Aub

Aub
Church tower in Aub

Coat of arms
Aub
Location of Aub within Würzburg district
Coordinates: 49°32′N 10°03′E / 49.533°N 10.050°E / 49.533; 10.050Coordinates: 49°32′N 10°03′E / 49.533°N 10.050°E / 49.533; 10.050
Country Germany
State Bavaria
Admin. region Unterfranken
District Würzburg
Municipal assoc. Aub
Government
  Mayor Robert Melber
Area
  Total 17.54 km2 (6.77 sq mi)
Elevation 310 m (1,020 ft)
Population (2017-12-31)[1]
  Total 1,455
  Density 83/km2 (210/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 97239
Dialling codes 09335
Vehicle registration
Website http://www.stadt-aub.de/

Aub (  ) is a town in the district of Würzburg, in Bavaria, Germany. It is situated 29 kilometres (18 mi) southeast of Würzburg, and 21 kilometres (13 mi) northwest of Rothenburg ob der Tauber.

It is on the Gollach River, not far from the border of Baden-Württemberg. Aub is divided into three parts: Aub, Baldersheim, and Burgerroth.

History

The earlier territory of the Catholic Church in Würzburg became part of Bavaria when the government was secularized in 1805. The present municipality was created during the administrative reforms of 2010.

Population

The population has remained relatively stable since 1970, as shown in the following table:

Population History
Year Population
19701714
19871631
20001702
20051608

Administrative municipality

Aub forms an administrative municipality with the nearby towns of Gelchsheim and Sonderhofen.

Sister city

Sightseeing

Aub has a beautiful church and a well-kept Jewish cemetery. The main church has a very fine carved wooden altarpiece by Riemenschnider, who was an important master sculptor in Southern Germany in the late Middle Ages. The town has most of its medieval walls intact, and an interesting small museum in the 'spittalkirche', a medieval monastery-cum-hospice, which served pilgrims and the old and infirm. Today the museum has objects from Aub's past, and displays about caring for the elderly through the centuries (all in German). Aub is the second smallest town in Bavaria. It has a bank, two bakery-cum-cafes, a doctor and a hairdresser. The countryside is very pleasant to cycle around. There is a cycle track along the disused railway line that leads to the Tauber valley, which is quite picturesque. A few kilometres from Aub is the church called the 'Kunegonde Kapelle', named after an early medieval queen-saint. The key to the chapel can be obtained from the nearby village. The chapel is very atmospheric inside. In the wall of the old church yard a (reputedly) 1,000-year-old pollarded lime tree still stands. When the Catholic Church is celebrating a major festival, the townsfolk dress up in medieval costume, the town band plays, and there is a fair with dodgem cars and American Line dancing in the evening, or a medieval fair with jousting in the grounds of the hunting lodge at the top of the town.


Personality

Johann Adam Schmidt
  • Johannes Böhm (1485-1533/1535), German humanist
  • Johann Adam Schmidt (1759-1809), doctor of Ludwig van Beethoven[2]
  • Kaspar Bausewein (1838-1903), singer at the Munich Court Opera
  • Konrad Hoos (1892-1982), priest, ecclesiastic council study professor, honorary citizen of Baldersheim
  • Max Aub (1903-1972), novelist and playwright, was not from Aub, but he is, as well as the rabbi Joseph Aub, a descendant of Abraham Meyer from Aub

References

  1. "Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes". Bayerisches Landesamt für Statistik und Datenverarbeitung (in German). September 2018.
  2. Beethovens Ärzte, Übersicht in englischer Sprache
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