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Sinsheim

Sinsheim

FieldValue
nameSinsheim
typeTown
image_coaWappen Sinsheim.svg
image_photoBW-Sinsheim-Pano.jpg
image_captionPanoramic view
stateBaden-Württemberg
regbzkKarlsruhe
districtRhein-Neckar-Kreis
Gemeindeschlüssel08226085
area126.99
elevation154
coordinates
image_planSinsheim in HD.svg
postal_code74871-74889
area_code07260, 07261, 07265, 07266, 07268
licenceHD
mayorMarco Siesing
leader_term2024–28
BürgermeistertitelLord Mayor
partyCDU
website
Historical buildings in the principal street
Burg Steinsberg
The monastery Stift Sunnisheim

Sinsheim (; ) is a town in southwestern Germany, in the Rhine Neckar Area of the state Baden-Württemberg about 22 km southeast of Heidelberg and about 28 km northwest of Heilbronn in the district Rhein-Neckar.

Geography

Overview

Sinsheim consists of a town centre and 12 suburbs with a total population of 36,780 (as of March 2023). Its area encompasses 127 km2. The Elsenz, an unnavigable left-bank tributary of the Neckar, flows through the town, reaching the Neckar at Neckargemünd.

Subdivisions

The list below shows the 12 suburban villages (Stadtteile). Population data was as of 31 December 2020 and the one of Sinsheim (the town proper) was of 12,914.

VillagePopulation
[[File:DEU Adersbach (Sinsheim) COA.svg20px]] Adersbach626
[[File:DEU Dühren (Sinsheim) COA.svg20px]] Dühren2,214
[[File:DEU Ehrstädt COA.svg20px]] Ehrstädt578
[[File:Wappen Eschelbach.svg20px]] Eschelbach2,222
[[File:DEU Hasselbach (Sinsheim) COA.svg20px]] Hasselbach325
[[File:DEU Hilsbach COA.svg20px]] Hilsbach2,323
VillagePopulation
[[File:DEU Hoffenheim COA.svg20px]] Hoffenheim3,310
[[File:COA Reihen.svg20px]] Reihen2,281
[[File:DEU Rohrbach (Sinsheim) COA.svg20px]] Rohrbach2,209
[[File:DEU Steinsfurt COA.svg20px]] Steinsfurt3,312
[[File:DEU Waldangelloch COA.svg20px]] Waldangelloch1,661
[[File:DEU Weiler (Sinsheim) COA.svg20px]] Weiler1,919

|}

History

The region around Sinsheim has been settled since 700,000 BC, as shown by the finding of the fossil Homo heidelbergensis in the village of Mauer, about 12 km (7 miles) north of Sinsheim. The Romans ruled the area from 90 AD to 260 AD. The city was possibly founded in about 550 AD by the Frankish nobleman Sunno. It was first historically mentioned in 770 AD in the Codex of the cloister Lorsch. Since 1192, the town had city rights, a privilege first granted by Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor.

Sinsheim was affected by wars and poverty from the 1500s to the 1700s. Sinsheim-born revolutionary Franz Sigel became a famous Union general in the American Civil War.

The Elsenz Valley Railway and Sinsheim station were opened in 1868 and the nearby Steinsfurt–Eppingen line was opened in 1900; electricity and public water pipes were introduced into the city from 1910 on. The World Wars and the Great Depression kept Sinsheim from growing until the A6 Autobahn was built in 1968. It connected Sinsheim to national and international roads, with Mannheim, Stuttgart, Frankfurt am Main, Heilbronn, Heidelberg, Ludwigshafen all now within an hour by car. While traditionally being an agricultural town, the highway made it into a small industrial centre, but it has been hit by recession and international outsourcing in recent years.

Demographics

The numbers are estimates, census results(¹) or official data of the statistical offices (only primary residences).

YearPopulation
14th centuryca. 1,200
1705823
17981,705
18522,854
1 December 18712,716
1 December 1880 ¹2,990
1 December 1890 ¹2,952
1 December 1900 ¹3,011
1 December 1910 ¹3,327
8 October 1919 ¹3,184
16 June 1925 ¹3,497
16 June 1933 ¹3,767
17 May 1939 ¹3,900
YearPopulation
December 1945 ¹4,101
13 September 1950 ¹5,860
6 June 1961 ¹6,532
27 May 1970 ¹8,056
31 December 197525,373
31 December 198026,658
27 May 1987 ¹27,454
31 December 199029,307
31 December 199532,828
31 December 200034,171
31 December 200535,524
31 December 200635,605
31 December 201135,373
31 December 201535,175
31 December 202136,177
31 March 202336,780

|} ¹ census results

Main sights

The Sinsheim Auto & Technik Museum, showing Concorde (left, background) and Tupolev Tu-144 (right, background) supersonic aircraft

Sinsheim's main tourist attraction is the Sinsheim Auto & Technik Museum situated in the suburb Steinsfurt, displaying a collection of historic vehicles to over 1 million visitors per year. In 1989, a trade fair area was established that features various industrial and popular events.

Additionally, Sinsheim has a medieval city core; the Altes Rathaus (old Town Hall) is a museum for the town and its role in the 1848 revolution. An old fortress, Burg Steinsberg in the village of Weiler, overlooks Sinsheim. With its octagonal tower, dating back to the 13th century, the fortress has sometimes been called the "compass" of the Kraichgau region, and nowadays contains a restaurant.

Sport

Stadium

Main article: Rhein-Neckar-Arena

The Rhein-Neckar-Arena

On September 19, 2006, the mayor of Sinsheim announced a stadium would be built not far from the Sinsheim Auto & Technik Museum, for the town's most successful football club TSG 1899 Hoffenheim. Construction of the €100 million stadium, which seats 30,164, was funded by Dietmar Hopp, a co-founder and major share holder of software giant SAP and a former player in the youth system of TSG 1899 Hoffenheim. The club christened their new stadium "Rhein Neckar-Arena" on 31 January 2009 with a 2–0 win over Energie Cottbus.

Twin towns – sister cities

Sinsheim is twinned with:

  • HUN Barcs, Hungary
  • FRA Longué-Jumelles, France

People

  • Hans Seyffer (c.1460–1509), stone sculptor and wood carver
  • Carl Friedrich Schuster (1823–1891], German politician, lord mayor of Freiburg im Breisgau and member of the Reichstag
  • Franz Sigel (1824–1902), U.S. Army General in the American Civil War.
  • August Karolus (1893–1972), professor and physicist who conducted fundamental research in television technology
  • Franz Bachelin (1895–1980), German art director.
  • Emil Rupp (1898–1979), German physicist and imposter
  • David Heinz Gumbel (1906–1992), Israeli designer and silversmith born in Sinsheim
  • Walter Horn (1908–1995), German-American medievalist scholar
  • Wilhelm Bauer (1924–2013), local history reasearcher and honorary citizen of Sinsheim
  • Volker Kauder (born 1949), German politician (CDU)
  • Matto Barfuss (born 1970), artist, photographer, filmmaker environmentalist and author
  • Roland Wester (born 1971), professor and physicist
  • Ulrich Lechte (born 1977), German politician (FDP)

Sport

  • Christian Eichner (born 1982), football player and manager, played 230 games
  • Matthias Krieger (born 1984), a paralympic judoka and bronze medallist at the 2012 Summer Paralympics.
  • Sarai Linder (born 1999), footballer, played 12 games for the Germany women's national football team
  • Andreas Müller (born 2000), footballer

Music

  • Liquido (1996-2009), rock band

References

References

  1. [https://www.staatsanzeiger.de/wahl/oberbuergermeisterwahl-sinsheim-2024/ Oberbürgermeisterwahl Sinsheim 2024], Staatsanzeiger, accessed 27 May 2025.
  2. {{in lang. de [https://www.sinsheim.de/stadt-info/stadtteile Stadtteile: Stadt Sinsheim (municipal website)]
  3. {{in lang. de [https://www.sinsheim.de/fileadmin/Dateien/Website/Dateien/Stadt___Info/Bevo__lkerungsstatistik_der_Stadt_Sinsheim.pdf Bevölkerungsstatistik der Stadt Sinsheim (Population statistics of Sinsheim)]
  4. "Partnerstädte". Sinsheim.
  5. {{Cite EB1911
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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