Ebersberg


Ebersberg is the seat of the similarly named Ebersberg Landkreis in the Oberbayern Regierungsbezirk in Bavaria, southern Germany. The Ebersberger Forst is one of Germany’s largest continuous area of woodlands.
Neighbouring communities are Grafing bei München, Kirchseeon and Steinhöring. Bavaria’s capital, Munich, lies 32 km away and may be reached by Munich S-Bahn. Rosenheim and Wasserburg am Inn are about the same distance away.

History

Ebersberg’s history is closely tied with the nearby Benedictine monastery founded in 934 by the Counts of Sempt. Beginning in the 14th century the monastery exercised local jurisdiction. In 1595, Pope Clement VIII dissolved the monastery and turned its lands over to the Jesuits. On January 18, 1634, during the Thirty Years War, Ebersberg was the site of a skirmish between Habsburg troops and local peasants. The peasants, being poorly armed, were quickly defeated by the Imperial forces and around 200 were killed. Later, the ringleaders were exonerated by local authorities and found they were acting only in self-defense. In 1773, the Knights of Malta took over the building. When the monastery was dissolved for good in 1808, the building went partly to government ownership and partly private.
In 1954, Ebersberg was raised to the status of a 'town'. In 1972 it was connected to Munich by the S-Bahn highway. The once separate municipality of Oberndorf was combined with Ebersberg.
Ebersberg is the only German town that has named a street after a cabaret group. Ebersberg’s main cultural institution, the Alte Kino Ebersberg, is today run by a non-profit governing board whose roots lie in this same Deutscher Kleinkunstpreis-winning group.

Coat of arms

Ebersberg’s civic coat of arms consists of a gold background with a black boar standing on a green three-knolled hill on the shield’s right edge sloping upwards.
The town’s website includes a short summary of its history.

Sights

Ebersberg has a station on the railway line between Grafing and Wasserburg and is the terminal station of line S 4 of the Munich S-Bahn.

Famous people

The following luminaries were born in Ebersberg: