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EUR 48 - 104 Hotel Klingelhöffer
Situated just a few metres from the Old Town, this hotel offers an intimate atmosphere and peaceful surroundings.
Soak up the medieval ambience of t… MoreEUR 46 - 128 Gasthof Roth Zur Linde
This family run hotel offers comfortable accommodation in the rural village of Liederbach, a southern district of Alsfeld, and is just an 8-minute dri… More | ||||||||||||
Alsfeld is a town in the center of Hesse. Large towns nearby are Bad Hersfeld about 33 km to the east, Fulda 36 km to the southeast, Gießen 47 km to the west and Marburg an der Lahn about 36 km to the northwest. Alsfeld is located on the upper part of the Schwalm in the northern Vogelsberg Mountains and just to the south of the Knüll Mountains at the western edge of the Alsfeld basin. Different interests group Alsfeld with different regions, but it is easy to find the town right in the heart of Germany.
In the 5th century the Huns under Attila the Hun|Attila came through the region around Alsfeld as the higher than average occurrence of the Mongolian spot around Alsfeld evidences to this day.
Alsfeld was first mentioned in an official document in 9th and 10th century|10th centuries. It is therefore estimated that the town was founded in Carolingian times. Between 1180 and 1190 the Counts of Thuringia built a castle along the historic trading route of the Kurze Hessen (Straße)|Kurze Hessen. That location favored the development of Alsfeld and it was subsequently documented as a town as early as 1222.
Since Hermann II built himself a castle here in 1695 and for a time turned the town into his official residence. From 1567 Alsfeld belonged to Hesse-Marburg and from 1604 on to Hesse-Darmstadt. Until 1972 it was the seat of Alsfeld district until the district was merged with neighboring Lauterbach (district)|Lauterbach district and the Schotten region into the present-day Vogelsbergkreis|Vogelsberg district. At that time, the decision to designate Lauterbach (Hesse)|Lauterbach as seat of the new district led to bitterness in Alsfeld that put a damper on the relationship between the two towns for years. This went so far that because of protests in and around Alsfeld the motor vehicle registration office in Alsfeld, for instance, would not issue licence plates with the code "LAT" (for Lauterbach) and instead continued to issue plates sporting the code "ALS" for Alsfeld until 1978 when the licence plate code "VB" was agreed on for the entire district of Vogelsberg.
One of the many legends about how Alsfeld came to its name and location goes as follows: Around 1200 the Margrave of Hesse/Thuringia went riding his horse over the Vogelsberg. When he got to the Homberg (a hill near Alsfeld) a very strong wind was blowing. Supposedly at this point the Margrave said: "Als fällt mir der Hut vom Kopp." (trans. I keep losing my hat.) The "Als fällt" in that statement supposedly became the name "Alsfeld" – it has the same pronunciation.
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The town's executive organ has a nine members. The members of the executive belong to political parties as follows:
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The oldest seal of the town features the Count of Hesse as judge with a sword in one hand and a shield in the other. That shield depicted the lion of Hesse. The combination used today has been seen since the late 14th century; since then there have only been some minor variations in color.
Town Hall was constructed in medieval, Rähmbau style timber framing from 1512 through 1516 and is located next to the market place in the center of the Altstadt. Its ground floor, constructed from solid rock, also used to be used as a market hall.
Near Town Hall is located the Weinhaus, on the corner of which is located the Pranger. In Alsfeld the Pranger is a lockable iron collar that those who violated medieval rules were locked into. The real or presumed violators then had to suffer the verbal and even physical abuse of their fellow citizens without any means to defend themselves. The Pranger is one of the favorite objects to photograph for many Alsfeld visitors. The "Wine House" was built in 1538 by Hans von Frankfurt with a Staffelgiebel (i.e., a gable that ascends to the tip of the roof in a stair fashion rather than a smooth line) to be the town's wine storage and distribution facility. It's original windows were modified in 1840.
Leaning up against the Weinhaus is the oldest timber framed house in Alsfeld. It was built in Ständerbau style beginning in 1350 and then expanded and again modified in 1403 and 1464. Underneath the house are two cellars with barrel vaults that date back to the time when the town was founded.
The Walpurgiskirche is located behind these three buildings. It was built in the second half of the 13th century. The church choir was built in 1393, the tower was rebuilt in 1394 after an earlier collapse. It was not finished until 1543 however and reduced by one floor in 1836. The Gothic architecture|gothic long house was remodeled into a church nave from 1472 on. The extensive stained glas art in the church was created in 1963 by Charles Crodel.
The late Gothic architecture|Gothic Ossuary|Beinhaus is located in the immediate vicinity of the Walpurgiskirche. The ossuary was first mentioned in 1368, expanded in 1510 and served as the final resting place of human skeletal remains.
The Dreifaltigkeitskirche was built as an Augustinians|Augustinian monastery church around 1435 with two asymmetric naves. As is customary in churches built for Mendicant orders, the Dreifaltigkeitskirche does not have a steeple. Again, the stained glass windows were fashioned by Charles Crodel in 1962 and 1963.
Only a small piece of the defensive wall|town wall remains together with the Leonhardsturm (Leonard's Tower). The tower was one of the gate towers built as part of the town fortifications in 1386.
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Visitors can reach Alsfeld also by train via the Vogelsberg line Gießen - Alsfeld - Fulda. In addition, from April 1, 1916 through 1974 the Gründchen line connected Alsfeld with Niederaula. Passenger traffic on the Gründchen line was discontinued on May 25 and the last freight train left Alsfeld on May 28, 1974. Since then the Right-of-way (railroad)|right-of-way between Alsfeld and Breitenbach has been renaturalized to varying degrees.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Alsfeld". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.