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Ludwigsburg

Ludwigsburg (German pronunciation: [ˈluːtvɪçsˌbʊʁk]; Swabian: Ludisburg) is a city in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, about 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) north of Stuttgart city centre, near the river Neckar. It is the largest and primary city of the Ludwigsburg district with about 88,000 inhabitants. It is situated within the Stuttgart Region, and the district is part of the administrative region (Regierungsbezirk) of Stuttgart.

Ludwigsburg
Ludwigsburg Palace, inner courtyard
Location of Ludwigsburg within Ludwigsburg district
ErdmannhausenErdmannhausenRemseckSchwieberdingenMarbach am NeckarMarbach am NeckarMarbach am NeckarMarbach am NeckarOberstenfeldOberstenfeldMundelsheimMundelsheimAffalterbachAspergBenningen am NeckarBesigheimBesigheimBönnigheimErligheimFreudentalGemmrigheimGroßbottwarGroßbottwarHessigheimLöchgauMurrMurrPleidelsheimPleidelsheimSteinheim an der MurrTammWalheimIngersheimFreiberg am NeckarBietigheim-BissingenBietigheim-BissingenDitzingenEberdingenKornwestheimMöglingenOberriexingenSersheimVaihingen an der EnzSachsenheimKorntal-MünchingenLudwigsburgMarkgröningenHemmingenGerlingenKirchheim am Neckar
Ludwigsburg
Ludwigsburg
Coordinates: 48°53′51″N 9°11′32″E / 48.89750°N 9.19222°E / 48.89750; 9.19222Coordinates: 48°53′51″N 9°11′32″E / 48.89750°N 9.19222°E / 48.89750; 9.19222
CountryGermany
StateBaden-Württemberg
Admin. regionStuttgart
DistrictLudwigsburg
Government
 • Lord mayor (2019–27) Matthias Knecht[1] (Ind.)
Area
 • Total43.33 km2 (16.73 sq mi)
Elevation
293 m (961 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total93,117
 • Density2,100/km2 (5,600/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
71634–71642
Dialling codes07141
Vehicle registrationLB
Websitewww.ludwigsburg.de

History

The middle of Neckarland, where Ludwigsburg lies, was settled in the Stone and Bronze Ages. Numerous archaeological sites from the Hallstatt period remain in the city and surrounding area.[3]

Towards the end of the 1st century, the area was occupied by the Romans. They pushed the Limes further to the east around 150 and controlled the region until 260, when the Alamanni occupied the Neckarland. Evidence of the Alamanni settlement can be found in grave sites in the city today.

 
View of the upper grounds of Ludwigsburg Palace
 
Favorite hunting lodge

The origins of Ludwigsburg date from the beginning of the 18th century (1718–1723) when the largest baroque castle in Germany, Ludwigsburg Palace was built by Duke Eberhard Ludwig von Württemberg. Originally, the Duke planned to just build one country home (albeit a palace), which he began building in 1704. However, the examples of other princes fostered a desire to project his absolutist power by establishing a city. To the baroque palace, he added a hunting lodge and country seat, called Schloss Favorite (1713–1728), and the Seeschloss (castle on the lake) Monrepos (1764–1768).[4]

A settlement began near the palace in 1709 and a town charter was granted on 3 April 1718. That same year, Ludwigsburg became a bailiff's seat, which eventually became the rural district of Ludwigsburg in 1938.

In the years between 1730 and 1800, the royal seat of residence changed back and forth several times between Stuttgart and Ludwigsburg. In 1800, Württemberg was occupied by France under Napoleon Bonaparte and was forced into an alliance. In 1806, the Kurfürst (Prince-Elector) Friedrich was made king of Württemberg by Napoleon. In 1812, the Württembergish army was raised in Ludwigsburg for Napoleon's Russian campaign. Of the 15,800 Württemberg soldiers who served, just a few hundred returned.

In 1921, Ludwigsburg became the largest garrison in southwest Germany. In 1945, Ludwigsburg was made a "Kreisstadt" (urban district), and later, when the Baden-Württemberg municipal code took effect on 1 April 1956, the city was named a major urban district. In 1956 the tradition of the German garrison town was taken up again by the Bundeswehr, Germany's federal armed forces.

2004 was the 300th birthday of Residenzschloss Ludwigsburg, celebrated by the opening of the Baroque Gallery and the Ceramic Museum in the Residenzschloss.

Founding

The area around Ludwigsburg had been a favored hunting grounds by the royal Württemberg family for generations before the founding of Ludwigsburg. Although the region was wilderness, it was easily accessible by boat using the Neckar River. In 1704 the founder of Ludwigsburg, Eberhard Louis, Duke of Württemberg, arranged for the laying of the foundation stone for Ludwigsburg Palace. Ludwigsburg is named after the Duke Eberhard Louis' middle name, Ludwig being the German name for Louis. Right up until his death, construction workers and craftsmen worked on what was to become one of the largest Baroque palace ensembles in Europe. Under Eberhard Louis and his successor, Charles Eugene, the Palace served as the royal residence of Württemberg for a total of 28 years. With the Palace as their Gesamtkunstwerk (translated literally, "collective work of art") and the opulent festivals they organized, the Dukes put their unbounded power on display with no consideration for the finances of Württemberg. To them, their most important task was to bring fame and renown to the court of Württemberg and to compete with and outdo other European rulers in this regard.

Duke Eberhard Louis planned to found an ideal Baroque city right beside Ludwigsburg Palace. From 1709 onwards, he tried to attract new residents to the city with a series of incentives: first he promised free plots of land and free building materials as well as fifteen years tax-free status, and later on he added freedom to practice one's profession and religion to the list. However, the town only began to grow when it was granted city status in 1718 and then in that year became the royal residence and capital city of the country of Württemberg. By the time of Eberhard Louis' death in 1733, the population had risen to around 6,000 people, which was more than half as big as the former capital city Stuttgart. Nevertheless, the new capital city Ludwigsburg was still a major construction site with many unpaved streets and half-finished buildings.

For over two decades, Eberhard Louis (1676–1733) held court in Ludwigsburg with his mistress Wilhilmine von Grävenitz (1684–1744) while the Duchess Johanna Elisabeth (1680–1757) remained in Stuttgart. The clever, ambitious mistress made the best of her time, influencing politics in Württemberg and advancing her status in society. When it became clear that the seriously ill heir to the throne would not come to power, Eberhard Louis had a change of heart, split with his lover and reconciled with his wife in the hope that he would have another son. This was cause for great joy for many people in Württemberg, as the Protestant population feared that power would fall into the hands of the Catholic side of the royal house. To mark reconciliation, the Ludwigsburg citizenry published a leaflet with a copper etching that made reference to the general wish for a new heir to the throne. The etching depicts the personification of Ludwigsburg who is receiving a pearl, a symbol of fertility, from the hand of God. However, people's hopes for another child were not fulfilled as Eberhard Louis died in 1733 and his Catholic cousin, Charles Alexander, Duke of Württemberg, ascended to the throne. When Charles Alexander immediately moved the capital of Württemberg back to Stuttgart, the population of the Ludwigsburg suddenly dropped by more than half within a year.


Jews and World War II

Jewish families began living in Ludwigsburg during the 19th century and in 1884, a synagogue was built on Solitudestraße. The synagogue was later destroyed by storm troopers during Kristallnacht, the pogrom of November 1938.[5] In 1988, the perimeter of the structure was marked out in plaster on the site. A 1959 memorial and newer memorial plaques commemorate the Jewish Holocaust victims and extol human rights.[6]

In 1940, a Nazi propaganda film, Jud Süß, was filmed in Ludwigsburg. The film was based on a historical figure, Joseph Süß Oppenheimer, who was executed in Stuttgart in 1738; Oppenheimer lived in Ludwigsburg.[7][8]

During World War II, the city suffered moderate damage compared to other German cities. There were 1500 deaths. It was the home of the prisoner-of-war camp Stalag V-A from October 1939 till April 1945. After the war, there was a large displaced persons camp which housed several thousand mainly Polish displaced persons until about 1948. After 1945 until the middle of 1946, there was also an allied internment camp for war criminals in Ludwigsburg and the U.S. Army maintained the Pattonville barracks on the edge of town, large enough to have its own American high school. The land was returned to Germany in 1994.

On 27 September 2008, the first 12 Stolpersteine were laid in Ludwigsburg.[9] They are part of a project by artist Gunter Demnig to memorialize individuals who perished under Nazi persecution. Demnig was back in Ludwigsburg on 7 October 2009 to install more Stolpersteine.[10]


Coat of arms

 
Ludwisburg's coat of arms

The coat of arms of Ludwigsburg depicts a black eagle on a golden banner flying on an oblique red lance, on a blue background. Duke Eberhard Louis, Duke of Württemberg awarded Ludwigsburg its coat of arms on 3 September 1718 as a Reichssturmfahne, which had been part of the Duchy of Württemberg's own coat of arms since 1495. There were some minor changes made to the design, as it had already been associated with the town of Markgröningen. A missive from the office of the mayor of Ludwigsburg in 1759–60 mentions its flag.[11]

Public institutions

  • Ludwigsburg has a court of first instance (magistrate’s/municipal court) (Amtsgericht in German), external benches of the Stuttgart Employment Tribunal, a tax- and revenue office, and an Employment Agency (German: Agentur für Arbeit).
  • Since its foundation in 1948 the Franco-German Institute (German: Deutsch-Französisches Institut (DFI)) has its seat at Ludwigsburg.

City government

The town council has 40 members. The last local election was on 25 May 2014. The voter participation was 44.62%. The results of the election were:

Party Seats %
CDU 11 26.72%
The Greens 8 19.87%
SPD 8 18.52%
Free Voters 7 17.64%
FDP 2 5.98%
The Left 2 5.20%
LUBU 1 3.37%
REP 1 1.78%


Business and industry

The North-South Powerline, includes a large transformer station Ludwigsburg-Hoheneck, built in 1926, which still exists today. It is a central junction in the power lines of Baden-Württemberg to this day.

On 5 October 1957, the first 380kV-powerline in Germany between the transformer station Ludwigsburg-Hoheneck and Rommerskirchen went into service.

Local businesses

Education

In 1966, the Ludwigsburg University of Education (Pädagogische Hochschule) a teacher training college, and the Staatliche Sportschule Ludwigsburg (State Sports School) were opened.

Further universities based in Ludwigsburg are the Ludwigsburg University of Applied Sciences (Hochschule für öffentliche Verwaltung und Finanzen Ludwigsburg), a public institution for the training of higher-level Civil Servants), and the Ludwigsburg Evangelical University for Social Works, Church Social Works and Religious Teaching (Evangelische Hochschule Ludwigsburg (Hochschule für Soziale Arbeit, Religionspädagogik und Diakonie)).

In 1991, a national film school, Film Academy Baden-Württemberg (Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg) was established in Ludwigsburg,[12] which has won several national and international awards[13] and is regarded as one of the best film schools in the world.[14]

Since 2007, there is also the Academy of Performing Arts Baden-Wuerttemberg (Akademie für Darstellende Kunst Baden-Württemberg).

Ludwigsburg has eight secondary schools of various types and four vocational schools. There ere are also four special schools and seventeen primary schools. An adult high school and the city library are located at the cultural center behind the city hall.

Sports

Ludwigsburg has seven teams in the top level of professional sports. They are MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg (Basketball), both formations A and B of the dance team (1. Tanzclub Ludwigsburg), the Latin-formation (TSC Ludwigsburg), the Hockey-Club Ludwigsburg 1912 e. V., Svl08 (Water-polo) and the riflery team of Ludwigsburg. Additionally there are numerous amateur clubs for various sports.

Districts

 

Ludwigsburg consists of following districts:

  • Mitte (Center)
  • West
  • Nord (North)
  • Ost (East)
  • Süd (South)
  • Eglosheim
  • Grünbühl-Sonnenberg
  • Hoheneck, with a therapeutic and thermal bath, opened in 1907
  • Neckarweihingen
  • Oßweil
  • Pflugfelden
  • Poppenweiler

Neighbouring towns

The following towns are neighbouring towns of Ludwigsburg, starting north of the city and going clockwise: Freiberg am Neckar, Benningen am Neckar, Marbach am Neckar, Erdmannhausen, Affalterbach, Remseck am Neckar, Kornwestheim, Möglingen, Asperg und Tamm.

Population growth

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1718 600—    
1726 2,442+307.0%
1774 11,607+375.3%
1803 5,248−54.8%
1843¹ 10,726+104.4%
1871¹ 11,785+9.9%
1875¹ 13,800+17.1%
1880¹ 14,700+6.5%
1885¹ 16,187+10.1%
1890¹ 17,418+7.6%
YearPop.±%
1895¹ 19,311+10.9%
1900¹ 19,436+0.6%
1905¹ 22,585+16.2%
1910¹ 24,926+10.4%
1916¹ 19,377−22.3%
1917¹ 19,206−0.9%
1919¹ 23,303+21.3%
1925¹ 28,861+23.9%
1933¹ 34,135+18.3%
1939¹ 43,505+27.4%
YearPop.±%
1945 38,804−10.8%
1946¹ 49,635+27.9%
1950¹ 58,489+17.8%
1956¹ 69,535+18.9%
1961¹ 73,512+5.7%
1965 76,555+4.1%
1970¹ 78,019+1.9%
1975 83,622+7.2%
1980 81,589−2.4%
1985 76,973−5.7%
YearPop.±%
1987¹ 78,884+2.5%
1990 82,343+4.4%
1995 86,810+5.4%
2000 86,897+0.1%
2005 87,673+0.9%
2006 87,295−0.4%
2014 90,386+3.5%

Notable people

Karl Eugen, Duke of Württemberg, enrolled the young Friedrich Schiller in the Karlsschule Stuttgart (an elite military academy he had founded) in 1773, where Schiller eventually studied medicine. The Duke was very demanding of his students, and Schiller's childhood was a lonely and unhappy one, but he was greatly enriched by the excellent education he received. It was there that he wrote his first play, Die Räuber ("The Robbers"), about a group of naïve revolutionaries and their tragic failure.

Leopold Mozart visited Württemberg with his son, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in July 1763 and said, "Ludwigsburg is a very special town."[15]

 
Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart

Notable residents

 
Friedrich Silcher and his wife 1822

Twin towns – sister cities

Ludwigsburg is twinned with:[18]

References

  1. ^ Aktuelle Wahlergebnisse, Staatsanzeiger, accessed 13 September 2021.
  2. ^ "Bevölkerung nach Nationalität und Geschlecht am 31. Dezember 2021" [Population by nationality and sex as of December 31, 2021] (CSV) (in German). Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg. June 2022.
  3. ^ Hans-Peter Stika. "Traces of a possible Celtic brewery in Eberdingen-Hochdorf, Kreis Ludwigsburg, southwest Germany" Vegetation History and Archaeobotany Volume 5, Numbers 1–2 (June 1996). Accessed 4 March 2010
  4. ^ Official website of the Ludwigsburg Palace
  5. ^ Jewish History of Ludwigsburg Official website of Alemania Judaica. Accessed 3 March 2010
  6. ^ Gedenkstätten für die Opfer des Nationalsozialismus. Eine Dokumentation. (Memorial Sites for the Victims of Nazism. A Documentary Report) Volume I, Bonn 1995, page 56, ISBN 3-89331-208-0 (in German)
  7. ^ Description of cultural tour through Ludwigsburg "Guided City Tours Ludwigsburg." Accessed 3 March 2010
  8. ^ German Propaganda Archive: Jud Süss. Eight-page flyer from Illustrierter Film-Kurier magazine (1940). Accessed 4 March 2010
  9. ^ "Erinnerung an zwölf Nazi-Opfer" 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ludwigsburger Kreiszeitung (3 October 2008) Retrieved 12 June 2010 (in German)
  10. ^ "Chronik: October 2009" Stolperstein, official website. Retrieved 12 June 2010 (in German)
  11. ^ "Ludwigsburg". LEO-BW. Baden-Württemberg. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  12. ^ "The History of the Baden-Württemberg Film Academy"
  13. ^ "Filmakademie Baden Württemberg GmbH – Startseite". www.filmakademie.de.
  14. ^ "Top 15 International Film Schools Revealed". The Hollywood Reporter. 30 July 2015. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  15. ^ "Ludwigsburg Travel Guide" world66.com Accessed 4 March 2010
  16. ^ Résumé of President Horst Köhler 21 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine Official presidential website. Retrieved 2 March 2010
  17. ^ Sophie Scholl in Ludwigsburg. Website about Sophie Scholl's childhood years in Ludwigsburg. Accessed 4 March 2010
  18. ^ "Städtepartnerschaften". ludwigsburg.de (in German). Ludwigsburg. Retrieved 19 February 2021.

Further reading

  • Andrea Hahn: Ludwigsburg, Stationen einer Stadt, Andreas Hackenberg Verlag, Ludwigsburg 2004, ISBN 3-937280-02-2
  • Gernot von Hahn, Friedhelm Horn: Ludwigsburg, Stadt der Schlösser und Gärten, Medien-Verlag Schubert, Stuttgart 1998, ISBN 3-929229-55-2
  • Bruno Hahnemann: Ludwigsburg. Stadt – Schlösser – Blühendes Barock, Verlag Ungeheuer + Ulmer, Ludwigsburg 1979
  • on the sidelines, Frederick Forsyth: The Odessa File (ISBN 0-553-27198-9)
  • Annette Weinke, Eine Gesellschaft ermittelt gegen sich selbst. Die Geschichte der Zentralen Stelle Ludwigsburg 1958–2008 (Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 2008).
  • Hans H. Pöschko (Hg.), Die Ermittler von Ludwigsburg. Deutschland und die Aufklärung nationalsozialistischer Verbrechen (Berlin: Metropol 2008).
  • Tobias Herrmann / Gisela Müller, Mitteilungen aus dem Bundesarchiv. Themenheft 2008: Die Außenstelle Ludwigsburg (Koblenz: Bundesarchiv 2008).

External links

  • Official website of the City of Ludwigsburg
  • about Ludwigsburg (in German)
  • Ludwigsburg at Curlie

Other educational institutions

  • Carl-Schaefer-Schule (in German)
  • Elly-Heuss-Knapp Realschule (in German)
  • Eugen-Bolz Hauptschule (in German)
  • Friedrich-Schiller-Gymnasium (in German)
  • Goethe-Gymnasium (in German)
  • Gottlieb-Daimler Realschule (in German)
  • (in German)
  • (in German)
  • Otto-Hahn-Gymnasium (in German)
  • Uhlandschule Hauptschule (in German)
  • Oscar-Walcker-Schule (in German)

ludwigsburg, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, german, 2016, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, point, translations, translator. This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in German May 2016 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 710 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Ludwigsburg see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Ludwigsburg to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Ludwigsburg German pronunciation ˈluːtvɪcsˌbʊʁk Swabian Ludisburg is a city in Baden Wurttemberg Germany about 12 kilometres 7 5 mi north of Stuttgart city centre near the river Neckar It is the largest and primary city of the Ludwigsburg district with about 88 000 inhabitants It is situated within the Stuttgart Region and the district is part of the administrative region Regierungsbezirk of Stuttgart LudwigsburgTownLudwigsburg Palace inner courtyardCoat of armsLocation of Ludwigsburg within Ludwigsburg districtLudwigsburgShow map of GermanyLudwigsburgShow map of Baden WurttembergCoordinates 48 53 51 N 9 11 32 E 48 89750 N 9 19222 E 48 89750 9 19222 Coordinates 48 53 51 N 9 11 32 E 48 89750 N 9 19222 E 48 89750 9 19222CountryGermanyStateBaden WurttembergAdmin regionStuttgartDistrictLudwigsburgGovernment Lord mayor 2019 27 Matthias Knecht 1 Ind Area Total43 33 km2 16 73 sq mi Elevation293 m 961 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total93 117 Density2 100 km2 5 600 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes71634 71642Dialling codes07141Vehicle registrationLBWebsitewww ludwigsburg de Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding 1 2 Jews and World War II 2 Coat of arms 3 Public institutions 3 1 City government 4 Business and industry 4 1 Local businesses 5 Education 6 Sports 7 Districts 8 Neighbouring towns 9 Population growth 10 Notable people 10 1 Notable residents 11 Twin towns sister cities 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External links 14 1 Other educational institutionsHistory EditThe middle of Neckarland where Ludwigsburg lies was settled in the Stone and Bronze Ages Numerous archaeological sites from the Hallstatt period remain in the city and surrounding area 3 Towards the end of the 1st century the area was occupied by the Romans They pushed the Limes further to the east around 150 and controlled the region until 260 when the Alamanni occupied the Neckarland Evidence of the Alamanni settlement can be found in grave sites in the city today View of the upper grounds of Ludwigsburg Palace Favorite hunting lodge Monrepos Palace The origins of Ludwigsburg date from the beginning of the 18th century 1718 1723 when the largest baroque castle in Germany Ludwigsburg Palace was built by Duke Eberhard Ludwig von Wurttemberg Originally the Duke planned to just build one country home albeit a palace which he began building in 1704 However the examples of other princes fostered a desire to project his absolutist power by establishing a city To the baroque palace he added a hunting lodge and country seat called Schloss Favorite 1713 1728 and the Seeschloss castle on the lake Monrepos 1764 1768 4 A settlement began near the palace in 1709 and a town charter was granted on 3 April 1718 That same year Ludwigsburg became a bailiff s seat which eventually became the rural district of Ludwigsburg in 1938 In the years between 1730 and 1800 the royal seat of residence changed back and forth several times between Stuttgart and Ludwigsburg In 1800 Wurttemberg was occupied by France under Napoleon Bonaparte and was forced into an alliance In 1806 the Kurfurst Prince Elector Friedrich was made king of Wurttemberg by Napoleon In 1812 the Wurttembergish army was raised in Ludwigsburg for Napoleon s Russian campaign Of the 15 800 Wurttemberg soldiers who served just a few hundred returned In 1921 Ludwigsburg became the largest garrison in southwest Germany In 1945 Ludwigsburg was made a Kreisstadt urban district and later when the Baden Wurttemberg municipal code took effect on 1 April 1956 the city was named a major urban district In 1956 the tradition of the German garrison town was taken up again by the Bundeswehr Germany s federal armed forces 2004 was the 300th birthday of Residenzschloss Ludwigsburg celebrated by the opening of the Baroque Gallery and the Ceramic Museum in the Residenzschloss Founding Edit The area around Ludwigsburg had been a favored hunting grounds by the royal Wurttemberg family for generations before the founding of Ludwigsburg Although the region was wilderness it was easily accessible by boat using the Neckar River In 1704 the founder of Ludwigsburg Eberhard Louis Duke of Wurttemberg arranged for the laying of the foundation stone for Ludwigsburg Palace Ludwigsburg is named after the Duke Eberhard Louis middle name Ludwig being the German name for Louis Right up until his death construction workers and craftsmen worked on what was to become one of the largest Baroque palace ensembles in Europe Under Eberhard Louis and his successor Charles Eugene the Palace served as the royal residence of Wurttemberg for a total of 28 years With the Palace as their Gesamtkunstwerk translated literally collective work of art and the opulent festivals they organized the Dukes put their unbounded power on display with no consideration for the finances of Wurttemberg To them their most important task was to bring fame and renown to the court of Wurttemberg and to compete with and outdo other European rulers in this regard Duke Eberhard Louis planned to found an ideal Baroque city right beside Ludwigsburg Palace From 1709 onwards he tried to attract new residents to the city with a series of incentives first he promised free plots of land and free building materials as well as fifteen years tax free status and later on he added freedom to practice one s profession and religion to the list However the town only began to grow when it was granted city status in 1718 and then in that year became the royal residence and capital city of the country of Wurttemberg By the time of Eberhard Louis death in 1733 the population had risen to around 6 000 people which was more than half as big as the former capital city Stuttgart Nevertheless the new capital city Ludwigsburg was still a major construction site with many unpaved streets and half finished buildings For over two decades Eberhard Louis 1676 1733 held court in Ludwigsburg with his mistress Wilhilmine von Gravenitz 1684 1744 while the Duchess Johanna Elisabeth 1680 1757 remained in Stuttgart The clever ambitious mistress made the best of her time influencing politics in Wurttemberg and advancing her status in society When it became clear that the seriously ill heir to the throne would not come to power Eberhard Louis had a change of heart split with his lover and reconciled with his wife in the hope that he would have another son This was cause for great joy for many people in Wurttemberg as the Protestant population feared that power would fall into the hands of the Catholic side of the royal house To mark reconciliation the Ludwigsburg citizenry published a leaflet with a copper etching that made reference to the general wish for a new heir to the throne The etching depicts the personification of Ludwigsburg who is receiving a pearl a symbol of fertility from the hand of God However people s hopes for another child were not fulfilled as Eberhard Louis died in 1733 and his Catholic cousin Charles Alexander Duke of Wurttemberg ascended to the throne When Charles Alexander immediately moved the capital of Wurttemberg back to Stuttgart the population of the Ludwigsburg suddenly dropped by more than half within a year Jews and World War II Edit Jewish families began living in Ludwigsburg during the 19th century and in 1884 a synagogue was built on Solitudestrasse The synagogue was later destroyed by storm troopers during Kristallnacht the pogrom of November 1938 5 In 1988 the perimeter of the structure was marked out in plaster on the site A 1959 memorial and newer memorial plaques commemorate the Jewish Holocaust victims and extol human rights 6 In 1940 a Nazi propaganda film Jud Suss was filmed in Ludwigsburg The film was based on a historical figure Joseph Suss Oppenheimer who was executed in Stuttgart in 1738 Oppenheimer lived in Ludwigsburg 7 8 During World War II the city suffered moderate damage compared to other German cities There were 1500 deaths It was the home of the prisoner of war camp Stalag V A from October 1939 till April 1945 After the war there was a large displaced persons camp which housed several thousand mainly Polish displaced persons until about 1948 After 1945 until the middle of 1946 there was also an allied internment camp for war criminals in Ludwigsburg and the U S Army maintained the Pattonville barracks on the edge of town large enough to have its own American high school The land was returned to Germany in 1994 On 27 September 2008 the first 12 Stolpersteine were laid in Ludwigsburg 9 They are part of a project by artist Gunter Demnig to memorialize individuals who perished under Nazi persecution Demnig was back in Ludwigsburg on 7 October 2009 to install more Stolpersteine 10 Coat of arms Edit Ludwisburg s coat of arms The coat of arms of Ludwigsburg depicts a black eagle on a golden banner flying on an oblique red lance on a blue background Duke Eberhard Louis Duke of Wurttemberg awarded Ludwigsburg its coat of arms on 3 September 1718 as a Reichssturmfahne which had been part of the Duchy of Wurttemberg s own coat of arms since 1495 There were some minor changes made to the design as it had already been associated with the town of Markgroningen A missive from the office of the mayor of Ludwigsburg in 1759 60 mentions its flag 11 Public institutions EditLudwigsburg has a court of first instance magistrate s municipal court Amtsgericht in German external benches of the Stuttgart Employment Tribunal a tax and revenue office and an Employment Agency German Agentur fur Arbeit The Central Office of the State Justice Administrations for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes German Zentrale Stelle der Landesjustizverwaltungen zur Aufklarung nationalsozialistischer Verbrechen or German Zentrale Stelle or German Z Commission Germany s main agency responsible for investigating war crimes during Nazi rule has its seat at Ludwigsburg Further there is the district administration office German Landratsamt of Ludwigsburg district There is a teaching hospital with 969 beds of the University Hospital Heidelberg The town is also the seat of a church district office of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Wurttemberg German Evangelische Landeskirche in Wurttemberg and a deanery of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rottenburg Stuttgart Since its foundation in 1948 the Franco German Institute German Deutsch Franzosisches Institut DFI has its seat at Ludwigsburg Staatsarchiv LudwigsburgCity government Edit The town council has 40 members The last local election was on 25 May 2014 The voter participation was 44 62 The results of the election were Party Seats CDU 11 26 72 The Greens 8 19 87 SPD 8 18 52 Free Voters 7 17 64 FDP 2 5 98 The Left 2 5 20 LUBU 1 3 37 REP 1 1 78 Business and industry EditThe North South Powerline includes a large transformer station Ludwigsburg Hoheneck built in 1926 which still exists today It is a central junction in the power lines of Baden Wurttemberg to this day On 5 October 1957 the first 380kV powerline in Germany between the transformer station Ludwigsburg Hoheneck and Rommerskirchen went into service Local businesses Edit GdF Wustenrot building and loan association Beru AG automotive supplier Getrag GmbH automotive supplier founded in Ludwigsburg now in Untergruppenbach Mann Hummel manufacturer of automotive filtration products Kreissparkasse Ludwigsburg bank Volksbank Ludwigsburg bank Stihl Bosch Porsche Mieschke Hofman und Partner Mercedes AMG Gleason Pfauter Maschinenfabrik GmbHEducation EditIn 1966 the Ludwigsburg University of Education Padagogische Hochschule a teacher training college and the Staatliche Sportschule Ludwigsburg State Sports School were opened Further universities based in Ludwigsburg are the Ludwigsburg University of Applied Sciences Hochschule fur offentliche Verwaltung und Finanzen Ludwigsburg a public institution for the training of higher level Civil Servants and the Ludwigsburg Evangelical University for Social Works Church Social Works and Religious Teaching Evangelische Hochschule Ludwigsburg Hochschule fur Soziale Arbeit Religionspadagogik und Diakonie In 1991 a national film school Film Academy Baden Wurttemberg Filmakademie Baden Wurttemberg was established in Ludwigsburg 12 which has won several national and international awards 13 and is regarded as one of the best film schools in the world 14 Since 2007 there is also the Academy of Performing Arts Baden Wuerttemberg Akademie fur Darstellende Kunst Baden Wurttemberg Ludwigsburg has eight secondary schools of various types and four vocational schools There ere are also four special schools and seventeen primary schools An adult high school and the city library are located at the cultural center behind the city hall Sports EditLudwigsburg has seven teams in the top level of professional sports They are MHP Riesen Ludwigsburg Basketball both formations A and B of the dance team 1 Tanzclub Ludwigsburg the Latin formation TSC Ludwigsburg the Hockey Club Ludwigsburg 1912 e V Svl08 Water polo and the riflery team of Ludwigsburg Additionally there are numerous amateur clubs for various sports Districts Edit Ludwigsburg consists of following districts Mitte Center West Nord North Ost East Sud South Eglosheim Grunbuhl Sonnenberg Hoheneck with a therapeutic and thermal bath opened in 1907 Neckarweihingen Ossweil Pflugfelden PoppenweilerNeighbouring towns EditThe following towns are neighbouring towns of Ludwigsburg starting north of the city and going clockwise Freiberg am Neckar Benningen am Neckar Marbach am Neckar Erdmannhausen Affalterbach Remseck am Neckar Kornwestheim Moglingen Asperg und Tamm Population growth EditHistorical populationYearPop 1718600 17262 442 307 0 177411 607 375 3 18035 248 54 8 1843 10 726 104 4 1871 11 785 9 9 1875 13 800 17 1 1880 14 700 6 5 1885 16 187 10 1 1890 17 418 7 6 YearPop 1895 19 311 10 9 1900 19 436 0 6 1905 22 585 16 2 1910 24 926 10 4 1916 19 377 22 3 1917 19 206 0 9 1919 23 303 21 3 1925 28 861 23 9 1933 34 135 18 3 1939 43 505 27 4 YearPop 194538 804 10 8 1946 49 635 27 9 1950 58 489 17 8 1956 69 535 18 9 1961 73 512 5 7 196576 555 4 1 1970 78 019 1 9 197583 622 7 2 198081 589 2 4 198576 973 5 7 YearPop 1987 78 884 2 5 199082 343 4 4 199586 810 5 4 200086 897 0 1 200587 673 0 9 200687 295 0 4 201490 386 3 5 Notable people EditKarl Eugen Duke of Wurttemberg enrolled the young Friedrich Schiller in the Karlsschule Stuttgart an elite military academy he had founded in 1773 where Schiller eventually studied medicine The Duke was very demanding of his students and Schiller s childhood was a lonely and unhappy one but he was greatly enriched by the excellent education he received It was there that he wrote his first play Die Rauber The Robbers about a group of naive revolutionaries and their tragic failure Leopold Mozart visited Wurttemberg with his son Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in July 1763 and said Ludwigsburg is a very special town 15 Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart Charles Pfizer geb Karl Pfizer 1824 1906 chemist and founder of Pfizer Inc Wilhelm Emil Fein 1842 1898 inventor Gerold von Gleich 1869 1938 army officer military memoirist physicist Wilhelm Groener 1867 1939 officer and politician Willi Hennig 1913 1976 biologist and founder of cladistics Caesar von Hofacker 1896 1944 Luftwaffe officer and Nazi resistance member hanged for treason Eduard von Kallee 1818 1888 general painter and archaeologist Richard Kallee 1854 1933 pastor of Stuttgart Feuerbach Justinus Kerner 1786 1862 writer and physician Hartmut Michel born 1948 co recipient of 1988 Nobel Prize in Chemistry Eduard Morike 1804 1875 romantic poet and theologian Nikolaos Nakas born 1982 German former footballer Karl Ludwig von Phull 1757 1826 general Christian Friedrich Daniel Schubart 1739 1791 poet Tony Schumacher 1848 1931 author of children s books Hugo Sperrle 1885 1953 field marshal of the Luftwaffe during World War II David Friedrich Strauss 1808 1874 theologian and writer Albert Veiel 1806 1874 dermatologist Friedrich Theodor Vischer 1807 1887 theologian professor and politician Reinhard von Werneck 1757 1842 soldier and director of Munich s Englischer Garten Antonio Colak born 1993 Croatian footballerNotable residents Edit Friedrich Silcher and his wife 1822 Ilse Koch 1906 1967 Nazi war criminal lived there Horst Kohler born 1943 former Federal President of Germany grew up there 16 Hans Scholl 1918 1943 student and resistance fighter executed by the Nazis Sophie Scholl 1921 1943 student and resistance fighter executed by the Nazis 17 Friedrich Silcher 1789 1860 composer wrote music there Carl Maria von Weber 1786 1826 composer wrote music there Eva Heller 1948 2008 author and social scientist grew up thereTwin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Ludwigsburg is twinned with 18 Montbeliard France 1950 Caerphilly Wales United Kingdom 1960 Yevpatoria Ukraine 1990 St Charles United States 1995 Novy Jicin Czech Republic 1991 References Edit Aktuelle Wahlergebnisse Staatsanzeiger accessed 13 September 2021 Bevolkerung nach Nationalitat und Geschlecht am 31 Dezember 2021 Population by nationality and sex as of December 31 2021 CSV in German Statistisches Landesamt Baden Wurttemberg June 2022 Hans Peter Stika Traces of a possible Celtic brewery in Eberdingen Hochdorf Kreis Ludwigsburg southwest Germany Vegetation History and Archaeobotany Volume 5 Numbers 1 2 June 1996 Accessed 4 March 2010 Official website of the Ludwigsburg Palace Jewish History of Ludwigsburg Official website of Alemania Judaica Accessed 3 March 2010 Gedenkstatten fur die Opfer des Nationalsozialismus Eine Dokumentation Memorial Sites for the Victims of Nazism A Documentary Report Volume I Bonn 1995 page 56 ISBN 3 89331 208 0 in German Description of cultural tour through Ludwigsburg Guided City Tours Ludwigsburg Accessed 3 March 2010 German Propaganda Archive Jud Suss Eight page flyer from Illustrierter Film Kurier magazine 1940 Accessed 4 March 2010 Erinnerung an zwolf Nazi Opfer Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ludwigsburger Kreiszeitung 3 October 2008 Retrieved 12 June 2010 in German Chronik October 2009 Stolperstein official website Retrieved 12 June 2010 in German Ludwigsburg LEO BW Baden Wurttemberg Retrieved 2 September 2018 The History of the Baden Wurttemberg Film Academy Filmakademie Baden Wurttemberg GmbH Startseite www filmakademie de Top 15 International Film Schools Revealed The Hollywood Reporter 30 July 2015 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Ludwigsburg Travel Guide world66 com Accessed 4 March 2010 Resume of President Horst Kohler Archived 21 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine Official presidential website Retrieved 2 March 2010 Sophie Scholl in Ludwigsburg Website about Sophie Scholl s childhood years in Ludwigsburg Accessed 4 March 2010 Stadtepartnerschaften ludwigsburg de in German Ludwigsburg Retrieved 19 February 2021 Further reading EditAndrea Hahn Ludwigsburg Stationen einer Stadt Andreas Hackenberg Verlag Ludwigsburg 2004 ISBN 3 937280 02 2 Gernot von Hahn Friedhelm Horn Ludwigsburg Stadt der Schlosser und Garten Medien Verlag Schubert Stuttgart 1998 ISBN 3 929229 55 2 Bruno Hahnemann Ludwigsburg Stadt Schlosser Bluhendes Barock Verlag Ungeheuer Ulmer Ludwigsburg 1979 on the sidelines Frederick Forsyth The Odessa File ISBN 0 553 27198 9 Annette Weinke Eine Gesellschaft ermittelt gegen sich selbst Die Geschichte der Zentralen Stelle Ludwigsburg 1958 2008 Darmstadt Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft 2008 Hans H Poschko Hg Die Ermittler von Ludwigsburg Deutschland und die Aufklarung nationalsozialistischer Verbrechen Berlin Metropol 2008 Tobias Herrmann Gisela Muller Mitteilungen aus dem Bundesarchiv Themenheft 2008 Die Aussenstelle Ludwigsburg Koblenz Bundesarchiv 2008 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ludwigsburg Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Ludwigsburg Official website of the City of Ludwigsburg Tourism Information about Ludwigsburg in German Ludwigsburg at CurlieOther educational institutions Edit Carl Schaefer Schule in German Elly Heuss Knapp Realschule in German Eugen Bolz Hauptschule in German Friedrich Schiller Gymnasium in German Goethe Gymnasium in German Gottlieb Daimler Realschule in German Moerike Gymnasium in German Oststadt Hauptschule in German Otto Hahn Gymnasium in German Uhlandschule Hauptschule in German Oscar Walcker Schule in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ludwigsburg amp oldid 1130796159, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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