Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Lackenbach

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Country
  
Austria

District
  
Oberpullendorf

Vehicle registration
  
OP

Area
  
18.1 km²

Population
  
1,114 (1 Apr 2009)

Area code
  
02619

State
  
Burgenland

Time zone
  
CET (UTC+1)

Elevation
  
313 m

Local time
  
Friday 10:41 PM

Postal code
  
7322

Lackenbach wwwreiseinfohuonlinepicgallery3635435364x

Weather
  
5°C, Wind NW at 23 km/h, 71% Humidity

Lackenbach (Hungarian: Lakompak, Croatian: Lakimpuh) is an Austrian municipality in the District of Oberpullendorf, Burgenland.

Contents

Map of Lackenbach, Austria

Geography

Lackenbach lies in the Oberpullendorf District, the Middle Burgenland and is not divided into any districts.

History

Between 1548 and 1552, Lackenbach was developed as a fort. After 1670-71 many Jews from Vienna settled there. From the 18th century, Lackenbach belonged to Prince Esterházy's Siebengemeinden where the Jews had their own autonomous administration.

The town, like the rest of Burgenland, belonged to the Kingdom of Hungary until 1920-21. After the end of the First World War, the western border area of Hungary was awarded to Austria by the Treaties of St. Germain and Trianon. Since 1921, the town has belonged to the newly founded State of Burgenland.

In 1940, a "Gypsy-Anhaltelager" was established on municipal territory at a former estate of the Esterházys. The inmates, mainly Romani from Burgenland, were made to do forced labor and, starting in 1943, were partially deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau where they were murdered. At the end of March 1945, the camp's administrators fled the approaching Red Army, so there were never any evacuation marches.

Politics

Lackenbach's mayor is Ing. Heinrich Dorner of the SPÖ, and its vice-mayor is Gerhard Wukovits of the ÖVP. The chief officer is Christian Janitsch.

The mandate assignments in the Municipal Council (19 seats) are SPÖ 11, ÖVP 8, FPÖ 0, Grüne 0, and other lists 0.

Notable residents

  • Julius Deutsch, Austrian politician born here
  • Rudolf Sarközi, Romani community leader, born in the Lackenbach concentration camp
  • Shalom Ullmann, Bavaria-born rabbi, lived and died here
  • References

    Lackenbach Wikipedia