| Columbia Encyclopedia: Bingen |
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[BING-uhn] An important wine town directly across from rüdesheim where the Nahe River joins the Rhine River. Its name is also used for the bereich that covers this area. Both are part of the rheinhessen region, with Bereich Bingen covering the northwestern portion of the Rheinhessen. The Bereich contains six grosslagen including Grosslage Sankt Rochuskapelle, of which the vineyards around the town of Bingen are a part. The town's best-known vineyard is the 87-acre Scharlachberg (which means "scarlet hill," referring to its red soil). riesling grapes produce the area's top wines, which can be among the best from the Rheinhessen region.
| Wikipedia: Bingen am Rhein |
| Bingen am Rhein | |
| Administration | |
| Country | Germany |
|---|---|
| State | Rhineland-Palatinate |
| District | Mainz-Bingen |
| Town subdivisions | 8 |
| Mayor | Birgit Collin-Langen (CDU) |
| Basic statistics | |
| Area | 37.74 km2 (14.57 sq mi) |
| Elevation | 89 m (292 ft) |
| Population | 26,048 (1 December 2006) |
| - Density | 690 /km2 (1,788 /sq mi) |
| Other information | |
| Time zone | CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) |
| Licence plate | MZ |
| Postal code | 55411 |
| Area codes | 06721-06725 |
| Website | www.bingen.de |
Bingen am Rhein is a town in the Mainz-Bingen district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.
The settlement’s original name was Bingium, a Celtic word that may have meant “hole in the rock”, a description of the shoal behind the Mäuseturm, known as the Binger Loch. Bingen was the starting point for the Via Ausonia, a Roman military road that linked the town with Trier. Bingen is well known for, among other things, the story about the Mouse Tower, in which allegedly the Bishop of Mainz Hatto was eaten by mice. The town was in 2008, after Kaiserslautern and Trier, organizer of the third Rhineland-Palatinate State Garden Show.
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Bingen is found just southeast of the Rhine knee at the Bingen Forest (Binger Wald – actually a low mountain range), which rises west of town. Looming to the north on the other side of the Rhine is the Rheingau range, the Taunus’s southwesternmost outliers. In Bingen the river Nahe empties into the Rhine Gorge. Bingen forms the southern limit of the UNESCO Rhine Gorge World Heritage Site. The Rochusberg (mountain) is nearly completely surrounded by the townsite.
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(each time at 31 December)
| Year | 1998 | 2000 | 2002 | 2004 | 2006 | |
| Inhabitants | 24,821 | 24,710 | 24,786 | 24,849 | 24,587 |
Even before the Romans, there was here, because the location favoured transport (confluence of the Nahe and Rhine, and the Rhine’s entry into the gorge), a Celtic (Gaulish) settlement by the name of Binge – meaning “rift”. In the early first century AD, Roman troops were stationed in Bingen on their Rhine Valley Road. They changed the place’s name to Bingium. There arose a wooden bridge across the Nahe and a bridgehead castrum. The presbyter Aetherius of Bingen founded sometime between 335 and 360 a firmly Christian and priest-led society. Bearing witness to this time is Aetherius’s gravestone, which can still be seen in Saint Martin’s Basilica[1][2]. After the fall of the Limes, the town became a Frankish royal estate and passed in 983 by the Donation of Verona from Otto II to Archbishop Willigis of Mainz[3]. Under Otto III the Binger Kammerforst (forest) came into being. Under Willigis arose, somewhat up the river Nahe, the stone Drususbrücke (bridge).
The Bingen dwellers strove time and again for independence, which led in 1165 through disputes between the Archbishop of Mainz and the Emperor to destruction. In the 13th century, Bingen was a member of the Rhenish League of Towns. The building of Klopp Castle (Burg Klopp) in the mid 13th century could well be seen as being tied in with this development. A last attempt was the town’s unsuccessful participation in the Peasants' War in 1525. From the Archbishop the Cathedral Chapter of Mainz acquired the town in two halves in 1424 and 1438. Until the late 18th century Bingen remained under its administration. Like many towns in the valley, Bingen suffered several town fires and wars.
From 1792 to 1813, the town was, as part of the département of Mont-Tonnerre (or Donnersberg – both names meaning “Thunder Mountain”), French after French Revolutionary troops had occupied the Rhine’s left bank. In 1816, after the Congress of Vienna, the town passed to the Grand Duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt while today’s outlying centre of Bingerbrück went to Prussia’s Rhine Province, making Bingen a border town until 1871, when the German Empire was founded.
On 7 June 1969, the formerly Prussian[4] municipality of Bingerbrück was amalgamated. On 22 April 1972 came Dromersheim’s and Sponsheim’s amalgamation with Bingen. The epithet am Rhein has been borne since 1 July 1982[5].
For the State Garden Show in 2008 in Bingen, the Rhineside areas in the town underwent extensive modernization.
The council is made up of 36 council members. The Chief Mayor has been since 1996 the CDU politician Birgit Collin-Langen. Her deputy is the CDU politician Thomas Feser. Seats are apportioned thus:
| SPD | CDU | Grüne | FDP | FWG | Total | |
| 2004 | 10 | 18 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 36 seats |
(as at municipal election held on 13 June 2004)
The town’s arms show Saint Martin cutting off a piece of his cloak for a poor man, and in a small inescutcheon in dexter chief, the Wheel of Mainz.
Bingen was from 18 April to 19 October 2008 host for the Rhineland-Palatinate State Garden Show. The event was held along a 2.8 km stretch of the Rhine waterfront on 24 ha of exhibition area. With 1.3 million visitors, the expected number of 600,000 was greatly exceeded[7].
The region is characterized economically by winegrowing, all the more so as in Bingen, three winegrowing areas (Rheinhessen, Mittelrhein and Nahe) meet. The town is also the winegrowing Bereich’s (Bereich Bingen) namesake in German wine law.
Other industries, which once did business in Bingen when there was a harbour, have left the town over the years. The service industries found here today are found mainly in the industrial park (Autobahn interchange Bingen-Ost / Kempten / Industriegebiet) and in the Scharlachberg commercial park.
Tourism also plays an important rôle.
The main railway station, Hauptbahnhof Bingen/Rhein lies in the outlying centre of Bingerbrück. It is served as a regional station by InterCity trains as well as one ICE line.
The railway station Bingen/Rhein Stadt lies 2 km farther east, right across from the historical harbour crane. This station is only important for local transport. Furthermore, there is also a stop in Bingen-Gaulsheim. The reason that two railway stations arose in Bingen is historical. The main railway station was originally a Prussian border station, while the station in town belonged to the Hessian Ludwigsbahn (railway).
The stops at Drususbrücke on the Bingen Hbf-Bad Kreuznach line and Bingen-Kempten and Büdesheim-Dromersheim on the Bingen/Rhein Stadt–Alzey line are no longer served.
Bingen lies right near Autobahnen A 60 and A 61, which are linked to the town by Bundesstraße 9.
Only private transport is still of importance today. The cargo harbour has been forsaken. The former winter harbour is now a marina.
There are landing stages of the tourist lines Köln-Düsseldorfer, Bingen-Rüdesheimer Fahrgastschifffahrt and Rösslerlinie. A passenger ferry and a car ferry link Bingen with Rüdesheim.
Until the late 1970s, Bingen was a piloting station.
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