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Nördlingen

Nördlingen (German: [ˈnœʁt.lɪŋ.ən] ; Swabian: Nearle or Nearleng) is a town in the Donau-Ries district, in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany, with a population of approximately 20,674. It is located approximately 115 km (71 mi) east of Stuttgart, and 145 km (90 mi) northwest of Munich. It was built in an impact crater 15 million years old and 25 km in diameter—the Nördlinger Ries—of a meteorite which hit with an estimated speed of 70,000 km/h, and left the area riddled with an estimated 72,000 tons of micro-diamonds.[3]

Nördlingen
Nördlingen, south view from the church tower Daniel
Location of Nördlingen within Donau-Ries district
Dornstadt-LinkersbaindtDornstadt-LinkersbaindtEsterholz (gemeindefreies Gebiet)RainMünsterHolzheimOberndorf am LechMertingenDonauwörthAsbach-BäumenheimGenderkingenNiederschönenfeldMarxheimTagmersheimRöglingMonheimKaisheimBuchdorfDaitingFremdingenAuhausenOettingen in BayernHainsfarthEhingen am RiesTapfheimMarktoffingenMaihingenMegesheimMunningenWolferstadtWallersteinNördlingenReimlingenEderheimForheimAmerdingenWemdingWechingenHarburgHohenaltheimDeiningenAlerheimOttingFünfstettenHuisheimMönchsdeggingenMöttingenBaden-WürttembergAnsbach (district)Weißenburg-GunzenhausenEichstätt (district)Neuburg-SchrobenhausenAichach-FriedbergAugsburg (district)Dillingen (district)
Nördlingen
Nördlingen
Coordinates: 48°51′4″N 10°29′18″E / 48.85111°N 10.48833°E / 48.85111; 10.48833
CountryGermany
StateBavaria
Admin. regionSwabia
DistrictDonau-Ries
Government
 • Lord mayor (2020–26) David Wittner[1]
Area
 • Total68.10 km2 (26.29 sq mi)
Elevation
441 m (1,447 ft)
Population
 (2022-12-31)[2]
 • Total21,009
 • Density310/km2 (800/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
86720
Dialling codes09081
Vehicle registrationDON, NÖ
Websitewww.noerdlingen.de

Nördlingen was first mentioned in recorded history in 898. The town was the location of two battles during the Thirty Years' War, which took place between 1618 and 1648. Today it is one of only three towns in Germany that still have completely intact city walls, the other two being Rothenburg ob der Tauber and Dinkelsbühl.

Another attraction in the town is Saint George's Church's 90-metre (300 ft) steeple, called "Daniel", which is made of a suevite impact breccia that contains shocked quartz. Other notable buildings are the town hall (which dates to the 13th century), St. Salvator church and the Spital, a former medieval hospital. The Ries crater museum is located in the well-preserved medieval tanners' quarter.

The city is home to several other museums, such as the Bavarian Railway Museum, the Nördlingen city museum (Stadtmuseum), the city wall museum (Stadtmauermuseum) and Augenblick museum. The latter has panoramas, magic lanterns, silent films, barrel organs, pianolas, music boxes and gramophones.

Nördlingen is also known for the Scharlachrennen (Scarlet Race), a horse race tournament that was first mentioned in 1463. Since World War II, it has expanded to include eventing, jumping and dressage.

History edit

Prehistory and Celtic period edit

 
The Large Ofnet, one of the earliest sites with evidence of human habitation in the Nördlingen area.

Finds in the Ofnet Caves near the city show that the site of present-day Nördlingen was already inhabited in the late Palaeolithic. In the Large Ofnet, in 1908 archaeologist R. R. Schmidt found two dish-shaped pits in which human skulls were lying "like eggs in flat baskets".[4] In the larger pit were 27 skulls and in the other there were 6 skulls.[5] The skulls were arranged concentrically with their faces turned towards the setting sun.[5] They were all covered with a thick layer of red ochre.[5] The skulls have been dated to the 7th millennium BC.[6] In the area around Nördlingen, additional sites dating to almost all of the subsequent prehistoric epochs have been discovered. Particularly important was an area on the eastern edge of the district Baldingen, where settlements have been found belonging to the Neolithic Linear Pottery culture, the Bronze Age Urnfield culture, and the Celtic Iron Age Hallstatt and La Tène cultures.

Roman Empire edit

The area which includes present-day Nördlingen was part of the Roman province of Raetia,[7] but little research has been conducted on the city's Roman period. A Roman villa has been excavated in the district of Holheim, and can be visited today. Another villa with an adjoining burial ground has been identified in the Baldingen district. A settlement (vicus), built in 85 C.E., occupied the southern part of the city until 259–260 C.E., when it was destroyed during the conquest of what is now southern Germany by the Germanic-speaking Alemanni tribes. The Roman settlement may have been the one known as Septemiacum, which is supposed to have been built between 80-300 C.E.,[8] although it is possible that this particular settlement was actually located at a different site such as Oberdorf,[9] leaving the name of the settlement at Nördlingen uncertain.

Middle Ages edit

The Alemannic people occupied the Nördlingen area during the 6th and 7th centuries, during which time the region was gradually Christianized under the Merovingian dynasty, and several burial grounds from this period have been discovered. The name "Nordilinga" is first found in documents of the Carolingian royal court dating from 898, and the city today celebrates this as the date of its "foundation". Under the rule of the Bishops of Regensburg, Nördlingen grew into an important market town.

In 1215, Nördlingen was granted city rights by Emperor Frederick II and became imperial city of the Holy Roman Empire. In that year, the first city wall was built, the footprint of which is still visible today. In a document dating to 1219, the Nördlinger Pfingstmesse ("Nördlingen Pentecost fair") was first mentioned, an event which continues as a folk festival in the city to the present day. Thanks to Nördlingen's location at the crossroads of two major trade routes (Frankfurt / Würzburg-Augsburg and Nuremberg-Ulm), it became an important trading center for grain, livestock, textiles, furs, and metal goods. Besides Frankfurt am Main, Nördlingen was one of the most important long-distance trade fairs in the region.

In 1238, a fire destroyed much of Nördlingen, but the city quickly recovered. Three generations later, a large number of craftsmen, especially tanners and weavers, settled outside the city walls. In 1327 the present-day circular wall was built, which increased the size of the walled portion of the city fourfold. 1427 saw the start of construction on St. George's Church.

In the year 1472 the court case against the brothel owners Linhardt Freiermuth and his wife Barbara Taschenfeind is recorded in the city's court records. The starting point of the trial was the charge of forced abortion on the prostitute Els von Eystett. The court convicted the owners and banished the husband from the city. His wife was branded on the forehead and pilloried. The associated 40 parchment pages in the Nördlingen city archives give unique insight into the conditions of a brothel in this time period.

Early modern period edit

 
1744 map of the County of Oettingen, with Nördlingen and its exclaves in the middle, coloured violet.
 
The fortress walls of Nördlingen are well preserved.

In 1529, the city was part of the Protestation at Speyer, which sought to allow the unimpeded spread of the Protestant Reformation. In 1555, the Reformation in Nördlingen was finally completed. In 1579, Mayor Peter Seng (1512–1589) signed the Lutheran Formula of Concord.

The witch trials in the early modern period in Nördlingen have been well documented. Between 1589 and 1598, 34 women and one man were burned at the stake for the crime of witchcraft, and one co-defendant midwife, Barbara Lierheimer, died while in custody. The trials of Maria Holl and Rebecca Lemp became especially well-known.[10] In 1589, Pastor Wilhelm Friedrich Lutz delivered sermons against the radical witch persecution of Nördlingen City Council, prior to the Council's execution of the first alleged witches in May 1590. One of the three women executed in that year was a carter's daughter, Ursula Haider, who was arrested on 8 November 1589 and burned on 15 May 1590. The trial of Ursula Haider was by described by Ulrike Haß in her book Teufelstanz.

It is often said that in 1604 a shortened and simplified version of William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet was performed in Nördlingen and that this was one of the first performances of any Shakespearean play outside England.[11] In fact, the players applied to perform but were denied by the local authorities and were compensated for their efforts.[12]

Nördlingen served as the site of two historic battles, and marked a turning point in the Thirty Years' War. In the first Battle of Nördlingen in 1634, the Swedish Protestant forces were decisively defeated for the first time by the imperial Habsburg troops. The city was compelled to open its gates to the victors, but was not plundered by the victorious troops after high reparations payments. However, during and after the siege, the city lost more than half of its population due to hunger and illness. This was exacerbated by the second Battle of Nördlingen in 1645, and it would not be until 1939 that Nördlingen regained the population it had in 1618. In the early 18th century, during the War of the Spanish Succession, the city was further affected by the impact of nearby battles of Höchstädt. The wars forced trade to shift to the seaports, and as a result, Nördlingen lost its importance as a trading center. In part due to this forced economic standstill, Nördlingen's medieval cityscape remained well preserved.

As a result of the German mediatization, in 1803 Nördlingen lost its status as an imperial city and became part of the Electorate of Bavaria, which had occupied the city in September 1802 in anticipation of the decree. On January 1, 1806, Bavaria's Elector declared himself king, officially changing the Electorate of Bavaria into the Kingdom of Bavaria, which seceded from the Holy Roman Empire the following August.

Modern period edit

 
"Little planet" panorama of Nördlingen

On May 15, 1849, Nördlingen was connected to the network of the Royal Bavarian State Railways. In that same year, the first rail lines opened to Nuremberg. A third railway connection, under the leadership of the Royal Württemberg State Railways, was opened on 3 October 1863 to Aalen.

During the Second World War, a total of 33 people were killed in and around Nördlingen by air raids conducted in the spring of 1945. The train station and several houses were destroyed, and St. George's Church was severely damaged. However, most of the historic district of the city was spared. In 1945, Nördlingen became part of the American occupation zone of Allied-occupied Germany. The United States military set up a displaced persons camp in the city. It was overseen by UNRRA and housed approximately 500 DPs, mostly from Latvia and Lithuania. More than 4,500 people settled permanently in Nördlingen after the war.[citation needed]

Since the Middle Ages, Jewish families have resided in Nördlingen. They buried their dead in the Jewish cemetery on Nähermemminger Way, and a synagogue was built in 1885. The synagogue was destroyed by the Nazis during the November pogrom of 1938, and this is commemorated by a plaque on today's Protestant parish hall. In 1979, a memorial stone was erected in the Jewish cemetery commemorating Jewish victims of the Holocaust.

In the course of the municipal reorganization of Bavaria, Nördlingen lost its status as a city on July 1, 1972 and was incorporated into the newly formed district Nördlingen-Donauwörth, which received its current name, Donau-Ries, on May 1, 1973.

Mayors edit

 
Saint George's church, Nördlingen, the Daniel in background
List of Nördlingen mayors since 1914
Name Term of office
Wilhelm Brunco 1914–1916
Otto Mainer 1916–1927
Wilhelm Hausmann 1927–1939
Heinrich Schulz 1939–1941
Eugen Einberger 1941–1944
Paul Söldner 1945–1946
Josef Feil 1946–1948
Johannes Weinberger 1948–1964
Hermann Keßler 1964–1982
Paul Kling 1982–2006
Hermann Faul 2006–2020
David Wittner 2020–

Economy edit

Important companies in Nördlingen are:

  • C.H. Beck – book publisher
  • Varta – battery manufacturer
  • Maierbier – brewery

Nördlingen has a station on the Augsburg–Nördlingen railway and the Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt–Nördlingen railway, which are served hourly on weekdays.

Sport edit

The local sports club, the TSV 1861 Nördlingen, has a very successful basketball department with the men's and the women's team both in the Basketball Bundesliga. The clubs football team is traditionally the strongest side in northern Swabia. Its most successful former player is Gerd Müller, who was born and raised in Nördlingen. Its stadium was renamed in his honour in 2008.

Impact diamonds edit

Stone buildings in the town contain millions of tiny diamonds, all less than 0.2 mm (0.008 in) across. The meteorite impact — from a 1 km-wide (0.6 mi) asteroid — that caused the Nördlinger Ries crater created an estimated 72,000 tons of these tiny diamonds when it impacted a local graphite deposit. Stone from this area was later quarried and used to build the stone buildings.[3]

 
Panorama of Nördlingen from the Daniel

In movies edit

Aerial scenes at the end of Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory were filmed here.

In anime edit

The main city featured in Attack on Titan is based on Nördlingen.

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Nördlingen is twinned with:[13]

Notable people edit

 
Albrecht Adam, c. 1850

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Liste der ersten Bürgermeister/Oberbürgermeister in kreisangehörigen Gemeinden, Bayerisches Landesamt für Statistik, 15 July 2021.
  2. ^ Genesis Online-Datenbank des Bayerischen Landesamtes für Statistik Tabelle 12411-003r Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes: Gemeinden, Stichtag (Einwohnerzahlen auf Grundlage des Zensus 2011)
  3. ^ a b "The ancient town with a history from outer space". BBC. 2 March 2020.
  4. ^ Oliva, Martin (2005). Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Moravia. Moravian Museum. p. 112.
  5. ^ a b c Onians, R. B. (1988). The Origins of European Thought. Cambridge University Press. p. 541. ISBN 0521347947.
  6. ^ Whittle, A. W. R. (1996). Europe in the Neolithic: The Creation of New Worlds. Cambridge University Press. p. 153. ISBN 0521449200.
  7. ^ "Septemiacum (Nördlingen) - Vici.org". Retrieved 1 December 2022.
  8. ^ Czysz, Wolfgang. Die Römer in Bayern. Nikol, 2005. ISBN 3937872116, 9783937872117. 594 pages.
  9. ^ Bender, H. (9 June 2017). "Places: 123119 (Septemiacum)". Pleiades. Retrieved August 19, 2018.
  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-07-23. Retrieved 2018-08-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ Dawson, Anthony B. (2002). "International Shakespeare". In Wells, Stanley; Stanton, Sarah. The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare on Stage. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 174–193. ISBN 978-0-521-79711-5, p. 176
  12. ^ Oppitz-Trotman, George. (2015). Romeo and Juliet in German, 1603-1604" Notes and Queries 260: 96–98.
  13. ^ "Partnerstädte". noerdlingen.de (in German). Nördlingen. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
  14. ^ Hashagen, Justus (1911). "Lang, Karl Heinrich" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). pp. 171–172.

Further reading edit

  • Emsley, John (2001). NATURE'S BUILDING BLOCKS. Oxford University Press, pp. 99. ISBN 0-19-850341-5.
  • Baier, Johannes (2007): Die Ausfwurfprodukte des Ries-Impakts, Deutschland, 'in Documenta Naturae, Vol. 162, München. ISBN 978-3-86544-162-1
  • Baier, Johannes (2008): Zur Herkunft der Suevit-Grundmasse des Ries-Impakt Kraters, in Documenta Naturae, Vol. 172, München. ISSN 0723-8428
  • Theodor Heuss: Reiz biedermeierhafter Idylle. Besuch in Nördlingen. In: Die romantische Straße. Merian, 7. Jg., Heft 12/1954, S. 34–41.
  • Wolfgang Kootz (Text), Willi Sauer, Ulrich Strauch u. a. (Fotos): Nördlingen im Ries an der Romantischen Straße, Stadtführer mit 90 Farbbildern, Kraichgau Verlag, 2007, ISBN 978-3-929228-47-2.
  • Dietlof Reiche: Der Bleisiegelfälscher. Beltz & Gelberg, 1998, ISBN 978-3-407-78781-1 (Historischer Roman, ausgezeichnet mit dem Kinder- und Jugendbuchpreis der Stadt Oldenburg 1977 und mit dem Deutschen Jugendbuchpreis 1978. In diesem Jugendbuch wird die mittelalterliche Situation der Nördlinger Lodenweber sehr eingehend beschrieben.)
  • Dietlof Reiche: Die Hexenakte. Carl Hanser, 2007, ISBN 978-3-446-20860-5; dtv, 2009, ISBN 978-3-423-62387-2 (Historischer Roman (Jugendroman) zur Hexenverbrennung und -verfolgung in Nördlingen; beruht auf der Geschichte Reiches eigener Vorfahrin).
  • VII. 90/2: Bernd Vollmar, Georg Paula, Catharina Kociumaka: Stadt Nördlingen, mit Beiträgen von Wolfgang Czysz, Hanns Dietrich, Gerhard Ongyerth und Dietmar-H. Voges und Aufnahmen von Vera Sohnle. Photohaus Finck, Dieter Komma, 1998, ISBN 3-87490-578-0.
  • Wolfgang Wüst: Wider Gotteslästerung, Unkeuschheit, Ehebruch, Neid, Hass und Aufruhr – Policey und Zucht in Nördlingen im Jahre 1542/43. In: Zeitschrift des Historischen Vereins für Schwaben (=ZHVS) 109 (2017), ISBN 978-3-95786-110-8, S. 167–187.
  • Gustav Adolf Zipperer: Wege durchs Ries. Ein Wanderführer. Fränkisch-Schwäbischer Heimatverlag, Donauwörth 1975.

External links edit

nördlingen, german, ˈnœʁt, lɪŋ, swabian, nearle, nearleng, town, donau, ries, district, swabia, bavaria, germany, with, population, approximately, located, approximately, east, stuttgart, northwest, munich, built, impact, crater, million, years, diameter, nörd. Nordlingen German ˈnœʁt lɪŋ en Swabian Nearle or Nearleng is a town in the Donau Ries district in Swabia Bavaria Germany with a population of approximately 20 674 It is located approximately 115 km 71 mi east of Stuttgart and 145 km 90 mi northwest of Munich It was built in an impact crater 15 million years old and 25 km in diameter the Nordlinger Ries of a meteorite which hit with an estimated speed of 70 000 km h and left the area riddled with an estimated 72 000 tons of micro diamonds 3 NordlingenTownNordlingen south view from the church tower DanielCoat of armsLocation of Nordlingen within Donau Ries districtNordlingenShow map of GermanyNordlingenShow map of BavariaCoordinates 48 51 4 N 10 29 18 E 48 85111 N 10 48833 E 48 85111 10 48833CountryGermanyStateBavariaAdmin regionSwabiaDistrictDonau RiesGovernment Lord mayor 2020 26 David Wittner 1 Area Total68 10 km2 26 29 sq mi Elevation441 m 1 447 ft Population 2022 12 31 2 Total21 009 Density310 km2 800 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes86720Dialling codes09081Vehicle registrationDON NOWebsitewww noerdlingen deNordlingen was first mentioned in recorded history in 898 The town was the location of two battles during the Thirty Years War which took place between 1618 and 1648 Today it is one of only three towns in Germany that still have completely intact city walls the other two being Rothenburg ob der Tauber and Dinkelsbuhl Another attraction in the town is Saint George s Church s 90 metre 300 ft steeple called Daniel which is made of a suevite impact breccia that contains shocked quartz Other notable buildings are the town hall which dates to the 13th century St Salvator church and the Spital a former medieval hospital The Ries crater museum is located in the well preserved medieval tanners quarter The city is home to several other museums such as the Bavarian Railway Museum the Nordlingen city museum Stadtmuseum the city wall museum Stadtmauermuseum and Augenblick museum The latter has panoramas magic lanterns silent films barrel organs pianolas music boxes and gramophones Nordlingen is also known for the Scharlachrennen Scarlet Race a horse race tournament that was first mentioned in 1463 Since World War II it has expanded to include eventing jumping and dressage Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory and Celtic period 1 2 Roman Empire 1 3 Middle Ages 1 4 Early modern period 1 5 Modern period 2 Mayors 3 Economy 4 Sport 5 Impact diamonds 6 In movies 7 In anime 8 Twin towns sister cities 9 Notable people 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory editPrehistory and Celtic period edit nbsp The Large Ofnet one of the earliest sites with evidence of human habitation in the Nordlingen area Finds in the Ofnet Caves near the city show that the site of present day Nordlingen was already inhabited in the late Palaeolithic In the Large Ofnet in 1908 archaeologist R R Schmidt found two dish shaped pits in which human skulls were lying like eggs in flat baskets 4 In the larger pit were 27 skulls and in the other there were 6 skulls 5 The skulls were arranged concentrically with their faces turned towards the setting sun 5 They were all covered with a thick layer of red ochre 5 The skulls have been dated to the 7th millennium BC 6 In the area around Nordlingen additional sites dating to almost all of the subsequent prehistoric epochs have been discovered Particularly important was an area on the eastern edge of the district Baldingen where settlements have been found belonging to the Neolithic Linear Pottery culture the Bronze Age Urnfield culture and the Celtic Iron Age Hallstatt and La Tene cultures Roman Empire edit The area which includes present day Nordlingen was part of the Roman province of Raetia 7 but little research has been conducted on the city s Roman period A Roman villa has been excavated in the district of Holheim and can be visited today Another villa with an adjoining burial ground has been identified in the Baldingen district A settlement vicus built in 85 C E occupied the southern part of the city until 259 260 C E when it was destroyed during the conquest of what is now southern Germany by the Germanic speaking Alemanni tribes The Roman settlement may have been the one known as Septemiacum which is supposed to have been built between 80 300 C E 8 although it is possible that this particular settlement was actually located at a different site such as Oberdorf 9 leaving the name of the settlement at Nordlingen uncertain Middle Ages edit The Alemannic people occupied the Nordlingen area during the 6th and 7th centuries during which time the region was gradually Christianized under the Merovingian dynasty and several burial grounds from this period have been discovered The name Nordilinga is first found in documents of the Carolingian royal court dating from 898 and the city today celebrates this as the date of its foundation Under the rule of the Bishops of Regensburg Nordlingen grew into an important market town In 1215 Nordlingen was granted city rights by Emperor Frederick II and became imperial city of the Holy Roman Empire In that year the first city wall was built the footprint of which is still visible today In a document dating to 1219 the Nordlinger Pfingstmesse Nordlingen Pentecost fair was first mentioned an event which continues as a folk festival in the city to the present day Thanks to Nordlingen s location at the crossroads of two major trade routes Frankfurt Wurzburg Augsburg and Nuremberg Ulm it became an important trading center for grain livestock textiles furs and metal goods Besides Frankfurt am Main Nordlingen was one of the most important long distance trade fairs in the region In 1238 a fire destroyed much of Nordlingen but the city quickly recovered Three generations later a large number of craftsmen especially tanners and weavers settled outside the city walls In 1327 the present day circular wall was built which increased the size of the walled portion of the city fourfold 1427 saw the start of construction on St George s Church In the year 1472 the court case against the brothel owners Linhardt Freiermuth and his wife Barbara Taschenfeind is recorded in the city s court records The starting point of the trial was the charge of forced abortion on the prostitute Els von Eystett The court convicted the owners and banished the husband from the city His wife was branded on the forehead and pilloried The associated 40 parchment pages in the Nordlingen city archives give unique insight into the conditions of a brothel in this time period Early modern period edit nbsp 1744 map of the County of Oettingen with Nordlingen and its exclaves in the middle coloured violet nbsp The fortress walls of Nordlingen are well preserved In 1529 the city was part of the Protestation at Speyer which sought to allow the unimpeded spread of the Protestant Reformation In 1555 the Reformation in Nordlingen was finally completed In 1579 Mayor Peter Seng 1512 1589 signed the Lutheran Formula of Concord The witch trials in the early modern period in Nordlingen have been well documented Between 1589 and 1598 34 women and one man were burned at the stake for the crime of witchcraft and one co defendant midwife Barbara Lierheimer died while in custody The trials of Maria Holl and Rebecca Lemp became especially well known 10 In 1589 Pastor Wilhelm Friedrich Lutz delivered sermons against the radical witch persecution of Nordlingen City Council prior to the Council s execution of the first alleged witches in May 1590 One of the three women executed in that year was a carter s daughter Ursula Haider who was arrested on 8 November 1589 and burned on 15 May 1590 The trial of Ursula Haider was by described by Ulrike Hass in her book Teufelstanz It is often said that in 1604 a shortened and simplified version of William Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet was performed in Nordlingen and that this was one of the first performances of any Shakespearean play outside England 11 In fact the players applied to perform but were denied by the local authorities and were compensated for their efforts 12 Nordlingen served as the site of two historic battles and marked a turning point in the Thirty Years War In the first Battle of Nordlingen in 1634 the Swedish Protestant forces were decisively defeated for the first time by the imperial Habsburg troops The city was compelled to open its gates to the victors but was not plundered by the victorious troops after high reparations payments However during and after the siege the city lost more than half of its population due to hunger and illness This was exacerbated by the second Battle of Nordlingen in 1645 and it would not be until 1939 that Nordlingen regained the population it had in 1618 In the early 18th century during the War of the Spanish Succession the city was further affected by the impact of nearby battles of Hochstadt The wars forced trade to shift to the seaports and as a result Nordlingen lost its importance as a trading center In part due to this forced economic standstill Nordlingen s medieval cityscape remained well preserved As a result of the German mediatization in 1803 Nordlingen lost its status as an imperial city and became part of the Electorate of Bavaria which had occupied the city in September 1802 in anticipation of the decree On January 1 1806 Bavaria s Elector declared himself king officially changing the Electorate of Bavaria into the Kingdom of Bavaria which seceded from the Holy Roman Empire the following August Modern period edit nbsp Little planet panorama of NordlingenOn May 15 1849 Nordlingen was connected to the network of the Royal Bavarian State Railways In that same year the first rail lines opened to Nuremberg A third railway connection under the leadership of the Royal Wurttemberg State Railways was opened on 3 October 1863 to Aalen During the Second World War a total of 33 people were killed in and around Nordlingen by air raids conducted in the spring of 1945 The train station and several houses were destroyed and St George s Church was severely damaged However most of the historic district of the city was spared In 1945 Nordlingen became part of the American occupation zone of Allied occupied Germany The United States military set up a displaced persons camp in the city It was overseen by UNRRA and housed approximately 500 DPs mostly from Latvia and Lithuania More than 4 500 people settled permanently in Nordlingen after the war citation needed Since the Middle Ages Jewish families have resided in Nordlingen They buried their dead in the Jewish cemetery on Nahermemminger Way and a synagogue was built in 1885 The synagogue was destroyed by the Nazis during the November pogrom of 1938 and this is commemorated by a plaque on today s Protestant parish hall In 1979 a memorial stone was erected in the Jewish cemetery commemorating Jewish victims of the Holocaust In the course of the municipal reorganization of Bavaria Nordlingen lost its status as a city on July 1 1972 and was incorporated into the newly formed district Nordlingen Donauworth which received its current name Donau Ries on May 1 1973 Mayors edit nbsp Saint George s church Nordlingen the Daniel in backgroundList of Nordlingen mayors since 1914 Name Term of officeWilhelm Brunco 1914 1916Otto Mainer 1916 1927Wilhelm Hausmann 1927 1939Heinrich Schulz 1939 1941Eugen Einberger 1941 1944Paul Soldner 1945 1946Josef Feil 1946 1948Johannes Weinberger 1948 1964Hermann Kessler 1964 1982Paul Kling 1982 2006Hermann Faul 2006 2020David Wittner 2020 Economy editImportant companies in Nordlingen are C H Beck book publisher Varta battery manufacturer Maierbier breweryNordlingen has a station on the Augsburg Nordlingen railway and the Stuttgart Bad Cannstatt Nordlingen railway which are served hourly on weekdays Sport editThe local sports club the TSV 1861 Nordlingen has a very successful basketball department with the men s and the women s team both in the Basketball Bundesliga The clubs football team is traditionally the strongest side in northern Swabia Its most successful former player is Gerd Muller who was born and raised in Nordlingen Its stadium was renamed in his honour in 2008 Impact diamonds editStone buildings in the town contain millions of tiny diamonds all less than 0 2 mm 0 008 in across The meteorite impact from a 1 km wide 0 6 mi asteroid that caused the Nordlinger Ries crater created an estimated 72 000 tons of these tiny diamonds when it impacted a local graphite deposit Stone from this area was later quarried and used to build the stone buildings 3 nbsp Panorama of Nordlingen from the DanielIn movies editAerial scenes at the end of Willy Wonka amp the Chocolate Factory were filmed here In anime editThe main city featured in Attack on Titan is based on Nordlingen Twin towns sister cities editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Nordlingen is twinned with 13 nbsp Markham Canada nbsp Wagga Wagga Australia nbsp Riom France nbsp Olomouc Czech RepublicNotable people edit nbsp Albrecht Adam c 1850Friedrich Herlin 1425 1430 1500 painter Bartholomaus Zeitblom c 1455 c 1518 painter Karl Heinrich Ritter von Lang 1764 at Balgheim 1835 an historian and statesman 14 Albrecht Adam 1786 1862 war artist Heinrich Adam 1787 1862 painter member of the painter family Adam from Nordlingen Johann Michael Voltz 1784 1858 graphic artist and painter Friedrich Voltz 1817 1886 painter Robert Beyschlag 1838 1903 painter Otto Forschner 1902 1946 SS commander and a Nazi concentration camp official executed for war crimes Christel DeHaan 1942 2020 American businesswoman and philanthropist former owner of Resort Condominiums International founder of Christel House International Gerd Muller 1945 2021 football player and coach Anton Meyer born 1955 economist and professor of business administration Sabine Haubitz born 1959 art photographer Michael Lutz born 1982 footballer Frank Kechele born 1986 racing driver Stefan Riess born 1988 footballer Steffen Lang born 1993 footballerSee also editRintfleisch Pogrom Master of Nordlingen whose name is derived from the town Henry of Nordlingen Herkheim a community within NordlingenReferences editThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Liste der ersten Burgermeister Oberburgermeister in kreisangehorigen Gemeinden Bayerisches Landesamt fur Statistik 15 July 2021 Genesis Online Datenbank des Bayerischen Landesamtes fur Statistik Tabelle 12411 003r Fortschreibung des Bevolkerungsstandes Gemeinden Stichtag Einwohnerzahlen auf Grundlage des Zensus 2011 a b The ancient town with a history from outer space BBC 2 March 2020 Oliva Martin 2005 Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Moravia Moravian Museum p 112 a b c Onians R B 1988 The Origins of European Thought Cambridge University Press p 541 ISBN 0521347947 Whittle A W R 1996 Europe in the Neolithic The Creation of New Worlds Cambridge University Press p 153 ISBN 0521449200 Septemiacum Nordlingen Vici org Retrieved 1 December 2022 Czysz Wolfgang Die Romer in Bayern Nikol 2005 ISBN 3937872116 9783937872117 594 pages Bender H 9 June 2017 Places 123119 Septemiacum Pleiades Retrieved August 19 2018 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 07 23 Retrieved 2018 08 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Dawson Anthony B 2002 International Shakespeare In Wells Stanley Stanton Sarah The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare on Stage Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 174 193 ISBN 978 0 521 79711 5 p 176 Oppitz Trotman George 2015 Romeo and Juliet in German 1603 1604 Notes and Queries 260 96 98 Partnerstadte noerdlingen de in German Nordlingen Retrieved 2021 03 03 Hashagen Justus 1911 Lang Karl Heinrich Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed pp 171 172 Further reading editEmsley John 2001 NATURE S BUILDING BLOCKS Oxford University Press pp 99 ISBN 0 19 850341 5 Baier Johannes 2007 Die Ausfwurfprodukte des Ries Impakts Deutschland in Documenta Naturae Vol 162 Munchen ISBN 978 3 86544 162 1 Baier Johannes 2008 Zur Herkunft der Suevit Grundmasse des Ries Impakt Kraters in Documenta Naturae Vol 172 Munchen ISSN 0723 8428 Theodor Heuss Reiz biedermeierhafter Idylle Besuch in Nordlingen In Die romantische Strasse Merian 7 Jg Heft 12 1954 S 34 41 Wolfgang Kootz Text Willi Sauer Ulrich Strauch u a Fotos Nordlingen im Ries an der Romantischen Strasse Stadtfuhrer mit 90 Farbbildern Kraichgau Verlag 2007 ISBN 978 3 929228 47 2 Dietlof Reiche Der Bleisiegelfalscher Beltz amp Gelberg 1998 ISBN 978 3 407 78781 1 Historischer Roman ausgezeichnet mit dem Kinder und Jugendbuchpreis der Stadt Oldenburg 1977 und mit dem Deutschen Jugendbuchpreis 1978 In diesem Jugendbuch wird die mittelalterliche Situation der Nordlinger Lodenweber sehr eingehend beschrieben Dietlof Reiche Die Hexenakte Carl Hanser 2007 ISBN 978 3 446 20860 5 dtv 2009 ISBN 978 3 423 62387 2 Historischer Roman Jugendroman zur Hexenverbrennung und verfolgung in Nordlingen beruht auf der Geschichte Reiches eigener Vorfahrin VII 90 2 Bernd Vollmar Georg Paula Catharina Kociumaka Stadt Nordlingen mit Beitragen von Wolfgang Czysz Hanns Dietrich Gerhard Ongyerth und Dietmar H Voges und Aufnahmen von Vera Sohnle Photohaus Finck Dieter Komma 1998 ISBN 3 87490 578 0 Wolfgang Wust Wider Gotteslasterung Unkeuschheit Ehebruch Neid Hass und Aufruhr Policey und Zucht in Nordlingen im Jahre 1542 43 In Zeitschrift des Historischen Vereins fur Schwaben ZHVS 109 2017 ISBN 978 3 95786 110 8 S 167 187 Gustav Adolf Zipperer Wege durchs Ries Ein Wanderfuhrer Frankisch Schwabischer Heimatverlag Donauworth 1975 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nordlingen nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Nordlingen Homepage in German Nordlingen Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed 1911 pp 741 742 Nordlingen Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nordlingen amp oldid 1174159489, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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