Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Frankenthal

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Country
  
District
  
urban district

Time zone
  
CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)

Area
  
43.78 km²

Local time
  
Thursday 10:44 AM

Dialling code
  
06233

Elevation
  
96 m (315 ft)

Postal codes
  
67227

Population
  
46,948 (31 Dec 2008)

Postal code
  
67227

Frankenthal wwwhotelroomsearchnetimcityfrankenthalgerman

Weather
  
11°C, Wind N at 3 km/h, 70% Humidity

Frankenthal (Pfalz) is a town in southwestern Germany, in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate.

Contents

Map of Frankenthal, Germany

History

Frankenthal was first mentioned in 772. In 1119 an Augustinian monastery was built here, the ruins of which — known, after the founder, as the Erkenbertruine — still stand today in the town centre.

In the second half of the 16th century, people from the Netherlands, persecuted for their religious beliefs, settled in Frankenthal. They were industrious and artistic and brought economic prosperity to the town. Some of them were important carpet weavers, jewellers and artists whose Frankenthaler Malerschule ("Frankenthal school of painting") acquired some fame. In 1577 the settlement was raised to the status of a town by the Count Palatine Johann Casimir.

In 1600 Frankenthal was converted to a fortress. In 1621 it was besieged by the Spanish during the Thirty Years' War, and then successively occupied by troops of the opposing sides. Trade and industry were ruined and the town was not reconstructed until 1682.

In 1689 the town was burnt to the ground by French troops in the War of the Grand Alliance. The town did not fully recover from this for more than fifty years.

However, in 1750, under the rule of the Elector (Kurfürst) Charles Theodore, Frankenthal was established as a centre of industry. Numerous factories were opened and mulberry trees were planted for silk production. In 1755 the famous Frankenthal porcelain factory was opened, which remained in production until 1800.

In 1797 the town came under French occupation during the French Revolutionary Wars. It passed into the rule of Bavaria in 1816.

The beginning of modern industrialisation is dated from 1859.

In 1938 the Jewish synagogue, built in 1884, was burnt to the ground during the Kristallnacht.

In 1943 during a bombing raid the centre of the town was almost completely destroyed. In 1945, at the end of World War II, its industries in ruins, it was occupied first by the Americans and then by the French.

From 1946 Frankenthal has been part of the federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate. Today the town is again the site of some medium-sized industries.

Number of inhabitants

  • 1850: 4.767
  • 1900: 16.899
  • 2000: around 50.000
  • 2015: 48.363
  • International relations

    Frankenthal is twinned with:

  • Colombes, France since October 26, 1958
  • Strausberg, Germany (Brandenburg) since October 16, 1990
  • Sopot, Poland since April 17, 1991
  • Partnership:

  • Community of Butamwa, Rwanda since December 15, 1982
  • Associated towns:

  • Berlin-Neukölln, Germany
  • Pushkin, Russia
  • Blumenau, Brazil
  • Sons and daughters of the town

  • Abraham Heidanus (1597-1678), a reformed theologian
  • Esther Moscherosch née Ackermann (1602-1632), wife of the statesman and baroque poet Johann Michael Moscherosch
  • Jacob Marrel (1614-1681), still life painter
  • Johann Philipp Becker (1809-1886), revolutionary
  • Georg Vierling (1820-1901), composer (dedication of the Vierlingstrasse )
  • Konrad Maurer (1823-1902), a Bavarian legal historian
  • Julius von Michel (1843-1911), ophthalmologist
  • Richard Reverdy (1851-1915), civil engineer
  • Karl Wendling (1857-1918), pianist and music pedagogue
  • Karl Perron (1858-1928), opera singer
  • Franz Nissl (1860-1919), neurologist and psychiatrist
  • August von Parseval (1861-1942), designer of airships (dedication of the Parsevalplatz)
  • Hermann Wilker (1874-1941), rower
  • Oskar Perron (1880-1975), mathematician
  • Ludwig Marum (1882-1934), lawyer and politician, victims of the Holocaust
  • Arnold Fanck (1889-1974), director and pioneer of the mountain film
  • Paul Martini (1889-1964), medical doctor
  • Carl Neubronner (1892-1961), politician
  • Georg Gehring (1903-1943), wrestler
  • Karl Huber (1904-1965), politician and trade unionist
  • Josef Frank (1906-1971), politician (SPD)
  • Werner Knab (1908-1945), jurist and SS leader
  • Hans Carste (1909-1971), composer and conductor
  • Adolf Metzner (1910-1978), Leichtathlet
  • Rudi Fischer (1925-2012), Football goalkeeper
  • Family name

    The family name "Frankenthal" is attested among people scattered in many countries - especially among Jews - and indicates an ultimate origin of the family in the town, though it might be centuries old and leaving no memory other than the name.

    References

    Frankenthal Wikipedia