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Results for Ansbach
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| Ansbach | |
| Coat of arms | Location |
| Administration | |
| Country | |
|---|---|
| State | Bavaria |
| Admin. region | Middle Franconia |
| District | Urban district |
| Lord Mayor | Ralf Felber (SPD) |
| Basic statistics | |
| Area | km² ( sq mi) |
| Elevation | m (1329 ft) |
| Population |
Please give "Stand or population_as_of" in YYYY-MM-DD format , e. g.
2005-12-31
|
| - Density | /km² ( /sq mi) |
| Other information | |
| Time zone | CET/CEST ([[UTC+1]]/[[UTC+2|+2]]) |
| Licence plate | AN |
| Postal code | 91522 |
| Area code | 0981 |
| Website | www.ansbach.de |
Ansbach, or Anspach, originally Onolzbach, is a town in Bavaria, Germany. It is the capital of the administrative region of Middle Franconia. Ansbach is situated 25 miles southwest of Nuremberg and 90 miles north of Munich, on the Fränkische Rezat, a tributary of the Main river. Population: 40.723 (2004).
The city has five schools. It is connected by motorway A6 and routes B13 and B14.
A Benedictine monastery at the place was founded around 748 by a Franconian noble, Gumbertus, who was later canonized. In the following centuries the monastery and the adjoining village (Onoldsbach) grew to become the town of Ansbach (called a town in 1221 for the first time).
The counts of Oettingen ruled over Ansbach until the Hohenzollern burgraves of Nuremberg took over in 1331. The Hohenzollerns made Ansbach the seat of their dynasty until their acquisition of the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1415. However, after the 1440 death of Frederick I, Elector of Brandenburg, the Franconian cadet branch of the family was not politically united with the main Brandenburg line, remaining independent as "Brandenburg-Ansbach."
Margrave George the Pious introduced the Protestant Reformation to Ansbach in 1528, leading to the secularization of St. Gumbertus Abbey in 1563.
In 1792 Ansbach was annexed by the Hohenzollerns of Prussia. In 1796 the Duke of Zweibrücken,
At the end of the 17th century, the margraves' palace at
Ansbach was rebuilt in Baroque style.
During World War II, a subcamp of Flossenburg concentration camp was located here.[1]
Since 1970, Ansbach has enlarged its municipal area by incorporating adjacent communities.
Ansbach was a small town largely by-passed by the Industrial Revolution, an administrative and cultural center. Although all bridges were destroyed, the historical center of Ansbach was spared during World War II and it has kept its baroque character.
Ansbach hosts several units of the U.S. armed forces, associated with German units under NATO. There are three separate U.S. installations: Shipton Kaserne, home to 412th Aviation Support Battalion, Katterbach Kaserne, formally the home of the 1st Infantry Division's 4th Combat Aviation Brigade, which has been replaced by the 12th Combat Aviation Brigade as of 2006, as part of the 1st Infantry Division's return to Ft. Riley, Kansas; Bismarck Kaserne, which functions as a satellite post to Katterbach, hosting their Post Exchange and other services, and Barton Barracks, home to the USAG Ansbach.
Albert of Prussia, Grand Master of the Teutonic Order and the first duke of Prussia.
In the late sixteenth century, the physician to margrave Georg Friedrich was the famous botanist, Leonhart Fuchs.
Ansbach was home of the astronomer Simon Marius, who observed
Ansbach was the birthplace of the early chemist, Georg Ernst Stahl.
Queen Caroline of Great Britain was born in Ansbach in 1683.
Two poets, Johann Peter Uz (1720-1796) and August Graf von Platen (1790-1835), were also born there.
John James Maximilian Oertel, (1811-1882), born in Ansbach, was a Lutheran clergyman who later converted to Roman Catholicism, became a professor of German at Fordham University, and later edited and founded several newspapers, including one that would become the leading German-language newspaper in the county, Baltimore's Kirchenzeitung.[2]
Kaspar Hauser lived in Ansbach from 1830 to 1833. He was murdered in the palace gardens.
Theodor Escherich, bacteriologist and paediatrician, born in Ansbach in 1857. Bacterial genus Escherichia (e.g. Escherichia coli) was named after him in 1919, eight years after his death.
Hermann Fegelein was a great admirer of his birthplace, Ansbach.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
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