Dillingen an der Donau

Dillingen an der Donau
King's Street

Coat of arms
Dillingen an der Donau
Location of Dillingen an der Donau within Dillingen district
Coordinates: 48°34′N 10°28′E / 48.567°N 10.467°E / 48.567; 10.467Coordinates: 48°34′N 10°28′E / 48.567°N 10.467°E / 48.567; 10.467
Country Germany
State Bavaria
Admin. region Schwaben
District Dillingen
Government
  Mayor Frank Kunz (CSU)
Area
  Total 75.59 km2 (29.19 sq mi)
Elevation 422 m (1,385 ft)
Population (2017-12-31)[1]
  Total 18,699
  Density 250/km2 (640/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 89407
Dialling codes 09071
Vehicle registration DLG
Website www.dillingen-donau.de

Dillingen, or Dillingen an der Donau (Dillingen on the Danube) is a town in Swabia, Bavaria, Germany. It is the administrative center of the district of Dillingen.

Besides the town of Dillingen proper, the municipality encompasses the villages of Donaualtheim, Fristingen, Hausen, Kicklingen, Schretzheim and Steinheim.

Schretzheim is notable for its 6th to 7th century Alemannic cemetery, 630 row graves in an area of 100 by 140 metres. The counts of Dillingen ruled from the 10th to the 13th century; in 1258 the territory was turned over to the Prince Bishops of Augsburg. After the Reformation, the prince-bishops of Augsburg moved to the Catholic city of Dillingen and made it one of the centers of the Counter-Reformation.

In 1800, during the War of the Second Coalition, the armies of the French First Republic, under command of Jean Victor Moreau, fought Habsburg regulars and Württemberg contingents, under the general command of Pál Kray. Kray had taken refuge in the fortress at Ulm; Moreau diverted his army to approach Ulm from the east and, after a small group of men captured a foothold on the northern bank of the Danube, his forces were able to move against the fortress on both sides of the river. At this battle, the culmination of the Danube Campaign of 1800, Moreau forced Kray to abandon Ulm and withdraw into eastern Bavaria.[2]

A university was established in 1549, but was closed by Napoleon in 1804. The philosophical and theological faculties still existed in the 20th century. In 1971, however, it became a part of the Bavarian Center for the Education and Training of Teachers and Personnel Management (Akademie für Lehrerfortbildung und Personalführung). One of the largest employers in the city is Bosch and Siemens Household Appliances, producer of household applicances.

The Church of the Jesuit University of Dillingen (Donau)

Local council

The elections in March 2014 showed the following results:

Party Seats
CSU8
SPD2
Alliance 90 /The Greens1
Free voters Bavaria2
Schretzheimer Liste2
Wählergemeinschaft Steinheim2
Wählervereinigung Kicklingen2
Wählerschaft Fristingen2
Bürgergemeinschaft Hausen2
Allgemeine Wählerliste Donaualtheim1

[3]

Notable people

  • Leonhard Wiedemann (around 1470-1646), abbot in Ottobeuren
  • Heinrich Vogtherr (1490-1556), painter
  • Walpurga Hausmännin (1510 / 1527-1587), victim of Dillingen witchcraft process
  • Johann Alois Jehle, country Defension colonel and commander of Braunau during Bavarian National Uprising in 1705. On 18 December In 1705 he called for 21 December, the Braunau Parliamenta
  • Sebastian Franz von Braunn (1762-1842) Bavarian Lieutenant General
  • Clemens von Raglovich for Rosenhof (1766-1836), Bavarian General and Reichsrat
  • Georg Wilhelm Ritter von Manz (1804-1867), Lieutenant General, Bavarian Minister of War
  • Sister Theresia Haselmayr (1808-1878), Generaloberin, co-founder of Regens Wagner Stiftungen
  • Wilhelm Bauer (1822-1875), the inventor of the (German) submarine
  • Max Joseph Oertel (1835-1897), university professor and pioneer of medical science
Max Joseph Oertel 1890

Connected with Dillingen

Sebastian Kneipp
  • Matthias Klostermayr (1736-1771), leader of a gang of robbers, convicted in Dillingen and strangled, then smashed, beheaded and quartered.
  • Johann Michael Sailer (1751-1832), a Catholic theologian, professor of ethics and pastoral theology in Dillingen 1821 Domkapitular and 1822 auxiliary bishop with right of succession, in 1829 Bishop of Regensburg
  • Christoph von Schmid (1768-1854), Catholic theologian
  • Sebastian Kneipp (1821-1897), Catholic priest and hydrotherapeut, began in 1848 his studies of theology in Dillingen.
  • Heinz Piontek (1925-2003), writer

See also

Twin towns

References

  1. "Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes". Bayerisches Landesamt für Statistik und Datenverarbeitung (in German). September 2018.
  2. "Höchstädt", History of the Wars of the French Revolution: Including Sketches of the Civil History of Great Britain and France, from the Revolutionary Movements, 1788, to the Restoration of a General Peace, 1815, Kuhl, France, 1820, p. 183.
  3. http://www.dillingen-donau.de/index.php?id=92
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