Meppen Explained

Meppen
German Name:Möppen (Northern Low Saxon)
Type:Stadt
Image Coa:DEU Meppen COA.svg
Coordinates:52.6936°N 7.2928°W
Image Plan:Meppen in EL.svg
State:Niedersachsen
District:Emsland
Elevation:14
Area:188.48
Postal Code:49716
Area Code:05931
Licence:EL
Gemeindeschlüssel:03 4 54 035
Divisions:7 Stadtteile and 13 villages
Website:www.meppen.de
Mayor:Helmut Knurbein[1]
Leader Term:2021 - 26
Party:independent

Meppen (pronounced as /de/; Northern Low Saxon: Möppen) is a town in and the seat of the Emsland district of Lower Saxony, Germany, at the confluence of the Ems, Hase, and Nordradde rivers and the Dortmund–Ems Canal (DEK). The name stems from the word Mappe, meaning "delta".

Geography

The town is in the central part of the Emsland, at the mouth of the Hase River where it meets the Ems, between the cities of Lingen and Papenburg. About from the Dutch border, Meppen has an area of and is above sea level. The population was 34,196 .

Districts of Meppen

1st Altstadt
Historical centre of Meppen with historical town hall.

2nd Esterfeld

3rd Feldkamp

4th Kuhweide

5th Neustadt

6th Nödike

7th Schleusengruppe

Villages in Meppen

In 1974, 13 independent, surrounding municipalities were integrated into Meppen.

  1. Apeldorn
  2. Bokeloh
  3. Borken
  4. Groß Fullen
  5. Klein Fullen
  6. Helte
  7. Hemsen
  8. Holthausen
  9. Hüntel
  10. Rühle
  11. Schwefingen
  12. Teglingen
  13. Versen

History

Meppen, formerly a fortified town, boasts 12 centuries of history. The first documented mention of Meppen dates from 834, in a deed of donation by Frankish emperor Louis the Pious, transferring a missionary establishment of that name to the abbey of Corvey.

945 -- Emperor Otto the Great grants the town the rights to mint coins and collect tolls, followed in 946 by market rights.

1252—Countess Jutta von Vechta-Ravensberg sells her possessions to the Bishop of Münster. Meppen becomes part of the Niederstift Münster (i.e. Lower Prince-Bishopric of Münster).

1360—Meppen is granted the right to build city fortifications by Bishop Adolf of Münster, and thereby, town rights. Over the next three centuries until 1660, Meppen is built up as a fortified town.

1762—at the end of the Seven Years' War, the fortifications are demolished. Some walls remain standing today, however.

1803—Resolutions of the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss assign Meppen to Louis Engelbert, 6th Duke of Arenberg, to compensate for the loss of his possessions on the west bank of the Rhine. Meppen becomes the capital of the dukedom of Arenberg.

1811—Meppen is incorporated into the First French Empire as a cantonal seat.

1813–1814—Occupation by Prussia.

1814–1815—Resolutions of the Congress of Vienna assign Meppen and the Duchy of Arenberg to the Kingdom of Hanover.

1855—Meppen connected to the Hannoverschen Westbahn railway line upon its opening.

1866—Hanover becomes a province of Prussia.

1871—Part of the German Empire.1938—Kristallnacht: the German police and SA broke down into Jewish houses and carried out mass arrests, beatings and tortures of Jews. Germans burned down the synagogue and destroyed Jewish homes and enterprises. Some Jews were deported to the Oranienburg concentration camp.[2]

1939—German prisoner-of-war camp Stalag VI-B established in Meppen-Versen, in which initially around 5,000 Polish prisoners of war were held after the German invasion of Poland, which started World War II, and then from 1940 to 1942 French, Belgian, Polish, Soviet and other POWs were held there.[3]

1943—Italian prisoners of war brought by the Germans to the Stalag VI-B.[3]

1944—Stalag VI-B converted into a subcamp of the Neuengamme concentration camp.[3] [4] Over 1,700 men were imprisoned there and used as forced labour,[4] and over 20% of them died.[5]

1945—Prisoners of the subcamp were evacuated by the Germans to Bremen, most in a death march, in which at least 50 prisoners died, sick ones by train, and then they were mostly transported to the Neuengamme concentration camp.[4] [5]

1946—The state of Prussia is abolished after the World War II. Meppen becomes part of the newly created Land of Lower Saxony.

1977—District reforms in Lower Saxony unite the former districts of Lingen, Meppen and Aschendorf-Hümmling in the district of Emsland, with Meppen as administrative seat.

Culture and sights

Theatre

Between September and April the Meppen Theatre Group (Theatergemeinde Meppen) offers a comprehensive programme. Productions take place in the Meppen Theatre and Concert Hall, which was designed by Eberhard Kulenkampff and completed in 1959. It also acts as a school hall for the Windthorst Gymnasium. The programme includes both touring theatre productions as well as musical events of various genres.

From May to September, the Emsland Open Air Stage at Meppen (Emsländische Freilichtbühne Meppen) offers visitors a family musical and an evening event, mostly based on musical productions. More than 30,000 visitors come each year to the open air theatre in Esterfeld Forest to see large musical performances involving casts of up to 100.

Museums

Buildings

Parks

Natural monuments

Population statistics

(*including the villages belonging to the town of Meppen)

Year Inhabitants Year Inhabitants Year Inhabitants Year Inhabitants YearInhabitants
1821* 4,815 1848* 5,130 1905* 7,687 1939* 15,0451950*19,141
1971* 27,305 1990 30,5082005 34,196 2010 34.944201534.918

Notable people

Sport

Sport clubs

Twin towns – sister cities

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany. Meppen is twinned with:[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Direktwahlen in Niedersachsen vom 12. September 2021. 13 October 2021. Landesamt für Statistik Niedersachsen.
  2. Web site: Meppen. 11 September 2020. de.
  3. Web site: Meppen-Versen. 11 September 2020. de.
  4. Web site: Meppen-Versen. KZ-Gedenkstätte Neuengamme. 11 September 2020.
  5. Web site: Meppen-Versen. 11 September 2020. de.
  6. Schücking, Levin . 24 . 382 . 1.
  7. Web site: Städtepartnerschaft Meppen - Ostroleka. meppen.de. Meppen. de. 2021-02-25.