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Wernigerode

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox German location

Wernigerode (Template:IPA) is a town in the district of Harz, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Until 2007, it was the capital of the district of Wernigerode.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Its population was 32,181 in 2020.

Wernigerode is located southwest of Halberstadt, and is picturesquely situated on the Holtemme river, on the northern slopes of the Harz Mountains.Template:Sfn Wernigerode is located on the German Timber-Frame Road.

Geography

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Location

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File:WernigerodeCastleWinter.jpg
Wernigerode Castle
File:WenigerodeWinterViewFromCastle.jpg
Wernigerode and the Brocken in winter

The town lies at about Template:Convert above sea level (NN) on the northeastern flank of the Harz Mountains in central Germany, at the foot of their highest peak, the Brocken, on the B 6 and B 244 federal highways and on the railway line from Halberstadt to Vienenburg that links the cities of Halle (Saale) and Hanover.

The River Holtemme flows through the town and, not far from its western gate, it is joined by the Zillierbach stream, which is also known as the Template:Lang near its mouth. North of the town the Barrenbach flows through several ponds and empties into the Template:Lang in the village of Minsleben. The historic town centre consists of an old town and a new town (Template:Lang and Template:Lang). The town's borough includes Hasserode, Nöschenrode, the residential estates of Stadtfeld, Burgbreite and Harzblick as well as the villages of Benzingerode, Minsleben, Silstedt, Schierke and Reddeber.

The borough measures Template:Convert from west to east and Template:Convert from north to south. Its highest point is the Brocken, at Template:Convert above NN, and its lowest is at Template:Convert.

The town lies on the German-Dutch holiday road known as the Orange Route.

The Northern Harz Boundary Fault crosses the borough along which runs the watershed between the Weser and Elbe rivers. To the north precipitation flows into the Weser, to the southeast, later northeast, waters flow into the Elbe. This fault line runs through the suburb of Hasserode to the west south west of the city centre and forms the town's castle hill to the south east of the city centre.

Town divisions

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The town of Wernigerode is divided into the town itself, including the villages of Hasserode and Nöschenrode incorporated before 1994, and five villages with their own local councils that were integrated after 1994: Benzingerode, Minsleben, Reddeber, Schierke and Silstedt.<ref>Hauptsatzung Stadt Wernigerode Template:Webarchive (PDF; 88 KB); accessed on 30 March 2011</ref>

Climate

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File:Harz Regenschatten.png
Wernigerode in the rain shadow of the Harz

Wernigerode is located in the Central European transition subzone of the temperate climatic zone.<ref>Klimaklassifikation nach E. Neef. Siehe m-forkel.de: Klimazonen Template:Webarchive</ref> Its average annual temperature is Template:Convert; its average annual precipitation is Template:Convert.

The warmest months are June to August with average temperatures of Template:Convert and the coldest are December to February at Template:Convert.

The most rain falls in July, on average Template:Convert, the least in February, with Template:Convert on average.

The climate, more precisely the amounts of precipitation and temperatures, are influenced by the orographic rainfall caused by the Harz Mountains. Because the town lies in the rain shadow (leeward side) of the Harz, less precipitation falls here than in similar temperate regions without the protection of a mountain range. In addition the occasional föhn winds that occur result in an increase in temperatures.

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Wernigerode has a snow load class of 3 according to the German industrial standard, DIN 1055.

History

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File:Wernigerode ca 1820.jpg
Friedrich August Schmidt: Stadt Wernigerode vom Eisenberg, Template:CircaTemplate:SndWernigerode around 1820,
File:Fotothek df roe-neg 0006140 011 Blick aus der Altstadt zum Schloss.jpg
Wernigerode in 1951

Wernigerode was the capital of the medieval County of Wernigerode and Stolberg-Wernigerode. In 1815, after the Napoleonic Wars, it became part of the Prussian Province of Saxony. The Hasseröder brewery was founded in Wernigerode in 1872.

After World War II, Wernigerode was included in the new state Saxony-Anhalt within the Soviet occupation zone (relaunched in October 1949 as the German Democratic Republic/East Germany). During the Communist years, the town was very close to the inner German border. Wernigerode became part of the restored state of Saxony-Anhalt in 1990 after German reunification.

Emergence of the town

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There are no written sources confirming exactly when the town was established. According to the latest researchTemplate:Sndfor example, by Eduard Jacobs and Walther GrosseTemplate:Sndthere were no early relations with the Abbey at Corvey (Weser) and the abbot there, Warin, instead the town name suggests it was a protected clearance settlement.

The first area to be settle was the Template:Lang, where there was a lowland castle, the so-called Template:Lang. In 1805 the ruins of this castle site were demolished. The only part remaining is Template:Lang at Template:Lang 12 which dates to the year 1582. At the time of the first settlelement there was still ancient forest, typical of the Harz, on the heights of the Template:Lang, which had first to be cleared, hence the suffix Template:Lang in the town name which means 'clearing'.

The town was first mentioned in the records in 1121 in connection with Count Adalbert of Haimar who had moved here from the region near Hildesheim and henceforth was titled the Count of Wernigerode. On 17 April 1229 the settlement was granted town rights along the lines of that for Goslar. In 2004 Wernigerode celebrated the 775th anniversary of that occasion.

As a result of the immigration of new townsfolk from the surrounding villages a new settlement, later called Template:Lang, grew up on the northeastern edge of the old town. It was a farming settlement that lay outside the walls of the old town. St. John's Church was built as the parish church of Wernigerode's Template:Langr in the last third of the 13th century in the Romanesque style.

Early rulers

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The counts of Wernigerode, who can be traced back to the early 12th century, were successively vassals of the margraves of Brandenburg (1268), and the archbishops of Magdeburg (1381). On the extinction of the family in 1429 the county fell to the counts of Stolberg, who founded the Stolberg-Wernigerode branch in 1645. The latter surrendered its military and fiscal independence to Prussia in 1714, but retained some of its sovereign rights till 1876. The counts were raised to princely rank in 1890.Template:Sfn

Mayors

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  • Runden, Template:Circa<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • Ludwig Gepel, 7 January 1921 to 6 January 1933
  • Ulrich von Fresenius (1 September 1888; died 12 November 1962), 10 January 1933 to 20 April 1945
  • Max Otto (1889–1969), SPD/SED, 20 April 1945 to 1951
  • Gustav Strahl, 1951 to 1962
  • Martin Kilian, SED, 24 October 1962 to 1990
  • Herbert Teubner, CDU, 1990 to 1991
  • Horst-Dieter Weyrauch, CDU, 1991 to 1994
  • Ludwig Hoffmann, SPD, 1994 to 31 July 2008
  • Peter Gaffert, independent, since 1 August 2008
  • Tobias Kascha, SPD, since 1 August 2022

Population statistics

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Template:Div col

  • 1595: 2,500
  • 1806: 3,700
  • 1845: 5,000
  • 1869: 7,000
  • 1886: 9,000
  • 1895: 10,662
  • 1904: 12,000
  • 1914: 18,000
  • 1957: 33,353
  • 1990: 37,000
  • 2006: 33,871
  • 2007: 34,413
  • 2008: 35,041
  • 2009: 34,673

Template:Div col end

Architecture

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File:Wernigerode (2013-06-03), by Klugschnacker in Wikipedia (14).JPG
Town hall and marketplace

Wernigerode contains several interesting Gothic buildings, including a fine town hall with a timber facade from 1498. Some of the quaint old houses which have escaped the numerous fires through the years are elaborately adorned with wood-carving. The Gerhart-Hauptmann Gymnasium,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> occupying a modern Gothic building, is the successor to an ancient grammar school that existed until 1825. The castle (Template:Lang) of the princes of Stolberg-Wernigerode rises above the town.Template:Sfn The original was built in the 12th century but the present castle was built between 1862 and 1893 by Karl Frühling and includes parts of the medieval building.

Economy

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Brandy, Hasseröder lager, cigars and dyes are among the products manufactured in Wernigerode.

Education

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File:HochschuleHarz Haupt.jpg
The campus in Wernigerode

Wernigerode is a site of the Harz University of Applied Studies. Template:Clear

Sights

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Template:Gallery

Culture

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Wernigerode is the home of the choir Rundfunk-Jugendchor Wernigerode.

Natural monuments

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Sport

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Wernigerode hosts the Brocken Marathon each October. Wernigerode's most supported club is Einheit Wernigerode, who competes in the NOFV-Oberliga, and recently qualified for the DFB-Pokal, eventually losing to SC Paderborn 07 0-10. Wernigerode also has had an American Football club, The Mountain Tigers, since 1993. During the last 19 years this team has played in Germany's Oberliga 4 and Regionaliga 3. Since its inception, it has been a mainstay for American football in the Harz region.

Twin towns – sister cities

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Template:See also Wernigerode is twinned with:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Notable people

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Notes

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References

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Attribution:

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Template:Commons Template:Wikivoyage

Template:Cities and towns in Harz (district) Template:Borough of Wernigerode

Template:Authority control