Wissembourg Explained

Wissembourg
Native Name:Weißenburg
Commune Status:Commune
Image Coat Of Arms:Blason Wissembourg 67.svg
Arrondissement:Haguenau-Wissembourg
Canton:Wissembourg
Insee:67544
Postal Code:67160
Mayor:Sandra Fischer-Junck[1]
Term:2020 - 2026
Intercommunality:Pays de Wissembourg
Coordinates:49.04°N 7.95°W
Elevation M:160
Elevation Min M:133
Elevation Max M:527
Area Km2:48.18

Wissembourg (in French pronounced as /visɑ̃buʁ/; South Franconian: Weisseburch pronounced as /ˈvaɪsəbʊʁç/; German: Weißenburg pronounced as /de/) is a commune in the Bas-Rhin department in Grand Est in northeastern France.[2]

Wissembourg was a sub-prefecture of the department until 2015.[3] The name Wissembourg is a Gallicized version of Weißenburg (Weissenburg) in German meaning "white castle". The Latin place-name, sometimes used in ecclesiastical sources, is Sebusium.[4]

The town was annexed by France after 1648 but then incorporated into Germany in 1871. It was returned to France in 1919, but reincorporated back into Germany in 1940. After 1944 it again became French.

Geography

Wissembourg is situated on the little river Lauter close to the border between France and Germany approximately 60km (40miles) north of Strasbourg and 35km (22miles) west of Karlsruhe. The Wissembourg station offers rail connections to Strasbourg, Haguenau and Landau (Germany).

History

Weissenburg (later Wissembourg) Abbey, the Benedictine abbey around which the town has grown, was founded in the 7th century, perhaps under the patronage of Dagobert I. The abbey was supported by vast territories. Of the 11th-century buildings constructed under the direction of Abbot Samuel, only the German: Schartenturm and some moats remain. The town was fortified in the 13th century. The abbey church of Saint-Pierre et Paul erected in the same century under the direction of Abbot Edelin was secularized in the French Revolution and despoiled of its treasures; in 1803 it became the parish church, resulting in the largest parish church of Alsace, only exceeded in size by the cathedral of Strasbourg. At the abbey in the late 9th century the monk Otfried composed a gospel harmony, the first substantial work of verse in German.

In 1354 Emperor Charles IV made it one of the grouping of ten towns called the Décapole that survived annexation by France under Louis XIV in 1678 and was extinguished with the French Revolution. On 25 January 1677 a great fire destroyed many houses and the Hôtel de Ville; its replacement dates from 1741 to 1752. Many early structures were spared: the French: Maison du Sel (1448), under its Alsatian pitched roof, was the first hospital of the town. There are many 15th- and 16th-century timber-frame houses, and parts of the walls and gateways of the town. The French: Maison de Stanislas was the retreat of Stanisław Leszczyński, ex-king of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, from 1719 to 1725, when the formal request arrived on 3 April 1725 asking for the hand of his daughter in marriage to Louis XV. The First Battle of Wissembourg took place near the town in 1793.

The "Lines of Wissembourg" (French: Lignes de Wissembourg; German: Weißenburger Linien), originally made by Villars in 1706, were famous. They were a line of works extending to Lauterbourg nine miles to the southeast. Like the fortifications of the town, only vestiges remain, although the city wall is still intact for stretches.[5] Austrian General von Wurmser succeeded in briefly capturing the lines in October 1793, but was defeated two months later by General Pichegru of the French Army and forced to retreat, along with the Prussians, across the River Rhine.[6]

Wissembourg formed the setting for the Romantic novel L'ami Fritz (1869) co-written by the team of Erckmann and Chatrian, which provided the material for Mascagni's opera L'amico Fritz.

Another Battle of Wissembourg took place on 4 August 1870. It was the first battle of the Franco-Prussian War. The Prussians were nominally commanded by the Crown Prince Frederick, but ably directed by his chief of staff, General Leonhard Graf von Blumenthal. The French defeat allowed the Prussian army to move into France. The Geisberg monument commemorates the battle; the town's cemetery holds large numbers of soldiers, including the stately tomb of French general Abel Douay who was killed in combat.[7]

In 1975 the commune of Wissembourg absorbed the former commune of Altenstadt.[2]

Notable people

Sights

Native Name:Reichsabtei Weißenburg (de)
Abbaye impériale de Wissembourg (fr)
Conventional Long Name:Imperial Abbey of Wissembourg
Common Name:Wissembourg
Era:Middle Ages, Early modern
Status:City-state
Status Text:Imperial Abbey, then Imperial Free City,
of the Holy Roman Empire
Empire:Holy Roman Empire
Government Type:Theocracy
Year Start:7th century
Year End:1697
Event1:Raised to Imperial City
Date Event1:1306
Event2:Joined Décapole
Date Event2:1354
Event End:Décapole annexed
by France
Event Post:Joined Imperial
Council of Princes
Date Post:
1793
P1:Duchy of Swabia
S1:Early modern France
Flag S1:Royal Standard of the King of France.svg
Capital:Weißenburg (Wissembourg)

The town, set in a landscape of wheat fields, retains a former Benedictine monastery with its large-scale Gothic church, now the parish church of Saints Peter and Paul's church (Église Saints-Pierre-et-Paul). Other medieval churches are the Lutheran St John's church (Église Saint-Jean), and the Romanesque St Ulrich's church (Église Saint-Ulrich) in Altenstadt. The 13th-century Dominican church now serves as the cultural center "La Nef". The Grenier aux Dîmes (tithe barn) belonging to the abbey is from the 18th century but an ancient foundation. Noteworthy houses are the medieval "Salt house" (Maison du sel), the Renaissance "House of l'Ami Fritz" and the Baroque town hall, a work by Joseph Massol.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Répertoire national des élus: les maires. data.gouv.fr, Plateforme ouverte des données publiques françaises. 13 September 2022. fr.
  2. https://www.insee.fr/fr/metadonnees/cog/commune/COM67544-wissembourg INSEE commune file
  3. http://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/eli/decret/2014/12/29/2014-1722/jo/texte Décret n° 2014-1722 du 29 décembre 2014 portant suppression des arrondissements de Strasbourg-Campagne et de Wissembourg (département du Bas-Rhin)
  4. Sebastian Franck, Germaniae Chronicon (Westermair 1538), p. CCCV verso. Jaucourt, L'Encylopédie, 1st ed. (1751), Vol. XVII, pp. 595–96.
  5. Wissembourg.
  6. http://www.retrobibliothek.de/retrobib/seite.html?id=116623 www.retrobibliotek.de
  7. Book: Murray, John. Handbook for North Germany: from the Baltic to the Black Forest, and the Rhine. 1886 . J.Murray . 382 . 2010-12-03 .