Oldenburg in Holstein explained

Oldenburg in Holstein should not be confused with Oldenburg (city).

Type:Stadt
Oldenburg in Holstein
Image Coa:DEU Oldenburg in Holstein COA.svg
Coordinates:54.3°N 63°W
Image Plan:Oldenburg in OH.png
State:Schleswig-Holstein
District:Ostholstein
Elevation:8
Area:39.67
Postal Code:23758
Area Code:04361
Licence:OH
Gemeindeschlüssel:01 0 55 033
Website:www.oldenburg-holstein.de
Mayor:Martin Voigt

Oldenburg in Holstein (pronounced as /de/) is a German town at the southwestern shore of the Baltic Sea. The nearest city is Lübeck. The town belongs to the (historical) region of Holstein, today in the German state of Schleswig-Holstein.

Oldenburg was the chief town of the Wagrians, one of the Slavic peoples that migrated as far west as the river Elbe in or after the 6th century (see Völkerwanderung), also known as Wends and Obotrites. They arrived about A.D. 700 and the Pomeranian/Kashubian (Slavic) name was Kashubian: Starigard or Kashubian: Stargard, meaning "Old Settlement", "Old Castle", "Old City/Town"; the German name German: Oldenburg is of Low German origin and carries the same meaning. The Obotrites were allies of Charlemagne. Emperor Otto I established the bishopric of Oldenburg under Adaldag, archbishop of Hamburg.

To the Northern Germanic Vikings, the city was known as Norse, Old: Brandehuse, i.e. "the burned houses", indicating the bellicose times.

For centuries, Starigard/Oldenburg remained the Slavic competitor of Hedeby on the Baltic trade, until the counts Adolph I and Adolph II of Schauenburg and Holstein, supported by Henry the Lion, finally defeated the Wends during the first half of the 12th century.

The modern town has a partnership with Bergen auf Rügen in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

Twin towns – sister cities

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany. Oldenburg in Holstein is twinned with:

Notable natives of Oldenburg in Holstein

See also