Alzenau
Alzenau is a town in the north of the Aschaffenburg district in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia in Bavaria, Germany. Until 1 July 1972, Alzenau was the district seat of the now abolished district of the same name and has a population of around 19,000.
Geography
Location
Alzenau is one of the eastern outliers of the Frankfurt Rhine Main Region and is crossed by the river Kahl. Most of its constituent communities nestle on or between the slopes of the western outliers of the Spessart with its Hahnenkamm. The closest hills to the town are Heilberg and Schanzenkopf.With roughly 2,600 ha of woodland and 85 ha of vineyards, it has been referred to as Stadt im Grünen. Alzenau is only a short drive on the A 45 or trainride on the Kahlgrundbahn from Aschaffenburg, Hanau or Frankfurt am Main.
Neighbouring communities
Alzenau borders in the north on the communities of Rodenbach and Freigericht, in the east and southeast on the communities of Mömbris and Johannesberg, in the southwest on the community of Karlstein and in the west on the community of Kahl am Main.Constituent communities
Alzenau's quarters are Albstadt, Hörstein, Kälberau, Michelbach and Wasserlos.On 1 January 1972, Kälberau was amalgamated into Alzenau. Albstadt and Wasserlos followed on 1 July that same year, as did Hörstein and Michelbach three years later, on 1 July 1975.
Name
The former epithet “in Unterfranken” distinguished it from another Alzenau, which since the Potsdam Agreement has been in Poland.Until the 15th century, Alzenau was known as Wilmundsheim. When the Archbishop of Mainz built a castle on the other side of the Kahl, the name was changed to Alzenau, likely because the place lay allzu nahe the castle.
History
The area was settled quite early on. There are traces of settlement and graves from Hallstatt times, graves from the Beaker culture and crematory graves from the Old Urnfield times.In 950 the community of Wilmundsheim on the Kahl's left bank had its first documentary mention.
In the 12th century, the Freigericht was established by Emperor Friedrich Barbarossa comprising the settlements of Wildmundsheim, Hörstein, Mömbris and Somborn and it was excused taxes and obligatory service. The twigs in the town's coat of arms symbolize this heritage. The Märker, as the townsmen sometimes called themselves, had to defend their autonomy against local noble families’ ambitions; these included the Rannenbergs and the Rienecks, and further pressures came from the Archbishops of Mainz.
These last built Alzenau Castle on the Kahl's right bank, across from Wilmundsheim, between 1395 and 1399 to protect their local holdings. In 1401, the settlement below this castle was granted town and market rights by King Ruprecht of the Palatinate, although these could not be realized. A few years later, the old centre of Wilmundsheim was destroyed and it was melded with the settlement across the Kahl, whereupon it also took the castle's name.
In the course of striving for Imperial reform, Emperor Maximilian I enfeoffed both the Archbishopric of Mainz and the Counts of Hanau in 1500 with the joint lordship over the free court, for which the two fiefholders were together to appoint the Amtmann. Conflicts arose from the inhabitants’ insistence on their ancestral freedoms and the denominational antagonism between the Calvinist Counts of Hanau on the one side and the Catholic population and the Archbishop on the other.
The condominium lasted until the Counts of Hanau died out in 1736. The Archbishop of Mainz then took over the free court as its only surviving lord, but in 1740 had to cede the Amt of Somborn to the Landgraves of Hesse-Kassel, who were the heirs to the County of Hanau, after a fierce legal battle. What was thereafter left of the free court was incorporated as the Amt of Alzenau into the Archbishopric of Mainz. The Wheel of Mainz in the town's arms still recalls this time today.
The Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803 awarded the Amt of Alzenau to the Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt. In 1816, the Grand Duchy of Hesse ceded the Amt to the Kingdom of Bavaria, and Alzenau has since remained Bavarian.
In 1862, Alzenau was raised to district seat. With the building of the Kahlgrundbahn railway, the community – and thereby the whole Kahlgrund – was linked to the railway network as of 1898. In 1951, Alzenau was granted town rights by the Free State of Bavaria.
In the course of municipal reform, the old Alzenau and Aschaffenburg districts were merged in 1972. The communities of Albstadt, Kälberau and Wasserlos were amalgamated. In the end, Alzenau took its current shape when the market community of Hörstein and the community of Michelbach were amalgamated in 1975.
Politics
''Landräte'' (“Chief District Administrators”) of the former Alzenau district
- 1946–1949 Friedrich Huth
- 1950–1970 Heinrich Degen
- 1970–1972 Karl Lautenschläger
Town council
Coat of arms
The town's arms might be described thus: Gules a wheel spoked of six argent, in base two twigs Or per saltire.The German blazon reads “In Rot über zwei gekreuzten goldenen Zweigen ein sechsspeichiges silbernes Rad”. This describes the twigs as “golden”, although they are rendered here in silver.
In 1401, King Ruprecht raised Alzenau to town, but the town never exercised its rights and remained a market community. From 1309 comes the first documentary record. The contents of this document deal with the Freigericht with four court regions, the so-called Hohe Mark. Since the first half of the 13th century the royal hunting forest had been owned by the Archbishopric of Mainz. In 1395, the whole market community passed to the Archbishopric. This part of Alzenau's history is recalled by the six-spoked wheel – the so-called Wheel of Mainz – which was a charge borne by the Archbishops in their arms. The two twigs refer to the court officials who were chosen from among the townsmen to be on the court.
The arms have been borne since 1926.
Town partnerships
- Sint-Oedenrode, North Brabant, Netherlands
- Pfaffstätten, Lower Austria, Austria
- Thaon-les-Vosges, Vosges, France
Economy and infrastructure
Agriculture, forestry, winegrowing
In 1998 there were 62 people contributors to the social welfare funds employed in agriculture and forestry. In 1999 there were 82 agricultural businesses with a cultivated area of 1 429 ha, of which 1 096 ha was cropland and 257 ha was meadowland.In the outlying centres of Michelbach, Wasserlos and Hörstein, Frankenwein is grown. In Albstadt, too, there was winegrowing until the late 19th century, as witnessed by the Gemarkung of Wingertsberg. Winegrowing was brought to Alzenau by the monks from the monastery in Seligenstadt. All in all, though, agriculture and forestry have lost importance for the community.
Transport
Alzenau currently has three interchanges on the A 45, the newest being the Alzenau-Mitte interchange opened on 23 November 2007, after many years in planning, joining the linking road between Alzenau and Kahl to the Autobahn, thereby providing a better link to the industrial areas in Alzenau and Kahl.The Kahlgrundbahn railway links the town with Kahl am Main and Hanau railway stations, where there are direct connections with the S-Bahn to Frankfurt am Main and long-distance trains.
The individual centres in the town are served by the City-Bus lines. One route runs hourly from Alzenau by way of Wasserlos and Hörstein as a regional bus on to Karlstein and to Dettingen railway station, where travellers can transfer to regional trains to Aschaffenburg and Würzburg.
Frankfurt Airport can be reached by car within 30 to 40 minutes.
Established businesses
What follows is a selection of businesses resident in Alzenau:- Alexander Shorokhoff GmbH, luxury mechanical watches
- ABB Automation Products
- Applied Materials GmbH
- Biotest Medizintechnik
- Buhler Leybold Optics
- Hyundai Motorsport GmbH, World Rally Championship team
- Mahle GmbH
- MSC Software
- Nukem
- Schott Solar AG
- Xella
- Nikon Metrology Europe NV
Sport and leisure facilities
The football club, FC Bayern Alzenau, is based in Alzenau.
Institutions
Administrative institutions and authorities
- Aschaffenburg Amtsgericht, Alzenau branch court
- Alzenau town administration
- Alzenau police force
- Aschaffenburg district administration office, Alzenau branch location and registration office
- Federal Agency for Technical Relief, Alzenau chapter
Educational institutions
- Kindergartens: 9 places with 705 children
- Elementary schools: 4 with 81 teachers and 1432 students
- Realschulen: 1 with 45 teachers and 1000 students
- Hahnenkammschule zur Lernförderung
- Spessart-Gymnasium Alzenau with roughly 1500 students
- Städtische Musikschule Alzenau
- Städtische Bibliothek Alzenau
- VHS Kahl-Alzenau-Karlstein, Alzenau branch
- “Grünes Klassenzimmer” in the town forest
Health
- Alzenau-Wasserlos district hospital
Seniors
- Caritas Sozialstation
- BRK Seniorenheim
Youth
- Jugendtreff „Teestube“
Sanitation
- Recycling yard
- 6 garden waste gathering centres
Nature
- An important part of the landscape in Alzenau is the large amount of area given over to Streuobstwiesen, which with their tall, unclustered trees furnish an important habitat for species that have become rare, such as the red-backed shrike or the little owl. Planting tall-trunked fruit trees is financially promoted by the town.
- Also ecologically very important are the Sandmagerrasenflächen in the Alzenauer Sande conservation area, on which a few threatened and endangered wasteland species find their habitat.
Culture and sightseeing
- At Alzenau Castle the Burgfestspiele and the AlzenauClassics are held in summer, and in autumn the Fränkische Musiktage within the framework of Bayerischer Rundfunk’s Musikzauber Franken.
- To the tradition of the Baroque Saint Justin's Parish Church the Alzenauers have built a bridge to the year 834. At that time, Archbishop Odgar of Mainz brought Saint Justin's bones with him from Rome. They found their way to Saint Justin's Church in Höchst and thence in 1298 into St. Alban's Abbey in Mainz; part of the relics, however, ended up in the monastery at the Einhard-Basilika in Seligenstadt. Since the Benedictines there were fellow caretakers of the old parish church of Wilmundsheim, which stood on what is today the graveyard lands, a link was made, and Saint Justin was worshipped in Alzenau. Of the Wilmundsheim church, which was torn down long ago, all that is left is a single capital. The current Baroque church building comes from 1758. Saint Justin's bones have never been in Alzenau.
- The Town Hall, built in 1860-62, was planned as a school, but then became the Royal Bavarian Regional Office. A new wing built in 1974 in Buntsandstein brings contemporary architecture together with Classicist building.
- The town's oldest inn was first named as a Wirtshaus from the Seligenstadt Monastery's ownership in a document in which it was sold to an Alzenau innkeeper. The current owner, who acquired the building clad in Parthenocissus vines in 1995, set up in 2004 a hotel with a small brewery, where according to advertising, beer is made in accordance with the Reinheitsgebot of 1516.
- The Villa Meßmer houses an inn today in a park with historical tree population.
- The Solarparcours illustrates the usages of photovoltaics with the help of 20 examples within the inner town area and without. What is seen along this learning path is a coöperative project by the town of Alzenau and the resident business Schott Solar, which manufactures the solar modules in Alzenau.
Outlying centres, countryside
- Kälberau pilgrimage church with large expansion from 1955 to 1957, affiliated with a Pallottine monastery. The pilgrimage church houses as an iconic object the statue Maria zum rauhen Wind.
- Schloss zu Wasserlos, today the district hospital
- The Jewish graveyard between Hörstein and Wasserlos is one of the biggest in the Aschaffenburg district. It was begun in 1812, severely damaged by the Nazis and restored after the Second World War. Two hundred and sixty-six gravestones are still extant
- The Catholic Pfarrkirche zu Hörstein from 1473 has a Romanesque defensive tower
- The Burgstall Randenburg, a former castle's site, is a monument from the late Middle Ages
- Historic vineyards stretch from Alzenau southwards through Wasserlos and Hörstein as well as northeastwards through Michelbach and Albstadt
- Schloss Maisenhausen from 1753 in the outlying centre of Michelbach, privately owned today
Regular events
- Orchestra concert by the music club „Concordia“ Michelbach 1923 e.V.
- Weinfest am Park in the summer garden of the Parkhotel in the outlying centre of Wasserlos every year in the week before Ascension Day
- Wine, cheese, and wind music
- Brückenfest by THW Alzenau at Corpus Christi
- Town Festival around Alzenau Castle
- October–November: Franconian Music Days
- Melodien bei Kerzenschein at the Prischoßhalle
- Hoffest at the Hotel Krone, yearly on the first weekend in September
- Great Christmas Market on the first weekend in Advent
- Michelbacher Winzerfest
- Pannfest, oldest street festival in the heart of the Pann, the oldest part of Alzenau on Wilmundsheimer Straße, since 1978 in September, whose proceeds are always donated for various projects by the festival's organizers, the Kolping family.
- Waste your time, a rock concert by the Spessart-Gymnasium in February
- Whatanoise, a concert by the JIA at the Hahnenkammhalle in Wasserlos
- X-mas Rock-Konzert by the JIA at Christmastime
Religion
- Roman Catholic parish of Saint Justin
- Evangelical Lutheran parish of Peter and Paul
- Yavuz Sultan Selim Han Mosque
Notable people
Sons and daughters of the town
- , composer and physician
- Paul Michel,, chessmaster
- , historian
- Franz A. Stein, musicologist
- , artist
- Alexander Leipold, freestyle wrestler stripped of an Olympic gold medal in 2000, Federal new-blood trainer for freestyle wrestling
- , cultural scientist
- Jochen Bendel, German radio speaker and television moderator
- , radio and television host and comedian
- Heiko Westermann, footballer
- Björn Ziegenbein, footballer
- Pascal Thomas, actor, musical singer
- Max Wissel, racing driver
- Svenja Huth, footballer
People linked with Alzenau
- , lady of Schloss Wasserlos
- , architect, built the Villa Meßmer in 1902–1904