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Porta Westfalica

Porta Westfalica

FieldValue
typeStadt
namePorta Westfalica
image_photoPorta.jpg
image_captionView over Porta Westfalica to the Weser hills
image_flagFlagge Porta Westfalica.svg
image_coaWappen von Porta Westfalica.svg
coordinates
image_planPorta Westfalica in MI.svg
stateNordrhein-Westfalen
regionDetmold
districtMinden-Lübbecke
elevation46 - 303
area105.22
postal_code32457
area_code0571, 05706, 05722, 05731, 05751
licenceMI
Gemeindeschlüssel05 7 70 032
divisions15
websitewww.portawestfalica.de
mayor
leader_term2020–25
Note

the town

Porta Westfalica () is a town in the district of Minden-Lübbecke, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

The name "Porta Westfalica" is Latin and means "gate to Westphalia". Coming from the north, the gorge is the entry to the region of Westphalia. The name was coined by scholars of the 19th century.

History

The town Porta Westfalica was established in 1973 by merging fifteen villages surrounding the gorge. The centre of the modern town is the former village of Hausberge, which was first mentioned in 1096.

The Emperor William Monument was erected near the town by the then Prussian Province of Westphalia between 1892 and 1896 The monument, which is around 88 metres high, is classified as one of Germany's national monuments.

From 18 March 1944 until 1 April 1945 a concentration camp was established in the Barkhausen quarter. From 1 February 1945 until 1 April 1945 a camp was used in the Hausberge quarter. In the Lerbeck quarter also was a concentration camp in use from 1 October 1944 until 1 April 1945. In the Neesen quarter was a location for the forced labour for some of the inmates. All of these camps were subcamps of the Neuengamme concentration camp.

On 10 January 2015, Belgian footballer Junior Malanda died in a car accident near the town, aged 20.

Geography

Porta Westfalica is situated on the right bank of the Weser (except for the Barkhausen quarter), near the Porta Westfalica gorge, where the river runs through the passage between the mountain chains of the Wiehen Hills in the west and the Weser Uplands in the east. The gorge appears like a gate to the region Westphalia, which lies to the south of it. It is overlooked by the Jakobsberg and Wittekindsberg hills.

Neighbouring places

  • Bad Oeynhausen
  • Bückeburg
  • Minden
  • Rinteln
  • Vlotho

Division of the town

The town of Porta Westfalica consists of 15 districts:

  • Hausberge (5,064 inhabitants)
  • Lohfeld (1,350 inhabitants)
  • Barkhausen (4,253 inhabitants)
  • Neesen (2,319 inhabitants)
  • Lerbeck (3,727 inhabitants)
  • Nammen (2,208 inhabitants)
  • Wülpke (606 inhabitants)
  • Kleinenbremen (2,245 inhabitants)
  • Eisbergen (3,401 inhabitants)
  • Veltheim (2,539 inhabitants)
  • Möllbergen (1,643 inhabitants)
  • Holtrup (1,048 inhabitants)
  • Vennebeck (983 inhabitants)
  • Costedt (508 inhabitants)
  • Holzhausen (4,284 inhabitants)

Buildings and structures

Monument of Kaiser Wilhelm I
  • Jakobsberg Telecommunication Tower, a TV tower with an observation deck
  • Monument to Kaiser Wilhelm I, above the gorge, near the village Barkhausen
  • Wittekindsburg, remains of an Iron Age "oppidum" (3rd – 1st century BC) and Saxon-Frankish fort (8th/9th century AD), in the Wiehen Hills near Barkhausen

Twin towns – sister cities

Porta Westfalica is twinned with:

  • GER Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg (Berlin), Germany
  • USA Waterloo, United States

References

References

  1. Information board with the title [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Porta_Westfalica,_2009-Nov_070.jpg ''Emperor William Monument''] at the northern approach to the monument at commons.wikimedia.org
  2. The camp is listed as No. 77 ''Barkhausen'' official German list.
  3. The camp is listed as No. 585 ''Hausberge a.d. Porta'' in the official German list.
  4. The camp is listed as No. 843 Lerbeck/Westfalen in the official German list.
  5. The location is listed as No. 1024 ''Neesen, Kreis Minden'', in the official German list.
  6. (10 January 2015). "Junior Malanda dies: 20-year-old Wolfsburg midfielder 'killed in car accident' on German motorway". The Independent.
  7. "Partnerstädte". Porta Westfalica.
Info: Wikipedia Source

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