Haguenau
Haguenau is a commune in the Bas-Rhin department of France, of which it is a sub-prefecture.
It is second in size in the Bas-Rhin only to Strasbourg, some to the south. To the north of the town, the Forest of Haguenau is the largest undivided forest in France.
Haguenau was founded by German dukes and has swapped back and forth several times between Germany and France over the centuries, with its spelling altering between "Hagenau" and "Haguenau" by the turn. After the French defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, Haguenau was ceded to the new German Empire. It was part of the German Empire for 48 years from 1871 to 1918, when at the end of World War I it was returned to France. This transfer was officially ratified in 1919 with the Treaty of Versailles.
Haguenau is a rapidly growing town, its population having increased from 22,644 inhabitants in 1968 to 34,891 inhabitants in 2006. Haguenau's metropolitan area has grown from 43,904 inhabitants in 1968 to 64,562 inhabitants in 2006.
History
Haguenau dates from the beginning of the 12th century, when Duke Frederick II the One-Eyed of Swabia erected a hunting lodge on an island in the Moder River. The medieval King and Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa fortified the settlement and gave it town rights, important for further development, in 1154. On the site of the hunting lodge he founded an imperial palace he regarded as his favourite residence. In this palace were preserved the "Crown Jewels of the Holy Roman Empire", i.e. the jewelled imperial crown, sceptre, imperial orb, and sword of Charlemagne.Richard of Cornwall, King of the Romans, made it an imperial city in 1257. Subsequently, through Rudolph I of Germany Haguenau became the seat of the Landvogt of Hagenau, the German imperial advocate in Lower Alsace. In the 14th century, it housed the executive council of the Decapole, a defensive and offensive association of ten Alsatian towns against external aggression, economic expansion and related political instability. In the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, Alsace was ceded to France, which had repeatedly invaded and looted the region in the past. In 1673 King Louis XIV had the fortifications as well as the remains of the king's palace razed in order to extinguish German traditions. Haguenau was recaptured by German troops in 1675, but was taken again by the French two years later, when it was nearly destroyed by fire set by looting French troops.
In 1793 Prussians and Austrians had occupied Lower Alsace from the Lauter to Moder to support the Royalists and before the year's end were driven back over the border by the French Revolutionary Army, causing the “great flight”.
In 1871, Haguenau was ceded to the German Empire upon its victory in the Franco-Prussian War; the community was made part of Alsace-Lorraine, with its Germanic spelling-Hagenau-restored.
The Haguenau Airport was built in 1916 by the German military to train fighter and bomber pilots to fight in the First World War.
Hagenau was part of the briefly independent Republic of Alsace-Lorraine after World War I, before being returned to France in 1919.
Second World War
In the Second World War, Germany retook the town in 1940. In November 1944 the area surrounding Haguenau was under the control of the 256th Volksgrenadier Division under the command of General Gerhard Franz.On 1 December 1944, the 314th Infantry Regiment of the 79th Division, XV Corps, 7th U.S. Army, moved into the area near Haguenau, and on 7 December the regiment was given the assignment to take it and the town forest just north that included German ammunition dumps. The attack began at 0645, 9 December, and sometime during the night of 10 December and the early morning of 11 December the Germans withdrew under the cover of darkness leaving the town proper largely under American control.
Before they withdrew, the Germans demolished bridges, useful buildings, and even the town park. However, as experienced by Haguenau throughout its history, the Germans came back and retook the town in late January. Most of the inhabitants fled with the assistance of the U.S. Army. The Americans launched an immediate counterattack to retake the town. The 313th Infantry Regiment of the 79th Division was relieved by the 101st Airborne Division on 5 February 1945. The 36th Infantry Division would relieve the 101st on 23 February 1945. On March 15 the Allied Operation Undertone, a combined effort of the U.S. Seventh and French 1st Armies of the U.S. Sixth Army Group was launched to drive the Germans back along a 75 km line from Saarbrücken to Haguenau. The last German soldier was not cleared out of the town until March 19, 1945, after house-to-house fighting.
Much of the town had been destroyed despite the Allied reluctance to use artillery to clear out the Germans. Technical Sergeant Morris E. Crain, Company E, 141st Infantry Regiment, 36th Infantry Division was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for providing covering fire for his men on 13 March 1945.
Population
Economy
The town has a well balanced economy. Centuries of troubled history in the buffer lands between France and Germany have given Haguenau a rich historical and cultural heritage which supports a lively tourist trade. There is also a thriving light manufacturing sector centred on the industrial zone to the west of the town. Here the presence nearby of significant retail developments testifies to Haguenau's importance as a regional commercial centre. The recent extension of the ring road has improved access to the commercial and industrial zones and reduced the traffic congestion which used to be a frequent challenge for vehicle drivers using the road which follows the line of the old town walls on the western side of town.Sights
Architecture
In spite of the extensive destruction Haguenau suffered during the many wars experienced by Alsace, especially the Thirty Years War, the French conquest in 1677 and the Second World War, it still possesses monuments from nine centuries, even if nothing is left of arguably the most prestigious of them, Frederick I Barbarossa's imperial palace.Medieval Haguenau retains three gates from its former fortification, the Tour des Chevaliers, the Tour des Pêcheurs and the Porte de Wissembourg, two fairly large Gothic churches, Saint-Georges and Saint-Nicolas, an ancient water-mill and the old custom-house. Both Saint-Georges and Saint-Nicolas Church have lost many of their artistic treasures over the centuries, especially their medieval stained glass windows and outside sculptures. Still, both display to this day some fine liturgical furniture. Saint-Nicolas has become the receptacle for the baroque wooden decoration of the church of the destroyed Neubourg Abbey nearby.
French Baroque and classicism has bequeathed the town several buildings, among which the former hospital and the current town hall. The Synagogue is a fine example of French Neo-classicism, as is the theatre . The large Hop hall is a good example of historicism in architecture. It was built by the French in 1867 and extended twice by the Germans, in 1881 and 1908.
The Basilica of Our Lady in the locality of Marienthal is a vast Gothic Revival sanctuary. It keeps two early 15th-century statues, and a host of sculptures from around 1519.
Haguenau's streets are adorned by attractive fountains, the medieval Saint-Georges fountain, the 18th-century Bee fountain and the 1825 Dolphin fountain.
Museums
- Musée historique de Haguenau. The largest museum in Bas-Rhin outside of Strasbourg, it is located in a grand neo-medieval building.
- Musée alsacien . Located in the former palace of the chancellor, Haguenau's main Renaissance building.
- Musée du bagage. Located in a former 1840s villa that subsequently served as a bank. The museum opened in April 2016.
Higher education
Notable people
- Thomas Anshelm :de:Thomas Anshelm|
- Werner Barkholt, a Catholic spiritualist
- Alfred von Beckerath :de:Alfred von Beckerath|
- Charles Berdellé :fr:Charles Berdellé|
- Stéphane Besle
- Philipp Biedert :de:Philipp Biedert|
- Philipp Friedrich Böddecker, a Composer and organist
- David Léon Cahun, a Jewish French traveler, orientalist and writer
- Wolfgang Fabricius Capito , a Christian theologian and reformer
- Roger Corbeau :fr:Roger Corbeau|
- Morris E. Crain, a United States Army soldier
- Louis Eisenmann :de:Louis Eisenmann|
- Frederick I
- Albert Gemmrich
- Karl Gengler, a politician
- Gustave Glotz
- Heinrich Gran, a printer of incunabula
- Heinrich von Isny :de:Heinrich von Isny|
- Josel of Rosheim, a Jewish shtadlan, born here
- Cédric Klein :fr:Cédric Klein|
- Diebold Lauber :de:Diebold Lauber|
- Borach Levi, later Joseph Jean François Elie, a Jewish convert to Christianity
- Eliezer Liebermann, an Austrian Jewish Talmudist son of the rabbi Zeeb-Wolf of this town
- Sébastien Loeb, 9-time World Rally Championship-winning driver
- Marcel Loeffler :fr:Marcel Loeffler|
- Adam Friedrich Löwenfinck :de:Adam Friedrich Löwenfinck|
- Niklaus von Hagenau
- Jean-Georges Paulus
- Reinmar of Hagenau, 12th-century minnesinger
- Marie-Louise Roth, a literary scientist :de:Marie-Louise Roth|
- Elie Scheid, a Jewish French communal worker and writer
- Diebold Schilling the Younger - 1515 ), an Alsatian-Swiss chronicler
- Marius Schneider :fr:Marius Schneider|
- Elek Schwartz
- Theobald Schwarz :de:Theobald Schwarz|
- Pierre Seel, an activist
- Eduard Stadtler
- Johannes Stroux
- Peter Stühlen :de:Peter Stühlen|
- Joseph Thierry
- Michel Walter :fr:Michel Walter|
- Mathieu Weill, a Jewish French mathematician
Twin towns