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EUR 76 - 169 Ringhotel Ahrensburg
The Ringhotel Ahrensburg offers modern rooms and apartments, a daily breakfast buffet and free parking. It is located in Ahrensburg within the grounds… MoreEUR 66 - 205 Park Hotel Ahrensburg
This modern 4-star hotel is situated within walking distance of Ahrensburg´s city centre. Make the most of free Wi-Fi internet access throughou… MoreEUR 77 - 155 Hotel am Schloss
This family-run, 3-star hotel in the historic city of Ahrensburg offers spacious rooms with flat-screen TV, fine Bavarian cuisine, and good train conn… More | ||||||||||||||||||
Ahrensburg is a town in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is part of the Hamburg Metropolitan Region, situated in Stormarn . Population around 30,100 (2004). Its outstanding sight is the Renaissance castle dating from 1595.
Other sights are the adjacent castle church with its "Gottesbuden" Almshouses. Ahrensburg is situated in the Tunneltal, in which Alfred Rust excavated many items dating back to the ice age.
Ahrensburg is easily accessible by car and train, being situated next to the Autobahn A1 and the railway route between the Hanseatic cities of Hamburg and Lübeck.
The "Arx Arnsburga", also called Arnesvelde castle, was built around the year 1200. Ruins of the castle are still visible in the Hagen forest to the south of the town. The town coat of arms shows the castle in the upper field. There are records of reeves based in the castle in 1295 and 1304. In 1326 Count Johann III. (Schauenburg)|John III of Schauenburg had his reeve relocated to Trittau and abbandoned the castle.
The "Ahrensburg Estate" belonged to the so-called Noble Estates, which possessed a large amount of freedom and self administration.
The Rantzaus' estate was heavily indebted by the middle of the 18th century and, in 1759, was acquired by the businessman Heinrich Carl von Schimmelmann. Schimmelmann remodelled the castle and village in the baroque style and the current layout of the town reflects these plans.
On the 7th June 1867 the estate village Woldenhorn became an independent Prussia|Prussian country community and renamed itself Ahrensburg after a decision by the community council. It belonged to the "Amt Ahrensburg", from which the "amtsfreie" community once more succeeded in 1912.
The construction of the railway between Hamburg and Lübeck in the year 1865 made Ahrensburg a well loved destination for outings outside Hamburg and the number of inhabitants increased. By 1910 the population had reached 2750. The incorporation of various surrounding communities in the year 1928 lead to an increase in the town area to about 5 km².
Building of the settlements "Daheim/Heimgarten" (partially on the territory of the current community of Ammersbek) and "Am Hagen" (originally called "Franz Seldte Settlement") commenced in 1933. The rush of settlers from around Hamburg lead to the creation of the current relaxed housing layout.
When Ahrensburg received town rights in 1949, the town had some 17 775 inhabitants - around half of which were refugees from the former eastern German regions.
The town infrastructure was greatly improved and expanded during the following decades. At the same time many companies settled at the edge of town and helped make Ahrensburg a well known business centre in Schleswig-Holstein.
Ahrensburg had a small Jewish community until the beginning of the 1930s. The Synagogue had to be demolished in 1931 due to structural problems. The Jewish cemetery (opened in 1822) can still be seen at the edge of town (Ahrensburg-West), not far from the golf course and is a reminder of this bygone time.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Ahrensburg". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.