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Celle

Celle (German pronunciation: [ˈtsɛlə]) is a town and capital of the district of Celle, in Lower Saxony, Germany. The town is situated on the banks of the river Aller, a tributary of the Weser, and has a population of about 71,000. Celle is the southern gateway to the Lüneburg Heath, has a castle (Schloss Celle) built in the Renaissance and Baroque style and a picturesque old town centre (the Altstadt) with over 400 timber-framed houses, making Celle one of the most remarkable members of the German Timber-Frame Road. From 1378 to 1705, Celle was the official residence of the Lüneburg branch of the dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg (House of Welf) who had been banished from their original ducal seat by its townsfolk.[3]

Celle
Celle Castle
Location of Celle within Celle district
Celle (district)Lower SaxonyHeidekreisUelzen (district)Gifhorn (district)Hanover RegionFaßbergSüdheideEschedeLohheide (unincorporated area)BergenWinsenWietzeHambührenCelleAdelheidsdorfNienhagenWathlingenBröckelEicklingenWienhausenLanglingenHohneLanglingenEldingenAhnsbeckBeedenbostelLachendorf
Celle
Celle
Coordinates: 52°37′32″N 10°04′57″E / 52.62556°N 10.08250°E / 52.62556; 10.08250Coordinates: 52°37′32″N 10°04′57″E / 52.62556°N 10.08250°E / 52.62556; 10.08250
CountryGermany
StateLower Saxony
DistrictCelle
Subdivisions17 districts
Government
 • Mayor (2017–22) Jörg Nigge[1] (CDU)
Area
 • Total176.01 km2 (67.96 sq mi)
Elevation
40 m (130 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total69,279
 • Density390/km2 (1,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
29221–29229
Dialling codes05141, 05145, 05086
Vehicle registrationCE
Websitewww.celle.de

Geography

 
The Weser watershed, showing the location of Celle on the Aller.

The town of Celle lies in the glacial valley of the Aller, about 40 kilometres (25 mi) northeast of Hanover, 60 kilometres (37 mi) northwest of Brunswick and 120 kilometres (75 mi) south of Hamburg. With 71,000 inhabitants it is, next to Lüneburg, the largest Lower Saxon town between Hanover and Hamburg.

Expansion

The town covers an area of 176.05 square kilometres (67.97 sq mi). Flowing from the northeast, the Lachte discharges into the Aller within the town's borders, as does the Fuhse flowing from the southeast. The Aller heads westwards towards Verden an der Aller where it joins the Weser.

Climate

Celle's annual precipitation is 692 millimetres (27.2 in) which puts it in the middle third of locations in Germany. 39% of the Deutscher Wetterdienst's weather stations record lower values. The wettest month is August which has 1.5 times the amount of precipitation as February, the driest month. Monthly precipitation varies only slightly and precipitation is very evenly spread throughout the year. Only 1% of German weather stations show a lower annual variation.

Subdivisions

The town of Celle has the following 17 boroughs or Stadtteile, some of which were previously independent villages (population as at 1 January 2005): Altencelle (4,998), Altenhagen (922), Blumlage/Altstadt (8,526), Bostel (455), Boye (832), Garßen (2,978), Groß Hehlen (2,773), Hehlentor (7,974), Hustedt (736), Klein Hehlen (5,782), Lachtehausen (639), Neuenhäusen (8,082), Neustadt/Heese (10,887), Scheuen (1,165), Vorwerk (2,842), Westercelle (7,183) and Wietzenbruch (4,805).

History

Middle Ages

Celle was first mentioned in a document of A.D. 985 as Kiellu[4] (which means Fischbucht[5] or fishing bay). It was granted the right to mint and circulate its own coins under the Münzrecht (minting privileges) during the 11th century and several coins were found in the Sandur hoard in the Faroes. In 1292 Duke Otto II the Strict (1277–1330), a Welf who ruled the Principality of Lüneburg from 1277 to 1330 left Altencelle, where there had been a defences in the form of a circular rampart (the Ringwall von Burg) since the 10th century, and founded a rectangular settlement by the existing castle (Burg) 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) to the northwest. In 1301 he granted Celle its town privileges,[6] and in 1308 started construction on the town church.

In 1378 Celle became the Residenz of the dukes of Saxe-Wittenberg and, in 1433, the princes of Lüneburg took up residence in the castle (Schloss). The ducal palace was situated on a triangle between the Aller and its tributary, the Fuhse. A moat connecting the rivers was built in 1433, turning the town centre into an island. In 1452 Duke Frederick the Pious of Lüneburg founded a Franciscan monastery. In 1464 the grain shipping monopoly generated an economic upturn for the town.

Early modern period

 
Rooftop view of Celle
 
Hugenottenstraße is the main street of the former French quarter
 
Emigrantenstraße, a historical street laid out for Austrian refugees
 
JVA Celle which is often mistaken for a castle

In 1524 the Reformation was introduced into Celle. In 1570 Duke William the Younger built the castle chapel which was consecrated in 1585.

In 1660 Celle had 3 750 inhabitants.[7] From 1665 to 1705 Celle experienced a cultural boom as a Residenz under Duke George William. This has been particularly put down to his French wife, Eleonore d'Olbreuse, who brought fellow Huguenot Christians and Italian architects to Celle. During this time the French and Italian Gardens were laid out and the baroque castle theatre built. Because of the persecution of Huguenots under Louis XIV many French Huguenots sought refuge in Germany, especially in Berlin and in the towns of Celle, Neuwied and Hanau. About 300 Huguenots settled down in Celle, where a new residential area was laid out for them in the southwest of the city centre. Its main street, Hugenottenstrasse is still a sightworthy historical street with well-preserved wooden houses built at the beginning of the 18th century. Many French refugees worked in the castle as cooks and servants, but some of them opened shops in Celle as tailors, carpenters, joiners, confectioners, wig makers and glovers thus introducing some French cuisine, fashion and lifestyle into the town. Some years later protestant refugees from Austria sought refuge in Celle as well. Emigrantenstraße is another historical street which was laid out for the Austrians.

In 1705 the last duke of the Brunswick–Lüneburg line died and Celle, along with the Principality of Lüneburg, passed back to the Hanover line of the Welfs. By way of compensation for the loss of its status as a Residenz town numerous administrative institutions were established in Celle, such as the Higher Court of Appeal (Oberappellationsgericht), the prison and the State Stud Farm. That began its development into an administrative and judicial centre. Even today the Lower Saxony-Bremen State Social Security Tribunal and the High Court responsible for most of Lower Saxony are based in Celle, amongst others.

Celle is also still home to a prison (the Justizvollzugsanstalt Celle or JVA Celle) which was built in a baroque style in the west of the city centre from 1710 to 1731.[8] Sometimes tourists mistake it for a castle because of its typical baroque architecture. That the citizens of Celle once − in a vote − chose to have a prison in Celle rather than a university in order to protect the virtue of their daughters is not verifiable, but it has remained a persistent anecdote in popular folklore.

In August 1714, George Elector of Hanover, Duke of Brunswick–Lüneburg (King George I) ascended to the British throne. Between then and 1866, when the town became Prussian during the Austro-Prussian War as part of the province of Hanover, Celle was a possession of the British Hanoverian line.

In 1786 Albrecht Thaer founded the first German Agricultural Testing Institute in the meadows at the Dammasch (dam marsh) (today Thaer's Garden). The Albrecht-Thaer School is nowadays part of a vocational centre in the Celle sub-district of Altenhagen.

 
New Town Hall

Modern period

In 1842 the Cambridge Dragoons Barracks (Cambridge-Dragoner-Kaserne) for the homonymous regiment named after the Hanoveran Viceroy Duke Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, was built in Celle. After being extended in 1913 and partially rebuilt after a fire in 1936, it was renamed Goodwood Barracks in 1945 and from 1976 to 1996 was the headquarters of Panzerbrigade 33 in the German armed forces, the Bundeswehr. In 1989 it was renamed again to Cambridge-Dragoner-Kaserne. Since 1996 the area has mainly been used to house one of the largest youth centres in Lower Saxony.

From 1869 to 1872 an infantry barracks was built for the 77th Infantry Regiment which also gave the main street (running the length of the front of the barracks) its name of 77er Strasse. In 1938 it was renamed the Heidekaserne ("Heath Barracks"). After the Second World War the barracks was used by British troops until 1993 during which time 94 Locating Regiment Royal Artillery held residency for over 25 years, followed briefly by 14 Signal Regiment, who relocated from Scheuen until the barracks were handed back to the local authorities. Today the New Town Hall (Neue Rathaus) and Celle Council Offices are housed in the restored brick building. Residential buildings and a town park have been established on the rest of the terrain.

 
Steel engraving of the market place around 1845

In 1892 − with the help of numerous citizens' donations − the present-day Bomann Museum with its important folkloric and town history collections was founded. In 1913 the 74 metre high clock tower was built on the town church, its clockwork underwent a major restoration in 2008. In the 1920s the silk mill was built. It was merged in 1932 with the one in Peine to become the Seidenwerk Spinnhütte AG. This concern expanded itself during the Nazi era into an armaments centre under the name of "Seidenwerk Spinnhütte AG". A subsidiary founded in 1936, the "Mitteldeutsche Spinnhütte AG", which led war preparations through its branches in the central German towns of Apolda, Plauen, Osterode, Pirna and Wanfried. Its only product was parachute silk that was needed for the paratroopers of the Wehrmacht.[9]

In September 1929 Rudolph Karstadt opened a Karstadt department store in Celle town centre, the façade of which was identical with that of the Karstadt store on Berlin's Hermannplatz. The Celle branch was demolished in the 1960s and replaced by a controversial new building, whose aluminium braced facade was meant to represent Celle's timber-framed houses.

Nazi era

 
Memorial of Celler Hasenjagd
 
Information board at the memorial

During Kristallnacht, the anti-Jewish pogrom in Nazi Germany on 9/10 November 1938, the synagogue in Celle was only saved from complete destruction because it is a very narrow lane and there would have been a risk to the adjacent leather factory and other parts of the historical city centre with its old wooden houses.

On 1 April 1939 Altenhäusen, Klein Hehlen, Neuenhäusen, Vorwerk and Wietzenbruch were incorporated into Celle. On 8 April 1945 the only serious allied bombing attack on the city during World War II occurred, 2.2% of the town was destroyed, especially on the industrial areas and railway freight terminal. A train in which about 4,000 prisoners were being transported to the nearby Bergen-Belsen concentration camp was hit. The attack claimed hundreds of casualties, but some of the prisoners managed to escape into the nearby woods. SS guards and Celle citizens participated in the so-called 'Celle hare hunt' (Celler Hasenjagd).[10] The 'hunt' claimed several hundred dead and went on until 10 April 1945 and represented the darkest chapter in Celle's history.[11] The exact number of victims has not been determined. Several of the perpetrators were later tried and convicted of this war crime. A memorial with an information board and a copper beech tree was inaugurated in Triftanlagen park on 8 April 1992. The German word for copper beech is "Blutbuche" meaning blood beech.

About 2.2% of Celle (67 houses) was destroyed in the Second World War. 550 houses were heavily damaged and 614 were slightly damaged. Celle was spared from further destruction by surrendering without a fight to advancing allied troops on 12 April 1945, so that the historical city centre and the castle survived the war completely unscathed.

Military

 
German Army Anti-tank helicopter Bölkow Bo 105 at Celle Air Base.

In Nazi Germany, Celle was an important garrison location. Elements of the 17th and 73rd Infantry Regiments and the 19th Artillery Regiment were garrisoned in the town. Celle was also the headquarters of a military district command and a military records office.

The different German Army barracks (including the Freiherr von Fritsch Barracks in Scheuen and the Cambridge Dragoons Barracks in the city) were used as sites for the German 33rd Armoured Brigade until the 1990s. The Celle Air Base (Immelmann Barracks) in the District of Wietzenbruch is now the site of the Training Centre of the Army Aviation School and the Cambridge Dragoons Barracks has now become a youth cultural centre (CD-Kaserne).

The British Army barracks, which as Celle Station formed part of Bergen-Hohne Garrison, were handed over to the German authorities on 5 November 2012. Since German reunification, Celle has largely lost its role as a major garrison town.

Post-war era

After the war Celle applied, along with Bonn and Frankfurt, to become the seat for the Parliamentary Council (Parlamentarischer Rat), the immediate post-war governmental body in Germany, later superseded by the West German Bundestag. In the end the privilege went to Bonn.

Trenchard Barracks in Celle was the most modern barracks in Germany during the war, with blackout blinds between the double-glazed windows and other features which became commonplace afterwards. The cellar doors were trial rooms for the number of inmates from Belsen who could be gassed. When Belsen concentration camp was liberated Trenchard Barracks was used as a hospital for surviving inmates who needed treatment. Later it became the Barracks for the 1st Battalion of the Rifle Brigade.

On 1 January 1973 Celle lost its status as an independent town (Kreisfreie Stadt) and became the largest municipality in the new district (Kreis) of Celle. It also became the largest town in the new region (Regierungsbezirk) of Lüneburg. At the same time the localities of Ummern, Pollhöfen and Hahnenhorn were incorporated into Gifhorn district. Since then the parish of Hohne has looked after six villages (Hohne, Helmerkamp, Spechtshorn, Ummern, Pollhöfen and Hahnenhorn) in two rural districts. The town of Celle has also incorporated a number of villages from the surrounding area.

On 25 July 1978 a staged bomb attack was made on the outer wall of the prison. This was initially blamed on the Red Army Faction, but was later revealed to have been perpetrated by Lower Saxony's intelligence service, the Verfassungsschutz. The incident became known as the Celle Hole.

In 2004 the region of Lüneburg was dissolved along with the rest of Lower Saxony's administrative districts. Celle is currently the twelfth largest town in Lower Saxony.

Incorporation of municipalities

Growth in population

In the Middle Ages and early modern period Celle only had a few thousand inhabitants. The population grew only slowly and dropped frequently as a result of many wars, epidemics and periods of famine. Not until the beginnings of industrialisation in the 19th century did population growth accelerate. It reached a total of 8,800 in 1818 but by 1900 this had more than doubled to 20,000. The incorporation of the surrounding villages on 1 April 1939 saw a further (artificial) rise in numbers to 38,000.

Shortly after the Second World War the many refugees and displaced persons from the German areas of Eastern Europe led to a steep rise in the number of inhabitants within just a few months from around 17,000 to 55,000 by December 1945. The addition of new municipalities on 1 January 1973 saw an additional 18,691 people being included within the borough of Celle and bringing the total population to 75,178 − its historical high point. On 30 June 2005 the official number of inhabitants within Celle borough, according to an update by the Lower Saxony State Department of Statistics, was 71,402 (only main residences, and after adjustments with the other state departments).

The following overview shows the population numbers based on the 'catchment area' at the time. The 1818 figure is an estimate, the rest are based on census results(¹) or official updates by the Department of Statistics. From 1871 the returns show the population actually present, from 1925 the resident population and since 1987 the population residing at their main residence. Before 1871 the numbers are based on various, different census-gathering processes.

Year Population
1818 8,800
3 December 1855 ¹ 13,117
3 December 1861 ¹ 14,100
3 December 1864 ¹ 14,900
3 December 1867 ¹ 16,200
1 December 1871 ¹ 16,147
1 December 1875 ¹ 18,200
1 December 1880 ¹ 18,800
1 December 1885 ¹ 18,800
1 December 1890 ¹ 18,901
2 December 1895 ¹ 19,438
Year Population
1 December 1900 ¹ 19,883
1 December 1905 ¹ 21,390
1 December 1910 ¹ 23,263
1 December 1916 ¹ 20,521
5 December 1917 ¹ 19,997
8 October 1919 ¹ 23,589
16 June 1925 ¹ 25,456
16 June 1933 ¹ 27,734
17 May 1939 ¹ 37,799
31 December 1945 55,059
29 October 1946 ¹ 52,281
Year Population
13 September 1950 ¹ 59,667
25 September 1956 ¹ 57,239
6 June 1961 ¹ 58,506
31 December 1965 58,766
27 May 1970 ¹ 57,155
31 December 1975 74,347
31 December 1980 72,820
31 December 1985 70,482
25 May 1987 ¹ 71,222
31 December 1990 72,260
31 December 1995 73,936
Year Population
31 December 2000 72,127
30 June 2005 71,402
1 January 2006 71,371
1 January 2008 70,850
31 December 2011 69,972
31 December 2014 68,721
31 December 2017 69,706

¹ Census results

Government

For the purposes of Bundestag elections the town of Celle belongs to the constituency of Celle-Uelzen. In 1983, 1987, 1990 and 1994 Klaus-Jürgen Hedrich (CDU) won the direct vote. In 1998, 2002 and 2005 Peter Struck (SPD) won the majority of votes. In 2009 Henning Otte (CDU) received the direct mandate.

For Lower Saxony State Parliament (Landtag) elections Celle forms the constituency of Celle-Stadt with its surrounding area. In 2003 the CDU won the majority of votes.

Town council

The town council has 42 elected members as well as the directly elected mayor (Oberbürgermeister). Since the local elections of 11 September 2016, it has consisted of ten parties or voting groups:[12]

  • CDU − 16 seats
  • SPD − 9 seats
  • AfD - 4 seats
  • Bündnis 90/Die Grünen − 3 seats
  • Zukunft Celle − 3 seats
  • FDP − 2 seats
  • Die Linke/Alliance for Social Justice (Bündnis Soziale Gerechtigkeit) – Celle (BSG-CE) − 2 seats
  • Die Unabhängigen - 2 seats
  • Die Partei - 1 seat
  • WG (Wählergemeinschaft) − 1 seat

Mayors (Oberbürgermeister)

  • 1877–1895: Otto Hattendorf (1822–1905)
  • 1895–1924: Wilhelm Denicke
  • 1924–1945: Ernst Meyer (1887–1948)
  • 1945: Max Vogel
  • 1945–1946: Walther Hörstmann (1898–1977)
  • 1946–1948: Richard Schäfer
  • 1948–1952: Franz-Georg Guizetti
  • 1952–1964: Wilhelm Heinichen (1883–1967)
  • 1964–1973: Kurt Blanke (1900–1997)
  • 1973–1985: Helmuth Hörstmann (1909–1993)
  • 1986–2001: Herbert Severin
  • 2001–2008: Martin Biermann (CDU)
  • 2009–2017: Dirk-Ulrich Mende (SPD)
  • since 2017: Jörg Nigge (CDU)

Coat of arms

 
The armorial achievement of the town of Celle

Blazoning: Azure, a castle, triple-towered, embattled above the port, all argent, masoned sable, the port sable, the towers roofed gules. The port charged with a lion rampant azure surrounded by seven hearts gules on an inescutcheon bendwise or.[13]

The helmet on the full coat of arms is described as follows: On the shield is a blue and white wreathed helmet with a mantling, blue on the outside and white on the inside. The crest consists of two sickles leaning outwards with red handles. The sickles have their points upwards, blades inward-facing and are decorated with peacock's eyes on the outside edges.

Flag

The town flag is divided into two equal stripes in the town colours of blue and white. It can also contain the town coat of arms.[14]

Official seal

The town of Celle has an official seal whose design is based on the oldest town seal of 1288 with the circumscription Stadt Celle. It depicts a gatehouse between two castle towers. In the open gateway under a decorative helmet there is a shield tilting to the left charged with the lion of the Dukes of Lüneburg.[15]

Twin towns – sister cities

 
Signpost of twin towns of Celle

Celle is twinned with:[16]

Main sights

 
half-timber house (Bergstr.) with wrong replaced halves
 
Church St.Marien with its white steeple

The buildings in Celle's old town centre date back to the 16th century, among them numerous (and some 480 restored) half-timber houses with wood carvings, making Celle an important city for tourism in the southern Lüneburg Heath region. One of the most famous houses is Hoppenerhaus dating from 1532. The Old Latin School was built in 1602. The most impressive building in Celle is the ducal palace, Schloss Celle, which was built in 1530 in a well-kept park at the site of the former castle. It was enlarged in a baroque style in the 17th century, and a renaissance chapel and a special theatre which is the oldest theatre in Germany were added in 1674. The Old City Hall which is famous for its sandstone carvings was built 1561-1579 in a Renaissance style.[17] Another major attraction is the Stadtkirche (town church) with its white tower, from where the town trumpeter blows a fanfare twice a day (an old tradition that was revived as a tourist attraction). Originally it was a small gothic chapel built in 1380, but it was enlarged from 1675 to 1698 and transformed into a baroque church with impressive stucco ornaments.

Hugenottenstrasse is a historical street with well-preserved wooden houses built at the beginning of the 18th century. It was the main street of a residential area specially laid out for French Huguenots who sought refuge in Celle because of the Persecution of Huguenots under Louis XV in the 17th century. The oldest house dates from 1693. On the corner of Emigrantenstraße, another historical street which was laid out for Austrian refugees at the beginning of the 18th century, Neuhäuser Kirche, a Lutheran church was founded in 1710. It was enlarged from 1852 to 1866. Its steeple dates from the same period.

Even a large prison (Justizvollzugsanstalt, JVA) was built in a baroque style in the west of the city centre from 1710 to 1731. It was the only historical building of Celle which was damaged during the air raid on 8 April 1945. It was repaired after the war. Sometimes tourists walking from the railway station to the centre mistake it for a castle because of its typical baroque architecture.

Celle has a synagogue built in 1740, one of the few that survived the Nazi pogrom night of 1938, thanks to its location in a narrow street of wooden half-timber houses next to an important leather factory that would have been collaterally damaged.

The Albrecht Thaer School, a school in Celle, was founded by Albrecht Daniel Thaer in 1796.

Museums

 
Bomann-Museum near castle with coat of arms

The Bomann Museum opposite the castle has works by the artist Eberhard Schlotter and has exhibitions of local folklore and town history. It houses the Tansey Collection, a collection of portrait miniatures. The Celle Art Museum (Kunstmuseum Celle) with its Robert Simon collection is affiliated with the Bomann Museum.

In the castle itself is the Residenz Museum, which makes use of its premises and an exhibition to document the princely House of Welf. The Garrison Museum deals with the history of Celle Garrison from 1866 to the present day, whilst the Shooting Museum (Schützenmuseum) in Haus der Stadtmauer is devoted to Celle's shooting club history. The work of Celle's Neues Bauen architect, Otto Haesler, is charted by the Haesler Museum. And in the old storage barn (Treppenspeicher) built in 1607, as well as the orangery, built in 1677 for the Institute of Apiculture, an exhibition of beekeeping may be viewed.

Theatre

The Schlosstheater Celle was founded in 1674 and is the oldest, still working theatre in Germany and the oldest baroque theatre in Europe. It has a main auditorium and two smaller stages (Malersaal and Turmbühne) as well as an additional external venue (Halle 19). Located at the edge of the old town (Altstadt) is the performing arts theatre Kunst & Bühne which is supported by the town and whose repertoire ranges from comedy to songs, jazz, cabaret and films.

Parks

The picturesque French Garden lies immediately south of the Altstadt and is where the Lower Saxon Institute of Apiculture may be found. The Castle Park, with its moats, is on the site of the former defensive fortifications of the ducal castle. Along Bahnhofstraße there is an area of common pasture used as a public park and play area (Triftanlagen). On the right bank of the Aller are the Dammasch Meadows, a popular destination for trips and recreation, and immediately next to them is the garden of medicinal plants and the Thaers Garden with its little manor house. By the New Town Hall (Neues Rathaus) is the recently laid-out town park. Other important open areas include the various town cemeteries, such as the picturesque forest cemetery, the Waldfriedhof, with its nature garden.

Image gallery

Events

The Congress Union Celle is an event centre for conferences and exhibitions as well as stage, music and festive events.

The CD-Kaserne ("Cambridge Dragoons (CD) Barracks") is a municipal youth and cultural centre with exhibition rooms covering the subject areas of music, film, art and society. Also located there is the Bunte Haus which is a charitable cultural centre. It focuses on projects and events dealing with social questions covering aspects of culture, social work and civic education. Its workers are volunteers. Celle also hosts a Christmas market every year in the old town centre.

Sports

The Celler Oilers are an ice hockey team that play in the Regionalliga or regional league. From 1968 to the mid-1970s Celle's football club, TuS Celle, played in the German second division (then called the Regionalliga or "regional league"). After two bankruptcies and relegation, it was promoted to the Lower Saxony league for the 2004–2005 season and, since 2005 has played in the Northeast Lower Saxony league (Oberliga Niedersachsen Nordost), which is fifth tier of the German football league system.

The handball club, SV Garßen-Celle, has fielded a women's team that had played in the women's Second Division North since the mid-1990s. In 2009 it came first and was promoted to the First Division.

Since 1983 the Celle Wasa Run (Celler Wasa-Lauf) has taken place every year on the second Sunday of March in Celle's town centre. This has become one of the biggest running events in Germany for distances less than a marathon and is divided into runs of several distances: a children's run of 2.5 km (1.6 mi) and runs of 5, 10, 15 and 20 km (12.4 mi) distance. For several years there has also been a hiking (Wandern) event over 11 km (7 mi) along the Aller as well as Walking and Nordic Walking events. 2004 saw a record number of participants with 11,232 men and women taking part. Celle is one of five centres for the Lower Saxony Rowing Club. The Celle Sprint Regatta takes place annually in October on the Upper Aller at the Ziegeninsel and is hosted by the Hermann Billung Celle, Celler Ruderverein and Ruderclub Ernestinum-Hölty Celle rowing clubs.

The Celle Triathlon always takes place in August. This was originally organised by the Celle branch of the German Alpine Club (Deutscher Alpenverein), but for several years has been run by SV Altencelle.

Since 2001 Celle has played host to the In-Line Skating and Handbike Marathon from Hanover to Celle. This is one of the biggest races of its kind in Germany. In 2007 the European Masters speed skating championship took place as part of this event.

Celle also hosted Angola's national football team during the 2006 Football World Cup.

Economy and Infrastructure

Economy

Tourism is a large contributor to Celle's economy, especially in the summer months during jazz, wine, and other festivals, which attract thousands of visitors.

The town is not really known for heavy industry, but many businesses which have started up in Celle and some, such as Rosa Graf Cosmetics, have reached the world market. Celle does have some links to the oil industry, though, particularly firms engineering parts for drilling; notably Baker Hughes (INTEQ and Hughes Christensen divisions; oil and gas industry service companies specialising in MWD, Wireline, Drill-bits, Drilling Applications Engineering, etc.), Cameron[18] (global provider of pressure control, processing, flow control and compression systems as well as project management and aftermarket services for the oil and gas and process industries), and ITAG[19] (drilling contractors and manufacturing plant). Halliburton, founded in 1919, is one of the world's largest providers of products and services to the energy industry and has an office in Celle.[20] There is also a school for advance drilling techniques.

Other light industries include electronics, food manufacture, and metal, wood and plastic processing. In addition there an ink manufacturer (formerly Hostmann-Steinberg now hubergroup), paper factory (Werner Achilles Glanzfolien-Kaschieranstalt) and musical instruments makers (including Moeck). Celle is also home to Germany's Bee institute which carries out scientific studies on the bee species as well as keeping its own bee hives.

Celle is also known as a town of civil servants, due to the large number of government officials and lawyers who work there providing important administrative and judicial services to the region. Agriculture and forestry also play a role.

Foodstuffs

Celle is the base for a crispbread factory, Barilla Wasa Deutschland. Regional and to some extent national suppliers are the high-alcohol drink manufactures of the Ratzeputz and Alter Provisor brands. Originally made in Celle's Altstadt, the herb-based spirit Ratzeputz is now distilled on the Westercelle industrial estate, Alter Provisor is still produced and sold in the Altstadt. Celler Bier is also established here with its six varieties of beer. Another Celle speciality is Rohe Roulade, which initially gained fame in the Gasthaus Krohne (now Dackel's Krohne) in the district of Blumlage and is now offered in many of Celle's restaurants and pubs.

Transport and logistics

The East Hanoverian Railways (Osthannoversche Eisenbahnen or OHE) is a goods and passenger transport company covering the north German area with its headquarters in Celle. Also based in Celle are the postal distribution centre for Deutsche Post's post code district 29 and the transport company DTLS – Drilling Tools Logistic & Service.

Transport

Rail

Celle lies on the Hanover – Celle – Uelzen – Lüneburg – Hamburg line. Intercity (IC) trains to Hanover and Hamburg stop hourly at the station as do individual ICE trains during the rush hour. metronom trains link Celle to Uelzen, Hanover and Göttingen as part of the regional transport network. Celle is the terminus for routes S 6 and S 7 of the Hanover S-Bahn.

The section between Celle and Großburgwedel was built in the 1920s as a high-speed line for testing and record journeys across the heath-like, so-called Wietzenbruch. It was nicknamed the Hare Railway (Hasenbahn) due to its environment which was devoid of habitation and the numerous hares killed on the line in its early days. In 1965 this section via Langenhagen was electrified for the TEE and IC services from Hamburg to Hanover, in order to save routing them via Lehrte and having to change direction in Hanover. Later it was upgraded for traffic operating regularly at 200 km/h (124 mph). Formerly there were railway links from Celle via Schwarmstedt to Bremen (Aller Valley Railway) and via Plockhorst to Brunswick; these were closed in the 1970s and have largely been dismantled. In 2004 the last remaining branch line from Gifhorn to Celle via Wienhausen, that was still used in places for goods traffic, was finally closed and work on lifting the line in the area of the town has begun.

The East Hanoverian Railways run goods trains on several branch lines in the Celle area, including those to Wittingen, Soltau and Munster. Occasionally heritage trains and specials also run on these lines.

The Lehrte–Celle railway is an important route for goods trains and was converted in 1998 into a modern S-Bahn line.

A tramway network of 2 lines had been operated since 1907 by the Celler Straßenbahn but this was closed and dismantled between 1954 and 1956.

Road

Important links are:

Air

 
The Berlin Airlift memorial at Celle Air Base

Hanover-Langenhagen airport with international flight connections is about 35 kilometres (22 miles) away.

The Army airfield at Celle is 4.5 kilometres southwest of the town centre on the edge of the district of Wietzenbruch. Operated as RAF Celle after the Second World War, it was from here in 1948–49 that supply flights to Berlin took off as part of the Berlin Airlift. Today the airfield is mainly used by the Army Aviation School (Heeresfliegerwaffenschule) as a training airfield for helicopter pilots.
Celle-Arloh airfield near the district of Scheuen is a recreational airfield. It also offers round trips over the town of Celle and the Lüneburg Heath. There is also a glider airfield at Scheuen.

Water

Celle harbour is only used by tourists today. From Celle the Aller is classified downstream as a federal shipping lane; upstream a weir prevents ships passing. In former centuries Celle was an important transhipment station for ships between Brunswick and the ports in Bremen via Oker, Aller and the (Lower) Weser. Bremen and Brunswick merchants had specific tasks from the Dukes of Celle and later the town of Celle in order to ensure the safety of transport, because the speed of the Aller in the area of Celle made loading and unloading in the port necessary.

From 1900 the quantity of trade through Celle Harbour steadily decreased and switched to road and rail. Until 1970 the transport of grain to the Celle Rathsmühle and the transport of potash salts were still significant.

Town public transport services

The firm of CeBus runs eight bus lines around the town. There are 15 bus lines for regional services, with which the villages in the district of Celle can be reached. Sometimes town and region bus services are combined.

Media

The Cellesche Zeitung is the local daily newspaper with a circulation of 34,977 (as at: 2nd quarter 2005). In addition there is the bi-weekly Celler Kurier and weekly Celler Blitz as well as a monthly town magazine, the Celler Scene. Another monthly is the Celler Blickpunkt. The revista appears roughly every 2 months with a left-wing perspective of politics and culture.

Education

Schools

The grammar schools (Gymnasien) in Celle are the Hermann Billung Gymnasium which majors in mathematics, the sciences, Spanish and bilingual education (history to level 7 in English), the Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria Gymnasium with a focus on music and European studies, the Gymnasium Ernestinum with Latin and ancient Greek, which was founded in 1328 as the Latin school, and the Hölty Gymnasium with courses in Russian and which has a mathematics and science branch.

The other general schools are the three secondary schools (Realschulen) (Westercelle, Auf der Heese, Burgstraße), six combined primary (Grundschulen) and secondary modern (Hauptschulen) schools (Altstadt, Blumlage, Groß Hehlen, Heese-Süd, Neustadt, Wietzenbruch) as well as nine primary schools. In addition there are also the Catholic primary school (Katholische Schule) and the Montessori primary and secondary school, Freie Aktive Schule Celle.

Vocational schools

Celle has four vocational establishments (Berufsbildende Schulen or BBS): BBS I − Economics and Administration, BBS II (Axel Bruns Schule) − Technology, Design and IT, BBS III − Health and Social Studies − and BBS IV (Albrecht Thaer Schule) − Agriculture, Domestic Science and Nutrition.

Other educational establishments

Since 2003 Celle has been the location for the private College of Economics (Fachhochschule der Wirtschaft or FHDW), which offers courses of studies in mechatronics and the Bachelor of Business Administration. Another important educational establishment in Celle is the Bohrmeisterschule which is a technical college for drilling, extraction and pipeline technology.

Celle is home to one of the two Lower Saxony State Firefighting Schools. It was also the location for the Celler Schule, one of the GEMA foundation institutions for up and coming songwriters, from 1996 to 2008, before it moved to Springe.

In addition there is an adult education centre in Celle, which has numerous branches in the surrounding districts.

Around Celle

Celle is known for being an entry point for tourists to the Lüneburg Heath. Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, where Anne Frank died in 1945, is located in the district of Celle; today, a memorial and exhibition centre mark the camp site.

Notable people

 
 
Friedrich Wieseler

Born in Celle before 1850

Born in Celle 1850 to 1950

 
Roland Freisler, 1942
 
Lilo Wanders 2009
 
Christian Oliver

Born in Celle since 1950

Residents of Celle

 
Caroline Mathilda
 
Heinrich Albertz (left) with President Heinrich Lübke 1966

Honorary citizen

  • Otto Telschow (1876–1945), Nazi Party official, Member of Reichstag 1930–1945. Honorary citizenship granted 1936 and revoked in 2007

See also

References

  1. ^ "Verzeichnis der direkt gewählten Bürgermeister/-innen und Landräte/Landrätinnen". Landesamt für Statistik Niedersachsen. April 2021.
  2. ^ "LSN-Online Regionaldatenbank, Tabelle A100001G: Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes, Stand 31. Dezember 2021" (in German). Landesamt für Statistik Niedersachsen.
  3. ^ Michelin et Cie (1993). Michelin Tourist Guide Germany (1st ed.) Clermont-Ferrand: Michelin. ISBN 2-06-150401-9.
  4. ^ Adolf Bach: Deutsche Namenkunde. Band II, 1: Die deutschen Ortsnamen. Heidelberg 1953, p. 36
  5. ^ Heinrich Wesche: Unsere niedersächsischen Ortsnamen. o. O. 1957, S. 38
  6. ^ Heinrich Gottfried Gengler: Regesten und Urkunden zur Verfassungs- und Rechtsgeschichte der deutschen Städte im Mittelalter, Erlangen 1863, S. 479–482; see also S. 982–983.
  7. ^ Jürgen Ricklefs et al.: "Geschichte der Stadt Celle", p. 103. Köln 1959.
  8. ^ Hans Pusen: Harz, Hannover, Lüneburger Heide, p. 34. München 1972
  9. ^ Hubertus Feußner, Die Spinnhütte, = Apoldaer Heimat. Beiträge zur Natur und Heimatgeschichte der Stadt Apolda und ihrer Umgebung 2008, S. 29ff.
  10. ^ Celinscak, Mark (2015). Distance from the Belsen Heap: Allied Forces and the Liberation of a Concentration Camp. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781442615700.
  11. ^ "Shifting Memories. The Nazi Past in the New Germany" K. Neumann. University of Michigan Press, 2000
  12. ^ "Bürger- und Ratsinformationssystem". Residenzstadt Celle. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  13. ^ Primary constitution of the town of Celle, 16th amendment of 12 July 2007 § 1 paragraph 2
  14. ^ Primary constitution of the town of Celle, 16th amendment of 12 July 2007 § 1 paragraph 3
  15. ^ Primary constitution of the town of Celle, 16th amendment of 12 July 2007 § 1, paragraph 3
  16. ^ "Partnerstädte". celle.de (in German). Celle. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
  17. ^ Hans Pusen: Harz, Hannover, Lüneburger Heide, p. 34. München 1972
  18. ^ "Cameron German office locations." Cameron. Retrieved on 31 March 2009.
  19. ^ "ITAG official website." Retrieved on 31 March 2009.
  20. ^ "Halliburton German office location." Halliburton. Retrieved on 13 January 2009.
  21. ^ "Sophia Dorothea" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 418.
  22. ^ "Galliard, John Ernest" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 20. 1889.
  23. ^ "Schulze, Ernst" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
  24. ^ "Expert and historian Dr. Volker Ullrich receives honorary doctorate at the University of Jena" 1 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine (PDF; 124 kB), University of Jena, 8 December 2008. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  25. ^ "Arndt, Johann" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 628.
  26. ^ "Arndt, Johann" . Encyclopedia Americana. 1920.
  27. ^ "Leisewitz, Johann Anton" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

External links

  • Official municipal website (in German and English)
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Celle" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 604.

celle, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar. For other uses see Celle disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Celle news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Celle German pronunciation ˈtsɛle is a town and capital of the district of Celle in Lower Saxony Germany The town is situated on the banks of the river Aller a tributary of the Weser and has a population of about 71 000 Celle is the southern gateway to the Luneburg Heath has a castle Schloss Celle built in the Renaissance and Baroque style and a picturesque old town centre the Altstadt with over 400 timber framed houses making Celle one of the most remarkable members of the German Timber Frame Road From 1378 to 1705 Celle was the official residence of the Luneburg branch of the dukes of Brunswick Luneburg House of Welf who had been banished from their original ducal seat by its townsfolk 3 CelleTownCelle CastleFlagCoat of armsLocation of Celle within Celle districtCelleShow map of GermanyCelleShow map of Lower SaxonyCoordinates 52 37 32 N 10 04 57 E 52 62556 N 10 08250 E 52 62556 10 08250 Coordinates 52 37 32 N 10 04 57 E 52 62556 N 10 08250 E 52 62556 10 08250CountryGermanyStateLower SaxonyDistrictCelleSubdivisions17 districtsGovernment Mayor 2017 22 Jorg Nigge 1 CDU Area Total176 01 km2 67 96 sq mi Elevation40 m 130 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total69 279 Density390 km2 1 000 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes29221 29229Dialling codes05141 05145 05086Vehicle registrationCEWebsitewww celle de Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Expansion 1 2 Climate 1 3 Subdivisions 2 History 2 1 Middle Ages 2 2 Early modern period 2 3 Modern period 2 4 Nazi era 2 5 Military 2 6 Post war era 2 7 Incorporation of municipalities 2 8 Growth in population 3 Government 3 1 Town council 3 2 Mayors Oberburgermeister 3 3 Coat of arms 3 4 Flag 3 5 Official seal 4 Twin towns sister cities 5 Main sights 5 1 Museums 5 2 Theatre 5 3 Parks 5 4 Image gallery 6 Events 7 Sports 8 Economy and Infrastructure 8 1 Economy 8 1 1 Foodstuffs 8 1 2 Transport and logistics 8 2 Transport 8 2 1 Rail 8 2 2 Road 8 2 3 Air 8 2 4 Water 8 2 5 Town public transport services 8 3 Media 8 4 Education 8 4 1 Schools 8 4 2 Vocational schools 8 4 3 Other educational establishments 9 Around Celle 10 Notable people 10 1 Born in Celle before 1850 10 2 Born in Celle 1850 to 1950 10 3 Born in Celle since 1950 10 4 Residents of Celle 10 5 Honorary citizen 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksGeography Edit The Weser watershed showing the location of Celle on the Aller The town of Celle lies in the glacial valley of the Aller about 40 kilometres 25 mi northeast of Hanover 60 kilometres 37 mi northwest of Brunswick and 120 kilometres 75 mi south of Hamburg With 71 000 inhabitants it is next to Luneburg the largest Lower Saxon town between Hanover and Hamburg Expansion Edit The town covers an area of 176 05 square kilometres 67 97 sq mi Flowing from the northeast the Lachte discharges into the Aller within the town s borders as does the Fuhse flowing from the southeast The Aller heads westwards towards Verden an der Aller where it joins the Weser Climate Edit Celle s annual precipitation is 692 millimetres 27 2 in which puts it in the middle third of locations in Germany 39 of the Deutscher Wetterdienst s weather stations record lower values The wettest month is August which has 1 5 times the amount of precipitation as February the driest month Monthly precipitation varies only slightly and precipitation is very evenly spread throughout the year Only 1 of German weather stations show a lower annual variation Subdivisions Edit The town of Celle has the following 17 boroughs or Stadtteile some of which were previously independent villages population as at 1 January 2005 Altencelle 4 998 Altenhagen 922 Blumlage Altstadt 8 526 Bostel 455 Boye 832 Garssen 2 978 Gross Hehlen 2 773 Hehlentor 7 974 Hustedt 736 Klein Hehlen 5 782 Lachtehausen 639 Neuenhausen 8 082 Neustadt Heese 10 887 Scheuen 1 165 Vorwerk 2 842 Westercelle 7 183 and Wietzenbruch 4 805 History EditMiddle Ages Edit Celle was first mentioned in a document of A D 985 as Kiellu 4 which means Fischbucht 5 or fishing bay It was granted the right to mint and circulate its own coins under the Munzrecht minting privileges during the 11th century and several coins were found in the Sandur hoard in the Faroes In 1292 Duke Otto II the Strict 1277 1330 a Welf who ruled the Principality of Luneburg from 1277 to 1330 left Altencelle where there had been a defences in the form of a circular rampart the Ringwall von Burg since the 10th century and founded a rectangular settlement by the existing castle Burg 4 kilometres 2 5 mi to the northwest In 1301 he granted Celle its town privileges 6 and in 1308 started construction on the town church In 1378 Celle became the Residenz of the dukes of Saxe Wittenberg and in 1433 the princes of Luneburg took up residence in the castle Schloss The ducal palace was situated on a triangle between the Aller and its tributary the Fuhse A moat connecting the rivers was built in 1433 turning the town centre into an island In 1452 Duke Frederick the Pious of Luneburg founded a Franciscan monastery In 1464 the grain shipping monopoly generated an economic upturn for the town Early modern period Edit Rooftop view of Celle Hugenottenstrasse is the main street of the former French quarter Emigrantenstrasse a historical street laid out for Austrian refugees JVA Celle which is often mistaken for a castle In 1524 the Reformation was introduced into Celle In 1570 Duke William the Younger built the castle chapel which was consecrated in 1585 In 1660 Celle had 3 750 inhabitants 7 From 1665 to 1705 Celle experienced a cultural boom as a Residenz under Duke George William This has been particularly put down to his French wife Eleonore d Olbreuse who brought fellow Huguenot Christians and Italian architects to Celle During this time the French and Italian Gardens were laid out and the baroque castle theatre built Because of the persecution of Huguenots under Louis XIV many French Huguenots sought refuge in Germany especially in Berlin and in the towns of Celle Neuwied and Hanau About 300 Huguenots settled down in Celle where a new residential area was laid out for them in the southwest of the city centre Its main street Hugenottenstrasse is still a sightworthy historical street with well preserved wooden houses built at the beginning of the 18th century Many French refugees worked in the castle as cooks and servants but some of them opened shops in Celle as tailors carpenters joiners confectioners wig makers and glovers thus introducing some French cuisine fashion and lifestyle into the town Some years later protestant refugees from Austria sought refuge in Celle as well Emigrantenstrasse is another historical street which was laid out for the Austrians In 1705 the last duke of the Brunswick Luneburg line died and Celle along with the Principality of Luneburg passed back to the Hanover line of the Welfs By way of compensation for the loss of its status as a Residenz town numerous administrative institutions were established in Celle such as the Higher Court of Appeal Oberappellationsgericht the prison and the State Stud Farm That began its development into an administrative and judicial centre Even today the Lower Saxony Bremen State Social Security Tribunal and the High Court responsible for most of Lower Saxony are based in Celle amongst others Celle is also still home to a prison the Justizvollzugsanstalt Celle or JVA Celle which was built in a baroque style in the west of the city centre from 1710 to 1731 8 Sometimes tourists mistake it for a castle because of its typical baroque architecture That the citizens of Celle once in a vote chose to have a prison in Celle rather than a university in order to protect the virtue of their daughters is not verifiable but it has remained a persistent anecdote in popular folklore In August 1714 George Elector of Hanover Duke of Brunswick Luneburg King George I ascended to the British throne Between then and 1866 when the town became Prussian during the Austro Prussian War as part of the province of Hanover Celle was a possession of the British Hanoverian line In 1786 Albrecht Thaer founded the first German Agricultural Testing Institute in the meadows at the Dammasch dam marsh today Thaer s Garden The Albrecht Thaer School is nowadays part of a vocational centre in the Celle sub district of Altenhagen New Town Hall Modern period Edit In 1842 the Cambridge Dragoons Barracks Cambridge Dragoner Kaserne for the homonymous regiment named after the Hanoveran Viceroy Duke Prince Adolphus Duke of Cambridge was built in Celle After being extended in 1913 and partially rebuilt after a fire in 1936 it was renamed Goodwood Barracks in 1945 and from 1976 to 1996 was the headquarters of Panzerbrigade 33 in the German armed forces the Bundeswehr In 1989 it was renamed again to Cambridge Dragoner Kaserne Since 1996 the area has mainly been used to house one of the largest youth centres in Lower Saxony From 1869 to 1872 an infantry barracks was built for the 77th Infantry Regiment which also gave the main street running the length of the front of the barracks its name of 77er Strasse In 1938 it was renamed the Heidekaserne Heath Barracks After the Second World War the barracks was used by British troops until 1993 during which time 94 Locating Regiment Royal Artillery held residency for over 25 years followed briefly by 14 Signal Regiment who relocated from Scheuen until the barracks were handed back to the local authorities Today the New Town Hall Neue Rathaus and Celle Council Offices are housed in the restored brick building Residential buildings and a town park have been established on the rest of the terrain Steel engraving of the market place around 1845 In 1892 with the help of numerous citizens donations the present day Bomann Museum with its important folkloric and town history collections was founded In 1913 the 74 metre high clock tower was built on the town church its clockwork underwent a major restoration in 2008 In the 1920s the silk mill was built It was merged in 1932 with the one in Peine to become the Seidenwerk Spinnhutte AG This concern expanded itself during the Nazi era into an armaments centre under the name of Seidenwerk Spinnhutte AG A subsidiary founded in 1936 the Mitteldeutsche Spinnhutte AG which led war preparations through its branches in the central German towns of Apolda Plauen Osterode Pirna and Wanfried Its only product was parachute silk that was needed for the paratroopers of the Wehrmacht 9 In September 1929 Rudolph Karstadt opened a Karstadt department store in Celle town centre the facade of which was identical with that of the Karstadt store on Berlin s Hermannplatz The Celle branch was demolished in the 1960s and replaced by a controversial new building whose aluminium braced facade was meant to represent Celle s timber framed houses Nazi era Edit Memorial of Celler Hasenjagd Information board at the memorial During Kristallnacht the anti Jewish pogrom in Nazi Germany on 9 10 November 1938 the synagogue in Celle was only saved from complete destruction because it is a very narrow lane and there would have been a risk to the adjacent leather factory and other parts of the historical city centre with its old wooden houses On 1 April 1939 Altenhausen Klein Hehlen Neuenhausen Vorwerk and Wietzenbruch were incorporated into Celle On 8 April 1945 the only serious allied bombing attack on the city during World War II occurred 2 2 of the town was destroyed especially on the industrial areas and railway freight terminal A train in which about 4 000 prisoners were being transported to the nearby Bergen Belsen concentration camp was hit The attack claimed hundreds of casualties but some of the prisoners managed to escape into the nearby woods SS guards and Celle citizens participated in the so called Celle hare hunt Celler Hasenjagd 10 The hunt claimed several hundred dead and went on until 10 April 1945 and represented the darkest chapter in Celle s history 11 The exact number of victims has not been determined Several of the perpetrators were later tried and convicted of this war crime A memorial with an information board and a copper beech tree was inaugurated in Triftanlagen park on 8 April 1992 The German word for copper beech is Blutbuche meaning blood beech About 2 2 of Celle 67 houses was destroyed in the Second World War 550 houses were heavily damaged and 614 were slightly damaged Celle was spared from further destruction by surrendering without a fight to advancing allied troops on 12 April 1945 so that the historical city centre and the castle survived the war completely unscathed Military Edit German Army Anti tank helicopter Bolkow Bo 105 at Celle Air Base In Nazi Germany Celle was an important garrison location Elements of the 17th and 73rd Infantry Regiments and the 19th Artillery Regiment were garrisoned in the town Celle was also the headquarters of a military district command and a military records office The different German Army barracks including the Freiherr von Fritsch Barracks in Scheuen and the Cambridge Dragoons Barracks in the city were used as sites for the German 33rd Armoured Brigade until the 1990s The Celle Air Base Immelmann Barracks in the District of Wietzenbruch is now the site of the Training Centre of the Army Aviation School and the Cambridge Dragoons Barracks has now become a youth cultural centre CD Kaserne The British Army barracks which as Celle Station formed part of Bergen Hohne Garrison were handed over to the German authorities on 5 November 2012 Since German reunification Celle has largely lost its role as a major garrison town Post war era Edit After the war Celle applied along with Bonn and Frankfurt to become the seat for the Parliamentary Council Parlamentarischer Rat the immediate post war governmental body in Germany later superseded by the West German Bundestag In the end the privilege went to Bonn Trenchard Barracks in Celle was the most modern barracks in Germany during the war with blackout blinds between the double glazed windows and other features which became commonplace afterwards The cellar doors were trial rooms for the number of inmates from Belsen who could be gassed When Belsen concentration camp was liberated Trenchard Barracks was used as a hospital for surviving inmates who needed treatment Later it became the Barracks for the 1st Battalion of the Rifle Brigade On 1 January 1973 Celle lost its status as an independent town Kreisfreie Stadt and became the largest municipality in the new district Kreis of Celle It also became the largest town in the new region Regierungsbezirk of Luneburg At the same time the localities of Ummern Pollhofen and Hahnenhorn were incorporated into Gifhorn district Since then the parish of Hohne has looked after six villages Hohne Helmerkamp Spechtshorn Ummern Pollhofen and Hahnenhorn in two rural districts The town of Celle has also incorporated a number of villages from the surrounding area On 25 July 1978 a staged bomb attack was made on the outer wall of the prison This was initially blamed on the Red Army Faction but was later revealed to have been perpetrated by Lower Saxony s intelligence service the Verfassungsschutz The incident became known as the Celle Hole In 2004 the region of Luneburg was dissolved along with the rest of Lower Saxony s administrative districts Celle is currently the twelfth largest town in Lower Saxony Incorporation of municipalities Edit 1 April 1939 Altenhausen Klein Hehlen Neuenhausen Vorwerk und Wietzenbruch 1 January 1973 Altencelle Altenhagen Alvern Bostel Boye Burg Garssen Gross Hehlen Hustedt Lachtehausen Scheuen and Westercelle Growth in population Edit In the Middle Ages and early modern period Celle only had a few thousand inhabitants The population grew only slowly and dropped frequently as a result of many wars epidemics and periods of famine Not until the beginnings of industrialisation in the 19th century did population growth accelerate It reached a total of 8 800 in 1818 but by 1900 this had more than doubled to 20 000 The incorporation of the surrounding villages on 1 April 1939 saw a further artificial rise in numbers to 38 000 Shortly after the Second World War the many refugees and displaced persons from the German areas of Eastern Europe led to a steep rise in the number of inhabitants within just a few months from around 17 000 to 55 000 by December 1945 The addition of new municipalities on 1 January 1973 saw an additional 18 691 people being included within the borough of Celle and bringing the total population to 75 178 its historical high point On 30 June 2005 the official number of inhabitants within Celle borough according to an update by the Lower Saxony State Department of Statistics was 71 402 only main residences and after adjustments with the other state departments The following overview shows the population numbers based on the catchment area at the time The 1818 figure is an estimate the rest are based on census results or official updates by the Department of Statistics From 1871 the returns show the population actually present from 1925 the resident population and since 1987 the population residing at their main residence Before 1871 the numbers are based on various different census gathering processes Year Population1818 8 8003 December 1855 13 1173 December 1861 14 1003 December 1864 14 9003 December 1867 16 2001 December 1871 16 1471 December 1875 18 2001 December 1880 18 8001 December 1885 18 8001 December 1890 18 9012 December 1895 19 438 Year Population1 December 1900 19 8831 December 1905 21 3901 December 1910 23 2631 December 1916 20 5215 December 1917 19 9978 October 1919 23 58916 June 1925 25 45616 June 1933 27 73417 May 1939 37 79931 December 1945 55 05929 October 1946 52 281 Year Population13 September 1950 59 66725 September 1956 57 2396 June 1961 58 50631 December 1965 58 76627 May 1970 57 15531 December 1975 74 34731 December 1980 72 82031 December 1985 70 48225 May 1987 71 22231 December 1990 72 26031 December 1995 73 936 Year Population31 December 2000 72 12730 June 2005 71 4021 January 2006 71 3711 January 2008 70 85031 December 2011 69 97231 December 2014 68 72131 December 2017 69 706 Census resultsGovernment EditFor the purposes of Bundestag elections the town of Celle belongs to the constituency of Celle Uelzen In 1983 1987 1990 and 1994 Klaus Jurgen Hedrich CDU won the direct vote In 1998 2002 and 2005 Peter Struck SPD won the majority of votes In 2009 Henning Otte CDU received the direct mandate For Lower Saxony State Parliament Landtag elections Celle forms the constituency of Celle Stadt with its surrounding area In 2003 the CDU won the majority of votes Town council Edit The town council has 42 elected members as well as the directly elected mayor Oberburgermeister Since the local elections of 11 September 2016 it has consisted of ten parties or voting groups 12 CDU 16 seats SPD 9 seats AfD 4 seats Bundnis 90 Die Grunen 3 seats Zukunft Celle 3 seats FDP 2 seats Die Linke Alliance for Social Justice Bundnis Soziale Gerechtigkeit Celle BSG CE 2 seats Die Unabhangigen 2 seats Die Partei 1 seat WG Wahlergemeinschaft 1 seatMayors Oberburgermeister Edit 1877 1895 Otto Hattendorf 1822 1905 1895 1924 Wilhelm Denicke 1924 1945 Ernst Meyer 1887 1948 1945 Max Vogel 1945 1946 Walther Horstmann 1898 1977 1946 1948 Richard Schafer 1948 1952 Franz Georg Guizetti 1952 1964 Wilhelm Heinichen 1883 1967 1964 1973 Kurt Blanke 1900 1997 1973 1985 Helmuth Horstmann 1909 1993 1986 2001 Herbert Severin 2001 2008 Martin Biermann CDU 2009 2017 Dirk Ulrich Mende SPD since 2017 Jorg Nigge CDU Coat of arms Edit The armorial achievement of the town of Celle Blazoning Azure a castle triple towered embattled above the port all argent masoned sable the port sable the towers roofed gules The port charged with a lion rampant azure surrounded by seven hearts gules on an inescutcheon bendwise or 13 The helmet on the full coat of arms is described as follows On the shield is a blue and white wreathed helmet with a mantling blue on the outside and white on the inside The crest consists of two sickles leaning outwards with red handles The sickles have their points upwards blades inward facing and are decorated with peacock s eyes on the outside edges Flag Edit The town flag is divided into two equal stripes in the town colours of blue and white It can also contain the town coat of arms 14 Official seal Edit The town of Celle has an official seal whose design is based on the oldest town seal of 1288 with the circumscription Stadt Celle It depicts a gatehouse between two castle towers In the open gateway under a decorative helmet there is a shield tilting to the left charged with the lion of the Dukes of Luneburg 15 Twin towns sister cities Edit Signpost of twin towns of Celle See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Celle is twinned with 16 Celle Ligure Italy Hameenlinna Finland Holbaek Denmark Kwidzyn Poland Meudon France Mazkeret Batya Israel Sumy Ukraine Tavistock England United Kingdom Tulsa United States Tyumen RussiaMain sights Edit half timber house Bergstr with wrong replaced halves Church St Marien with its white steeple The buildings in Celle s old town centre date back to the 16th century among them numerous and some 480 restored half timber houses with wood carvings making Celle an important city for tourism in the southern Luneburg Heath region One of the most famous houses is Hoppenerhaus dating from 1532 The Old Latin School was built in 1602 The most impressive building in Celle is the ducal palace Schloss Celle which was built in 1530 in a well kept park at the site of the former castle It was enlarged in a baroque style in the 17th century and a renaissance chapel and a special theatre which is the oldest theatre in Germany were added in 1674 The Old City Hall which is famous for its sandstone carvings was built 1561 1579 in a Renaissance style 17 Another major attraction is the Stadtkirche town church with its white tower from where the town trumpeter blows a fanfare twice a day an old tradition that was revived as a tourist attraction Originally it was a small gothic chapel built in 1380 but it was enlarged from 1675 to 1698 and transformed into a baroque church with impressive stucco ornaments Hugenottenstrasse is a historical street with well preserved wooden houses built at the beginning of the 18th century It was the main street of a residential area specially laid out for French Huguenots who sought refuge in Celle because of the Persecution of Huguenots under Louis XV in the 17th century The oldest house dates from 1693 On the corner of Emigrantenstrasse another historical street which was laid out for Austrian refugees at the beginning of the 18th century Neuhauser Kirche a Lutheran church was founded in 1710 It was enlarged from 1852 to 1866 Its steeple dates from the same period Even a large prison Justizvollzugsanstalt JVA was built in a baroque style in the west of the city centre from 1710 to 1731 It was the only historical building of Celle which was damaged during the air raid on 8 April 1945 It was repaired after the war Sometimes tourists walking from the railway station to the centre mistake it for a castle because of its typical baroque architecture Celle has a synagogue built in 1740 one of the few that survived the Nazi pogrom night of 1938 thanks to its location in a narrow street of wooden half timber houses next to an important leather factory that would have been collaterally damaged The Albrecht Thaer School a school in Celle was founded by Albrecht Daniel Thaer in 1796 Museums Edit Celle Castle Bomann Museum near castle with coat of arms The Bomann Museum opposite the castle has works by the artist Eberhard Schlotter and has exhibitions of local folklore and town history It houses the Tansey Collection a collection of portrait miniatures The Celle Art Museum Kunstmuseum Celle with its Robert Simon collection is affiliated with the Bomann Museum In the castle itself is the Residenz Museum which makes use of its premises and an exhibition to document the princely House of Welf The Garrison Museum deals with the history of Celle Garrison from 1866 to the present day whilst the Shooting Museum Schutzenmuseum in Haus der Stadtmauer is devoted to Celle s shooting club history The work of Celle s Neues Bauen architect Otto Haesler is charted by the Haesler Museum And in the old storage barn Treppenspeicher built in 1607 as well as the orangery built in 1677 for the Institute of Apiculture an exhibition of beekeeping may be viewed Theatre Edit The Schlosstheater Celle was founded in 1674 and is the oldest still working theatre in Germany and the oldest baroque theatre in Europe It has a main auditorium and two smaller stages Malersaal and Turmbuhne as well as an additional external venue Halle 19 Located at the edge of the old town Altstadt is the performing arts theatre Kunst amp Buhne which is supported by the town and whose repertoire ranges from comedy to songs jazz cabaret and films Parks Edit The picturesque French Garden lies immediately south of the Altstadt and is where the Lower Saxon Institute of Apiculture may be found The Castle Park with its moats is on the site of the former defensive fortifications of the ducal castle Along Bahnhofstrasse there is an area of common pasture used as a public park and play area Triftanlagen On the right bank of the Aller are the Dammasch Meadows a popular destination for trips and recreation and immediately next to them is the garden of medicinal plants and the Thaers Garden with its little manor house By the New Town Hall Neues Rathaus is the recently laid out town park Other important open areas include the various town cemeteries such as the picturesque forest cemetery the Waldfriedhof with its nature garden Image gallery Edit Old City Hall Houses in the Altstadt Neuenhauser Kirche Hoppener Haus the most famous and attractive timber framed house in Celle s Altstadt Portrait of Ernest the Confessor on the Hoppener Haus in Celle St Ludwig s the Catholic Church of Celle A half timber house lined street in CelleEvents EditThe Congress Union Celle is an event centre for conferences and exhibitions as well as stage music and festive events The CD Kaserne Cambridge Dragoons CD Barracks is a municipal youth and cultural centre with exhibition rooms covering the subject areas of music film art and society Also located there is the Bunte Haus which is a charitable cultural centre It focuses on projects and events dealing with social questions covering aspects of culture social work and civic education Its workers are volunteers Celle also hosts a Christmas market every year in the old town centre Sports EditThe Celler Oilers are an ice hockey team that play in the Regionalliga or regional league From 1968 to the mid 1970s Celle s football club TuS Celle played in the German second division then called the Regionalliga or regional league After two bankruptcies and relegation it was promoted to the Lower Saxony league for the 2004 2005 season and since 2005 has played in the Northeast Lower Saxony league Oberliga Niedersachsen Nordost which is fifth tier of the German football league system The handball club SV Garssen Celle has fielded a women s team that had played in the women s Second Division North since the mid 1990s In 2009 it came first and was promoted to the First Division Since 1983 the Celle Wasa Run Celler Wasa Lauf has taken place every year on the second Sunday of March in Celle s town centre This has become one of the biggest running events in Germany for distances less than a marathon and is divided into runs of several distances a children s run of 2 5 km 1 6 mi and runs of 5 10 15 and 20 km 12 4 mi distance For several years there has also been a hiking Wandern event over 11 km 7 mi along the Aller as well as Walking and Nordic Walking events 2004 saw a record number of participants with 11 232 men and women taking part Celle is one of five centres for the Lower Saxony Rowing Club The Celle Sprint Regatta takes place annually in October on the Upper Aller at the Ziegeninsel and is hosted by the Hermann Billung Celle Celler Ruderverein and Ruderclub Ernestinum Holty Celle rowing clubs The Celle Triathlon always takes place in August This was originally organised by the Celle branch of the German Alpine Club Deutscher Alpenverein but for several years has been run by SV Altencelle Since 2001 Celle has played host to the In Line Skating and Handbike Marathon from Hanover to Celle This is one of the biggest races of its kind in Germany In 2007 the European Masters speed skating championship took place as part of this event Celle also hosted Angola s national football team during the 2006 Football World Cup Economy and Infrastructure EditEconomy Edit Tourism is a large contributor to Celle s economy especially in the summer months during jazz wine and other festivals which attract thousands of visitors The town is not really known for heavy industry but many businesses which have started up in Celle and some such as Rosa Graf Cosmetics have reached the world market Celle does have some links to the oil industry though particularly firms engineering parts for drilling notably Baker Hughes INTEQ and Hughes Christensen divisions oil and gas industry service companies specialising in MWD Wireline Drill bits Drilling Applications Engineering etc Cameron 18 global provider of pressure control processing flow control and compression systems as well as project management and aftermarket services for the oil and gas and process industries and ITAG 19 drilling contractors and manufacturing plant Halliburton founded in 1919 is one of the world s largest providers of products and services to the energy industry and has an office in Celle 20 There is also a school for advance drilling techniques Other light industries include electronics food manufacture and metal wood and plastic processing In addition there an ink manufacturer formerly Hostmann Steinberg now hubergroup paper factory Werner Achilles Glanzfolien Kaschieranstalt and musical instruments makers including Moeck Celle is also home to Germany s Bee institute which carries out scientific studies on the bee species as well as keeping its own bee hives Celle is also known as a town of civil servants due to the large number of government officials and lawyers who work there providing important administrative and judicial services to the region Agriculture and forestry also play a role Foodstuffs Edit Celle is the base for a crispbread factory Barilla Wasa Deutschland Regional and to some extent national suppliers are the high alcohol drink manufactures of the Ratzeputz and Alter Provisor brands Originally made in Celle s Altstadt the herb based spirit Ratzeputz is now distilled on the Westercelle industrial estate Alter Provisor is still produced and sold in the Altstadt Celler Bier is also established here with its six varieties of beer Another Celle speciality is Rohe Roulade which initially gained fame in the Gasthaus Krohne now Dackel s Krohne in the district of Blumlage and is now offered in many of Celle s restaurants and pubs Transport and logistics Edit The East Hanoverian Railways Osthannoversche Eisenbahnen or OHE is a goods and passenger transport company covering the north German area with its headquarters in Celle Also based in Celle are the postal distribution centre for Deutsche Post s post code district 29 and the transport company DTLS Drilling Tools Logistic amp Service Transport Edit Rail Edit Celle lies on the Hanover Celle Uelzen Luneburg Hamburg line Intercity IC trains to Hanover and Hamburg stop hourly at the station as do individual ICE trains during the rush hour metronom trains link Celle to Uelzen Hanover and Gottingen as part of the regional transport network Celle is the terminus for routes S 6 and S 7 of the Hanover S Bahn The section between Celle and Grossburgwedel was built in the 1920s as a high speed line for testing and record journeys across the heath like so called Wietzenbruch It was nicknamed the Hare Railway Hasenbahn due to its environment which was devoid of habitation and the numerous hares killed on the line in its early days In 1965 this section via Langenhagen was electrified for the TEE and IC services from Hamburg to Hanover in order to save routing them via Lehrte and having to change direction in Hanover Later it was upgraded for traffic operating regularly at 200 km h 124 mph Formerly there were railway links from Celle via Schwarmstedt to Bremen Aller Valley Railway and via Plockhorst to Brunswick these were closed in the 1970s and have largely been dismantled In 2004 the last remaining branch line from Gifhorn to Celle via Wienhausen that was still used in places for goods traffic was finally closed and work on lifting the line in the area of the town has begun The East Hanoverian Railways run goods trains on several branch lines in the Celle area including those to Wittingen Soltau and Munster Occasionally heritage trains and specials also run on these lines The Lehrte Celle railway is an important route for goods trains and was converted in 1998 into a modern S Bahn line A tramway network of 2 lines had been operated since 1907 by the Celler Strassenbahn but this was closed and dismantled between 1954 and 1956 Road Edit Important links are North south the B 3 running north to Soltau Hamburg and south to Hanover Southeast west the B 214 running southeast to Brunswick and west to Nienburg Northeast the B 191 to Uelzen Luneburg Ludwigslust Landesstrasse 310 via Fuhrberg southwest to the junction at Mellendorf on the A 7 motorway Landesstrasse 282 east northeast via Beedenbostel Eldingen and Steinhorst to Wittingen Landesstrasse 180 via Winsen Aller west northwest to the motorway services of Raststatte Allertal on the A 7Air Edit The Berlin Airlift memorial at Celle Air Base Hanover Langenhagen airport with international flight connections is about 35 kilometres 22 miles away The Army airfield at Celle is 4 5 kilometres southwest of the town centre on the edge of the district of Wietzenbruch Operated as RAF Celle after the Second World War it was from here in 1948 49 that supply flights to Berlin took off as part of the Berlin Airlift Today the airfield is mainly used by the Army Aviation School Heeresfliegerwaffenschule as a training airfield for helicopter pilots Celle Arloh airfield near the district of Scheuen is a recreational airfield It also offers round trips over the town of Celle and the Luneburg Heath There is also a glider airfield at Scheuen Water Edit Celle harbour is only used by tourists today From Celle the Aller is classified downstream as a federal shipping lane upstream a weir prevents ships passing In former centuries Celle was an important transhipment station for ships between Brunswick and the ports in Bremen via Oker Aller and the Lower Weser Bremen and Brunswick merchants had specific tasks from the Dukes of Celle and later the town of Celle in order to ensure the safety of transport because the speed of the Aller in the area of Celle made loading and unloading in the port necessary From 1900 the quantity of trade through Celle Harbour steadily decreased and switched to road and rail Until 1970 the transport of grain to the Celle Rathsmuhle and the transport of potash salts were still significant Town public transport services Edit The firm of CeBus runs eight bus lines around the town There are 15 bus lines for regional services with which the villages in the district of Celle can be reached Sometimes town and region bus services are combined Media Edit The Cellesche Zeitung is the local daily newspaper with a circulation of 34 977 as at 2nd quarter 2005 In addition there is the bi weekly Celler Kurier and weekly Celler Blitz as well as a monthly town magazine the Celler Scene Another monthly is the Celler Blickpunkt The revista appears roughly every 2 months with a left wing perspective of politics and culture Education Edit Schools Edit The grammar schools Gymnasien in Celle are the Hermann Billung Gymnasium which majors in mathematics the sciences Spanish and bilingual education history to level 7 in English the Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria Gymnasium with a focus on music and European studies the Gymnasium Ernestinum with Latin and ancient Greek which was founded in 1328 as the Latin school and the Holty Gymnasium with courses in Russian and which has a mathematics and science branch The other general schools are the three secondary schools Realschulen Westercelle Auf der Heese Burgstrasse six combined primary Grundschulen and secondary modern Hauptschulen schools Altstadt Blumlage Gross Hehlen Heese Sud Neustadt Wietzenbruch as well as nine primary schools In addition there are also the Catholic primary school Katholische Schule and the Montessori primary and secondary school Freie Aktive Schule Celle Vocational schools Edit Celle has four vocational establishments Berufsbildende Schulen or BBS BBS I Economics and Administration BBS II Axel Bruns Schule Technology Design and IT BBS III Health and Social Studies and BBS IV Albrecht Thaer Schule Agriculture Domestic Science and Nutrition Other educational establishments Edit Since 2003 Celle has been the location for the private College of Economics Fachhochschule der Wirtschaft or FHDW which offers courses of studies in mechatronics and the Bachelor of Business Administration Another important educational establishment in Celle is the Bohrmeisterschule which is a technical college for drilling extraction and pipeline technology Celle is home to one of the two Lower Saxony State Firefighting Schools It was also the location for the Celler Schule one of the GEMA foundation institutions for up and coming songwriters from 1996 to 2008 before it moved to Springe In addition there is an adult education centre in Celle which has numerous branches in the surrounding districts Around Celle EditCelle is known for being an entry point for tourists to the Luneburg Heath Bergen Belsen concentration camp where Anne Frank died in 1945 is located in the district of Celle today a memorial and exhibition centre mark the camp site Notable people Edit Albrecht Thaer monument Friedrich Wieseler Born in Celle before 1850 Edit George Duke of Brunswick Luneburg 1582 1670 ruled as Prince of Calenberg from 1635 Sophia Dorothea of Celle 1666 1726 wife 21 of George I of Great Britain and mother of George II of Great Britain Johann Ernst Galliard 1687 1749 German composer 22 Anton Wilhelm von L Estocq 1738 1815 Prussian cavalry general commanded Prussian troops at the Battle of Eylau Albrecht Thaer 1752 1828 founder of agricultural science Ernst von Gemmingen 1759 1813 a German composer and aristocrat Ernst Schulze 1789 1817 Romantic poet 23 Ludwig Aaron Gans 1794 1871 a German industrialist and owner of the company Cassella Georg Seyler 1800 1866 theologian priest and the adoptive father of Felix Hoppe Seyler Friedrich Wieseler 1811 1892 German classical archaeologist and philologist Karl Goedeke 1814 1887 literary historian Georg Bergmann 1821 70 a German painter of historical subjects and portraits Wilhelm Hauers 1836 1905 architect in HamburgBorn in Celle 1850 to 1950 Edit Roland Freisler 1942 Admiral Eduard von Capelle 1855 1931 a German Imperial Navy officer Friedrich Pfotenhauer 1859 1939 fifth president of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod Ernst Emil Herzfeld 1879 1948 German Near Eastern archaeologist orientalist and epigraphists Co founder of the Near Eastern and Islamic archaeology architecture and art history and founder of Iranian archeology Robert Lehr 1883 1956 politician DNVP CDU Theodor Kruger 1891 1966 composer and musician Roland Freisler 1893 1945 lawyer judge and politician Nazi Party August Schirmer 1905 1948 architect civil engineer main branch manager of Amt Rosenberg and member of parliament Nazi Party Hermann Schridde 1937 1985 show jumper and manager of the German show jumping team Heiko Harborth born 1938 Professor of Mathematics at Braunschweig University of Technology Volker Ullrich born 1943 historian journalist and author 24 Hans Mueh born 1944 emigrated to USA 1951 director of athletics at the United States Air Force Academy Wolfgang Kubin born 1945 a German poet essayist sinologist and translator of literary works Bettina Hohls born 1947 a German artist and designer Claude Gewerc born 1947 a retired French politician President of the regional council of Picardy Gustav Humbert born 1950 German manager Airbus Lilo Wanders 2009 Christian Oliver Born in Celle since 1950 Edit Kersten Meier 1954 2001 a German swimmer who competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics Ernie Reinhardt born 1955 actor pseudonym Lilo Wanders Karl Henning Rehren born 1956 a German physicist who focuses on algebraic quantum field theory Gabi Bauer born 1962 journalist television presenter Ante Zelck born 1963 entrepreneur and hostel pioneer Michael Renkel born 1965 German concert guitarist Matthias Blazek born 1966 German free journalist historian and publicist Frauke Eickhoff born 1967 German Olympic judoka Silke Schatz born 1967 an artist who makes drawings sculptures and installations Robert Hermes DVM PhD born 1969 a veterinarian researcher at The Leibniz Institute of Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin Christian Oliver born 1972 actor Feleknas Uca born 1976 politician The Left Alex Boyd born 1984 Scottish photographer Dustin Brown born 1984 Jamaican German tennis player Merle Frohms born 1995 German football playerResidents of Celle Edit Caroline Mathilda Heinrich Albertz left with President Heinrich Lubke 1966 Urbanus Rhegius or Urban Rieger 1489 1541 reformer Johann Arndt 1555 1621 post Reformation 25 theologian 26 George William Duke of Brunswick Luneburg 1624 1705 ruled from 1665 to this death from Celle Castle as the last Heath Duke of the House of Welf Samuel Chappuzeau 1625 1701 playwright and author Head of Pages for Duke of Brunswick Luneburg from 1682 to 1701 Christoph Chappuzeau German Wiki 1656 1734 Son of Samuel private secretary of Duke of Brunswick Luneburg from 1676 Louise von Plessen 1725 1799 a Danish lady in waiting and memoir writer Caroline Mathilde 1751 1775 Queen of Denmark and Norway in exile Johann Anton Leisewitz 1752 1806 writer 27 and lawyer Hermann Lons 1866 1914 editor and heath poet lived in the years 1903 1912 in Celle Otto Haesler 1880 1962 architect along with Walter Gropius and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe an important representative of the New Architecture outside the Bauhaus Heinrich Hermann von Hulsen 1895 1982 Wehrmacht generalmajor Siegfried Westphal 1902 1982 Wehrmacht officer general of cavalry Ernst Zierke 1905 1972 Unterscharfuhrer SS member involved in the T4 euthanasia program and Aktion Reinhardt Heinrich Schmidt 1912 2000 Hauptsturmfuhrer and camp doctor in concentration camps Fritz Darges 1913 2009 Obersturmbannfuhrer and personal aide of Adolf Hitler Fritz Grasshoff 1913 1997 artist painter writer and hit songwriter lived in Celle 1946 to 1967 Heinrich Albertz 1915 1993 Protestant theologian after the Second World War pastor in Celle head of the municipal refugee office politician SPD and mayor of West Berlin 1966 1967 Yisroel Moshe Olewski 1916 1966 Rabbi of Celle Harald Range 1948 2018 lawyer 2011 2015 Attorney General at the Federal CourtHonorary citizen Edit Otto Telschow 1876 1945 Nazi Party official Member of Reichstag 1930 1945 Honorary citizenship granted 1936 and revoked in 2007See also EditCelle massacre Metropolitan region Hannover Braunschweig Gottingen WolfsburgReferences Edit Verzeichnis der direkt gewahlten Burgermeister innen und Landrate Landratinnen Landesamt fur Statistik Niedersachsen April 2021 LSN Online Regionaldatenbank Tabelle A100001G Fortschreibung des Bevolkerungsstandes Stand 31 Dezember 2021 in German Landesamt fur Statistik Niedersachsen Michelin et Cie 1993 Michelin Tourist Guide Germany 1st ed Clermont Ferrand Michelin ISBN 2 06 150401 9 Adolf Bach Deutsche Namenkunde Band II 1 Die deutschen Ortsnamen Heidelberg 1953 p 36 Heinrich Wesche Unsere niedersachsischen Ortsnamen o O 1957 S 38 Heinrich Gottfried Gengler Regesten und Urkunden zur Verfassungs und Rechtsgeschichte der deutschen Stadte im Mittelalter Erlangen 1863 S 479 482 see also S 982 983 Jurgen Ricklefs et al Geschichte der Stadt Celle p 103 Koln 1959 Hans Pusen Harz Hannover Luneburger Heide p 34 Munchen 1972 Hubertus Feussner Die Spinnhutte Apoldaer Heimat Beitrage zur Natur und Heimatgeschichte der Stadt Apolda und ihrer Umgebung 2008 S 29ff Celinscak Mark 2015 Distance from the Belsen Heap Allied Forces and the Liberation of a Concentration Camp Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 9781442615700 Shifting Memories The Nazi Past in the New Germany K Neumann University of Michigan Press 2000 Burger und Ratsinformationssystem Residenzstadt Celle Retrieved 3 May 2021 Primary constitution of the town of Celle 16th amendment of 12 July 2007 1 paragraph 2 Primary constitution of the town of Celle 16th amendment of 12 July 2007 1 paragraph 3 Primary constitution of the town of Celle 16th amendment of 12 July 2007 1 paragraph 3 Partnerstadte celle de in German Celle Retrieved 11 February 2021 Hans Pusen Harz Hannover Luneburger Heide p 34 Munchen 1972 Cameron German office locations Cameron Retrieved on 31 March 2009 ITAG official website Retrieved on 31 March 2009 Halliburton German office location Halliburton Retrieved on 13 January 2009 Sophia Dorothea Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed 1911 p 418 Galliard John Ernest Dictionary of National Biography Vol 20 1889 Schulze Ernst New International Encyclopedia 1905 Expert and historian Dr Volker Ullrich receives honorary doctorate at the University of Jena Archived 1 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine PDF 124 kB University of Jena 8 December 2008 Retrieved 22 April 2013 Arndt Johann Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed 1911 p 628 Arndt Johann Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Leisewitz Johann Anton New International Encyclopedia 1905 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Celle Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Celle Official municipal website in German and English Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Celle Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 604 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Celle amp oldid 1120161420, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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