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(bou'tsən) , city (1994 pop. 45,350), Saxony, E Germany, on the Spree River. It is an industrial city, a rail junction, and the center of a kaolin-quarrying region. Manufactures include vehicles, iron products, electrochemical equipment, machinery, and textiles. Bautzen was founded in the 10th cent. and was contested in the 11th and 12th cent. by Poland, Meissen, Brandenburg, and Bohemia. It eventually passed to Bohemia, was burned (1634) in the Thirty Years War, and passed (1635) with Lusatia to Saxony. Noteworthy landmarks include a 13th-century church and numerous 18th-century buildings. In 1813, Napoleon I defeated a Russo-Prussian army nearby. In 1989 discoveries were made in the Bautzen prison complex of the largest mass grave of post–World War II Germany. The remains of more than 17,000 political prisoners from the Soviet occupation era after 1945 were found at the site.


 
 
Wikipedia: Bautzen
Budyšin
Bautzen
Coat of arms Location
Coat of arms of Bautzen
Bautzen (Germany)
Bautzen
Administration
Country Flag of Germany Germany
State Saxony
Admin. region Dresden
District Bautzen
Mayor Christian Schramm (CDU)
Basic statistics
Area  km² ( sq mi)
Elevation  m  (669 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 BZ
Postal codes 02601-02625
Area code 03591
Website bautzen.de

Coordinates: 51°11′″N 14°25′″E / Expression error: unexpected / operator, Expression error: unexpected / operator

Ortenburg castle
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Ortenburg castle
Town hall Bautzen
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Town hall Bautzen
Old Waterworks and Church of St. Michael
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Old Waterworks and Church of St. Michael

Bautzen (pronounced [ˈbautsn̩] , until 1868: Budissin; Upper Sorbian: Budyšin [ˈbudɨʃin]; Lower Sorbian: Budyšyn [ˈbudɨʃɨn]; Polish: Budziszyn) is a city in eastern Saxony, Germany, and capital of the eponymous district. It is located on the Spree River. As of 2005, its population is 42,189. Asteroid 11580 Bautzen is named in honor of the city.

Bautzen is often regarded as the unofficial, but historical capital of Upper Lusatia, and it is the most important cultural center of the Sorbs, a Slavic minority.

History

The first written proof of the city was in 1002. In 1018 the Peace of Bautzen was signed between the German king Henry II and the Polish prince Boleslaus I. The Treaty left Bautzen (Budziszyn in Polish) under Polish rule. In 1033 the city passed to the Holy Roman Empire, in 1319 to Bohemia and in 1635 to Saxony. During the Middle Ages it was a member of the Six Cities' Alliance of the Upper Lusatian cities of Görlitz, Zittau, Löbau, Kamenz, Lauban and Bautzen.

It was the site of the Napoleonic War Battle of Bautzen in 1813.

During World War II and the Nazi era, there was a subcamp of the Groß-Rosen concentration camp in Bautzen. Ernst Thälmann was imprisoned there before being deported to Buchenwald. Between 21 April and 30 April 1945, the Battle of Bautzen was fought.

Furthermore Bautzen was infamous throughout the German Democratic Republic for its penitentiaries. Of which Bautzen I was used as an official prison, soon to be nicknamed Gelbes Elend ("Yellow Misery"), whereas the secret Bautzen II was used as a prison for prisoners of conscience. Bautzen I is still used as a prison and Bautzen II serves since 1993 as a memorial.

In 2002 the city commemorated its thousandth birthday.

Overview

  • 3rd cen. Eastern Germanic settlement. Excavations show that the Bautzen region was already inhabited in the late Stone Age.
  • prob. 958 Erection of Ortenburg Castle atop earlier fortifications of the Milceni tribe
  • 1002 First written mention of Bautzen
  • 1018 Peace of Bautzen concluded between the early-feudal German city and the Polish duchy; Budziszyn(Bautzen) region remains under Polish rule until 1031
  • 1076-1085 The city belongs to Upper Lusatia; Ortenburg Castle becomes the administrative centre of this area
  • 1084 Wiprecht von Groitzsch moves his residence to Budissin Castle and resides here until 1091
  • 1213 Bautzen Town Hall built; construction of the Church of Saint Peter begins
  • 1240 Existing city charter of Bautzen first mentioned in written documents
  • 1336 Foundation of the Six-City League of Upper Lusatia; besides Bautzen Görlitz, Löbau, Zittau, Kamenz and Lauban (Luban in modern Poland) were members
  • 1400 Craftsmen's Rebellion. Bautzen already has more than 5.300 inhabitants and is one of the most important cities in the area of modern eastern Germany
  • 1408 Wenceslas, King of Bohemia, in Bautzen, 100 of the rebelling craftsmen were sentenced to death; 14 executions at the Main Market
  • 1429 and 1431 Hussites lay siege to the town, but without success.
  • 1469-1490 Political allegiance to Hungary (under Matthias Corvinus), after 1490 to Bohemia again
  • 1524 Reformation comes to Bautzen; Church of St.Peter becomes an interdenominational church
  • 1547 In the so-called "Poenfall", the six cities of the Upper Lusatian League forfeit all of their privileges and holdings to the Emperor, ostensibly because they refused to provide assistance in the Schmalkaldic War (Battle of Mühlberg).
  • 1635 Peace of Prague; Upper Lusatia permanenty become part of Saxony.
  • 1813 Battle of Bautzen against Napoleon's army.
  • 1868 "Bautzen" fixed as official designation. After the name had changed so many times (being called, by turns, Budissin, Budessen, Buticyn, Pautzen, among other forms), the name of the city remains Budysin in Sorbian.
  • 1945 Bautzen is declared a fortress in Spring, pitched street fighting until 8 May; last German tank-offensive of World War II. During the fighting, approximately 10% of the residential buildings with almost 34% of the town’s living space were destroyed. Eighteen bridges, 33 public buildings, 46 small firms and 23 larger firms were completely destroyed. Approximately 6.500 soldiers from both sides fell in the battles. According to other statistics, it is said that 350 civilians were killed in Bautzen during this time (Battle of Bautzen (World War II))
  • 1995 Bautzen becomes a major regional administrative centre
  • 2002 1000 year celebration of the original first historical record of the city
BZ-Friedensbrücke-NO.jpg

Subdivisions

Here are the subdivisions of Bautzen:

  • In the east: Burk, Niederkaina, Basankwitz, Nadelwitz, Auritz (Bautzen), Jenkwitz-West, Strehla (Bautzen)
  • In the south: Oberkaina, Boblitz
  • In the west: Stiebitz, Rattwitz, Bloaschütz, Uhna, Bolbritz, Salzenforst, Schmole
  • In the north and northwest: Kleinwelka, Kleinseidau, Neumalsitz, Oehna

Twin cities

Reichenturm tower
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Reichenturm tower

Tourist attractions

Bautzen has a very compact and well preserved medieval town centre with a multitude of churches and towers and an impressive city wall on the steep enbankment to the river Spree, with one of the oldest preserved waterworks in central Europe (built 1558).

Sites of interest
  • The Reichenturm: One of the steepest leaning and still passable towers north of the Alps
  • Ortenburg Castle
  • The Old Waterworks: architectural monument and museum; landmark of Bautzen
  • Saint Peter's Cathedral: Eastern Germany's only historic interdenominational church edifice
  • Hexenhaus (Witch's House): oldest preserved building (built 1604)

There are four museums including the Stadtmuseum Bautzen (lit. the Bautzen city Museum) and the Sorbisches Museum, lit. the Sorbian Museum (Sorbian-Lusatian: Serbski muzej).

People

External links


hsb:Budyšin


 
 

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Copyrights:

Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bautzen" Read more

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