situated on the river Blies west of the Bosenberg hill at an elevation of 938 feet (286 m). Its highest elevation is the Bosenberg hill at 1591 feet (485 m); the lowest is where the river Blies exits St. Wendel heading for Ottweiler at 853 feet (260 m).

Demographics

(each year at December 31)

History

The center of St. Wendel supposedly was the farm of a feudal lord from the Merovingian period (late 6th century) named Baso, so the city was originally named Basonevillare ("farm of Baso"). Baso's farm was situated on Bosenberg's western side between the river Todtbach and the river Bosenbach. This term would probably have developed into "Bosenweiler" were it not for the local admiration of Wendelin. (Compare the names Bosenweiler, Bosenberg and Bosenbach, in which Baso's name has survived.)

In the mid-7th century the Bishop of Verdun, Paulus, bought Basonvillare. He also inherited the settlement Tholey (without the monastery) from the Merovingian nobleman Adalgisel Grimo, Deacon of Verdun. As a result, the St. Wendel area belonged to Verdun for centuries.

Shortly before that the hermit Wendelin died near Basonvillare. He had been highly venerated by the people, and as a result, an intense pilgrimage developed during the next few centuries, which finally resulted in the renaming of the settlement Basonvillare to "St. Wendel" in the 12th century.

The Lord of Blieskastel, whose properties stretched from the northern part of Lorraine all the way through the Hunsrück mountain chain to Bernkastel on the Moselle River (today Bernkastel-Kues), erected a moat-surrounded castle in the valley of the Blies River, which was supposed to grant protection to the blooming pilgrimage site. The castle consisted of an artificial hill of earth with a wooden tower on top, surrounded by a palisade and a moat. Such an installation was called "Mott", which is why this part of St. Wendel is named the Mott today.

A third area was a small church "above the grave of Wendelin", which supposedly was positioned where the Magdalenenkapelle ("chapel of Magdalena") is today. Not until the late 9th or early 10th century was a church built on the site of today's basilica, where the relics of Wendelin were taken during the 11th century and to which people make a pilgrimage on St. Wendel's day in October.

At the same time, the Wendel's Market developed, a central market for the area for cattle, clothing, and everyday utensils. Noble families and the clergy settled around the church. Castle, farm, and church gradually grew together in the 14th century.

Until the latter half of the 10th century, St. Wendel was an important outpost of Verdun. In 1326/28 the prince elector and Archbishop Balduin of Luxembourg from Trier bought the castle and the village of St. Wendel. He was trying to suppress the influence of Lorraine on the Rhine area. Through this purchase the village soon developed into a medieval city. Jakomin von Monkler became the first magistrate. As a representative of the prince elector, he had a new castle erected. In addition, he counseled Archbishop Balduin to create a new pilgrimage church. In 1332, he bought the city certificate from emperor Ludwig IV, gaining permanent revenues. His successor Werner von Falkenstein had a wall erected around the city in 1388. At this time about 500 people lived in St. Wendel.

While the Fruchtmarkt ("fruit market" - the area around the basilica) was a part of the town for the noble and clerical people in the 14th century, it became the central market place in the 15th century. Middle class and laborers settled on the former farms of noblemen. The guilds developed, gaining rights in the city administration through their jurors. In 1455 the municipal foundation, Hospitalstiftung, was erected, and a bit later the town hall was built. By the middle of the 15th century the number of residents had climbed to 700.

In 1591 a huge part of the town was destroyed by fire. The residents had just started re-building the town when requisitions and contributions (payments to the occupation army) during the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) almost drove the town into financial collapse.

During the Third Anglo-Dutch War (1672–1697) all buildings except for a few were burned down in 1677. The city wall was partly destroyed, and the prince elector's castle was devastated.

During the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1714) the city was occupied and despoiled again. Commerce did not recover from that for a long time. Only in 1714 could people begin rebuilding.

Also during the War of the Polish Succession (1733–1738)), the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–1748) and the Seven Years' War (1756–1763) the troops marched through St. Wendel so requisitions had to be paid.

Only in the middle of the 18th century could the residents start to relax again. The development in urban building had long been marked by a huge contrast between the high population density of the wall-encircled city center and the low population density outside the wall. Now the wall was gone and the city started to grow. Commerce, especially the wool and leather industries, grew again. There were huge companies with over 100 weaving machines. Merchants from Saarbrücken and Strassburg met their needs for good cloth while the tanneries took their products to the fair in Frankfurt. A wealthy upper class developed, as well as many gorgeous residential and commercial buildings. The basilica was provided with a three-layered baroque dome. Besides many urban building activities took place, for example roads, the area around the castle, moving the cemetery away from the basilica to outside the former city wall.

During the French revolutionary wars St. Wendel suffered plundering and requisitions from the troops of both sides. Wool weavers and tanners had to pay socage, a special kind of tax. The introduction of freedom of trade replaced the old rules of the guilds, putting many masters out of business, as prices were no longer fixed so blunderers could work below price.

From 1798, the canton St. Wendel belonged to the French Saardepartement. Eventually wealth was returning to the slowly but surely growing town. In the Kelsweilerstrasse, the upper city gate was broken down and a bridge over the river Blies was erected in today's Bahnhofstrasse.

In 1814, Duke Ernst I of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld received the cantons St. Wendel, Grumbach and Baumholder (together about 20,000 residents) for his performance during the French Revolutionary Wars. Beginning in 1816 he called this area the "Principality of Lichtenberg", which is still seen today in the borders of the evangelical church community of St. Wendel.

The government was economically successful, but it tried to control the jurisdiction, and the trust of the Lichtenbergers in their independent government disappeared. Creating a Landrat (senate for the district), the general public hoped to gain rights for self-rule, tax politics, etc., but Duke Ernst decided arbitrarily in too many cases. The general public became more and more dissatisfied, resulting in uprisings. During the liberal movements resulting from the Hambacher Fest in 1832, the uprisings escalated. The revolts were put down with the help of Prussian troops from Saarlouis. In 1834 the duke sold the land to the Kingdom of Prussia and St. Wendel became a chief town of the administrative district of Trier. The Prussian state stationed a garrison in St. Wendel.

Economically the St. Wendel area was poor until the middle of the 19th century, which is why so many people emigrated to America. Even today, there are towns in Brazil where the local German dialect of St. Wendel or even the surrounding villages is still spoken.[2]

In the middle of the 19th century, the city of St. Wendel and the nearby villages Alsfassen and Breiten slowly grew together. Today's Bahnhofstrasse, which leads to Niederweiler (the area of today's train station), was built, as well as the Brühlstrasse and the Kelsweilerstrasse, which also lead to Breiten and Alsfassen. In 1859, St. Wendel, Breiten and Alsfassen were finally united into the new city of St. Wendel. Other urban building actions: street lights, a hospital, an evangelical church (1841).

The economic situation of St. Wendel changed in 1860 with the opening of the railroad between Bingen and Saarbrücken, with St. Wendel profiting as a train station and the building of a train maintenance company. The train maintenance company was first situated opposite the station on the Tholeyerberg; between 1913 and 1915 it was moved to the Schwarzer Weg (today Werkstrasse). Today the area is used by the Bundeswehr as an army maintenance logistic center.

In 1898 the Divine Word Missionaries built a huge mission in St. Wendel. Also, as a reaction to the changes in economic and social structures, a major city expansion began, causing the inhabited area to double in size between 1910 and 1937.

During the Third Reich a huge military base was built near the western city border beside Highway B269 to Winterbach.

After the Second World War another big expansion of the city came during the Wirtschaftswunder. Saarland remained a French protectorate independent from Germany until its re-integration into the Bundesrepublik Deutschland in 1957, which began an economic downturn as the largest employer of St. Wendel, the Marschall Tobacco Company, had to close down in 1960.

Despite all the wars, there were still some historic buildings left in the city center of St. Wendel until 1960, but under mayors Franz Gräff (1956–1974) and Jakob Feller (1974–1982), a lack of historic interest and economically oriented sanitation destroyed a lot of them. Parts of the medieval town are still to be recognized near the Wendelsdom (the basilica).

St. Wendel nowadays has about 27,000 residents due to a district reform in 1974 in which several surrounding villages were united with the city area.

A French garrison stayed in St. Wendel from 1951 to July 1999. Their buildings are used by different companies today, and some have been removed. In their place, a golf course and a skating park have been built; a new public swimming pool is under construction.

Religion

While the upper Blies Valley (which contains St. Wendel) is mostly Catholic, the rest of the Blies Valley has about as many Catholics as Protestants. The Ostertal ("Oster Valley") is mostly Protestant. In the city center there a two Catholic churches (St. Wendelin and St. Anna) plus the Evangelical congregation.

City divisions / surrounding villages

Politics

City council

The communal elections on June 13, 2004 produced these results:

Traditionally the CDU has been the strongest power in town, governing in each period with an absolute majority.

Klaus Boullion at the city marathon 2007

Mayors

The direct election of the mayor on April 14, 2002 did not take place as there was no rival candidate for mayor Klaus Bouillon. Therefore, the city council re-elected him mayor for another eight years with 26 positive votes and 12 abstentions on June 7, 2002.

International relations

Sankt Wendel is twinned with:

Economy and infrastructure

Transportation

St. Wendel has good traffic connection in north-south direction. Parallel to the river Blies (resp. in northern direction to the river Nahe the Bundesstraße ("federal road") B41 and the train track 680 from Neunkirchen in the south to Birkenfeld, Idar-Oberstein in the north. Federal road and train tracks continue to Bad Kreuznach in the north and Saarbrücken in the south. Federal highway B41 crosses town free of intersections. The area of St. Wendel has five exits (from north to south): St. Wendel - Niederlinxweiler, St. Wendel - Oberlinxweiler, St. Wendel - City, St. Wendel - Winterbach, St. Wendel - Alsfassen. Between exits Niederlinxweiler and City it has three lanes in both directions. In St. Wendel it intersects with federal highway B269, which connects Lebach and Birkenfeld. At the southern border of the city federal highway B420 connects Ottweiler with the bordering regions of Rhineland-Palatinate

Wendalinus cycle track, start near St. Wendel
Wendalinus cycle track, ascension near Tholey

The next Highway are about 20 minutes by car away in each direction:

All regional express trains and regional trains stop in St. Wendel. Therefore, an hourly connection to the Rhine Main Area and three hourly connections to the capital of the Saarland, Saarbrücken are available.

Since 1915, there has been a single track connection through the suburbs Bliesen and Oberthal to Tholey. In 1984 passenger traffic was shut down on this track.

The entire track from St. Wendel to Tholey has been rebuilt into an asphalt-covered cycle track, named Wendalinus-Radweg.

Business and industry

Courts

St. Wendel has a district court, which belongs to the regional court of Saarbrücken

Clubs and organizations

Sports

St. Wendel has been an organizer of the 2005 and 2011 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships. St. Wendel with his "Wendelinuspark"-circuit is host of the Supermoto World, Europe & German Championships.

Culture

Museums

Cultural projects

Sightseeing

Buildings

Image gallery

Wikimedia Commons has media related to St. Wendel.

Personalities

Honorary Citizens

Notable people

Notes

  1. "Fläche und Bevölkerung - Stand: 31.12.2013 (Basis Zensus 2011)" (PDF). Statistisches Amt des Saarlandes (in German). September 2014.
  2. Saarbrücker Zeitung , July 25, 2007(German)

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 15, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.