Lorsch


Lorsch is a town in the Bergstraße district in Hessen, Germany, 60 km south of Frankfurt. Lorsch is well known for the Lorsch Abbey, which has been named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.

Geography

Location

Lorsch lies about 5 km west of the Bergstraße in the Rhine rift just west of the Odenwald between Darmstadt to the north and Mannheim to the south. The town lies not far from the Weschnitz's lower reaches. To the town's southeast the Weschnitzinsel conservation area is located.

Neighbouring communities

Lorsch borders in the north on the community of Einhausen and the town of Bensheim, in the east on the town of Heppenheim, in the southeast on the community of Laudenbach and the town of Hemsbach, in the south on the town of Lampertheim and in the west on the town of Bürstadt.

History

was founded in 764 by the Frankish Count Cancor and his mother Williswinda. The abbey was one of the greatest centres of Carolingian art. Several Carolingian kings of Germany were buried there. The monastery was settled by Benedictines from Gorze Abbey near Metz. In a document from 885, the abbey is mentioned as Lauressam, from which, over the course of time, came the town’s current name. In the Early and High Middle Ages, the abbey was a powerful Imperial monastery with holdings in the nearby Odenwald, on the Bergstraße and in Rhenish Hesse, and also in Alsace and Lorraine.
In the civil war resulting from the Investiture Controversy in the 11th century, the abbey sustained great losses in holdings to the nobility.
In the late 12th century, with the record of the old deeds, there was an attempt to reorganize the administration. Nevertheless, in 1232, Lorsch was awarded to the Archbishopric of Mainz and newly settled by Premonstratensians. Thereafter, Mainz and the Electorate of the Palatinate found themselves at odds over who should hold the vogt rights. Of the Carolingian Benedictine abbey, which in parts has been unearthed, the gatehall has been preserved. It is today a UNESCO-protected World Heritage Site.
In 1991, the town hosted the 31st Hessentag state festival.

Economy

The firm TrekStor GmbH & Co.KG was founded in 2001 in Lorsch and has its head office here.

Government

Community council

The municipal election held on 26 March 2006 yielded the following results:
The town executive is made up of seven councillors. Three seats are allotted to the CDU, two to the SPD and one each to the PWL and the Greens.

Mayor

From 1993 to 2011, the mayor was Klaus Jäger. He was re-elected on 7 February 1999 with 85.2% of the vote, and again on 13 February 2005 with 70.6%. Since 2011 the mayor has been Christian Schönung.

Coat of arms

Lorsch’s arms might be described thus: Party per fess, above sable the King’s Hall Or, below party per pale, argent a cross pattée fitchy gules and azure the Lion of Hesse springing.
The King’s Hall, the building declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1991, is borne as a charge in the town’s arms. The red cross pattée fitchy is the coat of arms formerly borne by the Lorsch Abbey in its heyday. The Lion of Hesse, shown here springing rather than rampant, comes from Hesse’s coat of arms and symbolizes Lorsch’s status as part of Hesse.

Town twinning

There is also a friendship arrangement with:
This came about through the sponsorship arrangement for those ethnic Germans driven out of the communities of Jívová, Pohorsch, Weska and Hraničné Petrovice, who then settled in Lorsch.

Arts and culture

Museums

In Lorsch on Tuesday during Carnival – locally known as Fastnacht – there is a Carnival parade with more than 100 attractions.

Historic buildings

Transport

Through the town’s municipal area run Autobahn A 67 and Bundesstraßen 47 and 460.
Lorsch’s DB railway station lies on the Nibelungenbahn between Bensheim and Worms. Furthermore, there are bus connections with Lampertheim/Bürstadt, Heppenheim, Einhausen and Bensheim.
Lorsch lies on Hesse’s cycle path R9, which leads from Worms by way of Bensheim to Höchst im Odenwald.

Public institutions

Lorsch has two regional daily newspapers, the Bergsträßer Anzeiger with its regional Lorsch/Einhausen edition, and the smaller circulation Starkenburger Echo.

Education

Honorary citizens