Gräfenberg, Bavaria


Gräfenberg is a Franconian town in the district of Forchheim, in Bavaria, Germany. It is situated 16km southeast of Forchheim and 25km northeast of Nuremberg.

Location

Gräfenberg is located in the southern part of Little Switzerland.
The town is characterised by a great range of elevation.
A brook, the Kalkach, flows through the town with a steep drop.
Gräfenberg is divided into 16 districts:

Religion

Gräfenberg is a majority Protestant town; even so, some districts are majority Catholic.

History

Gräfenberg was first mentioned in the year 1172. From 1333 onward the patrician family Haller reigned in Gräfenberg. In 1371 King Karl IV granted the market municipal law. In 1567 a fire destroyed the parts of town located back of the walls. In 1778 a flood wave, resulting from heavy rainfalls, killed six people. With the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss in 1803 the town became part of Bavaria. In the Austro-Prussian War between the German Confederation, and Prussia and her allies, the town was the headquarters of the Prussian army at the time that the ceasefire between Bavaria and Prussia was declared in 1866.
In the 1960s and 1970s the other districts of Gräfenberg became part of the borough: for example Lilling and Thuisbrunn.

Local council

Local elections were held on March 15, 2020 with the following results:
Ralf Kunzmann is the mayor since May 1, 2020. He won the election on March 29, 2020 against his predecessor Hans-Jürgen Nekolla with 52,55 % of the vote.