Oppenheim

Oppenheim
Oppenheim
Coat of arms of Oppenheim
Oppenheim is located in Germany
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Oppenheim
Coordinates 49°51′20″N 8°21′37″E / 49.85556°N 8.36028°E / 49.85556; 8.36028Coordinates: 49°51′20″N 8°21′37″E / 49.85556°N 8.36028°E / 49.85556; 8.36028
Administration
Country Germany
State Rhineland-Palatinate
District Mainz-Bingen
Municipal assoc. Nierstein-Oppenheim
Mayor Markus Held (SPD)
Basic statistics
Area 7.09 km2 (2.74 sq mi)
Elevation 100 m  (328 ft)
Population 7,024 (31 December 2010)[1]
 - Density 991 /km2 (2,566 /sq mi)
Other information
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Licence plate MZ
Postal code 55276
Area code 06133
Website www.stadt-oppenheim.de
Joannes Janssonius ca. 1682
Oppenheim about 1800
Aerial view 2007

Oppenheim is a town in the Mainz-Bingen district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. The town is well known as a wine town, the site of the German Winegrowing Museum and particularly for the wines from the Oppenheimer Krötenbrunnen vineyards.

Contents

Geography

Location

The town lies on the Upper Rhine in Rhenish Hesse between Mainz and Worms. It is the seat of the Verbandsgemeinde of Nierstein-Oppenheim.

History

In 765, the Frankish village had its first documentary mention in the Lorsch codex in connection with a donation by Charlemagne to the Lorsch Abbey, to which in 774 further parts of Oppenheim eventually went. In 1008, Oppenheim was granted market rights. In October 1076 Oppenheim earned special importance in the Investiture Controversy. At the princely session of Trebur and Oppenheim, the princes called on King Henry IV to undertake the "Walk to Canossa". After Oppenheim was given back to the Empire in 1147, it became in 1225 a Free Imperial City during the Staufer emperor Frederick II’s time. At this time, the town was important for its Imperial castle and the Burgmannen who lived there.

In the 14th century, the town was pledged to Electoral Mainz, and beginning in 1398 it belonged to the territory of Electoral Palatinate.

In 1621, the Oppenheim town chronicle reports a meteorite impact on the edge of town that unleashed a great fire in which the Oppenheim Town Hall was almost utterly destroyed. The Electoral Oberamt archive, too, was lost in the fire, and so it was moved to Mainz.

On 14 September 1620, Spanish troops overran the town in the Thirty Years' War. The Spaniards occupied Oppenheim until 1632. In 1688, French troops overran the town in the Nine Years' War (1688–1697). On 31 May 1689, Landskrone Castle and the town were utterly destroyed by the French under General Mélac. Until 1797, Oppenheim remained an Electoral Palatinate holding. After being in French hands, Oppenheim passed in 1816 to the Grand Duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt. It remained Hessian until 1945.

In March 1945, American troops managed to build a crossing over the Rhine near Oppenheim and to hold it.

Politics

Town partnerships

Coat of arms

The town’s arms might be described thus: Or an eagle displayed sable.

All town seals up until 1925 showed a crowned king’s head, but for one, from 1266, that showed the Emperor on his throne. Nevertheless, the town adopted arms with this composition while still using the king’s head seal. The arms have not changed since their adoption.

The arms have been borne since 1609.[2]

Wine sponsorship

In Oppenheim, wine was given hefty publicity by Mayor Dr. Heinz Scheller after he took office in 1935: For him, the only suitable city for sponsoring the town’s wine was none other than the capital, Berlin. The town of Ansbach and the city of Osnabrück followed. To revive this wine sponsorship and to give thanks for the commitment to the town of Oppenheim, the Governing Mayor of Berlin, Klaus Wowereit, was “knighted” on 11 March 2006 by Mayor Marcus Held, earning the title Wine Knight (Weinritter).

The sponsorship finds active expression in, among other things, the town’s participation in the estate festivals held by the Senate of Berlin in 2007 and 2008, each time with a wine stand. At Governing Mayor of Berlin Klaus Wowereit’s invitation, a citizens’ delegation under Mayor Marcus Held took part in the festivities at the German Embassy in Paris on German Unity Day and on the jubilee of the Berlin-Paris city partnership.

Culture and sightseeing

Oppenheim Ossuary
Saint Catherine’s Church (Katharinenkirche)

Worth seeing are

  • Saint Catherine’s Church (Katharinenkirche) with its stained glass (the "Oppenheim Rose"), the most outstanding Gothic church on the Rhine between the Cologne Cathedral and the Strasbourg Cathedral; * * Landskron Castle’s ruins with a lovely view over the Rhine rift and of the other church buildings in Oppenheim, also a venue for festival plays and other cultural events;
  • the Old Town with its marketplace, Town Hall from 1621 (with a column from Landskron Castle’s hall in front, which reputedly came from the Ingelheim Imperial Palace), the former town fortifications with Gautor, Rheintorpforte (gates), clocktower and town wall remnants, and unique museums (German Viticultural Museum, Town Museum.

Extraordinary is the Oppenheimer Kellerlabyrinth (“Oppenheim Cellar Labyrinth”) under the Old Town. On changing levels underground passageways, stairways and rooms link the houses and facilities with each other. In the Old Town’s heart, in the area of the Town Hall, there are altogether roughly 650 m of cellar passageways open to visitors and largely preserved in their historical state. It is believed, though, that what has been opened to the public is only about 3% of the total cellar area. The exact extent of the underground passageways is still not known with any great certainty, despite investigations commissioned by the town, but the length is at least 40 km. Guided tours through this unique underground labyrinth are offered all year round by the town’s tourism and festival play bureau. There are likewise town tours and night watchman tours.

Oppenheim Town Hall
Oppenheim town center.

Theatre

Yearly between August and October, the Oppenheimer Theaterfestspiele (“Oppenheim Theatre Festival Plays”) take place in the town’s Kulturkeller (“Culture Cellar”) and at Landskron Castle’s ruins.

Museums

Particularly worth visiting, besides Saint Catherine’s Church, the Town Museum and the underground labyrinth, is the German Viticultural Museum (Deutsches Weinbaumuseum) with the region’s oldest winepress from the Geistermühle, a centuries-old mill in Flonheim. Found here is everything worth knowing about wine.

Music

In the Kultursommer (“Culture Summer”), there are regular concerts on the town’s historic marketplace before the Town Hall. Furthermore there is the Oppenheim Trombone Choir.

Sport

In Oppenheim are several sport clubs, among others TC Rot-Weiß Oppenheim (tennis), FSV Oppenheim (football), and the one founded as early as 1846 that may well have the most members, TV Oppenheim. TV Oppenheim is successful well beyond its home region in gymnastics, swimming, cycling sports and above all, basketball.

Regular events

Each year in the town at Landskron Castle’s ruins, Saint Catherine’s Church, the Kulturkeller under the courthouse square and the marketplace, the Festspiele Oppenheim (“Oppenheim Festival Plays”) take place.

Also held every year are an Easter Market early in the year, and late in the year Saint Catherine’s Market in the Old Town.

Other regular events in town are:

  • The Easter Artists’ Market (Osterkünstlermarkt), a fortnight before Easter;
  • The well known and well loved Oppenheim Wine Festival (Oppenheimer Weinfest) on the second weekend in August;
  • Mittelalterspectaculum (“Mediaeval Spectacle”) in early May;
  • Rhine Bicycle Ride between Worms and Oppenheim in mid May;
  • Fairytale Christmas Market (Märchenweihnachtsmarkt) at the historic Town Hall, Saint Catherine’s Church and the marketplace on the third day of Advent.

Economy and infrastructure

Public institutions

The administration of the Verbandsgemeinde of Nierstein-Oppenheim is found in Oppenheim.

The State Office for Environment, Water Management and Trade Control, the Mannheim Water and Shipping Office and Mainz-Bingen District Vehicle Licensing each have a location in town.

Education

Besides three kindergarten institutions or kindergartens (among which two municipal daycare centres), there is the “Am Gautor” primary school.

There are in Oppenheim the Gymnasium zu St. Katharinen, the Professional School for Winegrowing and Agrarian Sciences, the Matthäus-Merian-Hauptschule and the Landskronschule, a special school.

Media

Appearing in Oppenheim is the Allgemeine Zeitung (Mainz) with local reporting and its own offices. Furthermore, there is the weekly Rheinhessisches Wochenblatt, likewise published by the Verlagsgruppe Rhein Main.

Transport

Oppenheim lies on Bundesstraße 9, which broadly leads from the Dutch border near Kleve to the French border near Kandel. Locally it serves foremost as a link to the nearby cities of Mainz and Worms and the Mainzer Autobahnring in the north and A 6 in the south.

Linking Oppenheim to rail transport is a railway station on the Mainz-Ludwigshafen line. Running on it is the RB 44 Mainz-Worms-Ludwigshafen-Mannheim. Furthermore, ORN regional bus routes run from Dalheim to Wörrstadt by way of Oppenheim and towards Guntersblum and Undenheim.

Famous people

Sons and daughters of the town

  • Johann von Dalberg (1455–1503), 1480 cathedral provost in Worms and Chancellor of the University of Heidelberg, 1482 Chancellor of Elector Philipp of the Palatinate, 1482 Bishop of Worms, made Heidelberg and Worms into the then centres of humanism.
  • Kaspar Sturm (1481–1523), Imperial herald, guided Martin Luther in 1521 on his way to the Diet of Worms and back.
  • Johann Paulsackel (1805–1855), champion of democratic freedom rights.
  • Paul Wallot (1841–1912), German architect, builder of the Reichstag building in Berlin.
  • Johanna Senfter (1879–1961), outstanding composer of the 20th century
  • Carl Wilhelm Witterstätter (1884–1964), aviation pioneer.
  • Jakob Steffan (1888–1957), Sozial Democratic politician, beginning in 1933 arrested several times, organized the civil anti-Nazi resistance in South Hesse and Rhenish Hesse, (1946–1950) Interior and Social Minister of Rhineland-Palatinate.
  • Paul Witterstätter (1892–1966), expressionist (later realist) painter.
  • Susanne Völker (b. 1974), German Wine Queen 1998/1999

Persons who have worked here

  • Madern Gerthener (b. about 1360; d. 1430), City master builder of the Free Imperial City of Frankfurt am Main, sculptor and one of the most important artists of the Late Gothic on the Middle Rhine, created the west quire at Saint Catherine’s Church, beginning in 1414
  • Johannes Pauli (b. 1450/54; d. after 1530), Franciscan monk, Schwank poet, trailblazer for the comic, pointed short story (Fazetie) in Early Renaissance Germany (1499 preacher at the Oppenheim Franciscan convent).
  • Jakob Köbel (1460–1535), beginning in 1494 active in Oppenheim as town clerk (chancellery chairman), book printer, publisher, important (mathematical) writer, member of the humanistic association Sodalitas litteraria Rhenana and hospes of the Oppenheim section.
  • Anton Praetorius (1560–1613), clergyman in Oppenheim (1589–1592), fighter against witch trials and torture.
  • Johann Theodor de Bry (1561–1623), worked from 1609 to 1619 as publisher and copper engraver in Oppenheim, which was sympathetic to Calvinistic religious refugees. speciality: the richly illustrated scientific book. 1617 Matthäus Merian’s father-in-law.
  • Hieronymus Galler, printer from Basel, left Frankfurt with Johann Theodor de Bry in 1609 and from 1610 to 1620 ran a highly productive printshop in Oppenheim.
  • Albert Molnár (1574–1634), reformed theologian and itinerant academic from Hungary, from 1615 to 1619 cantor and rector of the Latin school in Oppenheim.
  • Matthäus Merian (1593–1650), worked from 1616 to 1619 as copper engraver in Oppenheim.
  • Friedrich Koch (1786–1865), apothecary, inventor of industrial quinine manufacture.
  • Carl Koch (1833–1910), pharmaceutical manufacturer, winery owner, mayor, member of the second chamber of the Hessian Landstände, honorary citizen, Patriarch with social conscience, Friedrich Koch’s son.

References

External links


This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia.

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