Wolfsberg, Carinthia

Wolfsberg, Carinthia

Infobox Town AT
name=Wolfsberg
name_local=
image_coa = Wappen at wolfsberg.png

image_photo=Wolfsberg, Kreisverkehr Sued.jpg
imagesize=300px
image_caption=
state = Carinthia
regbzk =
district = Wolfsberg
population =24298
population_as_of = 01.01.2004
population_ref =
pop_dens =
area = 278.3
elevation = 463
lat_deg=46
lat_min=51
lat_hem=N
lon_deg=14
lon_min=50
lon_hem=E
postal_code = 9400
area_code =04352
mayor = Gerhard Seifried
website = [http://www.wolfsberg.at www.wolfsberg.at]
:"For other uses, see Wolfsberg"Wolfsberg ( _sl. Volšperk) is the capital of the Wolfsberg district in the Austrian state of Carinthia. The town consists of the Katastralgemeinden Aichberg, Auen, Forst, Gräbern-Prebl, Gries, Hartelsberg, Hattendorf, Hintertheißenegg, Kleinedling, Kleinwinklern, Lading, Leiwald, Michaelsdorf, Oberleidenberg, Priel, Reding, Reideben, Reisberg, Rieding, Ritzing, Schoßbach, Schwemmtratten, Sankt Jakob, Sankt Johann, Sankt Marein, Sankt Margarethen, Sankt Michael, Sankt Stefan, Thürn, Unterleidenberg, Vordergumitsch, Vordertheißenegg, Waldenstein, Weißenbach, Witra, Wolfsberg Obere Stadt and Wolfsberg Untere Stadt. It is situated within the Lavanttal Alps in the valley of the Lavant River, a tributary to the Drava. The Packsattel mountain pass connects Wolfsberg with Voitsberg in Styria.

The castle above the town was first mentioned as "Wolfsperch" in a 1178 deed of St. Paul's Abbey in the Lavanttal, though it probably had been an estate of the Archbishopric of Bamberg since 1007. The adjacent settlement became the administrative centre of Bamberg's Carinthian territories and in 1331 received town privileges by Bishop Werntho Schenk von Reicheneck. During the Protestant Reformation Wolfsberg was a main area of Lutheranism which nevertheless was suppressed by the Counter Reformation. In 1759 Maria Theresa of Austria acquired all Bamberg lands in Carinthia. In World War II Wolfsberg was the site of the Stalag XVIII-A Prisoner-of-war camp.

ights

* Wolfsberg Castle, first mentioned in 1178 and rebuilt several times, last about 1846 in a Tudorbethan style.
* Bayerhofen Castle, first mentioned in 1239 and rebuilt in the 16th century.

Twin towns

*
*

External links

* [http://www.wolfsberg.at Official website]
* [http://www.statistik.at/blickgem/gemDetail.do?gemnr=20923&gemnam=Wolfsberg Statistical overview (Census 2001)]
* [http://www.travel2austria.com/?p=326 Pictures of Wolfsberg]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Wolfsberg — Places named Wolfsberg include:*Wolfsberg, Carinthia, a district capital in Carinthia, Austria *Wolfsberg (district), a district of Carinthia, Austria *Wolfsberg im Schwarzautal, a municipality in Styria, Austria *Wolfsberg, Thuringia, a… …   Wikipedia

  • Carinthia (state) — Carinthia Kärnten Koroška   State of Austria   …   Wikipedia

  • WOLFSBERG — WOLFSBERG, small town in Carinthia, S. Austria; under the rule of the Bamberg bishopric in the 13th century. Jews are first mentioned there in 1289, and in 1304 the duke of Carinthia granted them a charter of privileges, which was renewed in 1311 …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • CARINTHIA — (Ger. Kaernten), federal state of Austria bordering on Slovenia and Italy. The presence of Jews there in the Middle Ages is indicated by places named Judendorf, near Friesach (mentioned in 1124), klagenfurt , Tamsweg, and Villach, among others.… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Wolfsberg (district) — Infobox Austrian district subject name = Bezirk Wolfsberg region district region = Carinthia population = 56,611 (2001) prefix = 04352 area = 973.8 car plate = WO nuts code = ? municipalities = 9 image location = Oesterreich kaernten WO.png… …   Wikipedia

  • Pfarrkirche Wolfsberg (Kärnten) — Außenansicht Portal …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Outline of Austria — The …   Wikipedia

  • Districts of Austria — Map of Austria subdivided in the 84 districts. In red the 15 Statutarstädte Austria is divided into 84 political districts (Politische Bezirke), and 15 Statutarstädte which form their own districts. Function The Austrian Bezirk is roughl …   Wikipedia

  • Christine Lavant — (born Christine Habernig in Groß Edling, Carinthia on 4 July 1915; died on 7 June 1973 in Wolfsberg, Carinthia) was an Austrian poet and novelist. Life She was the ninth child of a miner in the Lavant Valley, which she used for her pseudonym. Her …   Wikipedia

  • Herzogtum Kärnten — Kärntner Herzogseinsetzung auf dem Zollfeld. Zeitgenössische Darstellung von Leopold Stainreuter (14. Jhd.) Die Wurzeln der Geschichte Kärntens reichen bis in die Altsteinzeit zurück. In der Antike war auch das Gebiet des heutigen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”