• Source: Barsinghausen
    • Barsinghausen (German pronunciation: [ˌbaʁzɪŋˈhaʊ̯zn̩]) is a town in the district of Hanover, in Lower Saxony, Germany. It is situated at the Deister chain of hills approx. 20 km west of Hanover. Barsinghausen belongs to the historic landscape Calenberg Land and was first mentioned in 1193.


      Geography




      = Neighbouring places

      =
      Barsinghausen adjoins Wunstorf, Seelze, Gehrden, Springe, Bad Nenndorf and Wennigsen.


      = Division of the town

      =
      Barsinghausen consists of 18 districts:
      Bantorf, Barrigsen, Barsinghausen, Eckerde, Egestorf, Göxe, Großgoltern, Nordgoltern, Groß Munzel, Hohenbostel, Holtensen, Kirchdorf, Landringhausen, Langreder, Ostermunzel, Stemmen, Wichtringhausen, Winninghausen


      History


      Barsinghausen is the site of an old double monastery (“Kloster Barsinghausen”) that was established during the High Middle Ages. At that time, fertile loess soil and a number of influent streams to river Südaue constituted a central fundament for farming and numerous windmills in Calenberg Land. Barsinghausen became a coal mining town between 1871 and 1957. After World War II, other sectors of industry began to dominate Barsinghausen's economy.


      = Population development

      =
      (each time at 31 December)

      1998 – 34,743
      1999 – 34,648
      2000 – 34,497
      2001 – 34,408
      2002 – 34,370
      2003 – 34,376
      2004 – 34,253


      Sights


      Barsinghausen is home to "Kloster Barsinghausen", a nunnery first mentioned in 1193 (now a Lutheran women's convent, to Monastery Church St. Mary ("Marienkirche"), to the Deister Open Air Theater (“Deister Freilichtbühne”), to the exhibition mine “Klosterstollen”, to Sport Hotel Fuchsbachtal and to Lower Saxony's Soccer Association. The Colossus of Ostermunzel is a glacial erratic qualified as a natural monument. Its large size is abnormal, particularly for northern Germany and especially for Lower Saxony.


      Education




      = Elementary schools

      =
      Adolf-Grimme-Schule
      Wilhelm-Stedler-Schule
      Ernst-Reuter-Schule
      Astrid-Lindgren-Schule
      Albert-Schweitzer-Schule
      Grundschule Groß Munzel
      Grundschule Hohenbostel
      Grundschule Bantorf


      = Secondary schools

      =
      Hannah-Arendt-Gymnasium
      Lisa-Tetzner-Schule
      Goetheschule KGS Barsinghausen


      = Special schools

      =
      Bert-Brecht-Schule (Special education school)
      VHS (Volkshochschule – Adult high school) Calenberger Land


      Twin towns – sister cities



      Barsinghausen is twinned with:

      Brzeg Dolny, Poland
      Kovel, Ukraine
      Mont-Saint-Aignan, France
      Wurzen, Germany


      Notable people


      Hartmut Andryczuk, publisher
      Fritz Brase (1875–1940), military musician and composer
      Herbert Lattmann (born 1944), former member of the Bundestag (CDU)
      Kurt Sohns (1907–1990), painter, artist, professor at the Technical University of Hanover


      = Associated with the town

      =
      Heinz Erhardt (1909–1979), actor and comedian, attended from 1919 to 1924 a boarding school in Barsinghausen
      Herbert Gruhl (1921–1993), politician and author (Ein Planet wird geplündert, 1975)
      Hans-Joachim Mack (1928–2008), General of the Bundeswehr
      Robert Schulz (1900–1974), SS brigade leader in Nazism, member of the Reichstag, lived and worked after 1945 as a civil servant in Barsinghausen
      Colonel Ernst Poten (1785–1838), prominent cavalry leader (1808–1815) in the King's German Legion in Portugal, Spain, France and at Waterloo and later in the Hanoverian Army.
      August Heinrich Walter Münstermann (1931–2007), founder of Pelikan Company in Mexico. Writer and Journalist of Wochenblatt in the region of Schaumburg, Niedersachsen.


      References




      External links



      Official website (in German)

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