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Lüneburg

Lüneburg (German: [ˈlyːnəbʊʁk] ; Low German: Lümborg; Latin: Luneburgum or Lunaburgum; Old High German: Luneburc; Old Saxon: Hliuni; Polabian: Glain), officially the Hanseatic City of Lüneburg (German: Hansestadt Lüneburg) and also known in English as Lunenburg (/ˈljnənbɜːrɡ/ LEW-nən-burg), is a town in the German state of Lower Saxony. It is located about 50 km (31 mi) southeast of another Hanseatic city, Hamburg, and belongs to that city's wider metropolitan region. The capital of the district which bears its name, it is home to roughly 77,000 people.[3] Lüneburg's urban area, which includes the surrounding communities of Adendorf, Bardowick, Barendorf and Reppenstedt, has a population of around 103,000. Lüneburg has been allowed to use the title "Hansestadt" (Hanseatic Town) in its name since 2007, in recognition of its membership in the former Hanseatic League. Lüneburg is also home to Leuphana University.

Lüneburg
Lümborg (Low German)
Panorama of Lüneburg from the water tower, with St. Johannis Church in the foreground to the right
Location of Lüneburg within Lüneburg district
Lüneburg (district)Lower SaxonySchleswig-HolsteinMecklenburg-VorpommernLüchow-DannenbergUelzen (district)HeidekreisHarburgRehlingenSoderstorfOldendorfAmelinghausenBetzendorfBarnstedtMelbeckDeutsch EvernWendisch EvernEmbsenSüdergellersenKirchgellersenWestergellersenReppenstedtReppenstedtMechtersenVögelsenRadbruchBardowickHandorfWittorfLüneburgBarendorfVastorfReinstorfThomasburgDahlenburgBoitzeNahrendorfTosterglopeDahlemBleckedeNeetzeAdendorfScharnebeckRullstorfLüdersburgHittbergenHohnstorfEchemArtlenburgBarumBrietlingenAmt Neuhaus
Lüneburg
Lüneburg
Coordinates: 53°15′9″N 10°24′52″E / 53.25250°N 10.41444°E / 53.25250; 10.41444
CountryGermany
StateLower Saxony
DistrictLüneburg
Subdivisions14 districts
Government
 • Lord mayor (2021–26) Claudia Kalisch[1] (Greens)
Area
 • Total70.34 km2 (27.16 sq mi)
Elevation
17 m (56 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total75,599
 • Density1,100/km2 (2,800/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
21335–21337–21339
Dialling codes04131
Vehicle registrationLG
Websitewww.hansestadt-lueneburg.de

History edit

Lower SaxonyProvince of HanoverKingdom of HanoverFirst EmpireKingdom of WestphaliaElectorate of Brunswick-LüneburgPrincipality of LüneburgDuchy of Brunswick-LüneburgHoly Roman Empire
 
 
 
View from the Kalkberg towards the east, with all three main churches

Prehistory edit

The first signs of human presence in the area of Lüneburg date back to the time of Neanderthal Man: 56 axes, estimated at 150,000 years old, were uncovered during the construction in the 1990s of the autobahn between Ochtmissen and Bardowick.[4] The site of the discovery at Ochtmissen was probably a Neanderthal hunting location where huntsmen skinned and cut up the animals they had caught.

The area was almost certainly not continuously inhabited at that time, however, due to the various glaciations that lasted for millennia. The first indication of a permanent, settled farming culture in the area was found not far from the site of the Neanderthal discovery in the river Ilmenau between Lüne and Bardowick. This was an axe that is described as a Schuhleistenkeil or "shoe last wedge" due to its shape. It dates to the 6th century BC and is now in the collection of the Lüneburg Museum.

Since the Bronze Age, the Lüneburg hill known as the Zeltberg has concealed a whole range of prehistoric and early historic graves, which were laid out by people living in the area of the present-day town of Lüneburg. One of the oldest finds from this site is a so-called Unetice flanged axe (Aunjetitzer Randleistenbeil) which dates to 1900 BC.

The land within the town itself has also yielded a number of ice age urns that were already being reported in the 18th century. These discoveries are, however, like those from the Lüneburger Kalkberg — they went into the private collections of several 18th century scholars and, with a few exceptions, were lost when the scholars died.

Also worth mentioning in this regard are the Lombard Urnfield graves on the Lüneburg Zeltberg and Oedeme from the first few centuries AD. In the Middle Ages, there several discoveries were made on the site of the town, for example on the site of the old village of Modestorpe not far from St. John's Church (Johanniskirche), at the Lambertiplatz near the saltworks and in the old Waterside Quarter.

The ancient town may be that identified as Leufana or Leuphana (Greek: Λευφάνα), a town listed in Ptolemy (2.10) in the north of Germany on the west of the Elbe.

From village to commercial town edit

 
View from the Brausebrücke bridge

Lüneburg was first mentioned in medieval records in a deed signed on 13 August, 956 AD, in which Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor granted "the tax from Lüneburg to the monastery built there in honour of Saint Michael" (German: den Zoll zu Lüneburg an das zu Ehren des heiligen Michaels errichtete Kloster, Latin: teloneum ad Luniburc ad monasterium sancti Michahelis sub honore constructum).[5] An older reference to the place in the Royal Frankish Annals for 795 states:ad fluvium Albim pervenit ad locum, qui dicitur Hliuni, i.e. "on the river Elbe, at the location, which is called Hliuni") and refers to one of the three core settlements of Lüneburg; probably the castle on the Kalkberg which was the seat of the Billunger nobles from 951. The Elbe-Germanic name Hliuni corresponds to the Lombard word for "refuge site".

From archaeological finds, it is clear that the area around Lüneburg had already been settled (in the museum of the Principality of Lüneburg, for example, there is a whole range of artefacts that were found here) and the saltworks had already started production.

According to tradition, the salt was first discovered by a hunter who observed a wild boar bathing in a pool of water, shot and killed it, and hung the coat up to dry. When it was dry, he discovered white crystals in the bristles — salt. Later he returned to the site of the kill and located the salt pool, the first production of salt on the site took place. In the town hall is a bone preserved in a glass case; legend has it that this is the preserved leg-bone of the boar. It was here that the Lüneburg Saltworks was subsequently established for many centuries.

In spite of its lucrative saltworks, Lüneburg was originally subordinated to the town of Bardowick only a few miles to the north. Bardowick was older and was an important trading post for the Slavs. Bardowick's prosperity – it had seven churches – was based purely on the fact that no other trading centres were tolerated. Only when Bardowick refused to pay allegiance to Henry the Lion it was destroyed by him in 1189, whereupon Lüneburg was given town privileges (Stadtrechte) and developed into the central trading post in the region in place of Bardowick.

The Polabian name for Lüneburg is Glain (written as Chlein or Glein in older German sources), probably derived from glaino (Slavonic: glina) which means "clay". In the Latin texts Lüneburg surfaces not only as the Latinised Lunaburgum, but also as Selenopolis.

Hanseatic period edit

 
Miniature of Lüneburg in the Sächsische Weltchronik, 13th century
 
Hans Bornemann's The punishment of Aegeas (~1450). In the background a view of Lüneburg with St. Nicholas' Church
 
The slightly leaning spire of the church of St. John

As a consequence of the monopoly that Lüneburg had for many years as a supplier of salt within the North German region, a monopoly not challenged until much later by French imports, it very quickly became a member of the Hanseatic League. The League was formed in 1158 in Lübeck, initially as a union of individual merchants, but in 1356 it met as a federation of trading towns at the first general meeting of the Hansetag. Lüneburg's salt was needed in order to pickle the herring caught in the Baltic Sea and the waters around Norway so that it could be preserved for food inland during periods of fasting when fish (not meat) was permitted.

The Scania Market at Scania in Sweden was a major fish market for herring and became one of the most important trade events in Northern Europe in the Middle Ages. Lüneburg's salt was in great demand and the town quickly became one of the wealthiest and most important towns in the Hanseatic League, together with Bergen and Visby (the fish suppliers) and Lübeck (the central trading post between the Baltic and the interior). In the Middle Ages salt was initially conveyed overland up the Old Salt Road to Lübeck. With the opening of the Stecknitz Canal in 1398 salt could be transported by cog from the Lübeck salt warehouses, the Salzspeicher.

Around the year 1235, the Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg emerged, ruled by a family whose aristocratic lines repeatedly divided and re-united. The smaller states that kept re-appearing as a result, and which ranked as principalities, were usually named after the location of the ducal seat. Thus between 1267 and 1269 a Principality of Lüneburg was created for the first time, with Lüneburg as the seat of the royal Residenz. In 1371, in the wake of the Lüneburg War of Succession, rebel citizens threw the princes out of the town and destroyed their royal castle on the Kalkberg along with the nearby monastery. The state peace treaty in 1392 granted their demand to become a free imperial town, a status they were able to defend until 1637. The money now stayed in the town, enabling fine houses and churches to be built.

In 1392 Lüneburg was accorded the staple right. This forced merchants who travelled through the area with their carts to stop in Lüneburg, unload their wares, and offer them for sale for a certain period. So that merchants could not go around Lüneburg, an impassable defensive barrier was built west of the town in 1397; a similar barrier was built east of the town in 1479.

The Lüneburg Prelates' War caused a crisis from 1446 to 1462. This was not a war in the proper sense, but rather a bitter dispute between the town council and those members of the clergy who were also part-owners of the town's saltworks. It was not resolved until the intervention of the Danish King Christian I, the Bishop of Schwerin and the Lübeck Bishop, Arnold Westphal.

In 1454 the citizens demanded even more influence over public life.

Since 2007, Lüneburg has once again held the title of a Hanseatic town.

Modern period to the end of the Second World War edit

 
Cityscape of Lüneburg in the 16th-century atlas Civitates Orbis Terrarum, published in its first volume, in 1572

With the demise of the Hanseatic League – and the absence of herrings around 1560 around Falsterbo in Scania – the biggest customers of Lüneburg's salt broke away and the town rapidly became impoverished. Hardly any new houses were built in central Lüneburg after this time, which is why the historical appearance of the town centre has remained almost unchanged until the present day.

The town became part of the Electorate of Hanover in 1708, the Kingdom of Westphalia in 1807, the First French Empire in 1810, the Kingdom of Hanover in 1814, and the Prussian Province of Hanover in 1866.

In the centuries after the collapse of the League, it was as if Lüneburg had fallen into a Sleeping Beauty slumber. Heinrich Heine, whose parents lived in Lüneburg from 1822 to 1826, called it his "residence of boredom" (Residenz der Langeweile). Near the end of the 19th century Lüneburg evolved into a garrison town, and it remained so until the 1990s.

The horticulturist Curt Backeberg was born in Lüneburg in 1894.

After the Nazi anti-Jewish pogroms known as Kristallnacht in the night of November 9, 1938, the city ordered the Lüneburg Synagogue to be torn down at the costs of the local Jewish community.[6]

In the Lüneburg Special Children's Ward, part of the Lüneburg State Mental Hospital, it is suspected that over 300 children were killed during the Second World War as part of the official Nazi child euthanasia programme.[7]

In 1945 Lüneburg surfaced once again in the history books when, south of the town on the hill known as the Timeloberg (near the village of Wendisch Evern) the German Instrument of Surrender was signed that brought the Second World War in Europe to an end. The location is presently inaccessible to the general public as it lies within a military out-of-bounds area. Only a small monument on a nearby track alludes to the event. On 23 May 1945 Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler took his own life in Lüneburg whilst in British Army custody by biting into a potassium cyanide capsule embedded in his teeth before he could be properly interrogated. He was subsequently buried in an unmarked location in a nearby forest.

Post-war period edit

Even before the Nuremberg Trials took place, the first war crimes trial, the so-called Belsen Trial (Bergen-Belsen-Prozess), began in Lüneburg on 17 September 1945 conducted against 45 former SS men, women and kapos (prisoner functionaries) from the Bergen-Belsen and Auschwitz concentration camps.

After World War II, Lüneburg became part of the new state of Lower Saxony. But the dilapidated state of its buildings led to various plans to try to improve living conditions. One proposition that was seriously discussed was to tear down the entire Altstadt and replace it with modern buildings. The ensuing public protest resulted in Lüneburg becoming the focal point for a new concept: cultural heritage conservation. Since the early 1970s the town has been systematically restored. A leading figure in this initiative since the late 1960s has been Curt Pomp: against much opposition from politicians and councillors he founded and championed the Lüneburg Altstadt Working Group (Arbeitskreis Lüneburger Altstadt) for the preservation of historic buildings. His engagement was rewarded with the German Prize for Cultural Heritage Conservation and the German Order of Merit. Today Lüneburg is a tourist attraction as a result of the restoration and important sectors of the town's economy also depend on tourism.

Between Lüneburg and Soltau to the southwest, a large military training area, the Soltau-Lüneburg Training Area (SLTA), was established by the British and Canadian military, which was used from 1963 to 1994. It was governed by the Soltau-Lüneburg Agreement between the Federal Republic of Germany, the United Kingdom and Canada. The area was located on the Lüneburg Heath and was heavily used particularly by tanks and other armoured vehicles.

The salt mine was closed in 1980, ending the thousand-year tradition of salt mining, although small amounts are still mined for ceremonial purposes. Small bags of salt may be purchased in the town hall, and bags are given as a gift from the town to all couples married in the town. After the closing of the salt mines, the town gained new relevance from its university, which was founded in 1989.

As part of the restructuring of Defence in 1990 two of the three Bundeswehr barracks in the town were closed and the remaining one reduced in size. The Bundesgrenzschutz barracks was also closed. Lüneburg University moved to the site of the old Scharnhorst barracks. The university grew out of the new economics and cultural studies departments set up in the 1980s and their amalgamation with the College of Education (Pädagogischen Hochschule or PH) that took place in 1989. Since its move to the former barracks site the university has enrolled increasing numbers of students. The expansion of the university is an important contribution to the restructuring of the town into a service centre.

Today an industrial estate, the Lünepark, has been built on the terrain of the old Bundesgrenzschutz barracks with its new industrial premises for entrepreneurs. The promotion of trade and industry has resulted in many firms from the ICT area locating themselves there. In May 2006 the nearby Johannes Westphal Bridge was opened to traffic. This links the newly created Lünepark with the suburb of Goseburg on the far side of the Ilmenau. Since 5 October 2007 Lüneburg has been able to call itself a Hanseatic Town; together with Stade it is one of only two towns in Lower Saxony to bear the title.

Amalgamated villages/communities edit

  • 1943: Hagen and Lüne
  • 1974: Häcklingen, Ochtmissen, Oedeme and Rettmer as well as the Ortsteile of Alt-Hagen, Ebensberg and Pflegerdorf/Gut Wienebüttel.

Geography edit

 
 
Aerial photograph of the south of the town centre

Location edit

Lüneburg lies on the river Ilmenau, about 30 kilometres (19 mi) from its confluence with the Elbe. The river flows through the town and is featured in its song; it was formerly traversed by cogs taking salt from the town to the other, larger, ports of the Hanseatic League nearby.

To the south of the town stretches the 7,400-square-kilometre (2,857 sq mi) Lüneburg Heath which emerged as a result of widespread tree-felling, forest fires and grazing. The tradition that the heath arose from centuries of logging undertaken to meet the constant need of the Lüneburg salt works for wood is not historically confirmed. More likely, the heath was originally formed by clearances during the Bronze Age. The old town (Altstadt) of Lüneburg lies above a salt dome which is the town's original source of prosperity. However, the constant mining of the salt deposits over which the town stands has also resulted in the sometimes gradual, sometimes dramatically pronounced, sinking of various areas of the town. On the western edge of the town is the Kalkberg, a small hill and former gypsum quarry.

Neighbouring towns and cities edit

There are several towns, cities, and urban areas around Lüneburg in all directions:

Winsen (Luhe), Hamburg-Harburg
18 km (11 mi), 36 km
Hamburg-Bergedorf, Schwarzenbek, Lübeck
32 km (20 mi), 43 km (27 mi), 87 km (54 mi)
Adendorf, Lauenburg
5 km (3 mi), 22 km (14 mi)
Jesteburg
48 km (30 mi)
  Amt Neuhaus, Lübtheen
42 km (26 mi), 57 km
Soltau
51 km (32 mi)
Ebstorf, Uelzen
26 km (16 mi), 37 km (23 mi)
Lüchow (Wendland)
68 km

Town layout edit

Historical quarters edit

 
Manhole cover displaying the symbol for the motto "Mons, Pons, Fons"
 
Lüneburg street map around 1910

The motto Mons, Pons, Fons ("Hill, bridge, spring") characterised the development of the town from the 8th century as it coalesced from initially three, and later four, areas of settlement. These areas were the refuge castle on the — at that time considerably higher — Kalkberg, together with its adjoining settlement (the Marktviertel or "Market Quarter"), the village of Modestorpe between the bridge over the river Ilmenau and the large square, Am Sande (the Sandviertel or "Sand Quarter"), and the saline with its walled settlement for the work force (the Sülzviertel or "Salt Quarter"). Not until the 13th century was the river port settlement (the Wasserviertel or "Waterside Quarter") built between the market place and the Ilmenau. The resulting shape of the town thus formed did not change until its expansion in the late 19th century and it is still clearly visible today. Lüneburg's six historic town gates were the Altenbrücker Tor, the Bardowicker Tor, the Rote Tor, the Sülztor, the Lüner Tor and the Neue Tor.

Stadtteile edit

Lüneburg has the following Stadtteile: Altstadt, Bockelsberg, Ebensberg, Goseburg-Zeltberg, Häcklingen, Kaltenmoor (the largest Stadtteil, with around 8,000 inhabitants), Kreideberg, Lüne, Moorfeld, Mittelfeld, Neu Hagen, Ochtmissen, Oedeme, Rettmer, Rotes Feld, Schützenplatz, Weststadt and Wilschenbruch.

Jüttkenmoor, Klosterkamp, Bülows Kamp, In den Kämpen, Krähornsberg, Schäferfeld, Volgershall and Zeltberg are the names of individual blocks within a single Stadtteil.

Subsidence edit

The houses in the historic quarter between the Lüneburg Saltworks (today the German Salt Museum) and the Kalkberg were built above a salt dome that was excavated by the saltworks and which extended to just below the surface of the ground. As a result of the increasing quantities of salt mined with improved technical equipment after 1830, the ground began to sink by several metres. This resulted in the so-called Senkungsgebiet or "subsidence area". The houses there and the local church (St. Lambert's) lost their stability and had to be demolished. Because of this subsidence, and because salt mining was increasingly unprofitable, the saltworks were finally closed in 1980. Today, only small amounts of brine are extracted for the health spa in the Lüneburg Thermal Salt Baths (the Salztherme Lüneburg or SaLü). One side of the saltworks now houses a supermarket, while the other is the German Salt Museum.

The subsidence has been monitored at about 240 stations since 1946 every two years. The land has not quite stopped subsiding yet, but it is stable enough that new construction has taken place on it, and several historic buildings which had previously been damaged or demolished have been restored. The subsidence can still be clearly seen even today. Those who walk from Am Sande to the end of the Grapengießerstraße can clearly sense the degree of subsidence for themselves: the hollow in front of them was formerly at the same level as the Grapengießerstraße. This depression extends as far as the Lambertiplatz square.

In the Frommestraße, another sign of earth movements caused by salt mining may be seen: the Tor zur Unterwelt ("Door to the Underworld"), where two cast iron doors have been pushed on top of one another.

Near the church St. Michaelis, other consequences of the subsidence can be seen in its sloping columns and the west wing of the nave. Current subsidence movements can be seen in the road known as Ochtmisser Kirchsteig.

Demographics edit

Lüneburg already had about 14,000 inhabitants in the Late Middle Ages and beginning of the Modern Period and was one of the largest 'cities' of its time, but its population shrank with the economic downturn to just 9,400 in 1757; then rose again to 10,400 in 1813. With the onset of industrialisation in the 19th century, population growth accelerated. If 13,000 were living in the town in 1855, by 1939 there were as many as 35,000. Shortly after the Second World War, refugees and displaced persons from Germany's eastern territories brought an increase in population within just a few months of around 18,000 people so that the total number in December 1945 was 53,000. In 2003 the 70,000 level was exceeded for the first time.

The town of Lüneburg, its eponymous district and the neighbouring district of Harburg belong to the few regions in Germany that have experienced such a massive growth. The reasons for this include the growth of areas around the Hamburg Metropolitan Region and the consequent shift of people to those areas. The Lower Saxon State Office for Statistics has forecast that the town of Lüneburg will have a population of 89,484 by the year 2021. More realistic estimates, however, put the future size Lüneburg at between 75,000 and 79,000 in that time frame.

On 31 December 2008, according to the Statistics Office, the official census for Lüneburg recorded 72,492 people (those who had their main residence in the town and after adjustments with other states offices) – the highest number in its history. Currently Lüneburg is the eleventh largest centre of population in Lower Saxony. In addition Lüneburg has particularly close relations with its adjacent municipalities which are also growing and with which it is forming an agglomeration. The town, together with the nearby villages of Adendorf, Bardowick, Deutsch Evern, Reppenstedt, Vögelsen and Wendisch Evern, has a total population of about 103,000 and, on that basis, would qualify as a city (in Germany cities or Großstädte are defined as settlements with a population of over 100,000). The town council has the plan to extend the population by adding these villages to the town area.

Historical population
YearPop.±%
153014,000—    
169911,000−21.4%
17579,426−14.3%
181310,400+10.3%
185513,352+28.4%
186114,400+7.8%
186715,900+10.4%
187116,284+2.4%
189020,665+26.9%
190024,693+19.5%
191027,790+12.5%
192528,923+4.1%
193331,171+7.8%
193935,239+13.1%
194553,095+50.7%
195058,139+9.5%
195656,845−2.2%
196159,563+4.8%
196560,269+1.2%
197059,516−1.2%
197564,586+8.5%
198062,225−3.7%
198559,645−4.1%
199061,870+3.7%
200067,398+8.9%
201071,549+6.2%
201978,024+9.0%
Largest groups of foreign residents[8]
Nationality Population (2013)
  Turkey 608
  Poland 438
  Russia 221
  Italy 182
  Kosovo 170
  Serbia 141

The following overview shows the population figures based on the situation at the time. Up to 1813 they were mostly estimates; thereafter based on censuses (*) or official projections by the State Office of Statistics. From 1871 the figures were based on those 'present in the town', from 1925 on those 'living in the town' and since 1987 on the 'population who have their main residence in the town'. Before 1871 the numbers were based on inconsistent survey methods.

Economy edit

At one time Lüneburg had over 80 breweries. The Lüneburger Kronen Brewery of 1485 in Heiligengeiststraße brewed beers such as Lüneburger Kronen-Pilsener and Moravia Pilsener that were very well known in North Germany. These beers are brewed today by the Holsten Brewery in Hamburg, although the original yeast stock (Hefestämme) was destroyed when the Kronen Brewery was taken over. Only the original Lüneburger Pilsener is still produced as before, although it is now made by the Holsten Brewery and only sold on tap. Today there are just two small inn breweries left in Lüneburg. In the Nolte Inn Brewery (Gasthausbrauerei Nolte) some distance from the centre on the Dahlenburger Landstraße and in the Brau- und Tafelhaus Mälzer in Heiligengeiststraße the tradition of Lüneburger breweries lives on.

Recently Lüneburg has increasingly developed into a venue for tourists. Nevertheless, medium-sized and small businesses still play a major role in Lüneburg's economy. The University of Lüneburg has also generated changes which, together with its student population, have stimulated the economy of the region.

Important local firms edit

Industry and trade edit

Many small and medium-sized businesses are based in Lüneburg. They include the fashion company Roy Robson, DeVauGe Gesundkostwerk one of the largest German manufacturers of vegetarian food and the dairy, which today is part of Hochwald Nahrungsmittel-Werke and makes products, e.g., yoghurt, under the Lünebest label. (The knitware firm Lucia, once the biggest employer in the town, went bankrupt in 2008.) In the industrial field there are large local firms like the car interior manufacturers, Johnson Controls, H. B. Fuller, Impreglon and the electronics company of Sieb & Meyer. Also based in Lüneburg is the von Stern'schen Druckerei, founded in 1614, the oldest printing firm still in family ownership in the world. Werum IT Solutions is the largest information technology firm based in the town.

Tourism, new technologies and the service sector edit

The town nursery has created a spa park for tourists and visitors with a 'graduation works', ponds, numerous herbaceous borders and herb gardens which is immediately next to the health spa centre (Kurzentrum). The spa centre has wave pools, salt baths, wellness and sauna facilities, etc. (Salztherme Lüneburg); in addition there is a brine therapy centre which is used for those with skin and respiratory problems. Lüneburg is not an official health spa like e. g. the neighbouring town of Bad Bevensen, but does have special medicinal resources like, for example, Lüneburg brine (containing about 26% salt), which is used especially to relieve those suffering from psoriasis. In addition, since 1978, the headquarters of the conference hotel group Seminaris has been based here. Among firms in the technology and service sectors is Gründungszentrum e-novum, which supports new venture firms.

Governance edit

The town of Lüneburg is part of 'State Constituency 49 Lüneburg' and 'Federal Constituency No. 38 Lüchow-Dannenberg – Lüneburg'.[9][10]

Council edit

Local election results in 2016 for the town council of Lüneburg:[11]

Name (English) Name (German) Abbr. Ideology Position International organizations Votes (2016) Seats in town council Notes
Social Democratic Party Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands SPD Social democracy centre-left Progressive Alliance and Socialist International (observer) 32.9% 14
Alliance '90/The Greens Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen (GAL) Green Politics centre-left Global Greens 22.0% 9 merger of Die Grünen and Bündnis 90
Christian Democratic Union Christlich Demokratische Union CDU Christian democracy centre-right Centrist Democrat International and International Democrat Union 20.7% 9
The Left Die Linke Socialism
Eurocommunism
left-wing Party of the European Left 9.5% 4 merger of The Left Party.PDS and WASG
Alternative for Germany Alternative für Deutschland AfD German nationalism
Right-wing populism
right-wing European Alliance of People and Nations 9.0% 4
Free Democratic Party Freie Demokratische Partei FDP Liberalism centre Liberal International 6.0% 2

Mayor edit

Before the Second World War the lord mayor (Oberbürgermeister) was the full-time head of the town's administration. On the introduction of the North German council constitution by the British occupation forces power was separated: the voluntary lord mayor and chairman of the town body was the political representative of the town who, like all the members of the town council was elected by the people, whilst the administration was headed up by a full-time chief municipal director, who was elected by the town council. Since 1996, as a result of the reform of the local constitution, both functions (again) have been combined in the post of a full-time lord mayor, who is now directly elected by the townsfolk. In addition to the lord mayor there are other mayors (elected by the council) who support and represent the lord mayor in his civic duties.

  • 1945–1946: Werner Bockelmann, SPD
  • 1946–1949: Ernst Braune, SPD
  • 1949–1951: Paul Müller, DP
  • 1951–1952: Erich Dieckmann, DP
  • 1952–1954: Peter Gravenhorst, DP
  • 1954–1955: Reinhold Kreitmeyer, FDP
  • 1955–1958: Peter Gravenhorst, DP
  • 1958–1961: Wilhelm Hilmer, SPD
  • 1961–1964: Erich Drenckhahn, CDU
  • 1964–1978: Alfred Trebchen, SPD
  • 1978–1981: Heinz Schlawatzky, SPD
  • 1981–1987: Horst Nickel, CDU
  • 1987–1991: Jens Schreiber, CDU
  • 1991–2021: Ulrich Mädge, SPD
  • since 2021: Claudia Kalisch, Bündnis 90/Die Grünen

The current mayors are: Eduard Kolle (SPD), Ulrich Löb (Bündnis 90/Die Grünen), and Christel John (CDU).

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Lüneburg is twinned with:[12]

In addition Lüneburg has friendly relations with German towns Kulmbach and Köthen.[12]

Arts and culture edit

 
A cul-de-sac in Lüneburg's Altstadt
 
St. Nicolai in the Waterside Quarter
 
Stadtschloss am Markt: in front the Luna Fountain
 
Interior of St. Nicolai
 
Stint Market in Lüneburg Harbour
 
Old harbour with treadwheel crane and Altes Kaufhaus

Theatre edit

The Lüneburg Theatre (Theater Lüneburg) is one of the smallest, three-stage theatres in Germany. Not only are plays of all styles put on, but also operas, operettas, musicals and ballets. Although the financial means of the Lüneburg Theatre are comparatively limited, it is no 'provincial stage' and can hold its ground successfully against the many theatres in nearby Hamburg. In addition Lüneburg has a large number of amateur theatres, that also produce regular performances. Such a variety in amateur drama is otherwise only found in large cities like Hamburg or Hanover.

Museums edit

The historic town is itself a kind of open-air museum (a "Rothenburg of the North"), but there are numerous museums and historic churches (St. Michaelis, St. Johannis, St. Nicolai. The most important museums are the German Salt Museum in the premises of the old Lüneburg Saltworks, in which the significance of salt in the Middle Ages and the extraction of salt is portrayed, and the Museum of the Principality of Lüneburg, in which the town's history and the history of the surrounding area is captured. Also worthy of mention are the East Prussian Regional Museum, the nearby North German Brewery Museum with a gallery of valuable drinking vessels (over 1200 years), the 1485 Kronen Brewery of Lüneburg and the Lüneburg Nature Museum on the edge of the subsidence zone.

Town architecture edit

Lüneburg is one of the few towns in North Germany whose historic centre was not destroyed during the Second World War. Nevertheless, the general neglect of its buildings until the 1960s and the damage in the area of subsidence has led to gaps in the historic architecture of the town. In addition the demolition of ramshackle buildings in the 1950s and 1960s and the construction of shops with a contemporary design broke up the historic appearance of many rows of houses. Since the beginning of the 1970s, however, Lüneburg has been carefully restored. The restoration process revealed hitherto hidden ceiling frescos, medieval pottery workshops and many historic soakaways (Sickergruben) from which a considerably better picture of life in the Middle Ages resulted.

In the Lüneburg Stadtteil of Kaltenmoor is St. Stephen's (St. Stephanus), the oldest ecumenical building in the town, with Protestant and Catholic churches under one roof. Other buildings worthy of mention are the three remaining town churches: St. Johannis am Sande (completed 1370), St. Michaelis where Johann Sebastian Bach was a choirboy from 1700 to 1702, and the relatively 'modern' St. Nicolai which was built in 1407. The Church of St. Lambertus (St. Lamberti) was demolished in 1850 due to its dilapidated state; it stood in the subsidence area.

In addition there are the Glockenhaus ("Bell House", an old armoury) on the Glockenhof, the Rathsapotheke (town chemist's), dating to 1598, in Große Bäckerstraße and the historic town hall or Rathaus with its famous town council meeting room, the Gerichtslaube. The Luna Fountain (Lunabrunnen) in front of the town hall is graced by a bronze statue of the moon goddess with bow and arrow; the original dating to 1532 was stolen in 1970 and melted down; the present statue is a replica dating to 1972. In the area of the old port can still be seen the Baroque façade of the "Old Store" (Altes Kaufhaus), most of the rest of which was burned down and had to be replaced by one that was more suitable for a fire station. The port is also home to the "Old Crane" (Alter Kran), a wooden, medieval riverside crane that is still in working order today and which has two large wheels inside that enable the crane cable to be raised and lowered. The fire station moved in autumn 2007 to a new building on the edge of the town centre; the Altes Kaufhaus has since (2009) been converted into a hotel.

On the southern edge of the town centre is the Lüneburg Water Tower which now acts as an observation tower.

In front of the gates of the old town is Lüne Abbey, a former Benedictine nunnery. It was built in 1172 and has been restored.

About 2 kilometres (1 mile) west of Lüneburg, in the villages of Reppenstedt and Vögelsen, is a well-preserved section of the historic Lüneburg Landwehr, a boundary embankment and ditch, that can be walked.

Literature edit

The Lüneburg Variation is a novel, about chess and chess masters by Italian author Paolo Maurensig, named for the city.

Regular events edit

  • April: "Lüneburg Blossoms" (Lüneburg blüht auf) and spring market on the Sülzwiesen ("salt meadows")
  • June: Town festival
  • June: "Lunatic Festival": charity music festival on the university campus
  • July: Frommestraße Festival
  • August: Heath Flower Festival (Heideblütenfest) (in Amelinghausen)
  • September: Oktoberfest on the Sülzwiesen.
  • Early October: Master Salter Days (Sülfmeistertage)
  • Advent: Historic Christmas Market around St. Michael's church and Christmas Market with Fairy Tale Mile (Märchenmeile) and gable lights on the market place in front of the town hall, Grapengießerstraße and the square of Am Sande.

In 2012, the festival Hansetage took place in Lüneburg. The Hansetage is an event which takes place in a different town every year. Nearly 300,000 visitors were attracted by this event.

Sports edit

Association football is the most popular sport in Lüneburg, as in Germany in general; ice-hockey and basketball are also popular. Most teams compete in the Regionalliga, which is highly ranked within Germany.

Infrastructure edit

Health edit

 
Psychiatrische Klinik Lüneburg

Lüneburg has the following hospitals: Städtisches Krankenhaus Lüneburg and the "Landeskrankenhaus Lüneburg", now known as the Psychiatrische Klinik Lüneburg (Psychiatric Hospital Lüneburg).

Transport edit

Lüneburg is part of the transportation company Hamburger Verkehrsverbund. There are 11 bus lines in the urban area of Lüneburg. As well as Lüneburg station, there is a smaller one located in Bardowick. The nearest cities within easy reach by rail are Hamburg, Hanover, Lübeck, Lauenburg, Uelzen and Winsen.

Education edit

The town has one university, the Leuphana Universität Lüneburg (previously known only as the Universität Lüneburg). The university has more than 7,000 students.[13]

There are 14 high schools in the town: 5 Gymnasien, 4 Realschulen, and 5 Hauptschulen; there is currently 1 Gesamtschule, the "IGS Lüneburg" founded in 2009. In addition, there are 6 vocational schools, 3 special schools, 3 private schools, and 12 elementary schools.

Notable people edit

 
Jean Armand de Lestocq, 1740s
 
Paul von Hindenburg, c. 1925
 
Johann Sebastian Bach, 1748
 
Gustav Wallis, 1879
 
Hanne Brenner, 2010

Public service and thinking edit

Arts edit

Science & business edit

Sport edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Stichwahlen zu Direktwahlen in Niedersachsen vom 26. September 2021" (PDF). Landesamt für Statistik Niedersachsen. 13 October 2021.
  2. ^ "LSN-Online Regionaldatenbank, Tabelle A100001G: Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes, Stand 31. Dezember 2021" (in German). Landesamt für Statistik Niedersachsen.
  3. ^ "Hansestadt Lüneburg - Zahlen, Daten, Fakten".
  4. ^ What to see in Lüneburg https://shipmethere.com/2021/03/19/what-to-see-in-luneburg-most-beautiful-spots/
  5. ^ Vgl.: Monumenta Germaniae Historica D O1, 183
  6. ^ "Discovery of a looted estate leads to family reunion – DW – 11/20/2018". dw.com. Retrieved 2024-01-19.
  7. ^ [1] October 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "Statistik Staatsangehörigkeit - Zuständigkeitsbereich" (PDF). www.lueneburg.de. Hansestadt Lüneburg. Retrieved 2014-12-20.
  9. ^ Landtagswahlkreise ab 16. Wahlperiode. Wahlkreiseinteilung für die Wahl zum Niedersächsischen Landtag. Anlage zu § 10 Abs. 1 NLWG, p. 4. (PDF 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine; 87 KB)
  10. ^ Beschreibung der Wahlkreise. Anlage zu § 2 Abs. 2 Bundeswahlgesetz. In: Achtzehntes Gesetz zur Änderung des Bundeswahlgesetzes. Anlage zu Artikel 1. Bonn 18. März 2008, S. 325. (PDF 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine; 200 KB)
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-08-03. Retrieved 2019-05-30.
  12. ^ a b . hansestadtlueneburg.de (in German). Lüneburg. Archived from the original on 2019-04-27. Retrieved 2021-02-19.
  13. ^ . Leuphana Universität Lüneburg. Archived from the original on 2015-09-15. Retrieved 2014-04-05.
  14. ^ "Freytag, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 212.
  15. ^ "Bennigsen, Rudolf von" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 03 (11th ed.). 1911.
  16. ^ retrieved 5 October 2017
  17. ^ German National Library catalogue retrieved 5 October 2017
  18. ^ The New Bach Reader, p. 37
  19. ^ "Bach, J. S.: Lüneburg (1700–1703)". Jan.ucc.nau.edu. Retrieved 2015-10-29.
  20. ^ "Schulz, Johann Abraham Peter" . New International Encyclopedia. Vol. XVII. 1905.
  21. ^ "Ritter, August" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

References edit

External links edit

  • Official website (in German)
  • Leuphana University (in German)

lüneburg, 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, scho. For other uses see Luneburg 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 Luneburg news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Luneburg German ˈlyːnebʊʁk Low German Lumborg Latin Luneburgum or Lunaburgum Old High German Luneburc Old Saxon Hliuni Polabian Glain officially the Hanseatic City of Luneburg German Hansestadt Luneburg and also known in English as Lunenburg ˈ lj uː n e n b ɜːr ɡ LEW nen burg is a town in the German state of Lower Saxony It is located about 50 km 31 mi southeast of another Hanseatic city Hamburg and belongs to that city s wider metropolitan region The capital of the district which bears its name it is home to roughly 77 000 people 3 Luneburg s urban area which includes the surrounding communities of Adendorf Bardowick Barendorf and Reppenstedt has a population of around 103 000 Luneburg has been allowed to use the title Hansestadt Hanseatic Town in its name since 2007 in recognition of its membership in the former Hanseatic League Luneburg is also home to Leuphana University Luneburg Lumborg Low German TownPanorama of Luneburg from the water tower with St Johannis Church in the foreground to the rightCoat of armsLocation of Luneburg within Luneburg districtLuneburgShow map of GermanyLuneburgShow map of Lower SaxonyCoordinates 53 15 9 N 10 24 52 E 53 25250 N 10 41444 E 53 25250 10 41444CountryGermanyStateLower SaxonyDistrictLuneburgSubdivisions14 districtsGovernment Lord mayor 2021 26 Claudia Kalisch 1 Greens Area Total70 34 km2 27 16 sq mi Elevation17 m 56 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total75 599 Density1 100 km2 2 800 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes21335 21337 21339Dialling codes04131Vehicle registrationLGWebsitewww hansestadt lueneburg de Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 From village to commercial town 1 3 Hanseatic period 1 4 Modern period to the end of the Second World War 1 5 Post war period 1 6 Amalgamated villages communities 2 Geography 2 1 Location 2 2 Neighbouring towns and cities 2 3 Town layout 2 3 1 Historical quarters 2 3 2 Stadtteile 2 4 Subsidence 3 Demographics 4 Economy 4 1 Important local firms 4 1 1 Industry and trade 4 1 2 Tourism new technologies and the service sector 5 Governance 5 1 Council 5 2 Mayor 6 Twin towns sister cities 7 Arts and culture 7 1 Theatre 7 2 Museums 7 3 Town architecture 7 4 Literature 7 5 Regular events 8 Sports 9 Infrastructure 9 1 Health 9 2 Transport 10 Education 11 Notable people 11 1 Public service and thinking 11 2 Arts 11 3 Science amp business 11 4 Sport 12 Gallery 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 External linksHistory edit nbsp nbsp nbsp View from the Kalkberg towards the east with all three main churchesPrehistory edit The first signs of human presence in the area of Luneburg date back to the time of Neanderthal Man 56 axes estimated at 150 000 years old were uncovered during the construction in the 1990s of the autobahn between Ochtmissen and Bardowick 4 The site of the discovery at Ochtmissen was probably a Neanderthal hunting location where huntsmen skinned and cut up the animals they had caught The area was almost certainly not continuously inhabited at that time however due to the various glaciations that lasted for millennia The first indication of a permanent settled farming culture in the area was found not far from the site of the Neanderthal discovery in the river Ilmenau between Lune and Bardowick This was an axe that is described as a Schuhleistenkeil or shoe last wedge due to its shape It dates to the 6th century BC and is now in the collection of the Luneburg Museum Since the Bronze Age the Luneburg hill known as the Zeltberg has concealed a whole range of prehistoric and early historic graves which were laid out by people living in the area of the present day town of Luneburg One of the oldest finds from this site is a so called Unetice flanged axe Aunjetitzer Randleistenbeil which dates to 1900 BC The land within the town itself has also yielded a number of ice age urns that were already being reported in the 18th century These discoveries are however like those from the Luneburger Kalkberg they went into the private collections of several 18th century scholars and with a few exceptions were lost when the scholars died Also worth mentioning in this regard are the Lombard Urnfield graves on the Luneburg Zeltberg and Oedeme from the first few centuries AD In the Middle Ages there several discoveries were made on the site of the town for example on the site of the old village of Modestorpe not far from St John s Church Johanniskirche at the Lambertiplatz near the saltworks and in the old Waterside Quarter The ancient town may be that identified as Leufana or Leuphana Greek Leyfana a town listed in Ptolemy 2 10 in the north of Germany on the west of the Elbe From village to commercial town edit nbsp View from the Brausebrucke bridgeLuneburg was first mentioned in medieval records in a deed signed on 13 August 956 AD in which Otto I Holy Roman Emperor granted the tax from Luneburg to the monastery built there in honour of Saint Michael German den Zoll zu Luneburg an das zu Ehren des heiligen Michaels errichtete Kloster Latin teloneum ad Luniburc ad monasterium sancti Michahelis sub honore constructum 5 An older reference to the place in the Royal Frankish Annals for 795 states ad fluvium Albim pervenit ad locum qui dicitur Hliuni i e on the river Elbe at the location which is called Hliuni and refers to one of the three core settlements of Luneburg probably the castle on the Kalkberg which was the seat of the Billunger nobles from 951 The Elbe Germanic name Hliuni corresponds to the Lombard word for refuge site From archaeological finds it is clear that the area around Luneburg had already been settled in the museum of the Principality of Luneburg for example there is a whole range of artefacts that were found here and the saltworks had already started production According to tradition the salt was first discovered by a hunter who observed a wild boar bathing in a pool of water shot and killed it and hung the coat up to dry When it was dry he discovered white crystals in the bristles salt Later he returned to the site of the kill and located the salt pool the first production of salt on the site took place In the town hall is a bone preserved in a glass case legend has it that this is the preserved leg bone of the boar It was here that the Luneburg Saltworks was subsequently established for many centuries In spite of its lucrative saltworks Luneburg was originally subordinated to the town of Bardowick only a few miles to the north Bardowick was older and was an important trading post for the Slavs Bardowick s prosperity it had seven churches was based purely on the fact that no other trading centres were tolerated Only when Bardowick refused to pay allegiance to Henry the Lion it was destroyed by him in 1189 whereupon Luneburg was given town privileges Stadtrechte and developed into the central trading post in the region in place of Bardowick The Polabian name for Luneburg is Glain written as Chlein or Glein in older German sources probably derived from glaino Slavonic glina which means clay In the Latin texts Luneburg surfaces not only as the Latinised Lunaburgum but also as Selenopolis Hanseatic period edit nbsp Miniature of Luneburg in the Sachsische Weltchronik 13th century nbsp Hans Bornemann s The punishment of Aegeas 1450 In the background a view of Luneburg with St Nicholas Church nbsp The slightly leaning spire of the church of St JohnAs a consequence of the monopoly that Luneburg had for many years as a supplier of salt within the North German region a monopoly not challenged until much later by French imports it very quickly became a member of the Hanseatic League The League was formed in 1158 in Lubeck initially as a union of individual merchants but in 1356 it met as a federation of trading towns at the first general meeting of the Hansetag Luneburg s salt was needed in order to pickle the herring caught in the Baltic Sea and the waters around Norway so that it could be preserved for food inland during periods of fasting when fish not meat was permitted The Scania Market at Scania in Sweden was a major fish market for herring and became one of the most important trade events in Northern Europe in the Middle Ages Luneburg s salt was in great demand and the town quickly became one of the wealthiest and most important towns in the Hanseatic League together with Bergen and Visby the fish suppliers and Lubeck the central trading post between the Baltic and the interior In the Middle Ages salt was initially conveyed overland up the Old Salt Road to Lubeck With the opening of the Stecknitz Canal in 1398 salt could be transported by cog from the Lubeck salt warehouses the Salzspeicher Around the year 1235 the Duchy of Brunswick Luneburg emerged ruled by a family whose aristocratic lines repeatedly divided and re united The smaller states that kept re appearing as a result and which ranked as principalities were usually named after the location of the ducal seat Thus between 1267 and 1269 a Principality of Luneburg was created for the first time with Luneburg as the seat of the royal Residenz In 1371 in the wake of the Luneburg War of Succession rebel citizens threw the princes out of the town and destroyed their royal castle on the Kalkberg along with the nearby monastery The state peace treaty in 1392 granted their demand to become a free imperial town a status they were able to defend until 1637 The money now stayed in the town enabling fine houses and churches to be built In 1392 Luneburg was accorded the staple right This forced merchants who travelled through the area with their carts to stop in Luneburg unload their wares and offer them for sale for a certain period So that merchants could not go around Luneburg an impassable defensive barrier was built west of the town in 1397 a similar barrier was built east of the town in 1479 The Luneburg Prelates War caused a crisis from 1446 to 1462 This was not a war in the proper sense but rather a bitter dispute between the town council and those members of the clergy who were also part owners of the town s saltworks It was not resolved until the intervention of the Danish King Christian I the Bishop of Schwerin and the Lubeck Bishop Arnold Westphal In 1454 the citizens demanded even more influence over public life Since 2007 Luneburg has once again held the title of a Hanseatic town Modern period to the end of the Second World War edit nbsp Cityscape of Luneburg in the 16th century atlas Civitates Orbis Terrarum published in its first volume in 1572 With the demise of the Hanseatic League and the absence of herrings around 1560 around Falsterbo in Scania the biggest customers of Luneburg s salt broke away and the town rapidly became impoverished Hardly any new houses were built in central Luneburg after this time which is why the historical appearance of the town centre has remained almost unchanged until the present day The town became part of the Electorate of Hanover in 1708 the Kingdom of Westphalia in 1807 the First French Empire in 1810 the Kingdom of Hanover in 1814 and the Prussian Province of Hanover in 1866 In the centuries after the collapse of the League it was as if Luneburg had fallen into a Sleeping Beauty slumber Heinrich Heine whose parents lived in Luneburg from 1822 to 1826 called it his residence of boredom Residenz der Langeweile Near the end of the 19th century Luneburg evolved into a garrison town and it remained so until the 1990s The horticulturist Curt Backeberg was born in Luneburg in 1894 After the Nazi anti Jewish pogroms known as Kristallnacht in the night of November 9 1938 the city ordered the Luneburg Synagogue to be torn down at the costs of the local Jewish community 6 In the Luneburg Special Children s Ward part of the Luneburg State Mental Hospital it is suspected that over 300 children were killed during the Second World War as part of the official Nazi child euthanasia programme 7 In 1945 Luneburg surfaced once again in the history books when south of the town on the hill known as the Timeloberg near the village of Wendisch Evern the German Instrument of Surrender was signed that brought the Second World War in Europe to an end The location is presently inaccessible to the general public as it lies within a military out of bounds area Only a small monument on a nearby track alludes to the event On 23 May 1945 Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler took his own life in Luneburg whilst in British Army custody by biting into a potassium cyanide capsule embedded in his teeth before he could be properly interrogated He was subsequently buried in an unmarked location in a nearby forest Post war period edit Even before the Nuremberg Trials took place the first war crimes trial the so called Belsen Trial Bergen Belsen Prozess began in Luneburg on 17 September 1945 conducted against 45 former SS men women and kapos prisoner functionaries from the Bergen Belsen and Auschwitz concentration camps After World War II Luneburg became part of the new state of Lower Saxony But the dilapidated state of its buildings led to various plans to try to improve living conditions One proposition that was seriously discussed was to tear down the entire Altstadt and replace it with modern buildings The ensuing public protest resulted in Luneburg becoming the focal point for a new concept cultural heritage conservation Since the early 1970s the town has been systematically restored A leading figure in this initiative since the late 1960s has been Curt Pomp against much opposition from politicians and councillors he founded and championed the Luneburg Altstadt Working Group Arbeitskreis Luneburger Altstadt for the preservation of historic buildings His engagement was rewarded with the German Prize for Cultural Heritage Conservation and the German Order of Merit Today Luneburg is a tourist attraction as a result of the restoration and important sectors of the town s economy also depend on tourism Between Luneburg and Soltau to the southwest a large military training area the Soltau Luneburg Training Area SLTA was established by the British and Canadian military which was used from 1963 to 1994 It was governed by the Soltau Luneburg Agreement between the Federal Republic of Germany the United Kingdom and Canada The area was located on the Luneburg Heath and was heavily used particularly by tanks and other armoured vehicles The salt mine was closed in 1980 ending the thousand year tradition of salt mining although small amounts are still mined for ceremonial purposes Small bags of salt may be purchased in the town hall and bags are given as a gift from the town to all couples married in the town After the closing of the salt mines the town gained new relevance from its university which was founded in 1989 As part of the restructuring of Defence in 1990 two of the three Bundeswehr barracks in the town were closed and the remaining one reduced in size The Bundesgrenzschutz barracks was also closed Luneburg University moved to the site of the old Scharnhorst barracks The university grew out of the new economics and cultural studies departments set up in the 1980s and their amalgamation with the College of Education Padagogischen Hochschule or PH that took place in 1989 Since its move to the former barracks site the university has enrolled increasing numbers of students The expansion of the university is an important contribution to the restructuring of the town into a service centre Today an industrial estate the Lunepark has been built on the terrain of the old Bundesgrenzschutz barracks with its new industrial premises for entrepreneurs The promotion of trade and industry has resulted in many firms from the ICT area locating themselves there In May 2006 the nearby Johannes Westphal Bridge was opened to traffic This links the newly created Lunepark with the suburb of Goseburg on the far side of the Ilmenau Since 5 October 2007 Luneburg has been able to call itself a Hanseatic Town together with Stade it is one of only two towns in Lower Saxony to bear the title Amalgamated villages communities edit 1943 Hagen and Lune 1974 Hacklingen Ochtmissen Oedeme and Rettmer as well as the Ortsteile of Alt Hagen Ebensberg and Pflegerdorf Gut Wienebuttel Geography edit nbsp nbsp Aerial photograph of the south of the town centreLocation edit Luneburg lies on the river Ilmenau about 30 kilometres 19 mi from its confluence with the Elbe The river flows through the town and is featured in its song it was formerly traversed by cogs taking salt from the town to the other larger ports of the Hanseatic League nearby To the south of the town stretches the 7 400 square kilometre 2 857 sq mi Luneburg Heath which emerged as a result of widespread tree felling forest fires and grazing The tradition that the heath arose from centuries of logging undertaken to meet the constant need of the Luneburg salt works for wood is not historically confirmed More likely the heath was originally formed by clearances during the Bronze Age The old town Altstadt of Luneburg lies above a salt dome which is the town s original source of prosperity However the constant mining of the salt deposits over which the town stands has also resulted in the sometimes gradual sometimes dramatically pronounced sinking of various areas of the town On the western edge of the town is the Kalkberg a small hill and former gypsum quarry Neighbouring towns and cities edit There are several towns cities and urban areas around Luneburg in all directions Winsen Luhe Hamburg Harburg18 km 11 mi 36 km Hamburg Bergedorf Schwarzenbek Lubeck32 km 20 mi 43 km 27 mi 87 km 54 mi Adendorf Lauenburg5 km 3 mi 22 km 14 mi Jesteburg48 km 30 mi nbsp Amt Neuhaus Lubtheen42 km 26 mi 57 kmSoltau51 km 32 mi Ebstorf Uelzen26 km 16 mi 37 km 23 mi Luchow Wendland 68 kmTown layout edit Historical quarters edit nbsp Manhole cover displaying the symbol for the motto Mons Pons Fons nbsp Luneburg street map around 1910The motto Mons Pons Fons Hill bridge spring characterised the development of the town from the 8th century as it coalesced from initially three and later four areas of settlement These areas were the refuge castle on the at that time considerably higher Kalkberg together with its adjoining settlement the Marktviertel or Market Quarter the village of Modestorpe between the bridge over the river Ilmenau and the large square Am Sande the Sandviertel or Sand Quarter and the saline with its walled settlement for the work force the Sulzviertel or Salt Quarter Not until the 13th century was the river port settlement the Wasserviertel or Waterside Quarter built between the market place and the Ilmenau The resulting shape of the town thus formed did not change until its expansion in the late 19th century and it is still clearly visible today Luneburg s six historic town gates were the Altenbrucker Tor the Bardowicker Tor the Rote Tor the Sulztor the Luner Tor and the Neue Tor Stadtteile edit Luneburg has the following Stadtteile Altstadt Bockelsberg Ebensberg Goseburg Zeltberg Hacklingen Kaltenmoor the largest Stadtteil with around 8 000 inhabitants Kreideberg Lune Moorfeld Mittelfeld Neu Hagen Ochtmissen Oedeme Rettmer Rotes Feld Schutzenplatz Weststadt and Wilschenbruch Juttkenmoor Klosterkamp Bulows Kamp In den Kampen Krahornsberg Schaferfeld Volgershall and Zeltberg are the names of individual blocks within a single Stadtteil Subsidence edit The houses in the historic quarter between the Luneburg Saltworks today the German Salt Museum and the Kalkberg were built above a salt dome that was excavated by the saltworks and which extended to just below the surface of the ground As a result of the increasing quantities of salt mined with improved technical equipment after 1830 the ground began to sink by several metres This resulted in the so called Senkungsgebiet or subsidence area The houses there and the local church St Lambert s lost their stability and had to be demolished Because of this subsidence and because salt mining was increasingly unprofitable the saltworks were finally closed in 1980 Today only small amounts of brine are extracted for the health spa in the Luneburg Thermal Salt Baths the Salztherme Luneburg or SaLu One side of the saltworks now houses a supermarket while the other is the German Salt Museum The subsidence has been monitored at about 240 stations since 1946 every two years The land has not quite stopped subsiding yet but it is stable enough that new construction has taken place on it and several historic buildings which had previously been damaged or demolished have been restored The subsidence can still be clearly seen even today Those who walk from Am Sande to the end of the Grapengiesserstrasse can clearly sense the degree of subsidence for themselves the hollow in front of them was formerly at the same level as the Grapengiesserstrasse This depression extends as far as the Lambertiplatz square In the Frommestrasse another sign of earth movements caused by salt mining may be seen the Tor zur Unterwelt Door to the Underworld where two cast iron doors have been pushed on top of one another Near the church St Michaelis other consequences of the subsidence can be seen in its sloping columns and the west wing of the nave Current subsidence movements can be seen in the road known as Ochtmisser Kirchsteig Demographics editLuneburg already had about 14 000 inhabitants in the Late Middle Ages and beginning of the Modern Period and was one of the largest cities of its time but its population shrank with the economic downturn to just 9 400 in 1757 then rose again to 10 400 in 1813 With the onset of industrialisation in the 19th century population growth accelerated If 13 000 were living in the town in 1855 by 1939 there were as many as 35 000 Shortly after the Second World War refugees and displaced persons from Germany s eastern territories brought an increase in population within just a few months of around 18 000 people so that the total number in December 1945 was 53 000 In 2003 the 70 000 level was exceeded for the first time The town of Luneburg its eponymous district and the neighbouring district of Harburg belong to the few regions in Germany that have experienced such a massive growth The reasons for this include the growth of areas around the Hamburg Metropolitan Region and the consequent shift of people to those areas The Lower Saxon State Office for Statistics has forecast that the town of Luneburg will have a population of 89 484 by the year 2021 More realistic estimates however put the future size Luneburg at between 75 000 and 79 000 in that time frame On 31 December 2008 according to the Statistics Office the official census for Luneburg recorded 72 492 people those who had their main residence in the town and after adjustments with other states offices the highest number in its history Currently Luneburg is the eleventh largest centre of population in Lower Saxony In addition Luneburg has particularly close relations with its adjacent municipalities which are also growing and with which it is forming an agglomeration The town together with the nearby villages of Adendorf Bardowick Deutsch Evern Reppenstedt Vogelsen and Wendisch Evern has a total population of about 103 000 and on that basis would qualify as a city in Germany cities or Grossstadte are defined as settlements with a population of over 100 000 The town council has the plan to extend the population by adding these villages to the town area Historical populationYearPop 153014 000 169911 000 21 4 17579 426 14 3 181310 400 10 3 185513 352 28 4 186114 400 7 8 186715 900 10 4 187116 284 2 4 189020 665 26 9 190024 693 19 5 191027 790 12 5 192528 923 4 1 193331 171 7 8 193935 239 13 1 194553 095 50 7 195058 139 9 5 195656 845 2 2 196159 563 4 8 196560 269 1 2 197059 516 1 2 197564 586 8 5 198062 225 3 7 198559 645 4 1 199061 870 3 7 200067 398 8 9 201071 549 6 2 201978 024 9 0 Largest groups of foreign residents 8 Nationality Population 2013 nbsp Turkey 608 nbsp Poland 438 nbsp Russia 221 nbsp Italy 182 nbsp Kosovo 170 nbsp Serbia 141The following overview shows the population figures based on the situation at the time Up to 1813 they were mostly estimates thereafter based on censuses or official projections by the State Office of Statistics From 1871 the figures were based on those present in the town from 1925 on those living in the town and since 1987 on the population who have their main residence in the town Before 1871 the numbers were based on inconsistent survey methods Economy editAt one time Luneburg had over 80 breweries The Luneburger Kronen Brewery of 1485 in Heiligengeiststrasse brewed beers such as Luneburger Kronen Pilsener and Moravia Pilsener that were very well known in North Germany These beers are brewed today by the Holsten Brewery in Hamburg although the original yeast stock Hefestamme was destroyed when the Kronen Brewery was taken over Only the original Luneburger Pilsener is still produced as before although it is now made by the Holsten Brewery and only sold on tap Today there are just two small inn breweries left in Luneburg In the Nolte Inn Brewery Gasthausbrauerei Nolte some distance from the centre on the Dahlenburger Landstrasse and in the Brau und Tafelhaus Malzer in Heiligengeiststrasse the tradition of Luneburger breweries lives on Recently Luneburg has increasingly developed into a venue for tourists Nevertheless medium sized and small businesses still play a major role in Luneburg s economy The University of Luneburg has also generated changes which together with its student population have stimulated the economy of the region Important local firms edit Industry and trade edit Many small and medium sized businesses are based in Luneburg They include the fashion company Roy Robson DeVauGe Gesundkostwerk one of the largest German manufacturers of vegetarian food and the dairy which today is part of Hochwald Nahrungsmittel Werke and makes products e g yoghurt under the Lunebest label The knitware firm Lucia once the biggest employer in the town went bankrupt in 2008 In the industrial field there are large local firms like the car interior manufacturers Johnson Controls H B Fuller Impreglon and the electronics company of Sieb amp Meyer Also based in Luneburg is the von Stern schen Druckerei founded in 1614 the oldest printing firm still in family ownership in the world Werum IT Solutions is the largest information technology firm based in the town Tourism new technologies and the service sector edit The town nursery has created a spa park for tourists and visitors with a graduation works ponds numerous herbaceous borders and herb gardens which is immediately next to the health spa centre Kurzentrum The spa centre has wave pools salt baths wellness and sauna facilities etc Salztherme Luneburg in addition there is a brine therapy centre which is used for those with skin and respiratory problems Luneburg is not an official health spa like e g the neighbouring town of Bad Bevensen but does have special medicinal resources like for example Luneburg brine containing about 26 salt which is used especially to relieve those suffering from psoriasis In addition since 1978 the headquarters of the conference hotel group Seminaris has been based here Among firms in the technology and service sectors is Grundungszentrum e novum which supports new venture firms Governance editThe town of Luneburg is part of State Constituency 49 Luneburg and Federal Constituency No 38 Luchow Dannenberg Luneburg 9 10 Council edit Local election results in 2016 for the town council of Luneburg 11 Name English Name German Abbr Ideology Position International organizations Votes 2016 Seats in town council NotesSocial Democratic Party Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands SPD Social democracy centre left Progressive Alliance and Socialist International observer 32 9 14Alliance 90 The Greens Bundnis 90 Die Grunen GAL Green Politics centre left Global Greens 22 0 9 merger of Die Grunen and Bundnis 90Christian Democratic Union Christlich Demokratische Union CDU Christian democracy centre right Centrist Democrat International and International Democrat Union 20 7 9The Left Die Linke SocialismEurocommunism left wing Party of the European Left 9 5 4 merger of The Left Party PDS and WASGAlternative for Germany Alternative fur Deutschland AfD German nationalismRight wing populism right wing European Alliance of People and Nations 9 0 4Free Democratic Party Freie Demokratische Partei FDP Liberalism centre Liberal International 6 0 2Mayor edit Before the Second World War the lord mayor Oberburgermeister was the full time head of the town s administration On the introduction of the North German council constitution by the British occupation forces power was separated the voluntary lord mayor and chairman of the town body was the political representative of the town who like all the members of the town council was elected by the people whilst the administration was headed up by a full time chief municipal director who was elected by the town council Since 1996 as a result of the reform of the local constitution both functions again have been combined in the post of a full time lord mayor who is now directly elected by the townsfolk In addition to the lord mayor there are other mayors elected by the council who support and represent the lord mayor in his civic duties 1945 1946 Werner Bockelmann SPD 1946 1949 Ernst Braune SPD 1949 1951 Paul Muller DP 1951 1952 Erich Dieckmann DP 1952 1954 Peter Gravenhorst DP 1954 1955 Reinhold Kreitmeyer FDP 1955 1958 Peter Gravenhorst DP 1958 1961 Wilhelm Hilmer SPD 1961 1964 Erich Drenckhahn CDU 1964 1978 Alfred Trebchen SPD 1978 1981 Heinz Schlawatzky SPD 1981 1987 Horst Nickel CDU 1987 1991 Jens Schreiber CDU 1991 2021 Ulrich Madge SPD since 2021 Claudia Kalisch Bundnis 90 Die Grunen The current mayors are Eduard Kolle SPD Ulrich Lob Bundnis 90 Die Grunen and Christel John CDU Twin towns sister cities editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Luneburg is twinned with 12 nbsp Scunthorpe England UK 1960 nbsp Naruto Japan 1974 nbsp Clamart France 1975 nbsp Ivrea Italy 1988 nbsp Viborg Denmark 1992 nbsp Tartu Estonia 1993 In addition Luneburg has friendly relations with German towns Kulmbach and Kothen 12 Arts and culture edit nbsp A cul de sac in Luneburg s Altstadt nbsp St Nicolai in the Waterside Quarter nbsp Stadtschloss am Markt in front the Luna Fountain nbsp Interior of St Nicolai nbsp Stint Market in Luneburg Harbour nbsp Old harbour with treadwheel crane and Altes KaufhausTheatre edit The Luneburg Theatre Theater Luneburg is one of the smallest three stage theatres in Germany Not only are plays of all styles put on but also operas operettas musicals and ballets Although the financial means of the Luneburg Theatre are comparatively limited it is no provincial stage and can hold its ground successfully against the many theatres in nearby Hamburg In addition Luneburg has a large number of amateur theatres that also produce regular performances Such a variety in amateur drama is otherwise only found in large cities like Hamburg or Hanover Museums edit The historic town is itself a kind of open air museum a Rothenburg of the North but there are numerous museums and historic churches St Michaelis St Johannis St Nicolai The most important museums are the German Salt Museum in the premises of the old Luneburg Saltworks in which the significance of salt in the Middle Ages and the extraction of salt is portrayed and the Museum of the Principality of Luneburg in which the town s history and the history of the surrounding area is captured Also worthy of mention are the East Prussian Regional Museum the nearby North German Brewery Museum with a gallery of valuable drinking vessels over 1200 years the 1485 Kronen Brewery of Luneburg and the Luneburg Nature Museum on the edge of the subsidence zone Town architecture edit Luneburg is one of the few towns in North Germany whose historic centre was not destroyed during the Second World War Nevertheless the general neglect of its buildings until the 1960s and the damage in the area of subsidence has led to gaps in the historic architecture of the town In addition the demolition of ramshackle buildings in the 1950s and 1960s and the construction of shops with a contemporary design broke up the historic appearance of many rows of houses Since the beginning of the 1970s however Luneburg has been carefully restored The restoration process revealed hitherto hidden ceiling frescos medieval pottery workshops and many historic soakaways Sickergruben from which a considerably better picture of life in the Middle Ages resulted In the Luneburg Stadtteil of Kaltenmoor is St Stephen s St Stephanus the oldest ecumenical building in the town with Protestant and Catholic churches under one roof Other buildings worthy of mention are the three remaining town churches St Johannis am Sande completed 1370 St Michaelis where Johann Sebastian Bach was a choirboy from 1700 to 1702 and the relatively modern St Nicolai which was built in 1407 The Church of St Lambertus St Lamberti was demolished in 1850 due to its dilapidated state it stood in the subsidence area In addition there are the Glockenhaus Bell House an old armoury on the Glockenhof the Rathsapotheke town chemist s dating to 1598 in Grosse Backerstrasse and the historic town hall or Rathaus with its famous town council meeting room the Gerichtslaube The Luna Fountain Lunabrunnen in front of the town hall is graced by a bronze statue of the moon goddess with bow and arrow the original dating to 1532 was stolen in 1970 and melted down the present statue is a replica dating to 1972 In the area of the old port can still be seen the Baroque facade of the Old Store Altes Kaufhaus most of the rest of which was burned down and had to be replaced by one that was more suitable for a fire station The port is also home to the Old Crane Alter Kran a wooden medieval riverside crane that is still in working order today and which has two large wheels inside that enable the crane cable to be raised and lowered The fire station moved in autumn 2007 to a new building on the edge of the town centre the Altes Kaufhaus has since 2009 been converted into a hotel On the southern edge of the town centre is the Luneburg Water Tower which now acts as an observation tower In front of the gates of the old town is Lune Abbey a former Benedictine nunnery It was built in 1172 and has been restored About 2 kilometres 1 mile west of Luneburg in the villages of Reppenstedt and Vogelsen is a well preserved section of the historic Luneburg Landwehr a boundary embankment and ditch that can be walked Literature edit The Luneburg Variation is a novel about chess and chess masters by Italian author Paolo Maurensig named for the city Regular events edit April Luneburg Blossoms Luneburg bluht auf and spring market on the Sulzwiesen salt meadows June Town festival June Lunatic Festival charity music festival on the university campus July Frommestrasse Festival August Heath Flower Festival Heideblutenfest in Amelinghausen September Oktoberfest on the Sulzwiesen Early October Master Salter Days Sulfmeistertage Advent Historic Christmas Market around St Michael s church and Christmas Market with Fairy Tale Mile Marchenmeile and gable lights on the market place in front of the town hall Grapengiesserstrasse and the square of Am Sande In 2012 the festival Hansetage took place in Luneburg The Hansetage is an event which takes place in a different town every year Nearly 300 000 visitors were attracted by this event Sports editAssociation football is the most popular sport in Luneburg as in Germany in general ice hockey and basketball are also popular Most teams compete in the Regionalliga which is highly ranked within Germany Football Luneburger SK Hansa formed by merging Luneburger SK with the football section of Luneburger SV Oberliga Basketball MTV Treubund Luneburg 2 Regionalliga Women Stadtliga Men Ice hockey Adendorfer EC Regionalliga Handball HSG Luneburg Regionalliga Volleyball SVG Luneburg Bundesliga Baseball Luneburg Woodlarks Regionalliga American Football Luneburg Razorbacks VerbandsligaInfrastructure editHealth edit nbsp Psychiatrische Klinik LuneburgLuneburg has the following hospitals Stadtisches Krankenhaus Luneburg and the Landeskrankenhaus Luneburg now known as the Psychiatrische Klinik Luneburg Psychiatric Hospital Luneburg Transport edit Luneburg is part of the transportation company Hamburger Verkehrsverbund There are 11 bus lines in the urban area of Luneburg As well as Luneburg station there is a smaller one located in Bardowick The nearest cities within easy reach by rail are Hamburg Hanover Lubeck Lauenburg Uelzen and Winsen Education editThe town has one university the Leuphana Universitat Luneburg previously known only as the Universitat Luneburg The university has more than 7 000 students 13 There are 14 high schools in the town 5 Gymnasien 4 Realschulen and 5 Hauptschulen there is currently 1 Gesamtschule the IGS Luneburg founded in 2009 In addition there are 6 vocational schools 3 special schools 3 private schools and 12 elementary schools Notable people edit nbsp Jean Armand de Lestocq 1740s nbsp Paul von Hindenburg c 1925 nbsp Johann Sebastian Bach 1748 nbsp Gustav Wallis 1879 nbsp Hanne Brenner 2010Public service and thinking edit Lucas Bacmeister 1530 1608 Lutheran Theologian and church music composer Jacob Kroger ca 1550 1594 court goldsmith to Anne of Denmark and thief Johann von Gotzen 1599 1645 nobleman and Generalfeldmarschall Jean Armand de Lestocq 1692 1767 French adventurer influenced the foreign policy of Russia during the early reign of Elizabeth of Russia Georg Freytag 1788 1861 philologist 14 Johanna Stegen 1793 1842 heroine of the Napoleonic Wars she rushed ammunition to Prussian troop in her apron thus becoming The Heroine of Luneburg Rudolf von Bennigsen 1824 1902 politician 15 Charles Schroeter 1837 1921 US Army soldier who received the Medal of Honor for his actions during the American Indian Wars Paul von Hindenburg 1847 1934 general and statesman honorary citizen of Luneburg in 1918 for his service in the World War I President of Germany from 1925 to 1934 16 Paul von Osterroht 1887 1917 World War I fighter pilotArts edit Johann Georg Ebeling 1637 1676 editor and composer of hymns 17 by Paul Gerhardt Georg Bohm 1661 1733 organist of the St John s Church Luneburg in 1698 1733 Johann Sebastian Bach 1685 1750 attended St Michael s School and sang in its choir 1700 to 1703 18 19 Johann Abraham Peter Schulz 1747 1800 composer and conductor 20 Heinrich Heine 1797 1856 poet journalist and essayist likely to have composed his poem Lorelei here Eduard Kruger 1807 1885 musicologist composer and philologist Hans Winderstein 1856 1925 conductor and composer Charlotte Huhn 1865 1925 an operatic contralto Margarete Boie 1880 1946 author lived and died locally Jean Leppien 1910 1991 a German French painter Susanne Linke born 1944 dancer and choreographer innovator of German Tanztheater Annegret Soltau born 1946 visual artist Mirko Reisser born 1971 a k a DAIM graffiti artist Anjorka Strechel born 1982 film and theatre actressScience amp business edit Otto Volger 1822 1897 geologist August Ritter 1826 1908 civil engineer author of method to calculate for arches bridges and roofs 21 Bernhard Riemann 1826 1866 mathematician worked on analysis number theory and differential geometry went to school locally Gustav Wallis 1830 1878 plant collector who introduced over 1 000 plant species to Europe Ernst Ehlers 1835 1925 zoologist Louis Boehmer 1843 1896 German American agronomist and government advisor in Meiji period Japan Niklas Luhmann 1927 1998 sociologist and philosopher of social science Detlev Ganten born 1941 specialist in pharmacology and molecular medicine Detlef Franke 1952 2007 EgyptologistSport edit Hasso von Bismarck 1902 1941 bobsledder who competed at the 1932 Winter Olympics Ralf Sievers born 1961 footballer played over 275 games Hannelore Brenner born 1963 paralympian dressage equestrian athlete Bahne Rabe 1963 2001 rower and gold medallist at the 1988 Summer Olympics amp bronze medallist at the 1992 Summer Olympics Katarina Waters born 1980 English American professional wrestler and actress Anja Noske born 1986 rower twice world champion Fabian Stenzel born 1986 footballer who has played over 310 games Soren Ludolph born 1988 middle distance runner competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics John Franklin III born 1994 American football playerGallery edit nbsp Am Sande nbsp Am Sande nbsp The nearby Luneburg Heath is an anthropogenic heath See also editDuchy of Brunswick Luneburg Principality of Luneburg Luneburg Sate List of the rulers of LuneburgNotes edit Stichwahlen zu Direktwahlen in Niedersachsen vom 26 September 2021 PDF Landesamt fur Statistik Niedersachsen 13 October 2021 LSN Online Regionaldatenbank Tabelle A100001G Fortschreibung des Bevolkerungsstandes Stand 31 Dezember 2021 in German Landesamt fur Statistik Niedersachsen Hansestadt Luneburg Zahlen Daten Fakten What to see in Luneburg https shipmethere com 2021 03 19 what to see in luneburg most beautiful spots Vgl Monumenta Germaniae Historica D O1 183 Discovery of a looted estate leads to family reunion DW 11 20 2018 dw com Retrieved 2024 01 19 1 Archived October 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine Statistik Staatsangehorigkeit Zustandigkeitsbereich PDF www lueneburg de Hansestadt Luneburg Retrieved 2014 12 20 Landtagswahlkreise ab 16 Wahlperiode Wahlkreiseinteilung fur die Wahl zum Niedersachsischen Landtag Anlage zu 10 Abs 1 NLWG p 4 PDF Archived 2011 07 25 at the Wayback Machine 87 KB Beschreibung der Wahlkreise Anlage zu 2 Abs 2 Bundeswahlgesetz In Achtzehntes Gesetz zur Anderung des Bundeswahlgesetzes Anlage zu Artikel 1 Bonn 18 Marz 2008 S 325 PDF Archived 2011 07 25 at the Wayback Machine 200 KB Hansestadt Luneburg Ergebnisse Kommunalwahl 2016 Archived from the original on 2020 08 03 Retrieved 2019 05 30 a b Luneburg und die Welt hansestadtlueneburg de in German Luneburg Archived from the original on 2019 04 27 Retrieved 2021 02 19 The University Facts and Figures Leuphana Universitat Luneburg Archived from the original on 2015 09 15 Retrieved 2014 04 05 Freytag Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed 1911 p 212 Bennigsen Rudolf von Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 03 11th ed 1911 LUNEBURG DE retrieved 5 October 2017 German National Library catalogue retrieved 5 October 2017 The New Bach Reader p 37 Bach J S Luneburg 1700 1703 Jan ucc nau edu Retrieved 2015 10 29 Schulz Johann Abraham Peter New International Encyclopedia Vol XVII 1905 Ritter August New International Encyclopedia 1905 References edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Smith William ed 1854 1857 Leuphana Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography London John Murray External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Luneburg Luneburg Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed 1911 nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Luneburg Official website in German Leuphana University in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Luneburg amp oldid 1212070406, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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