Pforzheim

Pforzheim

Infobox Ort in Deutschland
Art = Stadt
Wappen = Wappen Pforzheim.svg
lat_deg = 48 |lat_min = 54 |lat_sec = 0
lon_deg = 08 |lon_min = 43 |lon_sec = 0
Karte = Karte pforzheim in deutschland.pngLageplan =
Bundesland = Baden-Württemberg
Regierungsbezirk = Karlsruhe
Landkreis = Stadtkreis
Höhe = 273
Fläche = 98.03
Einwohner = 119156
Stand = 2006-12-31
PLZ = 75172–75181
PLZ-alt = 7530
Vorwahl = 07231, 07234, 07041
Kfz = PF
Gemeindeschlüssel = 08 2 31 000
LOCODE = DE PFO
Gliederung = 16 Stadtteile
Adresse = Marktplatz 1
75175 Pforzheim
Website = [http://www.pforzheim.de/ www.pforzheim.de]
Bürgermeister = Christel Augenstein
Bürgermeistertitel= Oberbürgermeisterin
Partei = FDP/DVP

Pforzheim is a town of nearly 119,000 inhabitants in the state of Baden-Württemberg, southwest Germany at the gate to the Black Forest. It is world-famous for its jewelry and watch-making industry. Because of that it gained the nickname "Goldstadt" or Golden City. It has an area of 98 km² and is situated between the cities of Stuttgart and Karlsruhe at the confluence of three rivers (Enz, Nagold and Würm) and marks the frontier between Baden and Württemberg, being located on Baden territory.

The City of Pforzheim does not belong to any administrative district ("Kreis"), although it hosts the administrative offices of the Enz district which surrounds the town.

During World War II, Pforzheim was bombed a number of times. The largest raid, and one of the most devastating area bombardments of World War II, was carried out by the Royal Air Force (RAF) on the evening of February 23, 1945. About one quarter of the town's population, over 17,000 people, were killed in the air raid, and about 83% of the town's buildings were destroyed. The town was thought by the Allies to be producing precision instruments for use in the German war effort and to be a transport centre for the movement of German troops.

After the war, the rubble from the destruction was heaped into a large pile on the outskirts of the town, as was done by other cities such as Stuttgart and Munich. A building called the "Wallberg" was erected as a concrete "cap" on the mountain of rubble, long since covered with earth and vegetation. In the twenty years following the end of the war, Pforzheim was gradually rebuilt, giving the town a quite modern look.

Geography

Pforzheim is located at the northern rim of the eastern part of the Black Forest (Schwarzwald) and the rim of the hilly country of the Kraichgau, in an open valley at the confluences of the rivers Würm and Nagold and the rivers Nagold and Enz. Due to its location, this city is also called the "three-valleys town" ("Drei-Taeler Stadt") or the "Gateway to the Black Forest" ("Pforte zum Schwarzwald / Porta Hercinia"). The early settlement (in fact much earlier than the current centers Stuttgart and Karlsruhe) by the Romans, who constructed a ford through the river, shortly past the confluence of the three rivers, for their military highway, is also due to this extraordinary geography. Due to this location, Pforzheim later on became a center for the timber-rafting trade which transported timber from the Black Forest via the rivers Wuerm, Nagold, Enz and then the Neckar and Rhine to, among other destinations, the Netherlands for use in shipbuilding.

Pforzheim and its surrounding area belongs to the "Densely Populated Area Karlsruhe/Pforzheim". Pforzheim has the functions of a regional center (Mittelzentrum) for the towns and municipalities Birkenfeld (Enz), Eisingen, Engelsbrand,
Friolzheim, Heimsheim, Ispringen, Kämpfelbach, Keltern, Kieselbronn, Königsbach-Stein, Mönsheim,
Neuenbürg (Württemberg), Neuhausen, Neulingen, Niefern-Öschelbronn, Ölbronn-Dürrn, Remchingen,
Straubenhardt, Tiefenbronn, Wiernsheim,Wimsheim and Wurmberg.ref|wikipedia

Neighboring communities

The following towns and communities share borderlines with the City of Pforzheim. Below they are mentioned in clockwise order, beginning to the north of the city. Except for Unterreichenbach, which belongs to the district of Calw, all of them are included in the Enz district.

Ispringen, Neulingen, Kieselbronn, Niefern-Öschelbronn, Wurmberg, Wimsheim, Neuhausen (Enz), Unterreichenbach, Engelsbrand, Birkenfeld (Enz), Keltern and Kämpfelbachref|wikipedia

City wards

The city of Pforzheim consists of 16 city wards. The communities Büchenbronn, Eutingen on the Enz, Hohenwart, Huchenfeld and Würm, which by way of the latest regional administrative reform during the 1970s were incorporated into Pforzheim's administration, are represented by independent community councils and community administrations according to § 8 and following paragraphs of the main city-ordinance of Pforzheim. In important matters concerning any of these communities the opinions of the respective community councils must be taken into consideration. However, final decisions on the matter will be made by the Pforzheim city council.

* City center ("Innenstadt")
* Northern ward ("Nordstadt")
* Eastern ward ("Oststadt")
* Southeastern ward ("Südoststadt")
* Southwestern ward ("Südweststadt")
* Western ward ("Weststadt")
* Arlinger
* Brötzingen
* Buckenberg and Hagenschiess; including Altgefaell, Haidach and Wald-Siedlung
* Büchenbronn including Sonnenberg
* Sonnenhof
* Dillweißenstein
* Eutingen on the Enz including Mäuerach
* Hohenwart
* Huchenfeld
* Würmref|wikipedia

Views of Pforzheim (2003)

History

Since 90: A settlement was established by Roman citizens at the Enz river near the modern "Altstädter Brücke" (old town bridge). Archeological surveys have unearthed several items from that period which are kept and displayed in the Kappelhof Museum. The settlement was located where the Roman military road connecting the military camp Argentorate (nowadays Strasbourg in France) and the military camp at Cannstatt (now a suburb of Stuttgart) at the Upper Germanic Limes border line of the Roman Empire crossed the Enz river. This place was known as Portus (river crossing, harbor), which is believed to be the origin of the first part of the city's name "Pforzheim". A Roman milestone (the so-called 'Leugenstein') from the year 245 and later excavated at nowadays Friolzheim shows the exact distance to 'Portus'; it is the first document about the settlement.ref|hist1ref|hist6

259/260: The Roman settlement 'Portus' was destroyed completely, as the Frank and Alemanni tribes overrun the Upper Germanic Limes border line of the Roman Empire and conquered the Roman administrated area west of the Rhine river. From then on, over an extended period of time historical records about the settlement are not available.ref|hist1

6th/7th century: Graves from this period indicate that the settlement had been continued.ref|hist2

1067: The settlement of Pforzheim was mentioned for the first time in a document by Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor as "Phorzheim". Visits to Pforzheim by Heinrich IV in 1067 and 1074 are documented.ref|hist1ref|hist2

Before 1080: The "old town" of Pforzheim was awarded market rights (Marktrecht). At that time Pforzheim belonged to the estate of Hirsau Monastery, according to monastery documents.ref|hist1

From 1150: Establishment of the "new town" west of the "old town" at the foot of the Schlossberg (palais hill) under Margrave Hermann V.ref|hist1

1200: The town charter of the "new town" was mentioned for the first time in a document. The "old town" continued to exist as a legally independent entity.ref|hist1

1220: The Margraves of Baden selected Pforzheim as their residence. The "new town" became prominent.

1240: A mayor of Pforzheim was mentioned in a document for the first time.ref|hist1

13th/14th century: Pforzheim enjoyed its first period of flourishment. A group of influential patricians emerged. They developed extensive activities on the financial markets of those days. The town drew its income from the wood trade, timber rafting, the tannery trade, textile manufacturing and other crafts. Documents mention "mayor, judge, council and citizens". The town walls surrounding the new town were completed at about 1290. During this era three catholic orders established their convents in town (the Franciscan order established their domicile within the town wall at nowadays Barfuesserkirche (the choir of which remains), the Dominican nun order established their domicile outside of the walls of the old town near Auer bridge, and the Prediger cloister was located east of the Schlossberg, probably inside the town walls). Outside of the town wall across the Enz river, the suburb "Flösser Quarters" (the home of the timber floating trade) was established. Next to the western town wall, the suburb of "Brötzingen" gradually developed. The Margraves of Baden considered Pforzheim as their most important power base up to the first half of the 14th century. Under Margrave Bernard I (Bernhard I) Pforzheim became one of the administrative centers of the margraviate.ref|hist1ref|hist3ref|hist14ref|hist13

1322: Holy Ghost Hospital was founded at Tränk Street (nowadays Deimling Street).ref|hist4

15th century: Various fraternities among people working in the same trade were established: The fraternity of tailors in 1410, the fraternity of bakers on May 14, 1422, the fraternity of the weavers in 1469, the fraternity of the wine-growers in 1491, the fraternity of the skippers and timber raftsmen in 1501, and the fraternity of the carters in 1512. Members of the same fraternity assisted each other in various ways, for example with funerals and in cases of sickness. In a sense, the fraternities were early forms of health and life insurance.ref|hist4

August 8/9, 1418: Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor visits Margrave Bernard I (Bernhard I) in Pforzheim. On this occasion the mint of the Margraves of Baden in Pforzheim was mentioned. Mint master was Jakob Broeglin between 1414–1431. The emperor appointed the master of the Pforzheim mint, Jakob Bröglin, and Bois von der Winterbach for five years as Royal Mint Masters of the mints of Frankfurt and Nördlingen. The Margrave was appointed as their patron.ref|hist5ref|hist13

1447: The wedding of Margrave Charles I (Karl I) of Baden with Katharina of Austria, the sister of Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor (Friedrich III), was celebrated in Pforzheim with great pomp (including tournaments and dances).ref|hist1ref|hist7ref|hist12ref|hist13

1455: Johannes Reuchlin, the great German humanist, was born in Pforzheim on January 29 (he died in Stuttgart on June 30, 1522). He attended the Latin School section of the monastery school run by the Dominican order of Pforzheim in the late 1460s. Later, partly due to Reuchlin's efforts, the Latin School of Pforzheim developed into one of the most prominent schools in southwestern Germany. The school's teachers and pupils played an outstanding role in the dissemination of the ideas of humanism and the protestant reformation movement. The most famous pupils included Reuchlin himself, Reuchlin's nephew Philipp Melanchthon, and Simon Grynaeus.ref|hist1ref|hist8ref|hist12

1460: Margrave Charles I established a kind of monastery (Kollegialstift) at the site of Schlosskirche St. Michael, turning the church into a collegiate church. There were also plans to establish a university in Pforzheim, but this plan had to be abandoned because Margrave Charles I lost the Battle of Seckenheim.ref|hist9ref|hist10ref|hist12

1463: Margrave Charles I was forced to transfer the palace and the town of Pforzheim as a fiefdom to the Elector Palatine after losing the Battle of Seckenheim. He then began to build a new palace in modern Baden-Baden. Margrave Christoph I finally moved the residence of the margraves to Baden-Baden. This gradually ended the first period of Pforzheim's flourishment. The rich merchants gradually left the town, which declined to the status of a country town of mostly small traders. ref|hist1ref|hist10ref|hist3ref|hist12

1486: The Weavers Ordinance ("Wollweberordnung") for the towns Pforzheim und Ettlingen was approved by Margrave Christoph I. This was a contract concerning the town privileges of Pforzheim. This regulation of the weaving trade did not allow the formation of a regular guild (Zunft).ref|hist11ref|hist3

1491: A contract between Margrave Christoph I and the citizens of Pforzheim was concluded, granting the town of Pforzheim several privileges concerning taxes and business.ref|hist11ref|hist12

1496: Foundation of the first printer's shop by Thomas Anshelm. During the first half of the 16th century Pforzheim's printers contributed significantly to the establishment of this (in those days) new medium.ref|hist1

1501: Margrave Christoph I of Baden enacted the "Ordinance on the timber rafting profession in Pforzheim". The single timber logs that were floated from the deeper Black Forest areas down the Enz, Nagold and Wuerm rivers were bound together in the Au area to form larger timber rafts. Those rafts were then floated down the lower Enz, Neckar and Rhine rivers. The timber rafting stations of Weissenstein, Dillstein and Pforzheim were well known in the profession.ref|hist12

1501 was also the year for which an outbreak of the plague (probably the bubonic plague) is recorded in the Swabian chronicle Annalium Suevicorum by Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen professor Martin Grusius, published 1596. It is not known how many of Pforzheim's citizens died in that year, but there are reports of 500 deceased in the close-by city of Calw and about 4000 in Stuttgart, which accounted for approximately one quarter to one half of the populations of those towns. Outbreaks of the disease were reported for many places in southwestern Germany, Bohemia, the Alsace region in nowadays France, Switzerland, and Italy. Common graves with massive numbers of human bones at the cemetery of St. Michael Church and the cemetery on the estate of the Dominican order near nowadays Waisenhausplatz found during the last century may indicate that hundreds of citizens became the victims of the plague. There are indications that a fraternity for taking care of the sick and removing the bodies of the deceased from houses was formed in 1501, whose members later on stayed together and became known as the choral society "Singergesellschaft", which is still active today as the "Loebliche Singergesellschaft of 1501". (They are probably one of the oldest clubs in Europe).ref|hist4

1520s: The ideas of the protestant religious movement advanced by Martin Luther spread rapidly in Pforzheim. Its most prominent promoters were Johannes Schwebel, a preacher at Holy Ghost church (Heiliggeistkirche), and Johannes Unger, the principal of the Dominican Latin school.ref|hist1

1535-1565: Due to the heritage division of the clan of the Margraves of Baden, Margrave Ernst of Baden made Pforzheim the residential town of his family line. He decided to use the Schlosskirche St. Michael as the entombment site for his family line.ref|hist1

1549: A large fire caused severe damage to the town.

1556: After the conclusion of the Peace of Augsburg in 1555, Margrave Karl II introduced "Lutherism" (protestantism) as the state religion in the district Baden-Durlach, which included Pforzheim. The (Catholic) monasteries were gradually shut down.ref|hist1

1565: Margrave Karl II chooses Durlach as the new residential town. Pforzheim stayed one of the administrative centers of Baden.ref|hist1

1618: At the beginning of the Thirty Years' War, the number of inhabitants of Pforzheim is estimated to have been between 2500 and 3000. This was the largest town among all towns in Baden, even though at that time it had already declined somewhat.

1645: Toward the end of the Thirty Years' War the "old town" was burned down by Bavarian (i.e. Catholic) troops. It was rebuilt, but without the former fortifications, which gave it the status of a village-like settlement. It soon vanished from historical records. The "new town" had survived.ref|hist1

1688-1697: The "War of the Palatinian Succession" (also called the Nine Years War) caused tremendous destruction in Southwestern Germany. The French "sun king" Louis XIV's efforts to expand the territory of France up to the Upper Rhine river and to put the Elector Palatine under pressure to severe its ties with the League of Augsburg included the "Brûlez le Palatinat!" tactics of destroying major towns on both sides of the Rhine river. These tactics seem to have been mainly the idea of the French war minister, François Michel le Tellier, Marquis de Louvois.

Pforzheim was occupied by French troops on October 10, 1688. Commanding officer is said to have been Joseph de Montclar. The town was forced to accommodate a large number of soldiers and had to pay a large amount of "contributions" to the French. When the army unit was about to depart early in the morning of January 21, 1689 (obviously because an army of the Holy Roman Empire had been approaching), they set many major buildings on fire, including the palais, the city hall, and vicarages. About 70 houses (i.e. one quarter of all houses) and part of the town's fortifications were reportedly destroyed.

Between August 2nd and August 4th, the French army under the general command of Marshal Jacques Henri de Durfort de Duras again crossed the Rhine river and began the destruction of major towns in Baden. On August 10, 1689, a French army unit under the command of General "Ezéchiel du Mas, Comte de Mélac" appeared in front of Pforzheims town gates, but this time the town refused to surrender. In response, the French army began shelling the town with canons from the Rod hill located southwest of the town, and the several hundred soldiers of the German imperial command, who were defending the town, were forced to surrender. After a short period of looting, the French troops set the inner town area on fire on August 15, which made that area uninhabitable for several weeks. Then the French moved on.

During the following two years French troops stayed away from Pforzheim, but the economic situation of the town was miserable. In addition to this, the reconstruction of the town and the repairs of the fortifications under the supervision of Johann Matthaeus Faulhaber, the chief construction officer of the Margraviate Baden, required a lot of efforts. The accommodation of an imperial garrison under the command of (then) colonel Count Palfy also was a heavy burden.

In 1691 Louvois instructed his marshals to destroy those towns which were to serve as winter quarters for imperial troops, explicitly including Pforzheim, and then continue to Wuerttemberg for further destructions. After the French troops had crossed the Rhine river under the command of Marshal Guy Aldonce de Durfort de Lorges at Philippsburg on August 3, 1691, they assaulted the Margraves' residential town of Durlach and 1,200 cavalry men, 300 dragoons and 1,200 infantry men advanced toward Pforzheim where they arrived in the morning on August 9 and surrounded the town. When the approximately 200 imperial soldiers under the command of Captain Zickwolf and other men in the town refused to surrender, the siege began. After shelling the town during the day and the following night, the resistance of the town broke down and on August 10th in the morning the French forced the town gates open, occupied and looted it (although with little success, as there was not much left to be taken away). On August 12, the French moved on, this time refraining from setting houses on fire. The fortification had again been damaged, though (the White Tower, the Auer Bridge Gate, the Upper Mill and the Nonnen Mill were burnt down). The French also stole all church bells, except for one minor one.

On September 20, 1692, again crossed the Rhine river under the general command of Marshal Guy Aldonce de Durfort de Lorges, and advanced toward Durlach and Pforzheim. On September 24, 2,000 cavalry soldiers and 1,200 infantry and artillery troops under the command of Marshal Noël Bouton de Chamilly, moved to Pforzheim, where the town and 600 soldiers of the imperial German army in town surrendered without any military engagements. The rest of the French army arrived on September 27 under the command of Marshal de Lorges. On the same day, the French army moved on to Oetisheim near Mühlacker and attacked an imperial army unit of 4,000 cavalry men under the command of Duke Frederick Charles of Württemberg-Winnental in their camp. As they were taken by surprise, they withdrew hastily and lost several hundred men, either killed or captured by the French. (The Duke himself was among the French prisoners.) On September 28, the French army returned to Pforzheim and established a camp. It was reported that the entire Enz valley between the village of Eutingen east of Pforzheim and the village of Birkenfeld west of Pforzheim was occupied by the 30,000 French soldiers' camps. From their base in Pforzheim, French army units obviously under the leadership of Marshal de Chamilly advanced along the river valleys of Nagold and Wuerm and looted and destroyed the villages and towns of Huchenfeld, Calw, Hirsau, Liebenzell and Zavelstein. They also destroyed Liebeneck castle about 10 kilometers from Pforzheim towering above the Wuerm valley, where part of the Pforzheim town archives were hidden. The archive was burned. Another part of the town archive as well as documents of Baden administrative office had been brought to Calw, were they went up in flames, too.

When the French troops left after about one week of occupation, they again looted Pforzheim and put it on fire. This time, all houses which had survived the two previous fires, were destroyed. In the Au suburb, only three houses survived. The Au bridge was heavily damaged. Only four houses survived in the Broetzingen suburb. The town church St. Stephan and a large part of the Dominican monastery complex were also destroyed. The Castle Church (Schlosskirche) St. Michael was heavily damaged, and the family tombs of the Baden Margraves in the church were ravaged by the soldiers. The last remaining church bell and the churches' clockworks were stolen as well. The town wall was damaged again, including the town gates. After the one--week presence of 30,000 soldiers in a town of only a few thousand citizens, all food was gone, including the seeds saved for next spring's sowing season. Every tree and grapevine on the valley slopes had been used up as firewood. The French army reached their camp in Philippsburg on October 5, 1692.ref|hist15

1718: Inauguration of the "institution for orphans, the mad, the sick, for discipline and work" in a building of the former Dominican order Convent by the Enz river. Fifty years later this institution was to become the incubator of Pforzheim's jewellery and watchmaking industries.ref|hist1

1715-1730: During this period there was a prolonged dispute between Pforzheim's citizens and the Margrave of Baden concerning the privileges granted to the town in 1491, which the Margrave considered obsolete and therefore demanded significantly higher tax payments from Pforzheim citizens. The issue was taken all the way to the Imperial Court of Justice, where the town's motion was defeated.ref|hist1ref|hist15

1767: Establishment of a watch and jewellery factory in the orphanage. This led to Pforzheim's jewellery industries. Watchmaking was given up later on.ref|hist1

1805/06: Typhus epidemic in Pforzheim.ref|hist1

1809: The Administrative District Pforzheim of Baden was split into a "Municipal District Administration Pforzheim" and two Rural Districts.

1813: The two Rural Districts were combined to form the "Rural District Administration Pforzheim".

1819: "Municipal District Pforzheim" and "Rural District Pforzheim" are merged to form the "Higher District Administration Pforzheim".

1836: Ferdinand Öchsle in Pforzheim invented a device for measuring the sugar content in freshly pressed grape juice for assessing the future quality of wine (Mostwaage). It is still in use in the winery business.

1861/62: Pforzheim was connected to the German railway network with the completion of tracks between Wilferdingen and Pforzheim.ref|hist1

1863: The railway section between Pforzheim and Mühlacker was completed, thus establishing railway traffic between the capital of Baden, Karlsruhe, and the capital of Württemberg, Stuttgart.ref|hist1

1864: The "Higher District Administration Pforzheim" was made the "Regional Administration Pforzheim".

1868: The railway section between Pforzheim and Wildbad was completed.ref|hist1

1869: Establishment of the first worker's union in Pforzheim, the "Pforzheim Gold(-metal) Craftsmen's Union".ref|hist1

1874: The railway section between Pforzheim and Calw was completed.ref|hist1

1877: Inauguration of the Arts and Crafts School (Kunstgewerbeschule; now incorporated into Hochschule (University) Pforzheim).ref|hist1

1888: Berta Benz and her two sons arrived in Pforzheim on the first "long-distance" drive in the history of the automobile in a car manufactured by her husband Karl Benz in order to visit relatives. She had started her drive in Mannheim, which is located about 60 kilometers from Pforzheim. The very first gasoline-powered, automobile with an internal combustion engine of the inventor had hit the roads only two years earlier after a patent for this new technology had been granted to Karl Benz on January 29, 1886. She bought the gasoline necessary for her trip back home in a "pharmacy" in Pforzheim. During the trip Bertha Benz had to make repairs with a hairpin to open a blocked fuel line, and after returning home, suggested to her husband that another gear be provided in his automobile for climbing hills.ref|hist1

1893: Inauguration of the Pforzheim Jewish Synagogue.ref|hist1

From 1900: Revival of the Pforzheim watchmaking industry.ref|hist1

1906: The 1st FC Pforzheim Football (soccer) Club was defeated by VfB Leipzig with a score of 1:2 in the final game of the German soccer championship.ref|hist1

1914-1918: Pforzheim was not a battle field in World War I, but 1600 men from Pforzheim lost their lives as soldiers on the battlefields.ref|hist17

1920s: The Pforzheim watchmaking industry thrived due to the new popularity of wrist-watches.ref|hist1

1927: Pforzheim-born (1877) Professor of Munich University Heinrich Otto Wieland received the Nobel prize in chemistry.

From 1933: Along with the installation of the Nazi government in Germany the local subsidiaries of all political parties, groups and organizations other than the NSDAP were gradually disbanded in town. Public life as well as individual affairs were increasingly affected by Nazi influences. Persecution of Jewish fellow citizens occurred in Pforzheim, too, with boycotts of Jewish shops and companies.ref|hist1

1938: Establishment of the municipal Jewellery Museum.

1938: On November 9th, the so-called Kristallnacht, the Pforzheim Synagogue ( [http://www.edwardvictor.com/pforzheim_main.htm see WWW-site] ) of the Jewish community was so badly damaged by Nazi activists that it had to be demolished later on.

1939: "Regional Administration Pforzheim" (Bezirksamt) was converted to the "Rural District Pforzheim" (Landkreis) with Pforzheim city as its administrative site. However, the town itself became a district-less administrative body.

1940: Deportation of Jewish citizens of Pforzheim to the concentration camp in Gurs (France). Only 55 of the 195 deported persons escaped from the holocaust.ref|hist1

1944: Many factories were converted to produce weaponry such as anti-aircraft shells, fuzes for bombs, and allegedly even parts for the V1 and V2 rockets.

1945: On February 23, Pforzheim was bombed in one of the most devastating area bombardments of World War II. It was carried out by the Royal Air Force (RAF) on the evening of February 23 1945.ref|hist1 About one quarter of the town's population, over 17,000 people, were killed in the air raid,ref|hist18 and about 83% of the town's buildings were destroyed.ref|hist19 The mission order to bomb Pforzheim issued by the Bomber Command states as the intention of the raid on Pforzheim "to destroy built up area and associated industries and rail facilities".ref|hist18 The bombardment was carried out as part of the British carpet bombing campaign. The town was put on the target list for bombardments in November 1944 because it was thought by the Allies to be producing precision instruments for use in the German war effort and as transport centreref|station for the movement of German troops.ref|hist27(Additional details are given in Bombing of Pforzheim in World War II.)

There were also several minor raids in 1944 and 1945.ref|hist26

After the main attack, about 30,000 people had to be fed by public makeshift kitchens because their housings had been destroyed. Almost 90% of the buildings in the core city area had been destroyed. Many Pforzheim citizens were buried in common graves at Pforzheim's main cemetery because they could not be identified. There are also many graves of complete families. Among the dead were several hundred foreigners who had been in Pforzheim as forced labor workers. The inner city districts were severely depopulated. According to the State Statistics Bureau (Statistisches Landesamt), in the Market Square area (Marktplatzviertel) in 1939 there were 4.112 registered inhabitants, in 1945 none (0). In the Old Town area (Altstadtviertel) in 1939 there were 5.109 inhabitants, in 1945 only 2 persons were still living there. In the Leopold Square area, in 1939 there were 4.416 inhabitants, in 1945 only 13.ref|hist20ref|hist21ref|hist22

The German Army Report of February 24, 1945 devoted only two lines to reporting the bombardment: "In the early evening hours of February 23, a forceful British attack was directed at Pforzheim." British Bomber Command later assessed the bombing raid as the one with "probably the greatest proportion (of destroyed built-up area) (of any target) in one raid during the war".ref|hist23

In early April as the allied forces and notably the French Army advanced toward Pforzheim, the local German military commander gave orders to destroy the electric power generating plant and those gas and water supply lines that were still working, but citizens succeeded in persuading the staff sergeant in charge of the operation to refrain from this absurd endeavor in the face of the imminent and inevitable surrender of the German Military. Likewise, orders were issued for the destruction of those bridges that had remained unscathed (some of the bridges had been destroyed by air strikes even before and after February 23), and this could not be prevented. Only the Iron (Railway) Bridge in Weißenstein ward was saved by stout-hearted citizens who, during an unguarded moment, pulled off the fuze wiring from the explosive devices, which had already been installed, and dropped it into Nagold river. Soon after that on April 8, French troops (an armored vehicle unit) moved into Pforzheim from the northwest and were able to occupy the area north of Enz river, but the area south of the Enz river was defended by a German infantry unit using artillery. Fighting was especially fierce in Broetzingen. The French army units (including an Algerian and Moroccan unit) suffered heavy losses; among the dead was the commander the army unit, Capitaine Dorance. The advance of the French army came to a halt temporarily, but with the support of fighterbomber aircraft and due to the bad condition of the defenders (which included many old men and young boys who had been drafted in a last desperate war effort) the French troops finally succeeded and on April 18 took possession of the vast rubble field which once was the proud residential town of the Baden Margraves.ref|hist24ref|hist25ref|hist1

The three months of French occupation were reportedly marked by hostile attitudes on both the French army side and the Pforzheim population side; incidences of rape and looting, mainly by Moroccan soldiers, were also reported. Au Bridge (Auerbruecke) and Wuerm Bridge received makeshift repairs by the French military. The US Army, which replaced the French troops on July 8, 1945, helped repair Goethe Bridge, Benckiser Bridge, Old Town Bridge (Altstädterbrücke) and Horse Bridge (Roßbrücke) in 1945 and the following year. The relationship between the population and the US military was reportedly more relaxed than had been the case with the French army.ref|hist25ref|hist1

1945-1965: Pforzheim was gradually rebuilt, giving Pforzheim a quite modern look. In September 1951 the Northern Town Bridge (Nordstadtbrücke) was inaugurated (the ceremony was attended by then Federal President Prof. Dr. Theodor Heuss). Jahn Bridge followed in December 1951, Werder Bridge in May 1952, the rebuilt Goethe Bridge in October 1952, and the rebuilt Old Town Bridge was inaugurated in 1954.

1955: On the occasion of the 500th birthday anniversary of Johannes Reuchlin, the city of Pforzheim established the Reuchlin Prize and awarded it for the first time in the presence of then President of the Federal Republic of Germany (West-Germany), Prof. Dr. Theodor Heuss.ref|hist1

1961: Inauguration of the culture center "Reuchlinhaus", which from then on housed the Jewellery Museum, the Arts and Crafts Association, the City Library, the Homeland Museum (Heimatmuseum), and the City Archives.ref|hist1

1968: On July 10 shortly before 22:00, Pforzheim and its surrounding areas were hit by a rare tornado. It had strength F4 on the Fujita scale. Two persons died and more than 200 were injured, and 1750 buildings were damaged. Across the town between Buechenbronn ward and the village of Wurmberg the storm caused severe damage to forest areas (i.e. most trees fell to the ground). During the first night and the following days the soldiers of the French 3rd Husar Regiment and the US Army Unit, which were still stationed at the Buckenberg Barracks, helped clear the streets of a lot of fallen trees (especially in the Buckenberg/Haidach area). It took about four weeks to carry out the most necessary repairs on buildings. The overhead electric contact wires for the electric trolley buses then still operating in town and the streetcar transport system to the village of Ittersbach were never repaired; those transport systems were retired.ref|hist1

1971-1975: The townships of Würm, Hohenwart, Buechenbronn, Huchenfeld and Eutingen were incorporated into the city administration.ref|hist1

1973: Inauguration of the new Pforzheim City Hall.ref|hist1

1973 As part of the reform of administrative districts, the rural district of Pforzheim was incorporated into the newly established Enz rural district, which has its administration in Pforzheim. But the city of Pforzheim itself remains a district-less city. In addition, Pforzheim became the administrative center of the newly formed Northern Black Forest Region.

1975 On January 1, the population exceeded 100.000 and Pforzheim gained the status of a "large city" (Grossstadt).

1979: Inauguration of the Pforzheim City Museum.ref|hist1

1983: Inauguration of the "Technical Museum of the Jewellery and Watchmaking Industry" and the "Citizens Museum".ref|hist1

1987: Inauguration of the City Convention Center.ref|hist1

1987/1990: Inauguration of the City Theater at the Waisenhausplatz.ref|hist1

1989: Sister City agreement with the City of Gernika, Spain.ref|hist1

1990: Sister City agreement with the City of Saint-Maur-des-Fosses, France.ref|hist1

1991: Sister City agreement with the City of Vicenza, Italy.ref|hist1

1992: State Gardening Expo in Pforzheim. Enzauenpark was created and part of the Enz river was re-naturalized.ref|hist1

1994: Inauguration of the cultural institution "Kulturhaus Osterfeld".ref|hist1

1994: Merger of the Pforzheim Business School and the Pforzheim School of Design to form the Pforzheim University of Applied Sciences in Design, Technology and Business.ref|hist1

1995: Inauguration of the Archeological Site Kappelhof.

2000: Inauguration of the Pforzheim Gallery.ref|hist1

2002: In November, during excavation works for a new shopping center right in the center of the city, a power shovel hit a 250 kg bomb which had not gone off during the bombardment of 1945. On a Sunday, about 5000 citizens had to temporarily leave their homes as a precautionary measure while specialists were defusing and disposing of the (so far) last of a large number of unexploded explosive devices found in Pforzheim's grounds since 1945.

See also History of Baden.

Administrative unions

Formerly independent communities and districts which were incorporated into the City of Pforzheim.

ref|wikipedia

Population growth

The table below shows the number of inhabitants for the past 500 years. Until 1789 the numbers represent estimates, after that they represent census results (¹) or official recordings by the Statistics Offices or the city administration.

¹ Result of censusref|wikipedia

The population growth diagrams show that the largest growth rates were recorded between about 1830 and 1925, which was the period following the political reorganisation of Europe agreed upon at the Vienna Congress of 1815 after the violent period that was so much dominated by Napoleon Bonaparte of France. This high population growth period coincided with the period of intensive industrialisation of Germany. Population growth weakened due to the effects of World War I and World War II. The population declined sharply due to the destruction on February 23, 1945, and increased sharply in the post-WWII era due to high economic growth levels in West-Germany and the rapid rebuilding efforts in Pforzheim. Earlier setbacks were recorded during the Thirty Years' War period in the 17th century.

Religions

After margrave Karl II of Baden in 1556 installed the Protestant reformation in the Margraviate of Baden, of which Pforzheim was the capital in those days, Pforzheim continued to be a Protestant town for several centuries. The congregations in Pforzheim were affiliated with the deanery (Dekanat) of Pforzheim of the Protestant National Church of Baden, unless they were members of one of the independent churches(Freikirche).

Since the 19th century at the latest Catholics settled in Pforzheim again. They are affiliated with the deanery of Pforzheim which belongs to Archdiocese of Freiburg.

Other denominations and religious sects in Pforzheim are:

* Israelite Congregation
* Islamic Congregation
* Adventist Congregation
* Jehovah's Witnesses
* Baptist Church
* Salvation Army
* Methodist Church
* Church of Christ, Scientistref|wikipedia

Politics

City council

The city council of Pforzheim consists of the Lord Mayor as its president and 40 elected (part-time) councillors. It is democratically elected by the citizens for a period of five years. The last election was June 13, 2004. The city council is the main representative body of the city and determines the goals and frameworks for all local political activities. It makes decisions about all important issues regarding the public life and administration of the city and directs and monitors the work of thecity administration. It forms expert committees in order to deal withspecialized issues.ref|council

City administration

The city administration is lead by the Lord Mayer (presently Christel Augenstein) and three Mayors (presently Alexander Uhlig, Gert Hager and Andreas Schuetze). The administration consists of four departments (Dezernat) which are in charge of the following areas:

"Department I": Personnel, finances, business development, general administration. (Managed by Christel Augenstein.)

"Department II": Construction and planning, environment. (Managed by Alexander Uhlig.)

"Department III": Education, culture, social affairs, sports. (Managed by Gert Hager.)

"Department IV": Security and public order, health, energy and water supply, local transportation and traffic. (Managed by Andreas Schuetze.)ref|admin

(Lord) Mayors

At an early stage, the town administration was led by the mayor(Schultheiss) who used to be appointed by the lord (owner) of the town. Later on, there was a council with a mayor leading it, who since 1849 holds the title "Lord Mayor". The terms of office of the mayors until 1750 are unknown. Only the names of the mayors are mentioned in historical documents.

* 1750-1758: Ernst Matthaeus Kummer
* 1758-1770: W.C. Steinhaeuser
* 1770-1775: Weiss
* 1775-1783: Kissling
* 1783-1795: Guenzel
* 1795-1798: Geiger
* 1798-1815: Jakob Friedrich Dreher
* 1815-1830: Christoph Friedrich Krenkel
* 1830-1837: Wilhelm Lenz
* 1837-1848: Rudolf Deimling
* 1848-1849: Christian Crecelius
* 1849-1862: Karl Zirenner
* 1862-1875: Kaspar Schmidt
* 1875-1884: Karl Gross
* 1885-1889: Emil Kraatz
* 1889-1919: Ferdinand Habermehl
* 1920-1933: Erwin Guendert
* 1933: Dr. Emil Goelser
* 1933: Dr. Hans Gottlob
* 1933-1941: Hermann Kuerz
* 1941-1942: Karl Mohrenstein
* 1942-1945: Ludwig Seibel
* 1945: Albert Hermann
* 1945: Wilhelm Becker
* 1945-1947: Friedrich Adolf Katz
* 1947-1966: Dr. Johann Peter Brandenburg, FDP/DVP
* 1966-1985: Dr. Willi Weigelt, SPD
* 1985-2001: Dr. Joachim Becker, SPD
* 2001-now: Christel Augenstein, FDP/DVPref|wikipedia

The Coat of Arms

The Coat of Arms of Pforzheim city shows in the left-hand half of a shield an inclined bar in red color on a golden background, and theright-hand half is divided into four fields in the colors red, silver, blue and gold. The city flag is white-blue.

The inclined bar can be traced back to the 13th century as the symbol of the lords (owners) of Pforzheim, which later on also became the National Coat of Arms of Baden, but its meaning is unknown. Since 1489 the coat of arms in its entire form can be verified, but its meaning is not known, either. Current coloring has been used only since 1853; in earlier times the coloring was different.ref|wikipediaref|coat_of_arms

ister city and friendship agreements

Pforzheim has sister city agreements with the following cities:
* Gernika-Lumo (Spain), since 1989
* Saint-Maur-des-Fosses (France), since 1989
* Vicenza (Italy), since 1991

Friendship agreements exist with the following cities and regions:
* Osijek (Croatia), since 1994
* Irkutsk (Russia), since 1999
* Nevşehir (Turkey), since 2000
* Częstochowa (Poland), since 2000
* Győr-Moson-Sopron county (Hungary), since 2001 in conjunction with the Enz districtref|hist1

Economy and infrastructure

Pforzheim is one of the regional centers (Oberzentrum) in Baden-Württemberg and has one of the highest densities of industrial activity in the state.

Only a smaller fraction of the economy nowadays is dedicated to producing the traditional products of watches and jewellery. Two thirds of all employment positions are made available in the areas of metal processing, dental industry electronics and electro-technology. The mail order companies (Bader, Klingel, Wenz) with their sales volumes in the order of millions of Euros occupies a leading position in Germany. Tourism is gaining importance. In this respect the city benefits from its favorable Three-Valleys location at the gateway to the Black Forest, and related to this, from the starting points of a large number of hiking, cycling and waterway routes. The European long-distance trail E1 passes through Pforzheim. It is also the starting point of the Black Forest Hiking Routes Westweg, Mittelweg and Ostweg.ref|wikipedia

Traffic

The Federal Freeway A8 (Perl - Bad Reichenhall) runs by just to the north of the city. The city can be accessed via three freeway exits. The Interstate Road B10 (Lebach - Augsburg) and B294 (Gundelfingen - Bretten) run through the city. The B463 Interstate Road running toward Nagold has its starting point here.

Pforzheim is located at the railway line Karlsruhe-Stuttgart. In addition there are two railway lines into the Black Forest to Bad Wildbad and Nagold. Pforzheim is connected to the Karlsruhe Light Rail network. Other public transportation services in the city area are provided by buses of the Pforzheim Municipal Transport, subsidiary of Veolia Transport, Company (SVP) and several other transportation companies. They all offer unified fares within the framework of the "Pforzheim-Enzkreis Verkehrsverbund". Between 1931 and 1968 a light rail connection existed between Ittersbach and Pforzheim, operated by Pforzheim Municipal Transportation Company ("SVP"). Before that ("since 1899") the railroad belonged to the BLEAG (Baden Local Railway Inc., Badische-Lokaleisenbahn-Aktiengesellschaft). The only remaining light Rail service "S 5" connecting Pforzheim to Bietigheim-Bissingen, Karlsruhe and Wörth am Rhein is operated by Albtal-Verkehrs-Gesellschaft (Albtal Transportation Company), which since 2002 also operates the Enz Valley Light Rail route to Bad Wildbad.ref|wikipedia

Major local enterprises

* Victor Mayer GmbH&Co. KG, Workmaster of Fabergé (line)
* Schmid Machine Tools
* Klingel Mail Order Company
* Bader Mail Order Company
* Wenz Mail Order Company
* Witzenmann GmbH (Specialized Metal Goods)
* Mapal WWS
* Thales (Electronics)
* Allgemeine Gold- und Silberscheideanstalt (metal processing)

Media

The daily newspapers Pforzheim Newspaper (Pforzheimer Zeitung, independent) and the Pforzheim Courier (Pforzheimer Kurier), which is a regional edition of Badische Neueste Nachrichten (BNN) with main editorial offices in Karlsruhe, are published in Pforzheim.ref|wikipedia

Courts of Justice

Pforzheim is the site of a Local Court of Justice which belongs to the District Court and Higher District Court Precinct of Karlsruhe. It is also the domicile of a Local Labor Court.ref|wikipedia

Authorities

Pforzheim is the domicile of the following public authorities and public incorporated bodies:

* Pforzheim Employment Exchange (a federal government agency; Arbeitsagentur Pforzheim).
* Pforzheim Internal Revenue Agency (a state agency; Finanzamt Pforzheim)
* Northern Black Forest Chamber of Commerce (a public incorporated body; IHK Nordschwarzwald). The precinct of the chamber is the Northern Black Forest Region.
* Northern Black Forest Regional Association (a public incorporated body; Regionalverband Nordschwarzwald).ref|wikipedia

Educational institutions

* Pforzheim University of Applied Sciences (Hochschule Pforzheim - Hochschule fuer Gestaltung, Technik und Wirtschaft) enrolls about 4600 students. It was formed in 1992 by way of merging the former Pforzheim School of Design (Fachhochschule fuer Gestaltung) and Pforzheim Business School (Fachhochschule fuer Wirtschaft) and additionally establishing the Faculty of Engineering. The Pforzheim School of Design had its roots in the Ducal Academy of Arts and Crafts and Technical School for the Metal Processing Industry, established 1877. The Pforzheim Business School was the successor institution of the National Business College, which was established in 1963. The campuses of the Faculty of Design and the Faculties of Economics and Engineering are located at separate sites in the city area. The Pforzheim University of Applied Sciences fosters international exchange. Among other relationships, it is affiliated with the NIEBES Association and has close academic ties to Osijek University of Croatia and academic exchange programs with many institutions abroad, among them Auburn University and the Illinois Institute of Technology, in Chicago, of the United States of America.

* The Goldsmith and Watchmaking Vocational School is the only school of its kind in Europe. It is attended by many students from abroad.

* The general qualification for university admission (Abitur) can be obtained through an education at the Reuchlin-Highschool, the Kepler-Highschool, the Hebel-Highschool, the Theodor-Heuss-Highschool, the Hilda-Highschool, the Schiller-Highschool, the Fritz-Erler-Highschool (economics-oriented highschool), the Heinrich-Wieland-Highschool (technology-oriented highschool), der Johanna-Wittum-Highschool (home economics-oriented highschool), as well as the Waldorfschule.

* Pforzheim also has many schools providing the mandatory general elementary and secondary education (Grundschule, Realschule) as well an institution which is dedicated to further education of grown-ups (Volkshochschule). There are also several state-run vocational schools leading to professional diplomas in the crafts and trades.ref|hist1ref|wikipedia

Culture and places of interest

Theater

* Municipal Theater of Pforzheim (opera, operetta, musical, drama)

Orchestras

* Southwest German Chamber Orchestra - This orchestra was founded by Friedrich Tilegant in 1950. It participated in the world premiere of a work of Boris Blacher and has a good reputation beyond the region.
* Sinfonic Orchestra of the City of Pforzheim

Museums

* Archeological Site Kappelhof - Roman and medieval excavation objects
* Civic Museum Eutingen
* Museum on the German Democratic Republic (former east Germany)
* The Center of Fellow-Countrymen Associations (Landsmannschaften; especially those from eastern Europe)
* The Pforzheim Minerals Museum
* The Pforzheim Gallery (paintings)
* Reuchlinhaus
* The Pforzheim Jewellery Museum in the Reuchlinhaus
* The Pforzheim City Museum Pforzheim (on city history)
* The Technical Museum of the Jewellery and Watchmaking Industry of Pforzheim
* Weissenstein Station - On Railway History in the area of Pforzheim
* Roman Estate in the Kanzlerwald (the excavated remains of an estate built by Roman settlers)
* The Product Exhibition of Pforzheim (jewellery) Companies (Industriehaus)
* The Exhibition of Precious Stones by Widow Mrs. Schuett

Cultural institutions

* The House of Culture Osterfeld (a sociocultural center: theater, music, dance, cabaret, musical, arts, exhibitions etc.)
* Kupferdaechle (The Copper Roof Teenage Culture Center)
* The Puppet Theater of Raphael Muerle / The Marionette Stage Mottenkaefig
* The Communal Cinema of Pforzheim
* CongressCenter Pforzheim (CCP)
* City Library

Notable examples of architecture

* The Old and New City Hall
* The Archive Building (Archivbau)
* The House of Industry (Industriehaus)
* Reuchlinhaus
* The look-out tower on Büchenbronn Hill
* The Arch Bridge at Dillweißenstein
* The ruins of Liebeneck Castle
* Churches:
** The Palais and Monastery Church St. Michael (Schloss- und Stiftskirche); it is the city's landmark.
** The Old Town Church St. Martin (Altstadtkirche; Protestant)
** Resurrection Church (Auferstehungskirche; Protestant)
** The Bare Feet Church (Barfüsserkirche; Catholic)
** Christ Church of Brötzingen (Protestant)
** The Protestant City Church (Stadtkirche)
** Heart of Christ Church (Herz-Jesu-Kirche; Catholic)
** Matthew Church (Matthäuskirche; Protestant). This church was designed by architect Eiermann and is a precursory structure of the famous New Berlin Memorial Church (Gedächtniskirche)
** St. Franziskus Church (Catholic)
** The Islamic Mosque
** The notable New Synagogue (1890) was lost n Kristallnacht [http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/synagoge_pforzheim.htm]
* Leitgastturm
* Seehaus (formerly a hunting villa of the Margrave; now a popular destination for Sunday afternoon walks away from the city)
* The Old Grapes Press of Brötzingen
* Hachel Tower
* The Copper Hammer (Kupferhammer; a traditional water-powered sledge hammer which was used for metal forming)
* The Enz Flood-Plains Park (Enzauenpark; a park to walk, play or cycle along the river Enz)

Other sites of interest

* [http://www.alpengarten-pforzheim.de The Pforzheim Alpine Garden (Alpengarten), closed since 2006]
* The Main Cemetery (Hauptfriedhof)
* Wallberg. The debris from the destroyed town (February 23, 1945) was dumped onto this hill. The Wallberg-Monument on the top is meant to remind people of the city's history; it was erected in 2005 on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the bombing raid.
* The Game Animals Zoo (Wildpark Pforzheim)
* Brötzingen Valley Stadium. This is the classical soccer stadium of the 1st FC Pforzheim soccer club of 1896, which was inaugurated in 1913. It accommodated a record number of "15.000 to 20.000" spectators on the occasion of the match between South Germany against Central Hungary in 1920. In the post-2nd-world-war era it accommodated 12.000 spectators at the cup matches 1st FC Pforzheim - 1. FC Nuremberg (score 2:1 after extension; 1961) and 1st FCP - Werder Bremen (score 1:1 after extension; 1988). The soccer club (simply called the "club"), which during its history supplied the first national team captain and a total of eleven first league players, had to file for bankruptcy in February 2004 and for the first time in history is playing in the 5th league, i.e. the Soccer Association's Northern Baden League, during the 2004-05 season. In 1906, the club lost the final of the German Soccer Championship against VfB Leipzig 1:2 in Nuremberg.

Regularly scheduled events

* February: Carnival Procession (Faschingsumzug) in Dillweissenstein
* May: International Pentecost Tournament of the VfR Pforzheim
* June: "Pforzemer Mess" (a fun fair)
* July: Pforzheim Goldsmith's Market (Goldschmiedemarkt)
* July: "Gruschtelmarkt" (a flea market)
* July: International Pforzheim Music & Theater Festival
* July: "Marktplatzfest" (market place festival, every 2 years; this is one of the largest free-of-charge open air festivals in Soutwestern Germany)
* August: "Öchsle-Fest" (a festival celebrating local wines)
* September: "Brötzingen Saturday"
* November: Pre-Christmas Handicraft Market (Weihnachtsbastelmarkt)
* November/December: Christmas Market (Weihnachtsmarkt) in the inner city arearef|wikipedia

Personalities

Honorary citizens

(a small selection)

* 1939 Alfons Kern, historian
* 1965 Dr. Johann Peter Brandenburg, German politician (FDP/DVP, Member of State Parliament, Lord Mayor of Pforzheim
* 1985 Dr. Willi Weigelt, German politician (SPD), Lord Mayor of Pforzheim
* 1991 Richard Ziegler, painter
* 1998 Rolf Schweizer, church music director

Famous citizens born in Pforzheim

* 1455, January 29, Johannes Reuchlin, † June 30, 1522 in Stuttgart; humanist and philosopher
* 1798, October 21, Karl Heinrich Baumgaertner, † December 11, 1886 in Baden-Baden; pathologist
* 1849, May 3, Bertha Benz, nee Ringer, † 1944; wife of Karl Benz
* 1866, January 31, Emil Strauss, † August 10, 1960 in Freiburg (Breisgau); German poet
* 1877, Prof. Dr. Heinrich Otto Wieland, † 1957; Nobel Prize laureate in chemistry 1927
* 1899, December 18, Karl Abt, † December 1985; painter
* 1913, January 1, Hans Lutz Merkle, † September 22, 2000; chairman of the board of management of Robert Bosch GmbH
* 1933, September 22, Dr. Herbert Mohr-Mayer; jeweller who continued the legacy of Peter Carl Fabergé
* 1938, June 8, Manfred Mohr; artist and one of the pioneers of computer-generated graphic art (living in New York since 1981)
* 1943, June 6, Klaus Mangold; former chairman of the board of management of Toll Collect
* 1948, May 30, Dieter Kosslick; director of the Berlinale Film Festival
* 1953, March 26, Rene Weller; former boxing world champion, presently poet
* 1954, September 18, Peter Bofinger; member of the "Advisory Board on the Assessment of Macroeconomic Trends" in the Federal Republic of Germany
* 1961, April 13, Uwe Huebner; TV and radio show host (for example "ZDF-Hitparade")
* 1972, January 7, Philipp Mohr; architect and industrial designer (living in New York since 1995)ref|wikipedia

Miscellaneous topics

* The Freemasons Lodge "Reuchlin" is located in Pforzheim.
* The internationally successful rock band Fool's Garden ("Lemon Tree") has its origins in Pforzheim.ref|wikipedia

References

* [http://www.pforzheim.de/portal/page?_pageid=123,50560&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL Kurze Chronik der Stadt Pforzheim - Brief history on the official Web Site of the City of Pforzheim; in German]
*Klaus Kortüm: PORTUS - Pforzheim. Untersuchungen zur Archäologie und Geschichte in römischer Zeit, Sigmaringen, Germany; (1995); (=Quellen und Studien zur Geschichte der Stadt Pforzheim 3); in German.
*Hans-Peter Becht (Hg): Pforzheim im Mittelalter, Pforzheimer Geschichtsblätter, Band 6, Thorbecke, Sigmaringen, Germany; ISBN 3-7995-6044-0; (1983); in German.
*Hans-Peter Becht (Hg): Pforzheim in der frühen Neuzeit, Pforzheimer Geschichtsblätter, Band 7, Thorbecke, Sigmaringen, Germany; ISBN 3-7995-6045-9; (1989); in German.
* [http://www.loebliche-singer-pforzheim.de/DiePestUm1500.html Die Pest: Das grosse Sterben um 1500, Web page by LOEBLICHE SINGERGESELLSCHAFT VON 1501 PFORZHEIM, 2005; in German.]
* [http://www.loebliche-singer-pforzheim.de/VortragGrohMatinee2005.html, Christian Groh: Pforzheim und Baden zur Zeit Johannes Reuchlin. Die Auswirkungen markgraeflicher Regierung auf die Stadt. Web page by LOEBLICHE SINGERGESELLSCHAFT VON 1501 PFORZHEIM, 2005; in German.]
* [http://www.loebliche-singer-pforzheim.de/Pforzheim1500.html, Thomas Frei: Pforzheim im 16. Jahrhundert. Web page by LOEBLICHE SINGERGESELLSCHAFT VON 1501 PFORZHEIM, 2005; in German.]
* [http://www.pz-news.de/specials/web/pforzheim.html Pforzheim_im_Weltkrieg: Pforzheimer Zeitung of June 26 2004, No.145, p.26; in German.]
* [http://www.pz-news.de/specials/web/pforzheim.html Folge4:"23.Februar1945" Pforzheimer Zeitung of February 4 2005, No.28, p.22; in German.]
* [http://www.pz-news.de/specials/web/pforzheim.html Folge9:"23.Februar1945" Pforzheimer Zeitung of February 10 2005, No.33, p.18; in German.]
* [http://www.pz-news.de/specials/web/pforzheim.html Folge10:"23.Februar1945" Pforzheimer Zeitung of February 11 2005, No.34, p.20; in German.]
* [http://www.pz-news.de/specials/web/pforzheim.html Folge15:"23.Februar1945" Pforzheimer Zeitung of February 17 2005, No.39, p.18; in German.]
* [http://www.pz-news.de/specials/web/pforzheim.html Folge22:"23.Februar1945" Pforzheimer Zeitung of February 25 2005, No.46, p.24; in German.]
* [http://www.pz-news.de/specials/web/pforzheim.html Folge25:"23.Februar1945" Pforzheimer Zeitung of March 4 2005, No.52, p.20; in German.]
* [http://www.pz-news.de/specials/web/pforzheim.html Folge28:"23.Februar1945" Pforzheimer Zeitung of March 31 2005, No.73, p.20; in German.]
* [http://www.pz-news.de/specials/web/pforzheim.html Folge29:"23.Februar1945" Pforzheimer Zeitung of April 8 2005, No.80, p.24; in German.]
* [http://www.pforzheim.de/pls/portal/docs/PAGE/BILDER/CHRONIK/ZERSTOERUNGSKARTE.PDF Map of destroyed town area]
* [http://www.pforzheim.de/portal/page?_pageid=118,48701&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL Web page of the City of Pforzheim: City Council; in German]
* [http://www.pforzheim.de/portal/page?_pageid=118,48671&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL Web page of the City of Pforzheim: City Administration; in German]
* [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pforzheim Pforzheim: German language Wikipedia.]

Notes

# References Brief history on the official Web site of the City of Pforzheim.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim im Mittelalter, p. 41.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim im Mittelalter, chapters "Pforzheim im Mittelalter", pp. 39-62, and "Commercium et Connubium", pp. 63-76.
# References In: Die Pest: Das grosse Sterben um 1500.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim im Mittelalter, chapter "Pforzheim in muenzgeschichtlicher Sicht". p. 172.
# References Klaus Kortuem: PORTUS - Pforzheim.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim im Mittelalter, p. 223.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim in der fruehen Neuzeit, chapter "Melanchthons Pforzheimer Schulzeit", pp. 9-50.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim im Mittelalter, chapter "St. Michael in Pforzheim", pp. 107-50.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim im Mittelalter, p. 117.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim in der fruehen Neuzeit, chapter "Der Pforzheimer Privilegienstreit (1716-1730)", pp. 117, 118.
# References Christian Groh: Pforzheim und Baden zur Zeit Johannes Reuchlin.
# References Thomas Frei: Pforzheim im 16. Jahrhindert.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim im Mittelalter, p. 45.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim in der fruehen Neuzeit, chapter "Pforzheim im Pfaelzischen Krieg 1688-1697", pp. 81-116.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim in der fruehen Neuzeit, chapter "Der Pforzheimer Privilegienstreit (1716-1730)", pp. 117-160.
# References Pforzheimer Zeitung, June 26 2004, No.145, p.26, headline "Ein lokales Geschichtswerk".
# The number of dead 17,600 is taken from References Groh.
# References 83% from RAF Web Site: Campaign Diary February 1945,
# The 30,000 people fed by makeshift kitchens is reported in References Pforzheimer Zeitung of February 25 2005.
# The number of foreign workers killed in the bombings is reported in References Pforzheimer Zeitung of February 10 2005.
# These figures are similar to References Groh, but must be from another source which is not recorded.
# References The German army report is taken from References Pforzheimer Zeitung of February 23 2005, under headline "Sofortmeldung nach dem Angriff". Its original in German reads: "In den fruehen Abendstunden richtete sich ein schwerer britischer Angriff gegen Pforzheim".
#References Pforzheimer Zeitung of March 31 2005.
#References Pforzheimer Zeitung of April 8 2005.
# References Pforzheimer Zeitung of March 4 2005.
# A more detailed discussion on the reasons for the main air raid is given in the discussion section of this page. ( Draft of text: On the reason for the Pforzheim bombardment.)
# Pforzheim is situated in a valley and also spread out across the adjacent hill slopes. On the northern slope there is a level, narrow plateau that is about 100 meters wide and about 2 kilometers in length. The railway facilities, including the main station and what used to be the freight loading facilities, are located on this plateau. This is the only level space that can possibly be used for railway facilities there. If the RAF would have been only aiming at destroying the railway facilities, a few aircraft would have sufficed to finish this job in a short time. There was no need to bomb an area that was wider than one kilometer and had a length of more than three kilometers using more than 360 Lancasters, as was the case in the big raid on February 23. The existence and size of the plateau on the northern slope can be verified by examining any topographic map featuring the Pforzheim city area, and the map showing the destroyed city area. (refer to References Map of destroyed town area). And besides that, the area bombardment obviously was not even effective in destroying the railway facilities, because less than one month after the big raid in mid-March the railway facilities were bombed again several times by the USAF, this time focussing mainly on the suspected military target, not civilian estates (refer to References Pforzheimer Zeitung of March 4 2005).
# References Web page of the City of Pforzheim: City Council; in German.
# References Web page of the City of Pforzheim: City Administration; in German.
# References Hans-Peter Becht: Pforzheim im Mittelalter, chapter "Wappen und Siegel der Stadt Pforzheim". pp. 221-238.
# The core of this section was translated from the corresponding section of the article about Pforzheim in the References German language Wikipedia, as of May 2005.

External links

* [http://www.pforzheim.de Homepage of the city administration (no English version)]
* [http://www.pfenz.de Wiki for the greater Pforzheim area (no English version)]
* [http://homepage2.nifty.com/hild/indexP.html A personal view of contemporary Pforzheim (in English, German, Japanese)]
* [http://www.kulturhaus-osterfeld.de/ Osterfeld House of Culture Info (German)]
* [http://www.schmuckmuseum-pforzheim.de/ Pforzheim Jewellery Museum (German)]
* [http://www.schmuckwelten.de/ Presentation of Pforzheim Jewellery Companies]
* [http://www.angriff1945.de/ Airraid against Pforzheim] (in German)
* [http://sites-of-memory.de/main/pforzheimwallberg.html "Wallberg" rubble pile monument at the "Sites of Memory" webpage]
* [http://sites-of-memory.de/main/location.html#pforzheim Memorials in Pforzheim at the "Sites of Memory" webpage]


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