Würzburg
- For the German World War II radar system of the same name see Würzburg radar.
Template:Infobox Town DE Würzburg is a city in the region of Franconia which lies in the northern tip of Bavaria, Germany. Located on the Main River, it is the capital of the Regierungsbezirk Unterfranken. The regional dialect spoken by people in Würzburg is Franconian.
Würzburg is approximately 80 minutes train journey from Frankfurt, and almost an hour from Nuremberg. Distances to the nearest cities by motorway: Frankfurt 115 km, Nuremberg 115 km, Stuttgart 150 km, Kassel 215 km.
The city of Würzburg is not included in Würzburg (district), but is its administrative seat. Its population is 133,188 as of 2005.
History
By 1000 BC a Celtic fortification stood the site of the Fortress Marienberg. It was christianized in 686 by the Irish missionary Kilian, and the city is first mentioned as Vurteburch in 704. The first diocese was founded by St. Bonifatius in 742. He appointed the first bishop of Würzburg, St. Burkhard. The bishops eventually created a duchy with its center in the city, which extended in the 12th century to Eastern Franconia. The city was the seat of several Imperial diets, including the one of 1180, in which Henry the Lion was banned from the Empire and his duchy was handed over to Otto of Wittelsbach.
The first church at the site of the cathedral was built as early as 788, and consecrated that same year by Charlemagne; the current building was constructed from 1040 to 1225 in Romanesque style. The University of Würzburg was founded in 1402 and re-founded 1582.
The citizens of the city revolted several times against the bishop-prince, until definitively defeated in 1400. Later, Würzburg was a center of the German Peasants' War; the castle was besieged unsuccessfully. Notable duke bishops include Julius Echter (1573-1617) and members of the Schönborn family, who commissioned a great number of the monuments of today's city. In 1631, Swedish King Gustavus Adolphus invaded the town and destroyed the castle.
In 1720, the foundations of the Würzburg Residence were laid. In 1814, the town became part of the Bavarian state and a new bishopric was created seven years later, as the former one had been secolarized in 1802. The city had passed to Bavaria in 1803, but two years later, in the course of the Napoleonic Wars, it became the seat of the short-lived Duchy of Würzburg. Würzburg was restored to Bavaria in 1814.
During World War II, on March 16, 1945, 90% of the city was laid to ruins by a British air raid. Most of the main artistic highlights survived, while the baroque city center was severely damaged. During the next 20 years, the buildings of historical importance would be painstakingly re-constructed to the way they used to be before the bombing. The famous Würzburg Residence which was badly bombed, has to this day a piece of the original architecture from 1945.
Since the end of the war, Würzburg has been host to the US Army's 3rd Infantry Division, 1st Infantry Division and various other US military units who have maintained a presence in Germany. The local Würzburg economy benefits greatly from the US military presence. However, these units are due to withdraw from Würzburg after 2007 which may bring an end to over 60 years of US military stationing in Würzburg.
Town structure
Würzburg is divided into 13 municipals which are additionally structured 25 boroughs. In the following overview, the boroughs and their numbers are allocated to the 13 municipals.
01 Altstadt
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02 Zellerau
03 Dürrbachtal
04 Grombühl
05 Lindleinsmühle
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06 Frauenland
07 Sanderau
08 Heidingsfeld
09 Heuchelhof
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10 Steinbachtal
11 Versbach
12 Lengfeld
13 Rottenbauer
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Commerce, Business and Transportation
Würzburg is mainly known as an administrative center. Its largest employers are the University of Würzburg and the municipality. The largest private employer is Koenig & Bauer, a maker of printing machines.
The town is located on the intersection of the Autobahns A 3 and A 7. The city's main station is at the southern end of the Hanover-Würzburg high-speed rail line and offers frequent InterCityExpress and InterCity connections to cities such as Frankfurt, Munich, Kassel, Hanover or Hamburg. It also is an important hub in the regional rail network. The Main river flows into the Rhine and is connected to the Danube via the Rhine-Main-Danube Canal. This makes it part of a trans-European waterway connecting the North Sea to the Black Sea.
Arts and architecture
Notable artists that lived in Würzburg include poet Walther von der Vogelweide (12th and 13th cent.), philosopher Albertus Magnus and painter Mathias Grunewald. Two artists who made a lasting impression were sculptor Tilman Riemenschneider (1460-1531), who was also mayor and participated in the Peasants' War, and Balthasar Neumann (1687-1753), baroque architect and builder of the Würzburg Residence that is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Its interior was decorated by Giovanni Tiepolo and his son, Domenico.
Many of the cities "100 churches" survived intact with styles ranging from romanesque, gothic, baroque to modern. Parts of the cathedral St. Kilian were built in the romanesque periods. The "Käppele" on the other side of the Main river was planned by Balthasar Neumann.
Würzburg hosts the Mainfranken Museum, with artifacts from prehistory until modern times, a Museum of the cathedral, galleries for ancient and modern art, and the "Kulturspeicher" from 2002. Notable festivals include the Afrika Fest in May and the Mozart Fest, in June/July.
Notable people
Philipp Franz von Siebold was among the first Westerners to visit and work in Japan (1823). Werner Heisenberg was born in Würzburg in 1901.
Wilhelm Röntgen's original laboratory, where he discovered x-rays in 1895 is at the University of Würzburg. The University granted Alexander Graham Bell an honorary Ph.D. for his pioneering scientific work.
Würzburg is also the hometown of NBA superstar Dirk Nowitzki, field hockey player Björn Emmerling and footballer Frank Baumann.Also, Werner Heisenberg.
Historic buildings in Würzburg
The Fortress Marienberg is the castle on a hill across the Old Main Bridge, overlooking the whole town area as well as the surrounding hills.
Among Würzburg's many notable churches are the Käppele, a small Baroque/Rococo chapel by Balthasar Neumann, the Schönborn Chapel, a side-chapel of the Dome has interior decoration made of (artificial) human bones and skulls. Look for statues of Adam and Eve by Riemenschneider in the Market Church.
The Julius Spital is a baroque hospital with a courtyard and a church built by the prince bishop Julius Echter. Its medieval wine cellar, together with those of the Würzburg Residence and the Bürgerspital are one place to taste the Frankenwein. With an area under cultivation of 1.68 square kilometres, the Julius Spital is the second largest winery in Germany.
Würzburg's Old Bridge - Alte Mainbrücke
Würzburg's Old Main Bridge was built 1473–1543 to replace the destroyed Romanesque bridge. It was adorned with well-known statues of saints about 1730.
Historic population figures for Würzburg
Year | Population |
---|---|
1200 | 5,000 |
1787 | 18,070 |
1900 | 84,335 |
1939 | 112,997 |
1950 | 86,564 |
1961 | 126,093 |
1970 | 128,547 |
1987 | 123,378 |
2002 | 131,582 |
2004 | 133,539 |
Twin towns
Würzburg maintains cultural, economic and educational ties with:
- - Faribault, Minnesota, USA (since 1949)
- - Dundee, Scotland, (since 1962)
- - Caen, France (since 1962)
- - Rochester, USA (since 1966)
- - Mwanza, Tanzania (since 1966)
- - Otsu, Japan (since 1979)
- - Salamanca, Spain (since 1980)
- - Suhl, Germany (since 1988)
- - Umeå, Sweden (since 1992)
- - Bray, Ireland (since 2000)
Associated:
- - With the Germans in Czechoslovakia (1918-1938) of the district Trautenau, Czech Republic since 1956
External links
- City of Würzburg
- University of Würzburg
- http://www.hfm-wuerzburg.de (School ofmusic)
- Fachhochschule Würzburg-Schweinfurt
- Pictures of Wurzburg (German/English)
- Pictures and informations about Wurzburg (German)