Barsinghausen
Barsinghausen | |
---|---|
Location of Barsinghausen within Hanover district | |
Coordinates:52°18′0″N9°28′52″E/ 52.30000°N 9.48111°E | |
Country | Germany |
State | Lower Saxony |
District | Hanover |
Subdivisions | 18 district |
Government | |
•Mayor(2020–25) | Henning Schünhof[1](SPD) |
Area | |
• Total | 102.65 km2(39.63 sq mi) |
Elevation | 142 m (466 ft) |
Population (2022-12-31)[2] | |
• Total | 35,156 |
• Density | 340/km2(890/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+01:00(CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+02:00(CEST) |
Postal codes | 30890 |
Dialling codes | 05105 |
Vehicle registration | H |
Website | www.barsinghausen.de |
Barsinghausen(German pronunciation:[ˌbaʁzɪŋˈhaʊ̯zn̩]) is a town in thedistrict of Hanover,inLower Saxony,Germany.It is situated at theDeisterchain of hills approx. 20 km west ofHanover.Barsinghausen belongs to the historic landscapeCalenberg Landand was first mentioned in 1193.
Geography
[edit]Neighbouring places
[edit]Barsinghausen adjoinsWunstorf,Seelze,Gehrden,Springe,Bad NenndorfandWennigsen.
Division of the town
[edit]Barsinghausen consists of 18 districts: Bantorf, Barrigsen, Barsinghausen, Eckerde, Egestorf, Göxe, Großgoltern, Nordgoltern, Groß Munzel, Hohenbostel, Holtensen, Kirchdorf, Landringhausen, Langreder, Ostermunzel, Stemmen, Wichtringhausen, Winninghausen
History
[edit]Barsinghausen is the site of an olddouble monastery( “Kloster Barsinghausen” ) that was established during theHigh Middle Ages.At that time, fertileloesssoil and a number of influent streams to riverSüdaueconstituted a central fundament for farming and numerous windmills inCalenberg Land.Barsinghausen became a coal mining town between 1871 and 1957. AfterWorld War II,other sectors of industry began to dominate Barsinghausen's economy.
Population development
[edit](each time at 31 December)
- 1998 – 34,743
- 1999 – 34,648
- 2000 – 34,497
- 2001 – 34,408
- 2002 – 34,370
- 2003 – 34,376
- 2004 – 34,253
Sights
[edit]Barsinghausen is home to "Kloster Barsinghausen", a nunnery first mentioned in 1193 (now aLutheran women's convent,to Monastery Church St. Mary ( "Marienkirche" ), to the Deister Open Air Theater ( “Deister Freilichtbühne” ), to the exhibition mine “Klosterstollen”, to Sport Hotel Fuchsbachtal and to Lower Saxony's Soccer Association. TheColossus of Ostermunzelis a glacial erratic qualified as anatural monument.[3]Its large size is abnormal, particularly for northern Germany and especially for Lower Saxony.[4]
Education
[edit]Elementary schools
[edit]- Adolf-Grimme-Schule
- Wilhelm-Stedler-Schule
- Ernst-Reuter-Schule
- Astrid-Lindgren-Schule
- Albert-Schweitzer-Schule
- Grundschule Groß Munzel
- Grundschule Hohenbostel
- Grundschule Bantorf
Secondary schools
[edit]Special schools
[edit]- Bert-Brecht-Schule (Special educationschool)
- VHS (Volkshochschule –Adult high school) Calenberger Land
Twin towns – sister cities
[edit]Barsinghausen istwinnedwith:[5]
- Brzeg Dolny,Poland
- Kovel,Ukraine
- Mont-Saint-Aignan,France
- Wurzen,Germany
Notable people
[edit]- Hartmut Andryczuk, publisher
- Fritz Brase(1875–1940), military musician and composer
- Herbert Lattmann(born 1944), former member of the Bundestag (CDU)
- Kurt Sohns(1907–1990), painter, artist, professor at the Technical University of Hanover
Associated with the town
[edit]- Heinz Erhardt(1909–1979), actor and comedian, attended from 1919 to 1924 a boarding school in Barsinghausen
- Herbert Gruhl(1921–1993), politician and author (Ein Planet wird geplündert,1975)
- Hans-Joachim Mack(1928–2008), General of the Bundeswehr
- Robert Schulz (1900–1974), SS brigade leader in Nazism, member of the Reichstag, lived and worked after 1945 as a civil servant in Barsinghausen
- Colonel Ernst Poten (1785–1838), prominent cavalry leader (1808–1815) in the King's German Legion in Portugal, Spain, France and at Waterloo and later in theHanoverian Army.
- August Heinrich Walter Münstermann (1931–2007), founder of Pelikan Company in Mexico. Writer and Journalist of Wochenblatt in the region of Schaumburg, Niedersachsen.
References
[edit]- ^"Verzeichnis der direkt gewählten Bürgermeister/-innen und Landräte/Landrätinnen".Landesamt für Statistik Niedersachsen.April 2021.
- ^"LSN-Online Regionaldatenbank, Tabelle A100001G: Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes, Stand 31. Dezember 2022"(in German).Landesamt für Statistik Niedersachsen.
- ^Wie ein Milliarden Jahre alter Stein die Geheimnisse der Eiszeit lösen könntein focus.de of 16 March 2015
- ^Klaus Abelmann:Gehoben und verschoben: Der Findling von Ostermunzelin: Deisterjournal.
- ^"Partnerstädte".barsinghausen.de(in German). Barsinghausen.Retrieved2021-02-04.
External links
[edit]- Official website(in German)