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Bad Driburg

Bad Driburg (German: [baːt ˈdʁiːˌbʊʁk] ) is a town and spa in Höxter district in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, situated on the river Aa and the Altenbeken–Kreiensen railway.

Bad Driburg
Dringenberg Castle
Location of Bad Driburg within Höxter district
BrakelSteinheimBorgentreichNieheimHöxterBad DriburgWillebadessenMarienmünsterBeverungenWarburgNorth Rhine-WestphaliaLippe (district)Paderborn (district)HochsauerlandkreisHesseLower Saxony
Bad Driburg
Bad Driburg
Coordinates: 51°44′N 9°1′E / 51.733°N 9.017°E / 51.733; 9.017
CountryGermany
StateNorth Rhine-Westphalia
Admin. regionDetmold
DistrictHöxter
Government
 • Mayor (2020–25) Burkhard Deppe[1] (CDU)
Area
 • Total115.07 km2 (44.43 sq mi)
Highest elevation
435 m (1,427 ft)
Lowest elevation
147 m (482 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total18,985
 • Density160/km2 (430/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
33014
Dialling codes05253, 05259, 05238
Vehicle registrationHX, WAR
Websitewww.bad-driburg.de

Geography edit

Bad Driburg lies on the eastern slopes of the Eggegebirge which is roughly 20 km east of Paderborn.

Constituent communities edit

Bad Driburg consists of 10 districts:

  • Alhausen
  • Driburg
  • Dringenberg with Siebenstern
  • Erpentrup
  • Herste
  • Kühlsen
  • Langeland
  • Neuenheerse
  • Pömbsen with Bad Hermannsborn
  • Reelsen

History edit

Prehistory edit

Archaeological finds bear witness to settlement in the Driburg area between about 3000 and 1800 BC, in the Middle and New Stone Age.

Further important finds from the Bronze Age attest to quite a high culture living in the area between about 1800 and 600 BC.

Ancient times edit

Finds of potsherds and above all coins dating up to AD 15 show at least that there was peaceful trade between the Romans and the Cherusci, a Germanic tribe living in the area in antiquity.

Middle Ages edit

In 772, Charlemagne began military operations against the Saxons. Shortly thereafter, one of the churches consecrated to Saint Peter was built on the Iburg. This is one of the oldest churches in historic Saxony.

In 868, the Bishop of Paderborn founded the convent at Neuenheerse, now a constituent community of Bad Driburg. The convent church was built much later, in the early 12th century.

After the Bishopric of Paderborn was reorganized in 1231, Driburg became the seat of an archdeaconate. The Driburger Pfennig began to be minted at this time, and has now become a very rare coin (see Coat of arms below). It was also at about this time, or perhaps somewhat later, that Driburg was granted town rights. The document granting them, however, was lost long ago. A document from 1290 nevertheless makes it clear that, by this time, Driburg has town rights.

In the 14th century, the Castle Dringenberg was built. In 1323 Dringenberg, now a constituent community of Bad Driburg, was granted town rights and was seat of the free court until 1765. On 10 April 1345, Bishop Balduin of Paderborn renewed Driburg's town rights.

In 1444, Otto Duke of Braunschweig (Brunswick) destroyed Schloß Iburg (castle) and had it razed.

Modern era edit

 
Bad Driburg Spa and Hotel in The Count's Park

About 1500 came the beginnings of glassworks around Driburg. In 1593, the Driburger Heilquellen (healing springs) were once more made usable.

In the next century, two town fires in relatively quick succession—in 1680 and again in 1683—burnt the town to the ground.

The 18th century brought the Seven Years' War between 1756 and 1763, which left a wake of death and destruction. The Franzosengrab ("Frenchmen's Grave") on Brunnenstraße recalls the many victims of the fighting and epidemics.

On 9 May 1781 or 5 April 1782, the Brunswick Oberjägermeister (roughly "High Hunting Master"), Caspar Heinrich von Sierstorpff, founded the Driburg spa, which is still owned today by his descendants, the counts von Oeynhausen-Sierstorpff.

In 1803, Driburg passed to Prussia, and its old connection to the Prince-Bishopric of Paderborn was dissolved. This same year, the Neuenheerse convent became an accommodation centre for needy noblewomen of all denominations.

In 1809, Driburg's Jewish community had its own small synagogue, followed in 1905 by its own private school.

In 1810, after almost a thousand years, the Neuenheerse convent was at last dissolved.

In 1813, the doctor, poet and politician Friedrich Wilhelm Weber, who wrote the epic Dreizehnlinden was born in Alhausen (he died in Nieheim in 1894).

In 1864, Driburg was connected to the railway network. In 1919, Driburg was granted the designation "Bad" in recognition of its being a spa town.

In 1938, the synagogue was destroyed, and the Jewish townsfolk found themselves faced with a time of hardship and persecution under the Nazis.

Towards the end of the Second World War, on 5 April 1945, the town was taken over by American troops. Bad Driburg was largely spared any great war damage. Between 1945 and 1950, the spa was commandeered by the British Occupation authorities. The first postwar spa season came only in 1951.

In 1970 came amalgamation with the heretofore independent communities of Alhausen, Erpentrup, Herste, Langeland, Pömbsen and Reelsen. In 1974 came government recognition as a spa town, although the town had been calling itself Bad Driburg for many years. In 1975 came further amalgamations as the town of Dringenberg and the communities of Kühlsen and Neuenheerse were merged into Bad Driburg.

On 9 May 1981, the spa celebrated its bicentenary. Six years later, on 5 May 1987, the thermal boring was successfully completed. On 1 July 1990, Bad Driburg celebrated its 700-year town jubilee.

On 27 March 1994, the "Driburg Therme" thermal baths opened.[3]

Neuenheerse edit

In 868, a convent was established on the site of today's Neuenheerse by Luithard, the third bishop of Paderborn, to foster the Christianization of the Saxons. The church was at first consecrated to Mary, mother of Jesus. The sisters gathered many relics over the years, of which the most important were the bones of Saint Saturnina of Sains-les-Marquion, who became the convent's patron.

Main sights edit

Buildings edit

 
Iburg ruins
  • Saint Peter's and Paul's Catholic Parish Church was built in 1894-1897 from A. Güldenpfennig's plans. It is a three-naved neo-Gothic hall church with a transept. It is thoroughly complete with a pulpit, an organ, altars and glazing from the time when it was built. There is also painting from 1909 in a Baroquelike Art Nouveau. A few pieces have been saved from the former church, among them the Romanesque baptismal font (from about 1260), two Baroque figures of the two patron saints from 1676, as well as the late (died 1463) capitular Heinrich von Driburg's gravestone.
  • The town's railway station is a late classicist building from after 1860.
  • In the town core, which is made up of many new buildings, only a few half-timbered buildings from the 18th and 19th centuries are still standing.
  • The Gräfliches Haus (roughly "Count's House") is a two-storey classicist stone building with an outside staircase from 1780, located in the Count's Park with its hotel, conference center and spa. It was here that Beatrix of the Netherlands met her future husband Claus von Amsberg for the first time on New Year's Eve 1962 at a dinner hosted by the count of Oeynhausen-Sierstorpff who was a distant relative of both of them.
  • There are heavily restored and made-over remains of the town wall at the so-called Mühlenpforte ("Mill Gate").
  • Neuenheerse has a moat-ringed stately home (Wasserschloss).
  • The Stiftskirche St. Saturnina ("Convent church of St. Saturnina") in Neuenheerse (Eggedom), was built from 1100 to 1130, but was heavily damaged in a fire due to lightning in 1965.
  • The castle Iburg's ruins from the 8th century can be seen in Bad Driburg.
 
Alhausen seen from the Rosenberg

Museums edit

  • Modellbahnschau MO187, a model railway display in Bad Driburg's historic goods station.

Sports edit

  • Bilster Berg Drive Resort is a motorsport racetrack designed by Hermann Tilke, built on a former NATO Rhine Army facility. Opened in 2013, it operates as a country club and hosts track days.

Cultural events edit

  • Shooting festival of the Bad Driburg citizens' shooting guild (2nd weekend in July)
  • Shooting festival of the Schützenbruderschaft St. Fabian und Sebastian Neuenheerse e. V. ("Neuenheerse St. Fabian's and Sebastian's Marksmen's Brotherhood") (once a year in mid-August)
  • Mountain bike race 'Iburg-Bergsprint' in June, part of the Challenge4MTB race series

Politics edit

Mayors edit

The mayor of Bad Driburg is Burkhard Deppe (CDU). He was elected in 2004 and reelected in 2009, 2014 and 2020. His predecessor was Karl-Heinz Menne (CDU), who was elected in 1999.

Town council edit

CDU SPD UWG ödp Greens FDP The Left total
2016 17 6 2 2 3 1 1 32

Coat of arms edit

Bad Driburg's civic coat of arms might heraldically be described thus: In azure a crenellated town wall and gate over which a crenellated tower Or, above the wall sinister a Latin cross Or.

This tower has been a symbol of Driburg for almost 800 years, and it can even be seen on the "Driburg Pfennig", which was struck in 1215, and of which only two examples are known today. The cross stands for Paderborn, to which Bad Driburg once belonged.

A similar coat of arms in gules (red) rather than azure (blue) was granted on 6 July 1908, but in 1973, the red was changed to blue, and the cross, formerly a cross pattée, became a Latin cross.[1]

This newer version was approved by the Regierungspräsident in Detmold on 9 May 1973.

Education edit

  • Gem. Grundschule
  • Katholische Grundschule
  • Katholische Grundschule Neuenheerse
  • Gemeinschaftsgrundschule Dringenberg
  • Städtische Grundschule
  • Städtisches Gymnasium
  • Gymnasium St. Xaver
  • Gymnasium St. Kaspar
  • Caspar-Heinrich-Schule Gemeinschafts-Hauptschule der Stadt Bad Driburg
  • Friedrich-Wilhelm-Weber-Realschule der Stadt Bad Driburg
  • Städtische Schule für Lernbehinderte

Notable people edit

 
Friedrich Wilhelm Weber
  • Friedrich Wilhelm Weber (1813–1894), doctor and poet of Dreizehnlinden , member of the Prussian Landtag for the constituency Höxter / Warburg 1862-1893
  • Lilli Schwarzkopf (born 1983), heptathlete, lives in Bad Driburg (district Siebenstern), participated in the Olympic Summer Games 2008 in Beijing and 2012 in London.

Town partnerships edit

The partnership with Uebigau (citizens' shooting guild) in southwestern Brandenburg has existed since 1990.

References edit

  1. ^ Wahlergebnisse in NRW Kommunalwahlen 2020, Land Nordrhein-Westfalen, accessed 21 June 2021.
  2. ^ "Bevölkerung der Gemeinden Nordrhein-Westfalens am 31. Dezember 2021" (in German). Landesbetrieb Information und Technik NRW. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-08-10.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Bad Driburg at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official site (in German)
  • Bad Driburg in the Kulturatlas Westfalen (in German)

driburg, german, baːt, ˈdʁiːˌbʊʁk, town, höxter, district, north, rhine, westphalia, germany, situated, river, altenbeken, kreiensen, railway, towndringenberg, castlecoat, armslocation, within, höxter, districtshow, germanyshow, north, rhine, westphaliacoordin. Bad Driburg German baːt ˈdʁiːˌbʊʁk is a town and spa in Hoxter district in North Rhine Westphalia Germany situated on the river Aa and the Altenbeken Kreiensen railway Bad DriburgTownDringenberg CastleCoat of armsLocation of Bad Driburg within Hoxter districtBad DriburgShow map of GermanyBad DriburgShow map of North Rhine WestphaliaCoordinates 51 44 N 9 1 E 51 733 N 9 017 E 51 733 9 017CountryGermanyStateNorth Rhine WestphaliaAdmin regionDetmoldDistrictHoxterGovernment Mayor 2020 25 Burkhard Deppe 1 CDU Area Total115 07 km2 44 43 sq mi Highest elevation435 m 1 427 ft Lowest elevation147 m 482 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total18 985 Density160 km2 430 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes33014Dialling codes05253 05259 05238Vehicle registrationHX WARWebsitewww bad driburg de Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Constituent communities 2 History 2 1 Prehistory 2 2 Ancient times 2 3 Middle Ages 2 4 Modern era 2 5 Neuenheerse 3 Main sights 3 1 Buildings 3 2 Museums 3 3 Sports 4 Cultural events 5 Politics 5 1 Mayors 5 2 Town council 5 3 Coat of arms 6 Education 7 Notable people 8 Town partnerships 9 References 10 External linksGeography editBad Driburg lies on the eastern slopes of the Eggegebirge which is roughly 20 km east of Paderborn Constituent communities edit Bad Driburg consists of 10 districts Alhausen Driburg Dringenberg with Siebenstern Erpentrup Herste Kuhlsen Langeland Neuenheerse Pombsen with Bad Hermannsborn ReelsenHistory editPrehistory edit Archaeological finds bear witness to settlement in the Driburg area between about 3000 and 1800 BC in the Middle and New Stone Age Further important finds from the Bronze Age attest to quite a high culture living in the area between about 1800 and 600 BC Ancient times edit Finds of potsherds and above all coins dating up to AD 15 show at least that there was peaceful trade between the Romans and the Cherusci a Germanic tribe living in the area in antiquity Middle Ages edit In 772 Charlemagne began military operations against the Saxons Shortly thereafter one of the churches consecrated to Saint Peter was built on the Iburg This is one of the oldest churches in historic Saxony In 868 the Bishop of Paderborn founded the convent at Neuenheerse now a constituent community of Bad Driburg The convent church was built much later in the early 12th century After the Bishopric of Paderborn was reorganized in 1231 Driburg became the seat of an archdeaconate The Driburger Pfennig began to be minted at this time and has now become a very rare coin see Coat of arms below It was also at about this time or perhaps somewhat later that Driburg was granted town rights The document granting them however was lost long ago A document from 1290 nevertheless makes it clear that by this time Driburg has town rights In the 14th century the Castle Dringenberg was built In 1323 Dringenberg now a constituent community of Bad Driburg was granted town rights and was seat of the free court until 1765 On 10 April 1345 Bishop Balduin of Paderborn renewed Driburg s town rights In 1444 Otto Duke of Braunschweig Brunswick destroyed Schloss Iburg castle and had it razed Modern era edit nbsp Bad Driburg Spa and Hotel in The Count s ParkAbout 1500 came the beginnings of glassworks around Driburg In 1593 the Driburger Heilquellen healing springs were once more made usable In the next century two town fires in relatively quick succession in 1680 and again in 1683 burnt the town to the ground The 18th century brought the Seven Years War between 1756 and 1763 which left a wake of death and destruction The Franzosengrab Frenchmen s Grave on Brunnenstrasse recalls the many victims of the fighting and epidemics On 9 May 1781 or 5 April 1782 the Brunswick Oberjagermeister roughly High Hunting Master Caspar Heinrich von Sierstorpff founded the Driburg spa which is still owned today by his descendants the counts von Oeynhausen Sierstorpff In 1803 Driburg passed to Prussia and its old connection to the Prince Bishopric of Paderborn was dissolved This same year the Neuenheerse convent became an accommodation centre for needy noblewomen of all denominations In 1809 Driburg s Jewish community had its own small synagogue followed in 1905 by its own private school In 1810 after almost a thousand years the Neuenheerse convent was at last dissolved In 1813 the doctor poet and politician Friedrich Wilhelm Weber who wrote the epic Dreizehnlinden was born in Alhausen he died in Nieheim in 1894 In 1864 Driburg was connected to the railway network In 1919 Driburg was granted the designation Bad in recognition of its being a spa town In 1938 the synagogue was destroyed and the Jewish townsfolk found themselves faced with a time of hardship and persecution under the Nazis Towards the end of the Second World War on 5 April 1945 the town was taken over by American troops Bad Driburg was largely spared any great war damage Between 1945 and 1950 the spa was commandeered by the British Occupation authorities The first postwar spa season came only in 1951 In 1970 came amalgamation with the heretofore independent communities of Alhausen Erpentrup Herste Langeland Pombsen and Reelsen In 1974 came government recognition as a spa town although the town had been calling itself Bad Driburg for many years In 1975 came further amalgamations as the town of Dringenberg and the communities of Kuhlsen and Neuenheerse were merged into Bad Driburg On 9 May 1981 the spa celebrated its bicentenary Six years later on 5 May 1987 the thermal boring was successfully completed On 1 July 1990 Bad Driburg celebrated its 700 year town jubilee On 27 March 1994 the Driburg Therme thermal baths opened 3 Neuenheerse edit In 868 a convent was established on the site of today s Neuenheerse by Luithard the third bishop of Paderborn to foster the Christianization of the Saxons The church was at first consecrated to Mary mother of Jesus The sisters gathered many relics over the years of which the most important were the bones of Saint Saturnina of Sains les Marquion who became the convent s patron nbsp Neuenheerse from the Netheberg nbsp View of Neuenheerse nbsp St Anthony s Chapel Antoniuskapelle near Neuenheerse nbsp Convent church tower in NeuenheerseMain sights editBuildings edit nbsp Iburg ruinsSaint Peter s and Paul s Catholic Parish Church was built in 1894 1897 from A Guldenpfennig s plans It is a three naved neo Gothic hall church with a transept It is thoroughly complete with a pulpit an organ altars and glazing from the time when it was built There is also painting from 1909 in a Baroquelike Art Nouveau A few pieces have been saved from the former church among them the Romanesque baptismal font from about 1260 two Baroque figures of the two patron saints from 1676 as well as the late died 1463 capitular Heinrich von Driburg s gravestone The town s railway station is a late classicist building from after 1860 In the town core which is made up of many new buildings only a few half timbered buildings from the 18th and 19th centuries are still standing The Grafliches Haus roughly Count s House is a two storey classicist stone building with an outside staircase from 1780 located in the Count s Park with its hotel conference center and spa It was here that Beatrix of the Netherlands met her future husband Claus von Amsberg for the first time on New Year s Eve 1962 at a dinner hosted by the count of Oeynhausen Sierstorpff who was a distant relative of both of them There are heavily restored and made over remains of the town wall at the so called Muhlenpforte Mill Gate Neuenheerse has a moat ringed stately home Wasserschloss The Stiftskirche St Saturnina Convent church of St Saturnina in Neuenheerse Eggedom was built from 1100 to 1130 but was heavily damaged in a fire due to lightning in 1965 The castle Iburg s ruins from the 8th century can be seen in Bad Driburg nbsp Alhausen seen from the RosenbergMuseums edit Modellbahnschau MO187 a model railway display in Bad Driburg s historic goods station Sports edit Bilster Berg Drive Resort is a motorsport racetrack designed by Hermann Tilke built on a former NATO Rhine Army facility Opened in 2013 it operates as a country club and hosts track days Cultural events editShooting festival of the Bad Driburg citizens shooting guild 2nd weekend in July Shooting festival of the Schutzenbruderschaft St Fabian und Sebastian Neuenheerse e V Neuenheerse St Fabian s and Sebastian s Marksmen s Brotherhood once a year in mid August Mountain bike race Iburg Bergsprint in June part of the Challenge4MTB race seriesPolitics editMayors edit The mayor of Bad Driburg is Burkhard Deppe CDU He was elected in 2004 and reelected in 2009 2014 and 2020 His predecessor was Karl Heinz Menne CDU who was elected in 1999 Town council edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2021 CDU SPD UWG odp Greens FDP The Left total2016 17 6 2 2 3 1 1 32Coat of arms edit Bad Driburg s civic coat of arms might heraldically be described thus In azure a crenellated town wall and gate over which a crenellated tower Or above the wall sinister a Latin cross Or This tower has been a symbol of Driburg for almost 800 years and it can even be seen on the Driburg Pfennig which was struck in 1215 and of which only two examples are known today The cross stands for Paderborn to which Bad Driburg once belonged A similar coat of arms in gules red rather than azure blue was granted on 6 July 1908 but in 1973 the red was changed to blue and the cross formerly a cross pattee became a Latin cross 1 This newer version was approved by the Regierungsprasident in Detmold on 9 May 1973 Education editGem Grundschule Katholische Grundschule Katholische Grundschule Neuenheerse Gemeinschaftsgrundschule Dringenberg Stadtische Grundschule Stadtisches Gymnasium Gymnasium St Xaver Gymnasium St Kaspar Caspar Heinrich Schule Gemeinschafts Hauptschule der Stadt Bad Driburg Friedrich Wilhelm Weber Realschule der Stadt Bad Driburg Stadtische Schule fur LernbehinderteNotable people edit nbsp Friedrich Wilhelm WeberFriedrich Wilhelm Weber 1813 1894 doctor and poet of Dreizehnlinden member of the Prussian Landtag for the constituency Hoxter Warburg 1862 1893 Lilli Schwarzkopf born 1983 heptathlete lives in Bad Driburg district Siebenstern participated in the Olympic Summer Games 2008 in Beijing and 2012 in London Town partnerships editThe partnership with Uebigau citizens shooting guild in southwestern Brandenburg has existed since 1990 References edit Wahlergebnisse in NRW Kommunalwahlen 2020 Land Nordrhein Westfalen accessed 21 June 2021 Bevolkerung der Gemeinden Nordrhein Westfalens am 31 Dezember 2021 in German Landesbetrieb Information und Technik NRW Retrieved 20 June 2022 Geschichte Archived from the original on 2006 08 10 External links edit nbsp Media related to Bad Driburg at Wikimedia Commons Official site in German Bad Driburg in the Kulturatlas Westfalen in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bad Driburg amp oldid 1110304752, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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