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Alfeld

Alfeld

FieldValue
typeStadt
image_coaDEU Alfeld (Leine) COA.png
image_photoAlfeld Rathaus 1 2005.jpg
image_captionAlfeld town hall, behind St. Nicolai
coordinates
image_planAlfeld (Leine) in HI.svg
stateNiedersachsen
districtHildesheim
elevation145
area72.88
Gemeindeschlüssel03254002
postal_code31061
area_code05181
licenceHI, ALF
websitewww.alfeld.de
mayorBernd Beushausen
leader_term2021–26
partySPD

Alfeld (Leine) () is a town in the state of Lower Saxony, Germany. Located on the Leine river and situated approximately 20 km southwest of Hildesheim, it is the second biggest city in the district of Hildesheim in southern Lower Saxony and part of the Metropolitan region Hannover-Braunschweig-Göttingen-Wolfsburg. Alfeld is a member of the Leinebergland region and on the German Timber-Frame Road. With the Fagus Factory, Alfeld became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2011.

History

The town was founded before 1214, with the name Alvelde recorded in 1214, 1221, and 1233. The toponymic element "-feld" means "open area", "an undeveloped, open field", or "an untilled field". "Al-" likely derives from the Indoeuropean root "el-/ol-" meaning "water", "damp", or "flowing".

In 1426, Alfeld joined the Saxon League of Towns, thus becoming an indirect member of the Hanseatic League. The town was one of the smallest cities in the Hanseatic League, but had become prosperous in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries through its trade in beer, hops, linen, and yarn.

Alfeld originally belonged to the Diocese of Hildesheim, but was transferred to the Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel after the Hildesheim Diocesan Feud (1519-1523). In retrospect, this Brunswick period constituted Alfeld's Golden Age, its economy and culture flourishing before the Thirty Years' War.

Main Sights

Sights in Alfeld include the town hall (1586) with its octagonal tower, the twin-spired church of Saint Nicolai (part of the Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Hanover), the Fillerturm (a medieval watchtower), and the Fagus Factory of 1911, a fine example of early modernist architecture by Walter Gropius. More famous are the Seven Hills (German: Sieben Berge) in the north and the Lippoldshöhle ("Lippold's cave"), where a legendary robber-knight is said to have lived.

Culture

The assertion that the popular fairy tale of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was born in Alfeld is likely to be false. Even though the miners who mined ore in the Seven Mountains believed in the existence of dwarfs, it is more likely that the cradle of the fairy tale is to be found in France. The version the brothers Grimm heard and wrote down, as they travelled through the Seven Mountains, on the so-called Märchenstrasse (Street of Fairytales) is just one of many.

The most popular beer in Alfeld is Einbecker Brauherrn, from Einbeck, about 12 kilometers or so, away, south of Alfeld. Veltins Pilsner, Flensberger Pils and Gottinger Pils are also popular beers in Alfeld.

Economy

Marktstraße

The biggest employer of the city is the SAPPI (South African Pulp and Paper Industry) factory with its big chimney, which has become one of Alfeld's landmarks. Even more famous than SAPPI is the Fagus Werk, rebuilt in 1910-1915 after the blueprints of architect Walter-Gropius, what is said to be trend-setting for modern architecture.

International relations

Alfeld is twinned with:

  • UK Wakefield, United Kingdom

Notable people

  • Augustine of Alfeld (1480–1535), Franciscan and controversial theologian
  • Walter Kappe (1905–1944), German Nazi, who, as an emigrant in the US in the 1930s, created propaganda and committed espionage in service of Nazism
  • Uwe Schmidt (born 1954), German politician (SPD) and since July 2009, head of the district Kassel
  • Albrecht von Goertz (1914–2006), German industrial designer
  • Zbigniew Żedzicki (born 1945), Polish wrestler

References

References

  1. (13 October 2021). "Stichwahlen zu Direktwahlen in Niedersachsen vom 26. September 2021". [[Landesamt für Statistik Niedersachsen]].
  2. "Wakefield's twin towns". Wakefield City Council.
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