Gunzenhausen Explained

Type:Stadt
Image Coa:Stadtwappen Gunzenhausen.svg
Coordinates:49.1147°N 10.7542°W
Image Plan:Gunzenhausen in WUG.svg
State:Bayern
Region:Mittelfranken
District:Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen
Elevation:416
Area:82.73
Postal Code:91710
Area Code:09831
Licence:WUG, GUN
Gemeindeschlüssel:09 5 77 136
Divisions:14 Stadtteile
Website:gunzenhausen.de
Mayor:Karl-Heinz Fitz[1]
Leader Term:2020 - 26
Party:CSU

Gunzenhausen (pronounced as /de/; Gunzenhausn|link=no) is a town in the Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen district, in Bavaria, Germany. It is situated on the river Altmühl, northwest of Weißenburg in Bayern, and southwest of Nuremberg. Gunzenhausen is a nationally recognized recreation area. It is noted as being at one end of part of The Limes Germanicus, a Roman border wall, and a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[2]

History

Numerous excavations within the city of Gunzenhausen document that the area was occupied and there was a settlement in pre-historic time. In the year 90 the Romans expelled the Celts, occupied the inhabited areas north of the Danube, and expanded into the Gunzenhausen area. In the year 241 the Alemanni invaded the area and destroyed the fortress. A document from the year 823 supplies the first reliable written reference to Gunzenhausen.

Emperor Ludwig der Fromme conveyed the monastery "Gunzinhusir" to the High-monastery of Ellwangen. Later the "Truhendinger" and the "Oettinger" families became Lords of Gunzenhausen, and in 1368 Gunzenhausen came to the House of Hohenzollern. So the city received the right of holding fairs and was allowed to build city walls, towers and moat, as well as a large church. Gunzenhausen had a big Jewish community and a "Moorish" synagogue, built in 1882; the latter had its onion domes removed and was partially converted to "profane uses" during the Hitler regime, and by 1939 the town was declared Judenrein (free of Jews).[3]

In the 1970s eighteen municipalities were combined resulting in the city growing to about 17,000 inhabitants.

Gunzenhausen is mentioned in W. G. Sebald's collection of literary stories entitled The Emigrants (1992).[4]

International relations

See main article: article and List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany.

Gunzenhausen is twinned with:

Transport

The town lies on the Treuchtlingen-Würzburg railway.

Local notables

References

  1. https://www.statistik.bayern.de/wahlen/kommunalwahlen/bgm/ Liste der ersten Bürgermeister/Oberbürgermeister in kreisangehörigen Gemeinden
  2. Web site: Franconian Lake Region. Franken Tourismus. 23 March 2018.
  3. http://jl-gunzenhausen.de/en/synagoge.html "The Synagogue of Gunzenhausen 1882 - 1938" Jüdisches Leben En Gunzenhausen website
  4. W. G. Sebald, The Emigrants; transl. Michael Huse. New York: The New Directions, 1996, 50‒54.