Tauberbischofsheim

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Tauberbischofsheim
Centre of the town with the tower and castle
Centre of the town with the tower and castle
Coat of arms of Tauberbischofsheim
Coat of arms
Tauberbischofsheim   is located in Germany
Tauberbischofsheim
Tauberbischofsheim
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Location of Tauberbischofsheim within Main-Tauber-Kreis district
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Country Germany
State Baden-Württemberg
Admin. region Stuttgart
District Main-Tauber-Kreis
Government
 • Mayor Wolfgang Vockel
Area
 • Total 69.31 km2 (26.76 sq mi)
Population (2013-12-31)[1]
 • Total 12,705
 • Density 180/km2 (470/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 97941
Dialling codes 09341
Vehicle registration TBB, MGH
Website www.tauberbischofsheim.de

Tauberbischofsheim is a German town in the north-east of Baden-Württemberg on the river Tauber with a population of about 12,700 (2013). It is the capital of the Main-Tauber district.

Some relics of the medieval city wall, particularly a tower called Türmersturm can be viewed.

For many years the town was home to the Tauberbischofsheim altarpiece, a monumental piece of German renaissance art by Master Mathis now kept in the Karlsruhe Kunsthalle.

Tauberbischofsheim is famous for its fencers, who have won several Olympic medals and world championships.[2]

Geography

Location

Tauberbischofsheim is located in the Tauberfranken region of Franconia.

Constituent Communities

Tauberbischofsheim consists of the town of Tauberbischofsheim, as well as Dienstadt, Distelhausen, Dittigheim, Dittwar, Hochhausen and Impfingen.[3] The boundaries of these districts are the same as that of the former municipalities of the same name.

History

Protohistory

Around 3000 B.C. and before the area was arealdy settled (prehistoric finds).

Middle Ages

The town was first mentioned in a biography of Saint Lioba in 836. It bears its name ("bishop's place") due to its close relation to bishop Saint Boniface. Boniface brought his relative Lioba to the town around 735, where she became abbess of a monastery. Boniface founded the convent at Bischofsheim. In 1180 the town's oldest building, the Chapel of S. Peter, was built. Between 1237 and 1245 town rights were granted to Tauberbischofsheim. Around 1280 the Türmersturm-tower and the Kurmainz Castle were constructed. 1318 the Bischofsheim market was mentioned in official records.

16th to 18th century

From 1525 to 1627 the town denied self-rule after taking part in the Peasants' War. New municipal laws were introduced by Archbishop Albrecht of Mainz severely restricting citizens' rights. In 1629 Franciscan monks settled in Bischofsheim. From 1631 to 1635 Bischofsheim was under Swedish occupation. In 1688 a Latin school founded by the Franciscans. Later the school became the Matthias-Grünewald Grammar School.

19th century

In 1803 Bischofsheim placed under the rule of the Prince of Leiningen, after having been part of Kurmainz for over 560 years. In 1806 Bischofsheim joins the newly created Grand Duchy of Baden. In 1823 there was the dissolution of the Franciscan monastery (Klosterhof). Around 1850 the town becomes known as Tauberbischofsheim. To distinguish the town from other towns named Bischofsheim, the name of the river Tauber was added to the name. The new town hall was built between 1865 and 1867. In 1866, a battle in the Austro-Prussian War takes place in and around Tauberbischofsheim between troops from Württemberg and Prussia. Between 1894-95 the "Christuskirche" was built as a protestant church. From 1910 to 1914 the Catholic Church of St. Martin was reconstructed.

Coat of Arms

In a red shield is a silver-white helmet crested by a wheel with seven spokes and attached by four ribbons ending in roses, all of the same colour.[4][5] According to source the archbishopric of Mainz gained the village of Tauberbischofsheim in 1237 and the fiefdom of a castle in 1316. The archbishops were rulers of the city until 1802. The helmet is symbolizing this fiefdom. The image was taken from seals and was not changed until 1740. 1865 some elements had been added. Over time, the old version was re-established.[5]

File:Tauberbischofsheim-Panorama.jpg
A panorama of Tauberbischofsheim.

Districts

The six districts were incorporated to Tauberbischofsheim during the local government reform in Baden-Württemberg in the 1970s:

  • July 1, 1971: Hochhausen and Impfingen
  • January 1, 1972: Dienstadt
  • January 1, 1975: Distelhausen, Dittigheim and Dittwar

Dienstadt

Dienstadt has 335 residents and is located west of Tauberbischofsheim.

Dienstadt was first mentioned in 1314 as Diestadt, in 1341 it was renamed Dienstadt.

Distelhausen

Distelhausen has 983 residents and is located south of Tauberbischofsheim.

Distelhausen is home to the Distelhäuser Brewery.[6]

Dittigheim

Dittigheim has 1042 residents and is located south of Tauberbischofsheim. Prehistoric grave finds from the Neolithic period show that the area has been inhabited for 4000 years. Dittigheim was first mentioned in 772. Dittigheim is home to the baroque church of St. Vitus, which was built in 1748 by Balthasar Neumann, and several ornate shrines.

Dittwar

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Dittwar has 788 residents and is located south-west of Tauberbischofsheim. Dittwar was first mentioned in 1169 as Ditebure (dit (mhd) = people / common / usually; bure (mhd) = farmer / neighbour) . The name evolved to Dydebuor in 1343, Dytbuer in 1368, Dietbur in 1371, Dytewure in 1383, Dietwar in 1407, and finally Dittwar in 1615. The first mention Dittwar is related to the donation of the Castrum Dietebure by Count Henricus de Luden to the Prince-Bishop of Würzburg.

Hochhausen

Hochhausen has 788 residents and is located north of Tauberbischofsheim. Hochhausen was first mentioned in 780 in the Codex Eberhardi and the first written record of high Hausen dates back to 1149.

Impfingen

Impfingen has 788 residents and is located north of Tauberbischofsheim.

Culture

Architecture

In the old town, which was formerly surrounded by a wall, there are many historical buildings. The Tauberbischofsheim Castle dates back to second half of the 13th century. The marketplace is encircled by Half-Timbered houses and the Neo-Gothic town hall. The parish church of St. Martin (German: Stadtpfarrkirche St. Martin) was completed in 1914 after its predecessor burnt down. The Neo-Gothic church contains works of art from many past churches including an altar from the Ulmer workshop of Niklaus Weckmann the Elder with panel paintings by Hans Schäufelein, a Madonna by Hans Multscher and a copy of the Tauberbischofsheim altarpiece by Matthias Grünewald. The oldest church in the city is the Peterskapelle, built in the 12th century. The Badischer Hof (in English Court of Baden) is the oldest hotel in Tauberbischofsheim. It was built in 1733.

File:TBB Rathaus 2.jpg
The town hall.
File:Stadtkirche Tauberbischofsheim 01.JPG
Stadtpfarrkirche St. Martin

Tourism

Tauberbischofsheim is part of the Romantic Road (German: Romantische Straße), a highway that connects many scenic cities and towns. The Romantic Road is the oldest and one of the most scenic routes in Germany. Tauberbischofsheim is also part of the Siegfried road. Both roads lead past many sights.[7]

The Taubertalradweg along the Tauber River connects Tauberbischofsheim in one direction with Bad Mergentheim and Rothenburg ob der Tauber (in the other direction with Wertheim).

The solar-heated "Frankenbad" (in English: Franconia-pool) as a municipal swimming pool consists of a non-swimmer area with a large water slide and a 50 meter long swimming area with several starting blocks, a one-meter springboard and a three-meter springboard. For children, the bathroom offers an experience paddling pool with slide and water play facilities. [8]

The hospital Tauberbischofsheim has a public indoor pool with sauna and exercise pool.[9]

Museums

In Tauberbischofsheim and its suburbs there are the following museums:

  • Pharmacy Museum in the former pharmacy building at the sun place, Tauberbischofsheim[10]
  • Farm Museum, Distelhausen[11]
  • Village Museum, Dittwar[12]
  • Village Museum, Impfingen[3]
  • School Furniture Museum, Tauberbischofsheim[13]
  • Tauber Franconian countryside museum in the Kurmainz Castle, Tauberbischofsheim[14]

Regular events

In May is traditionally a "Maypole Festival" at Wörth place. In the same month there is a "Italian Night" at the market place.[15]

The "Tauberbischofsheimer Altstadtfest" (old town festival) is traditionally on the first weekend of July (Friday to Sunday).[16]

During Advent, the traditional "Tauberbischofsheim Christmas Market" is a popular meeting place on the castle square.[17]

Culinary specialties

Tauberbischofsheim and its neighborhoods are characterized in the lowlands by extensive natural fruit and wine growing areas. Among this Tauber valley wines and sparkling wines are produced. Also beers (in the Distelhäuser brewery in the district Distelhausen), precious fruit brandies, regional cider and apple juice are produced. In the catering industry, in addition to country inns and village restaurants with simple dishes (such as Vespers with homemade specialties), there is also fine dining. On the menus you will find regional specialties such as Tauber-trout, Boeuf de Hohenlohe, Tauber valley country pig products, Tauber valley lamb and regional Grünkern.[18]

Sports

File:Olympiastützpunkt Tauberbischofsheim (2013) - Eingang.JPG
Entrance of the Fencing-Club Tauberbischofheim's training camp

Fencing-City Tauberbischofsheim

The Fencing-Club Tauberbischofsheim[19] (commonly known as FC Tauberbischofsheim) is the most successful fencing club in the world, based on its medal successes in international sporting events.[2] The medalists were among others: Thomas Bach, Matthias Behr, Anja Fichtel, Zita Funkenhauser, Jürgen Hehn, Harald Hein and Alexander Pusch.[20][21] The FC Tauberbischofsheim is based in the Olympic team's training camp Tauberbischofsheim for the sport of fencing.[22]

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Other sports

The TSV 1863 Tauberbischofsheim e. V is a popular sports club with 2.304 members (point of time: 2 October 2014) with eleven different departments for the following sports:[23]

  • Football (soccer)
  • Judo
  • Gymnastics
  • Badminton
  • Basketball
  • Table tennis
  • Tennis
  • Rock n roll
  • Volleyball
  • Handball
  • Karate

Economy

Education

City grammar schools in Tauberbischofsheim are the Christian-Morgenstern-Grundschule and the Grundschule am Schloss.

As far as general education is concerned, Tauberbischofsheim operates one college-track highschool or gymnasium (Matthias-Grünewald-Gymnasium) and two non-college-track highschools or Realschulen (Riemenschneider-Realschule, Pestalozzi-Werkrealschule). There is also one special-education school run by the city (Christophorus-Förderschule).

The Kaufmännische Schule Tauberbischofsheim (with Wirtschaftsgymnasium) and the Gewerbliche Schule Tauberbischofsheim are vocational schools or professional training schools run by the Main-Tauber-Kreis county.

Finally, the following private schools round out the education options offered in Heilbronn: Volkshochschule Mittleres Taubertal e.V. and Euro Akademie Tauberischofsheim.

People from Tauberbischofsheim

Honorary citizen

Other people

References

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  3. 3.0 3.1 Stadt Tauberbischofsheim: Die Stadtteile der Kreisstadt Tauberbischofsheim. Online auf www.tauberbischofsheim.de. Abgerufen am 19. Oktober 2014.
  4. Zier, Hans Georg; Kastner, Julius Friedich: Wappenbuch des Landkreises Tauberbischofsheim, Fränkische Nachrichten, Tauberbischofsheim 1967.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Fahnenversand: Coat of Arms of Tauberbischofsheim. www.fahnenversand.de. 22 May 2015.
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  7. Corinna Egerer, Michael Latzel: Tauberbischofsheim, Fränkische Nachrichten, Tauberbischofsheim 2005, page 139.
  8. Stadt Tauberbischofsheim: Frankenbad. Online auf www.tauberbischofsheim.de. Abgerufen am 23. Mai 2015.
  9. Main-Tauber-Kreis: Hallenbad in Tauberbischofsheim. Online auf www.main-tauber-kreis.de. Abgerufen am 23. Mai 2015.
  10. fnweb: Reformhaus schließt seine Pforten. Online auf fnweb.de. 17. März 2012.
  11. Bauernhofmuseum: Willkommen im Bauernhofmuseum-Distelhausen. Online auf bauernhofmuseum-distelhausen.de. Abgerufen am 20. Mai 2014.
  12. Heimat- und Kulturverein Dittwar e.V.: Dorfmuseum. Online auf hkvdittwar.de. Abgerufen am 13. Oktober 2014.
  13. Wettin-Verlag – Werner M. Dienel: Hohenlohe-Franken „Das Schulmöbel-Museum“. Online auf museen-in-hohenlohe-franken.de. Abgerufen am 20. Mai 2014.
  14. Stadt Tauberbischofsheim: Tauberfränkisches Landschaftsmuseum im Kurmainzischen Schloss. Online auf tauberbischofsheim.de. Abgerufen am 20. Mai 2014.
  15. Main-Post: Bella Italia auf dem Marktplatz. Online auf www.mainpost.de. 1. Juni 2014. Abgerufen am 13. Mai 2015.
  16. Stadt Tauberbischofsheim: Altstadtfest. Online auf www.tauberbischofsheim.de. Abgerufen am 9. November 2014.
  17. Weihnachtsmärkte Deutschland: Tauberbischofsheimer Weihnachtsmarkt. Online auf www.weihnachtsmarkt-deutschland.de. Abgerufen am 13. Mai 2015.
  18. Liebliches Taubertal: Kulinarisches Profil. Online auf www.liebliches-taubertal.de. Abgerufen am 13. Mai 2015.
  19. Vereinsregistereintragung VR67 beim Amtsgericht Tauberbischofsheim
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  23. TSV 1863 Tauberbischofsheim e. V.: TSV 1863 Tauberbischofsheim e. V. - Übersicht. Online auf www.tsv-tauberbischofsheim.de. Abgerufen am 4. Mai 2015.
  24. de:Emil Beck (Fechttrainer)

Further reading

Specialised books, scientific books
  • Gerhard Finger, Erwin Heisswolf, Albert Krämer, Helmuth Lauf, Edgar Münch, Roland Veith: Tauberfranken: Lebensformen und Gesellschaftsordnung im Mittelalter. Fränkische Nachrichten, Tauberbischofsheim 1998, ISBN 3-924780-32-3.
  • Carlheinz Gräter: Tauberbischofsheim. Fränkisch-Schwäbischer Heimatverlag, Oettingen 1968.
  • Julius Berberich: Geschichte der Stadt Tauberbischofsheim und des Amtsbezirks. Mit einem Stadtplane vom Jahre 1790. M. Zöller’s Buchhandlung und Buchdruckerei, Tauberbischofsheim 1895 (Faksimile-Druck: Fränkische Nachrichten Druck- und Verlags-GmbH, Tauberbischofsheim 1984).
  • Hugo Stang, Anton Ullrich, Wilhelm Ogiermann, Josef Kiefer, August Haun: Tauberbischofsheim. Aus der Geschichte einer alten Amtsstadt. Eigenverlag der Stadtverwaltung, Tauberbischofsheim 1955 (Chronik ohne die Zeit 1600 bis 1800).
  • Gernot Wamser: Tauberbischofsheim. Sutton, Erfurt 2005, ISBN 3-89702-895-6.
  • Corinna Egerer, Michael Latzel: Tauberbischofsheim. Fränkische Nachrichten, Tauberbischofsheim 2005, ISBN 3-924780-48-X.
  • Franz Gehrig, Hermann Müller: Tauberbischofsheim. Verein Tauberfränkische Heimatfreunde e. V., Tauberbischofsheim 1997 (Schwerpunkt der Chronik: 1600 bis 1900).
  • Dietrich Barsch, Werner Fricke, Peter Meusburger, Ulrich Wagner: Tauberbischofsheim und Bad Mergentheim. Eine Analyse der Raumbeziehungen zweier Städte in der frühen Neuzeit. Universität Heidelberg: Geographisches Institut, Heidelberg 1985, ISBN 3-88570-074-3.
  • Emil Beck (Editor), Berndt Barth (Editor): The Complete Guide to Fencing, 366 pages, Publisher Meyer & Meyer, Aachen 2006, ISBN 978-1841261911.
  • Manfred Maninger: Chronik der Gemeinde Dittwar. Heimat- und Kulturverein Dittwar e. V., Dittwar 1968.
  • Elmar Weiß: Dittigheim: Eine alte Siedlung im Taubertal. Interessengemeinschaft Heimatbuch Dittigheim, Tauberbischofsheim 1987.
Guides and maps
  • Landesamt für Geoinformation und Landentwicklung Baden-Württemberg: Tauberbischofsheim: Bauland Unteres Taubertal. Landkarte. Freizeitkarte 1:50.000. LGL, Stuttgart 2009, ISBN 978-3-89021-605-8.
  • Landesamt für Geoinformation und Landentwicklung Baden-Württemberg: Bad Mergentheim Tauberbischofsheim: Wanderkarte. Landkarte 1:35.000. LGL, Stuttgart 2009, ISBN 978-3-89021-776-5.
  • Südwestrundfunk (Hrsg.): Tour de Ländle 2012 : 27. Juli bis 3. August - die komplette Route von Tauberbischofsheim bis zum Europa-Park in Rust. Hampp-Verlag, Stuttgart 2012, ISBN 978-3-942561-14-3.
  • Bikeline: Liebliches Taubertal: Der Klassiker - Der Sportive: Zwischen Rothenburg ob der Tauber und Wertheim. Esterbauer, Rodingersdorf 2013, ISBN 978-3-85000-463-3.
Fairy tales and legends
  • Hans Werner Siegel (Hrsg.), Hugo Pahl: Zwischen Tag und Dunkel: Sagen u. Geschichten aus dem Taubergrund. Verein Tauberfränkische Heimatfreunde e.V., Tauberbischofsheim 1982.
Directory and bibliography
  • Richard Möll: Die Fecht-Legende von Tauberbischofsheim. Verlag Laub, Elztal-Dallau 1987, ISBN 3-88260-033-0.
  • Claudia Wieland, Peter Müller: Hospital Tauberbischofsheim 1333–1965: Inventar des Bestands LRA 50 im Archiv des Main-Tauber-Kreises. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2000, ISBN 3-17-016063-X.
  • Thomas Müller, Romana Schneider: Das Klassenzimmer vom Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts bis heute / The classroom from the late 19th century until the present day: Das Katalogbuch zum VS-Schulmuseum in Tauberbischofsheim. Wasmuth, Tübingen 2010, ISBN 978-3-8030-3348-2. (englisch)
Fiction
  • Reiner Röber: Tot auf dem Schlossplatz: Ein Tauberfrankenkrimi. TRIGA - Der Verlag Gerlinde Heß, Gründau-Rothenbergen 2012, ISBN 978-3-89774-839-2.

External links