Braunfels

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coordinates: 50°30′N 8°23′E

Braunfels
Coat of arms of Braunfels Location of Braunfels in Germany

Country Germany
State Hesse
Administrative region Gießen
District Lahn-Dill-Kreis
Population 11,322 (30/06/2005)
Area 47.29 km²
Population density 242 /km²
Elevation 236 m
Coordinates 50°30′ N 8°23′ E
Postal code 35619
Area code 06442
Licence plate code LDK
Mayor Dieter Schmidt (CDU)
Website Stadt Braunfels

Braunfels is a town in the Lahn-Dill-Kreis in Hesse, Germany.

Contents

The climatic spa of Braunfels lies at a height of some 100 m above the Lahn valley, 10 km west of Wetzlar. It is 9 km southwest of Wetzlar, and 28 km northeast of Limburg an der Lahn.

Braunfels borders in the northwest on the town of Leun, in the north on the town of Solms, in the east on the community of Schöffengrund, in the southeast on the community of Waldsolms (all in the Lahn-Dill-Kreis), in the south on the community of Weilmünster, and in the west on the town of Weilburg and the community of Löhnberg (all three in Limburg-Weilburg).

Besides the main town, which bears the same name as the whole, there are outlying centres called Altenkirchen, Bonbaden, Neukirchen, Philippstein and Tiefenbach

Currently, Bonbaden, a picturesque place in the Solmsbach valley, is home to about 1600 people, who maintain a very active club life. Moreover, Bonbaden has a primary school (levels 1-4) and an Evangelical and Catholic church. A cultural highlight is the Freilichtbühne Bonbaden (Bonbaden Open-Air Stage), known far and wide, which presents two different plays for children each summer, and an evening play for adults.

The town and stately seat of Braunfels were first mentioned in 1246. Braunfels has had town rights since 1607. In the course of municipal reforms, the aforesaid constituent communities, formerly all independent villages, were amalgamated with Braunfels in 1972.

Bonbaden had its first documentary mention in 772, and so celebrated 1200 years of existence in 1972. Bonbaden is therefore one of Lahn-Dill's oldest inhabited places.

Schloss Braunfels, a stately home that had been built from a castle built in the 13th century by the Counts of Nassau, served as of about 1260 as the Solms-Braunfels noble family's residential castle. After Solms Castle had been destroyed by the Rhenish League of Towns in 1384, Braunfels Castle became the seat of the Counts of Solms. Over the castle's more than 750-year-long history, building work was done many times. Particularly worthy of mention is the town and castle fire of 1679, which burnt much of Braunfels and its stately seat down. Both were then built into a Baroque residence. Schloss Braunfels was built anew out of materials that were still on hand, while the town was given a regular marketplace, still preserved today and lying before the town wall.

The municipal elections on 26 March 2006 yielded the following results:

CDU 14 seats
SPD 12 seats
FWG 5 seats
FDP 3 seats
Greens 3 seats

Note: FWG is a citizens' coalition.

The town's coat of arms is the same as that used by the Counts of Solms-Braunfels, except that the colours in the lower half are reversed, simply to differentiate the town's arms from the old noble family's. The arms were designed and granted in 1937, and granted again on 14 October 1982. Formerly, the arms were identical to the Counts' arms.[1]

Braunfels maintains partnerships with the following towns:

Schloss Braunfels
Schloss Braunfels
  • Schloss Braunfels: The last makeover, which defines the Schloss as it is seen today, took place starting in 1880, and was undertaken according to neo-Gothic plans by building master Edwin Oppler. Many works of art are to be found in the Schloss. Besides works by the Dutch Masters, among them van Eyck, are works by the Hessian Tischbein family of painters, the historically important Altenberg Altar, parts of which are found in the Städel in Frankfurt and the Bavarian National Museum in Munich, and Saint Elizabeth's legendary ring. Places worth visiting include the courtyard, the knights' hall, the guest rooms and painting gallery, the sacral exhibition pieces from the Altenberg Monastery, the hunting paintings by Johannes Deiker, and the cannon square. Other things to visit are the Princely Family Museum and the castle church with displays about the church's building history.
  • Old Town: The inner Old Town has distinctive defensive features. There are a Baroque expansion with a marketplace and great spa gardens.
  • Dr. Kanngießer'sches Waldmuseum (a whimsical museum)
  • Stadtmuseum Obermühle, a museum of local history, built in a former mill.
  • Burg Philippstein: These castle ruins lie on a slope and are separated from the surrounding mountainside by a dry moat, although nowadays this is partly filled in. Still preserved are the round keep, remains of the cellar and parts of the surrounding wall.

Every year, the local Aktionsring Braunfels e.V. organizes the Mittelalterliches Spektakulum, which over several days attracts many tourists, showmen and various "travelling folk" from all over Europe, for which occasion, the spa gardens are turned into one great knightly encampment.

  • Friedrich Ludwig Mallet, preacher of the Great Awakening
  • Gerhard Bökel, Landtag member and Hessian Interior Minister, retired
  • Friederike Fliedner, cofounder of the Women's Deaconate
  • Ewald von Kleist, Second World War field marshal
  • Dorkas Kiefer, actress
  • Sascha Müller, Nobel Prize winner

This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.


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