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Andernach

Andernach (German pronunciation: [ˈandɐˌnax]) is a town in the district of Mayen-Koblenz, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, of about 30,000 inhabitants. It is situated towards the end of the Neuwied basin on the left bank of the Rhine between the former tiny fishing village of Fornich in the north and the mouth of the small river Nette in the southeast, just 13 miles (21 km) north of Koblenz, with its five external town districts: Kell, Miesenheim, Eich, Namedy, and Bad Tönisstein.

Andernach
Location of Andernach within Mayen-Koblenz district
Andernach
Andernach
Coordinates: 50°26′23″N 7°24′06″E / 50.43972°N 7.40167°E / 50.43972; 7.40167Coordinates: 50°26′23″N 7°24′06″E / 50.43972°N 7.40167°E / 50.43972; 7.40167
CountryGermany
StateRhineland-Palatinate
DistrictMayen-Koblenz
Government
 • Lord mayor (2017–25) Achim Hütten[1] (SPD)
Area
 • Total53.23 km2 (20.55 sq mi)
Elevation
60 m (200 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total30,126
 • Density570/km2 (1,500/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
56626
Dialling codes02632
Vehicle registrationMYK
Websitewww.andernach.de

A few hundred metres downstream of Andernach the Rhine valley narrows from both sides forming the northern part of the romantic Middle Rhine stretch. Already in Roman times the place the narrow passage begins was named "Porta Antunnacensis" or Andernachian Gate. It is formed by two hills, the Krahnenberg  (engl. Crane hill)  and the Engwetter (Narrow weather) on the right bank near the wine village Leutesdorf (external town district of Bad Hönningen). The crane hill is named after the old crane beneath his foot (see below); in earlier times (until 1650) the hill was named "Geiersberg" ("Vulture's hill").

After World War II it was the site of two Rheinwiesenlager temporary prison camps.

The town

Local dialect

As with most German cities, towns and villages, Andernach has its own local dialect – the "Andernacher Platt" ("Andernachian dialect") in which "Andernach" and the local dialect itself is named "Annenach" and "Annenache Platt". It belongs to the Moselle Franconian language subgroup and considerably differs from High German, e. g. the Rhine river is named "Rhein" [ˈʁaɪn] in High German (pronounced similar to English "Rhine" except for the "r"), but "Rhäin" [ˈʁɛːɪn] in the dialect; except for the "r", it sounds similar to English "rain" with a stretched "a". Another examples are words like "Wind" (engl. wind) and "Winter" (engl. winter), which is "Weend" and "Weende" in the dialect. The double "ee" is pronounced like French "é". Unlike other dialects in the surrounding places the Andernachian dialect is strongly relative to the Ripuarian dialect due its connection to Cologne. For more examples see the German Wikipedia site.

Coat of arms and town seal

The coat of arms of Andernach known since 1344 (the colours appeared first in 1483) shows a black cross on a white escutcheon (shield) charged with a pair of X-shapedly arranged red keys. It is described in heraldic language as Argent a cross sable charged with keys in saltire gules.

The black cross on silver symbolizes the governance of the Electorate of Cologne; the keys refer to St. Peter the patron saint of the Archbishopric of Trier (and of the cathedral of Trier), of which Andernach formed part. The red (key) colour adverts to the red cross (on silver) in the coat of arms of the Electorate of Trier.

The oldest town seal shows St. Mary sitting on a throne with a church in her right hand and with the left hand holding a town. The seal inscription says: MATER DEI PATRONA CIVIUM ANDERNACENSIUM – Mother of God, patron saint of the Andernachian citizens. The oldest seal was made before 1200, the oldest seal impression dates from the year 1250.

 
View to Andernach
 
Andernach in 1900 with "Round Tower" and "St. Mary Assumption Church"; the Rhine river is visible in the background; in the foreground the new railway tracks

Description

Founded by the Romans as Antunnacum in 12 BC on the site of an old Celtic settlement probably called Antunnuac, Andernach is one of the oldest towns in Germany which as such held its "Bimillenary feast" in 1988. Both the Roman and the Celtic names mean "village or farm of Antunnos/us"—a man not yet identified. It was the southernmost outpost of the Electorate of Cologne from the 12th to the 19th century. In addition to the touristically appealing medieval remnants of the old town fortifications, the city of Andernach is the location of several old industrial plants such as a huge malt mill (the last one of more than ten mills and breweries from the 19th and 20th centuries dismantled in 2008). In the 19th century the town was noted for the production of millstones, bricks and clay for making tobacco pipes.[3] Among the more modern of its industrial / manufacturing base is a large steel-mill to produce cold formed tin plate and companies manufacturing medicinal products, raw food materials, cast iron products, engines and engine parts. Tourists who come to the region usually visit the medieval fortifications such as the 183 feet (56 m) tall "Round Tower" (Ger. "Der Runde Turm") finished in 1453, the archiepiscopal (Electorate of Cologne) castle ruins with a well-preserved keep, and the remains of the town wall with several well-restored wall towers and two gates: the "Rhine Gate" (das "Rheintor") built around 1200 as the "Grain Gate" (die "Kornpforte"; last renovation and reconstruction in 1899 after 17th century plans) and the "Coblencian Gate" ("Koblenzer Tor"), originally called the "Castle Gate" ("Burgpforte"); in medieval and Renaissance times up to the 19th century the German word "Pforte" (from Latin "porta") was used for town and church gates instead of "Tor".

 
Map of regions in the vicinity of Andernach

Another attraction from its ancient industrial past is the "Old Crane" of Andernach (Ger. der "Alte Krahnen"), a 16th-century stony land based treadwheel tower crane 29 feet (8.8 m) in diameter and 31 feet (9.4 m) high situated outside the town downstream close to the river bank of the old harbour where it replaced an even older 14th century wooden floating treadwheel crane. For 350 years it was in operation from 1561 to 1911. Two to four men were required to rotate the crane top by means of a huge double ended lever (horizontal wooden bar) attached to the vertical wooden crane "beam" and four others on a (treadwheel men or menials) to operate the huge wooden twin treadwheels (more than 14 feet (4.3 m) in diameter) which lifted and lowered the load—mainly millstones, tuff-stone blocks for the Netherlands and wine casks. This treadwheel crane with stone walls (most cranes had a timber housing) is one of only a few of its kind in Europe to have survived. A prince-electoral order or permission was needed to build and operate such a crane in the times of the Holy Roman Empire.

The Catholic "St. Mary Assumption Parish Church" locally known as "Church of Our Lady" or "St. Mary's Cathedral" (Ger. "Pfarrkirche Maria Himmelfahrt", "Liebfrauenkirche", or "Mariendom") is the oldest historical attraction in Andernach, some of which date back to the 11th century.

The town palais "von der Leyen house" (Ger. "Haus von der Leyen"), named after its builder district magistrate and governor of the prince-elector, "Georg III von der Leyen," dates back to 1600. Built in renaissance and baroque styles it now houses the town museum since 1936 and again since 1969. It displays among others a fine model of the Roman "castrum" Antunnacum, a 17th-century town model in ~1:600 scale and a thoroughly assembled model (~1:90) of the prince-electoral town castle.

 
Andernach Geyser, the world's highest cold-water geyser

One of Andernach's natural attractions is the world's highest (max. 210 feet (64 m)) cold-water geyser, driven by carbon dioxide with force generated in a fashion similar to that in a shaken bottle of table water. It is located a little less than half a mile downstream from the "Crane" in the Nature Reserve of "Namedyer Werth" (MHG for "island of Namedy") now a peninsula. Activated for the first time in 1903, the geyser was shut down in 1957 but reactivated early in the current century as yet another city attraction.

Jewish history

In the 12th century, Benjamin of Tudela described Andernach as one of the 13 on the Rhine with important Jewish communities.[4] Jewish residents in Andernach were first mentioned in the Köln archives in 1255.[5] The Jewish community was periodically persecuted during the 13th to 15th centuries. On 3 August 1287 Archbishop Siegfried II of Westerburg issued a protection decree for the town Jews from the local Burghers.[5] Persecutions occurred especially during the 14th century by the Arnold von Uissigheim "Armleder" persecutions and in 1348–1349, as a result of the Black Death Jewish persecutions.[4] It appears as if between the 15th and the 19th centuries no Jews lived in Andernach. In 1860, a new Jewish community was founded in Andernach. Its cemetery, dated to 1888, is part of the city cemetery on KoblenzerStrasse.[4] On Kristallnacht in 1938, the town synagogue was set on fire and most of the young men were taken to Dachau.[4] At least 11 Jews who used to live in Andernach were murdered during the Holocaust, and no Jews lived in Andernach after 1945.[4] Several sites commemorate the history of Jewish community of Andernach. An ancient Jewish Mikveh, dated to the 13th century, is one of the oldest ones in Europe and can be found under the old town house, built in the 16th century close to the site where the synagogue stood.[6] The Mikveh can be visited.

Population development

Year Inhabitants
1790 1.790
1812 2.451
1850 3.500
1871 4.482
1895 6.583
Year Inhabitants
1905 08,789
1933 12,523
1950 15,879
1970 27,140
1995 30,343
Year Inhabitants
1998 30,437
2000 30,263
2004 30,359
2005 30,987
Year Inhabitants
2006 30,567
2010 30,379
2012 30,343
2014 29,500

[7]

Lord Mayors

Till 1969 the Lord Mayor was named Mayor.

  • 1946–1948: Egon Herfeldt (CDP, later FWG)
  • 1949–1964: Johann Füth (CDU)
  • 1965–1974: Walter Steffens (CDU)
  • 1974–1994: Gerold Küffmann (CDU)
  • 1994–2023: Achim Hütten (born 1957), (SPD)
  • since 2023: Christian Greiner (FWG)[8]

Mayors

  • 1965–1975: Werner Klein (SPD) (1928–1985)
  • 1975–1982: Helmuth Günter (CDU)
  • 1983–1993: Rainer Krämer (SPD)
  • 1993–1994: Achim Hütten (SPD)
  • 1994–2002: Franz Breil (FWG)
  • 2002–2010: Josef Nonn (CDU)
  • since 2010: Claus Peitz (CDU)

Literature

Honoré de Balzac places his short story L'Auberge rouge in Andernach. It is also the birthplace of twentieth century American author Charles Bukowski.

Music

The Dutch folk song "T'Andernaken" (In Andernach) was very popular all over western Europe in the 15th/16th century and set to music by numerous composers of the period such as Obrecht, Brumel, King Henry VIII, Agricola, Hofhaimer, Senfl.

Places of interest

The famous Lake Laach (Ger. "Laacher See", literally "'Laachian' or 'Laky' Lake", i.e. "Lacustrine Lake" or "Lake of the Lake", comparable to the naming of "Loch Lochy" in Scotland) is the largest maar-like lake in the Eifel (more precisely a water-filled caldera) and has a 12th-century Benedictine monastery. The famous Abbey of Maria Laach is 12 miles (19 km) west of the town in the southern Fore-Eifel (Ger. Südliche Voreifel or Vordereifel, the south-eastern forelands of the Eifel).

Namedy Castle is situated in a village on the Rhine, adjacent to Andernach in north-western direction. In 1909 it was purchased by Prince Karl Anton of Hohenzollern and his wife Princess Joséphine Caroline of Belgium. Today it is managed by their grandsons' widow, Princess Heide of Hohenzollern, housing concerts, theatre plays, art exhibitions, dinners and other events.

Andernach mirror container

During World War II, a transit camp for the Nazi Euthanasia Action T4 victims was active in town. The institute in Andernach sent mentally ill patients and disabled people to the Hadamar Euthanasia Centre, where victims were murdered. Between 1941 and 1944, about 1,560 people were sent to Hadamar through the Andernach transit hospital.[9] In 1996, a memorial was built at the city center, commemorating the victims. The interior of the memorial is lined with mirrors on which the names of the known victims are engraved. 400 other dots stand for victims whose names are unknown.

Infrastructure

Andernach station is on the Left Rhine line and the Eifelquer Railway. It is served by InterCity, Regional-Express (the Rhein-Express, at hourly intervals) and Regionalbahn services (MittelrheinBahn, at hourly intervals) operating between Cologne and Koblenz. It is also served by Regionalbahn on the Eifelquer Railway to Kaisersesch at hourly intervals.

Twin towns – sister cities

Andernach is twinned with:[10]

Notable people

Associated with Andernach

  • Inge Helten (born 1950), athlete (sprinter) of the DJK Andernach up to 1971, 1976 100-metre world record, as well as silver and bronze at the Olympic Games 1976
  • Stephan Ackermann (born 1963), theologian, made 1981 his abitur at the Kurfürst-Salentin-Gymnasium, since 2009 Bishop of Trier

See also

References

  1. ^ Wahlen der Bürgermeister der verbandsfreien Gemeinden, Landeswahlleiter Rheinland-Pfalz, accessed 30 July 2021.
  2. ^ "Bevölkerungsstand 2021, Kreise, Gemeinden, Verbandsgemeinden" (in German). Statistisches Landesamt Rheinland-Pfalz. 2022.
  3. ^ The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge, Vol I, London, Charles Knight, 1846, pp.702-3.
  4. ^ a b c d e The Encyclopedia of Jewish Life Before and During the Holocaust: A-J, p. 43, at Google Books
  5. ^ a b http://jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/1495-andernach[bare URL]
  6. ^ Traveler's Guide to Jewish Germany, p. 34, at Google Books
  7. ^ Quelle: Stadtverwaltung Andernach
  8. ^ Aktuell, S. W. R. "Andernach: Christian Greiner als neuer Oberbürgermeister vereidigt". swr.online (in German). Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  9. ^ http://www.memorialmuseums.org/eng/staettens/view/1338/Andernach-Mirror-Container#
  10. ^ "Die Partnerstädte der Stadt Andernach". andernach.de (in German). Andernach. Retrieved 2021-02-28.

External links

  • Coat of arms of Andernach

andernach, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, assist,. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Andernach German pronunciation ˈandɐˌnax is a town in the district of Mayen Koblenz in Rhineland Palatinate Germany of about 30 000 inhabitants It is situated towards the end of the Neuwied basin on the left bank of the Rhine between the former tiny fishing village of Fornich in the north and the mouth of the small river Nette in the southeast just 13 miles 21 km north of Koblenz with its five external town districts Kell Miesenheim Eich Namedy and Bad Tonisstein AndernachTownCoat of armsLocation of Andernach within Mayen Koblenz districtAndernachShow map of GermanyAndernachShow map of Rhineland PalatinateCoordinates 50 26 23 N 7 24 06 E 50 43972 N 7 40167 E 50 43972 7 40167 Coordinates 50 26 23 N 7 24 06 E 50 43972 N 7 40167 E 50 43972 7 40167CountryGermanyStateRhineland PalatinateDistrictMayen KoblenzGovernment Lord mayor 2017 25 Achim Hutten 1 SPD Area Total53 23 km2 20 55 sq mi Elevation60 m 200 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total30 126 Density570 km2 1 500 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes56626Dialling codes02632Vehicle registrationMYKWebsitewww andernach deA few hundred metres downstream of Andernach the Rhine valley narrows from both sides forming the northern part of the romantic Middle Rhine stretch Already in Roman times the place the narrow passage begins was named Porta Antunnacensis or Andernachian Gate It is formed by two hills the Krahnenberg engl Crane hill and the Engwetter Narrow weather on the right bank near the wine village Leutesdorf external town district of Bad Honningen The crane hill is named after the old crane beneath his foot see below in earlier times until 1650 the hill was named Geiersberg Vulture s hill After World War II it was the site of two Rheinwiesenlager temporary prison camps Contents 1 The town 1 1 Local dialect 1 2 Coat of arms and town seal 1 3 Description 1 4 Jewish history 2 Population development 3 Lord Mayors 4 Mayors 5 Literature 6 Music 7 Places of interest 7 1 Andernach mirror container 8 Infrastructure 9 Twin towns sister cities 10 Notable people 10 1 Associated with Andernach 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksThe town EditLocal dialect Edit As with most German cities towns and villages Andernach has its own local dialect the Andernacher Platt Andernachian dialect in which Andernach and the local dialect itself is named Annenach and Annenache Platt It belongs to the Moselle Franconian language subgroup and considerably differs from High German e g the Rhine river is named Rhein ˈʁaɪn in High German pronounced similar to English Rhine except for the r but Rhain ˈʁɛːɪn in the dialect except for the r it sounds similar to English rain with a stretched a Another examples are words like Wind engl wind and Winter engl winter which is Weend and Weende in the dialect The double ee is pronounced like French e Unlike other dialects in the surrounding places the Andernachian dialect is strongly relative to the Ripuarian dialect due its connection to Cologne For more examples see the German Wikipedia site Coat of arms and town seal Edit The coat of arms of Andernach known since 1344 the colours appeared first in 1483 shows a black cross on a white escutcheon shield charged with a pair of X shapedly arranged red keys It is described in heraldic language as Argent a cross sable charged with keys in saltire gules The black cross on silver symbolizes the governance of the Electorate of Cologne the keys refer to St Peter the patron saint of the Archbishopric of Trier and of the cathedral of Trier of which Andernach formed part The red key colour adverts to the red cross on silver in the coat of arms of the Electorate of Trier The oldest town seal shows St Mary sitting on a throne with a church in her right hand and with the left hand holding a town The seal inscription says MATER DEI PATRONA CIVIUM ANDERNACENSIUM Mother of God patron saint of the Andernachian citizens The oldest seal was made before 1200 the oldest seal impression dates from the year 1250 View to Andernach Andernach in 1900 with Round Tower and St Mary Assumption Church the Rhine river is visible in the background in the foreground the new railway tracks Description Edit Founded by the Romans as Antunnacum in 12 BC on the site of an old Celtic settlement probably called Antunnuac Andernach is one of the oldest towns in Germany which as such held its Bimillenary feast in 1988 Both the Roman and the Celtic names mean village or farm of Antunnos us a man not yet identified It was the southernmost outpost of the Electorate of Cologne from the 12th to the 19th century In addition to the touristically appealing medieval remnants of the old town fortifications the city of Andernach is the location of several old industrial plants such as a huge malt mill the last one of more than ten mills and breweries from the 19th and 20th centuries dismantled in 2008 In the 19th century the town was noted for the production of millstones bricks and clay for making tobacco pipes 3 Among the more modern of its industrial manufacturing base is a large steel mill to produce cold formed tin plate and companies manufacturing medicinal products raw food materials cast iron products engines and engine parts Tourists who come to the region usually visit the medieval fortifications such as the 183 feet 56 m tall Round Tower Ger Der Runde Turm finished in 1453 the archiepiscopal Electorate of Cologne castle ruins with a well preserved keep and the remains of the town wall with several well restored wall towers and two gates the Rhine Gate das Rheintor built around 1200 as the Grain Gate die Kornpforte last renovation and reconstruction in 1899 after 17th century plans and the Coblencian Gate Koblenzer Tor originally called the Castle Gate Burgpforte in medieval and Renaissance times up to the 19th century the German word Pforte from Latin porta was used for town and church gates instead of Tor Map of regions in the vicinity of Andernach Another attraction from its ancient industrial past is the Old Crane of Andernach Ger der Alte Krahnen a 16th century stony land based treadwheel tower crane 29 feet 8 8 m in diameter and 31 feet 9 4 m high situated outside the town downstream close to the river bank of the old harbour where it replaced an even older 14th century wooden floating treadwheel crane For 350 years it was in operation from 1561 to 1911 Two to four men were required to rotate the crane top by means of a huge double ended lever horizontal wooden bar attached to the vertical wooden crane beam and four others on a treadwheel men or menials to operate the huge wooden twin treadwheels more than 14 feet 4 3 m in diameter which lifted and lowered the load mainly millstones tuff stone blocks for the Netherlands and wine casks This treadwheel crane with stone walls most cranes had a timber housing is one of only a few of its kind in Europe to have survived A prince electoral order or permission was needed to build and operate such a crane in the times of the Holy Roman Empire The Catholic St Mary Assumption Parish Church locally known as Church of Our Lady or St Mary s Cathedral Ger Pfarrkirche Maria Himmelfahrt Liebfrauenkirche or Mariendom is the oldest historical attraction in Andernach some of which date back to the 11th century The town palais von der Leyen house Ger Haus von der Leyen named after its builder district magistrate and governor of the prince elector Georg III von der Leyen dates back to 1600 Built in renaissance and baroque styles it now houses the town museum since 1936 and again since 1969 It displays among others a fine model of the Roman castrum Antunnacum a 17th century town model in 1 600 scale and a thoroughly assembled model 1 90 of the prince electoral town castle Andernach Geyser the world s highest cold water geyser One of Andernach s natural attractions is the world s highest max 210 feet 64 m cold water geyser driven by carbon dioxide with force generated in a fashion similar to that in a shaken bottle of table water It is located a little less than half a mile downstream from the Crane in the Nature Reserve of Namedyer Werth MHG for island of Namedy now a peninsula Activated for the first time in 1903 the geyser was shut down in 1957 but reactivated early in the current century as yet another city attraction Jewish history Edit In the 12th century Benjamin of Tudela described Andernach as one of the 13 on the Rhine with important Jewish communities 4 Jewish residents in Andernach were first mentioned in the Koln archives in 1255 5 The Jewish community was periodically persecuted during the 13th to 15th centuries On 3 August 1287 Archbishop Siegfried II of Westerburg issued a protection decree for the town Jews from the local Burghers 5 Persecutions occurred especially during the 14th century by the Arnold von Uissigheim Armleder persecutions and in 1348 1349 as a result of the Black Death Jewish persecutions 4 It appears as if between the 15th and the 19th centuries no Jews lived in Andernach In 1860 a new Jewish community was founded in Andernach Its cemetery dated to 1888 is part of the city cemetery on KoblenzerStrasse 4 On Kristallnacht in 1938 the town synagogue was set on fire and most of the young men were taken to Dachau 4 At least 11 Jews who used to live in Andernach were murdered during the Holocaust and no Jews lived in Andernach after 1945 4 Several sites commemorate the history of Jewish community of Andernach An ancient Jewish Mikveh dated to the 13th century is one of the oldest ones in Europe and can be found under the old town house built in the 16th century close to the site where the synagogue stood 6 The Mikveh can be visited Population development EditYear Inhabitants1790 1 7901812 2 4511850 3 5001871 4 4821895 6 583 Year Inhabitants1905 0 8 7891933 12 5231950 15 8791970 27 1401995 30 343 Year Inhabitants1998 30 4372000 30 2632004 30 3592005 30 987 Year Inhabitants2006 30 5672010 30 3792012 30 3432014 29 500 7 Lord Mayors EditTill 1969 the Lord Mayor was named Mayor 1946 1948 Egon Herfeldt CDP later FWG 1949 1964 Johann Futh CDU 1965 1974 Walter Steffens CDU 1974 1994 Gerold Kuffmann CDU 1994 2023 Achim Hutten born 1957 SPD since 2023 Christian Greiner FWG 8 Mayors Edit1965 1975 Werner Klein SPD 1928 1985 1975 1982 Helmuth Gunter CDU 1983 1993 Rainer Kramer SPD 1993 1994 Achim Hutten SPD 1994 2002 Franz Breil FWG 2002 2010 Josef Nonn CDU since 2010 Claus Peitz CDU Literature EditHonore de Balzac places his short story L Auberge rouge in Andernach It is also the birthplace of twentieth century American author Charles Bukowski Music EditThe Dutch folk song T Andernaken In Andernach was very popular all over western Europe in the 15th 16th century and set to music by numerous composers of the period such as Obrecht Brumel King Henry VIII Agricola Hofhaimer Senfl Places of interest EditThe famous Lake Laach Ger Laacher See literally Laachian or Laky Lake i e Lacustrine Lake or Lake of the Lake comparable to the naming of Loch Lochy in Scotland is the largest maar like lake in the Eifel more precisely a water filled caldera and has a 12th century Benedictine monastery The famous Abbey of Maria Laach is 12 miles 19 km west of the town in the southern Fore Eifel Ger Sudliche Voreifel or Vordereifel the south eastern forelands of the Eifel Namedy Castle is situated in a village on the Rhine adjacent to Andernach in north western direction In 1909 it was purchased by Prince Karl Anton of Hohenzollern and his wife Princess Josephine Caroline of Belgium Today it is managed by their grandsons widow Princess Heide of Hohenzollern housing concerts theatre plays art exhibitions dinners and other events Maria Laach Abbey Namedy CastleAndernach mirror container Edit During World War II a transit camp for the Nazi Euthanasia Action T4 victims was active in town The institute in Andernach sent mentally ill patients and disabled people to the Hadamar Euthanasia Centre where victims were murdered Between 1941 and 1944 about 1 560 people were sent to Hadamar through the Andernach transit hospital 9 In 1996 a memorial was built at the city center commemorating the victims The interior of the memorial is lined with mirrors on which the names of the known victims are engraved 400 other dots stand for victims whose names are unknown Infrastructure EditAndernach station is on the Left Rhine line and the Eifelquer Railway It is served by InterCity Regional Express the Rhein Express at hourly intervals and Regionalbahn services MittelrheinBahn at hourly intervals operating between Cologne and Koblenz It is also served by Regionalbahn on the Eifelquer Railway to Kaisersesch at hourly intervals Twin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Andernach is twinned with 10 Dimona Israel Ekeren Antwerp Belgium Farnham England United Kingdom Saint Amand les Eaux France Stockerau Austria Zella Mehlis GermanyNotable people EditJohann Winter von Andernach 1505 1574 humanist physician Adolf Kolping 1909 1997 Catholic theologian university professor Charles Bukowski 1920 1994 poet and writer Puig Aubert 1925 1994 French rugby league footballer Hans Belting 1935 2023 art historian and media theorist Ralf Walter born 1958 politician SPD Member of the European Parliament 1994 2009 David Wagner born 1971 writer Christian Sturm born 1978 opera and concert singer Daniel Bauer born 1982 footballer Markus Pazurek born 1988 footballer Stefan Bell born 1991 footballerAssociated with Andernach Edit Inge Helten born 1950 athlete sprinter of the DJK Andernach up to 1971 1976 100 metre world record as well as silver and bronze at the Olympic Games 1976 Stephan Ackermann born 1963 theologian made 1981 his abitur at the Kurfurst Salentin Gymnasium since 2009 Bishop of TrierSee also EditAndernach chessReferences Edit Wahlen der Burgermeister der verbandsfreien Gemeinden Landeswahlleiter Rheinland Pfalz accessed 30 July 2021 Bevolkerungsstand 2021 Kreise Gemeinden Verbandsgemeinden in German Statistisches Landesamt Rheinland Pfalz 2022 The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge Vol I London Charles Knight 1846 pp 702 3 a b c d e The Encyclopedia of Jewish Life Before and During the Holocaust A J p 43 at Google Books a b http jewishencyclopedia com articles 1495 andernach bare URL Traveler s Guide to Jewish Germany p 34 at Google Books Quelle Stadtverwaltung Andernach Aktuell S W R Andernach Christian Greiner als neuer Oberburgermeister vereidigt swr online in German Retrieved 2023 05 09 http www memorialmuseums org eng staettens view 1338 Andernach Mirror Container Die Partnerstadte der Stadt Andernach andernach de in German Andernach Retrieved 2021 02 28 External links EditCoat of arms of Andernach Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andernach Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andernach amp oldid 1153941234, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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