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Cham, Germany

Cham, Germany

FieldValue
typeStadt
nameCham
image_coaDEU Cham COA.svg
image_photoAerial image of Cham (view from the southeast).jpg
image_captionAerial view of Cham
coordinates
image_planCham in CHA.svg
stateBayern
regionOberpfalz
districtCham
elevation370
area80.69
postal_code93413
area_code0 99 71
licenceCHA
Gemeindeschlüssel09 3 72 116
divisions53 Stadtteile
website
mayorMartin Stoiber
leader_term2020–26
partyCSU

Cham (; ) is the capital of the district of Cham in the Upper Palatinate in Bavaria in Germany.

Location

Cham lies within the Cham-Furth lowland, which is bordered on the south by the Bavarian Forest and on the north by the Oberpfälzer Wald. The city lies on the Regen River, which joins the Danube at Regensburg.

Etymology

The name Cham is of Celtic origin and probably means "bend" or "curvature". In fact, a few kilometers from the city, a winding stream called the Chamb flows into the Regen; it probably gave its name to Cham, the first settlement at the bend of the larger river. Alternatively, the name may have derived from Kamm (comb). The city's coat of arms contains a comb. A partner city, also named "Cham" in Switzerland, is actually pronounced with an initial "ch" sound (Ach-Laut), whereas Bavarian Cham is pronounced with a .

History

Monks from Regensburg founded the Marienmünster, the first and oldest church in the Bavarian forest, at Chammünster in the 8th century. The first reference to Cham as a city appears in 976. An imperial castle of the Holy Roman Empire stood on the Galgenberg (German: "gallows hill"), providing protection for the trade route into Bohemia. Cham was granted its own currency in around 1000, the so-called Cham Denar. The 12th century saw the town's location shifted to its current place. The Hussite Wars of the 15th century inflicted great hardships on the townspeople. In 1742, the Pandur troops of Franz Freiherr von der Trenck overran and destroyed the city.

Cham's first railway connection came in 1861. On April 18, 1945, a British air raid on the western part of Cham caused 63 deaths. The arrival of numerous German war refugees from Silesia and the Sudetenland swelled Cham's population from 5,860 to over 10,000.

The father of the French resistance fighter Jeannette Guyot, Jean-Marie Guyot, who likewise was a member of the resistance, was arrested in early 1944 and transported to Cham, where he died.

International relations

Main article: List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany

Cham is twinned with:

  • Cham, Switzerland Switzerland
  • Klatovy, Czech Czech Republic
  • Gainsborough, UK Great Britain
  • Zele, Belgium Belgium

Notable people

Nicolas Luckner
  • Anne of Bohemia (1323–1338), a sister of Emperor Charles IV, later Duchess consort of Austria, Styria and Carinthia
  • Nicolas Luckner (1722–1794), Marshal of France, to whom the Marseillaise was dedicated
  • Karl Stern (1906–1975), professor of neurology and psychiatry, author; a street in Cham is named after him.
  • Fritz Zängl (1914–1942), German skier, born in Katzbach, now Cham
  • Ernie Stautner (1925–2006), German-born American football coach and poker player
  • Wolfgang Gedeon (born 1947), physician, author and politician (AfD)
  • Max Deml (born 1957), publisher, writer, entrepreneur
  • Max Schierer (1970–2019), businessman, politician
  • Gerhard Hopp (born 1981), politician
  • Christoph Janker (born 1985), football defender
  • Jo Lindner (1991–2023), social media influencer
  • Leony (born 1997), singer-songwriter

References

References

  1. [https://www.statistik.bayern.de/wahlen/kommunalwahlen/bgm/ Liste der ersten Bürgermeister/Oberbürgermeister in kreisangehörigen Gemeinden], [[Bayerisches Landesamt für Statistik]], 15 July 2021.
  2. "Obituary: Jeannette Guyot, French Resistance fighter".
  3. (26 April 2016). "Jeannette Guyot, Free French agent – obituary". The Telegraph.
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