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EUR 36 - 108 Mercure Hotel Kongress Wetzlar
This modern, 4-star hotel in Wetzlar features a free spa with indoor pool, Wi-Fi access, and free underground parking. The Wetzlarer Dom cathedral is … MoreEUR 50 - 125 Pension Domblick
You will stay in the traffic reduced area of the “Goethe Town” Wetzlar, with a wonderful view of the cathedral. The hotel is directly located at t… MoreEUR 55 - 75 Hotel Wetzlarer Hof
This hotel offers free Wi-Fi and free parking. It stands on the edge of the old town, a 5-minute walk from Wetzlar Cathedral and a 2-minute walk from … MoreEUR 55 - 75 Hotel Euler Haus
This hotel lies directly in the heart of quaint, medieval Wetzlar, within easy walking distance of all the main attractions in the beautiful Old Town.… MoreEUR 63 - 98 Hotel Blankenfeld
This family-run hotel offers individually furnished rooms and free Wi-Fi internet in all areas. It is in Büblingshausen, just to the east of Wetzlar.… MoreEUR 75 - 130 Best Western Hotel Wetzlar
This 3-star hotel enjoys a central location in Wetzlar, between the railway station and the cathedral. It offers modern rooms and free internet.
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Notable architectural features include the Eisenmarkt and the steep grades and claustrophobic street layout of a medieval town. The sandstone cathedral of St. Mary was commenced in the 12th century as a Romanesque building. In the later Middle Ages the construction was continued under a masterplan in Gothic architecture|Gothic style. The church was never finished, as one steeple still is uncompleted. The cathedral suffered heavy damage in the Second World War by aerial bombing, but was restored in the 1950s. On the outskirts of town exist the ruins of several masonry towers arranged along the river.
Wetzlar lies in the Lahn-Dill area in Middle Hesse on the river Lahn, not far downstream from its change in direction from south to west in the heights near the mouth of the Dill (river)|Dill. The town lies at a division between Hessian low mountain ranges: south of the Lahn lies the Taunus; north of the Lahn and west of the Dill begins the Westerwald; north of the Lahn and east of the Dill begins the Rothaargebirge. The highest point within town limits is the Stoppelberg at 401 m above sea level.
Wetzlar's neighbouring towns and cities are Gießen (up the Lahn from centre to centre about 12 km), Koblenz 80 km down the Lahn, Limburg an der Lahn 40 km to the west, Siegen 50 km to the northwest, Dillenburg 30 km to the north, Marburg 30 km to the northeast and Frankfurt am Main 60 km to the south.
Wetzlar and Gießen are the two cores of this small (about 200,000 inhabitants) urban agglomeration in Middle Hesse. Along the valleys of the Lahn (east and west) and Dill (north) are heavily built-up neighbouring communities, whose built-up areas in some places merge with Wetzlar's. The low mountain ranges around Wetzlar to the northwest, northeast and south, on the other hand, are heavily wooded and very thinly populated.
Below is a chart of all Wetzlar's constituent communities, both within the main built-up area and without:
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as of 31 December 2005
The name "Wetzlar" had come into being most likely by the Celtic or Old Frankish language|Frankish (in the latter case, most likely referring to wooden defences around the town). The Conradines|Conradine Gebhard, Count in the Wetterau, and as of 904 Duchy of Lorraine|Duke of Lorraine, had a Church of the Saviour consecrated in 897, which replaced earlier structures. In the early 10th century came the founding of the Marienstift (monastery).
At some unknown time, Wetzlar was granted market rights, and thereby, the right to levy market duties. Within a year, a market community came into being. The monastery's forerunners were surely part of the crystalization point at which believers, traders and craftsmen met, above all on holidays.
The German). Imperial coinage was struck at Kalsmunt. The commercial road, which crossed the Lahn at Wetzlar, the town's iron production, to which the Iron Market (forum ferri) still bears witness, the wool weaving mill and tanning seemed a good basis on which to develop the town further.
In 1285 came the "false emperor" Dietrich Holzschuh, called Tile Kolup, who claimed to be Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor (who actually had already died, in Italy in 1250) to Wetzlar. When the rightful king, Rudolph I of Germany|Rudolph I heard of this and came to Wetzlar, the city leaders seized Tile Kolup and handed him over. He was sentenced as a warlock, a heretic and a blasphemer to a Execution by burning|fiery death, which he suffered the next day in Wetzlar at the stake.
Until 1250, most of the town fortifications, whose remains can still be seen today, were complete. By the middle of the 14th century, it is reckoned, the town's population was 6,000, making it by the standards of the time a "city". About 1350, the high point of the town's development in the Middle Ages was reached.
Decades-long feuds with the Counts of Solms, who were trying to make Wetzlar into a Solms-domain city, threatened the vital commercial road. The Emperor supported the town, albeit vainly. The city plunged into debt and in 1387 it fell under forced administration; however, it was incorporated into the Swabian League of Towns. The town's decline led by the end of the Thirty Years' War to a drop in population, to 1,500.
A stroke of luck came Wetzlar's way in 1689 when the Holy Roman Empire's highest court, the Reichskammergericht (Imperial Chamber Court) was moved from Speyer to Wetzlar after Speyer had beed badly devastated by the French in the war of the Palatinate succession. Besides Vienna (residence of the Emperor) and Regensburg (seat of the Imperial Diet) Wetzlar thus gained a central fuction within the Holy Roman Empire and although it remained a tiny town it was regarded as one of its capitals. In the summer of 1772, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe was at the Reichskammergericht as a trainee. His novel The Sorrows of Young Werther is inspired by real events, Goethe came to know in Wetzlar. In 1803 Wetzlar came under the rule of Karl Theodor Anton Maria von Dalberg, the Archchancellor of the Holy Roman Empire and a close ally of Napoleon Bonaparte ans thus lost its status as a free town. With the Empire's dissolution in 1806, the great court also met its end. It was replaced by a school of law founded by Karl von Dalberg. After the Congress of Vienna, the area passed to Prussia in 1815, and in 1822 it became the seat of the newly formed district of Wetzlar, which later in an administrative sense was part of the Prussian Rhineland (although Wetzlar does not identify itself in any was as a "rhenish" town).
In 1869, in the municipal area alone, 100 ore mines were in operation. Wetzlar's first blast furnace, built by the brothers Buderus, went into service in 1872. As well, world-famous optical and precision mechanics companies such as Leitz (Leica), Hensoldt (Zeiss), Pfeiffer, Philips, Loh, Seibert, Hollmann, and many others set up shop in town.
For more than one hundred years, the strip mines was being offered at lower prices on the world market. In 1926, mining came to an end altogether.
After the Second World War ended in 1945, Wetzlar found itself in the United States|American occupation zone, and later, once new boundaries had been drawn, in the States of Germany|Federal State of Hesse. By the beginning of the 1950s, owing to the huge numbers of displaced people from lost territories and refugees flooding into the town, the population had doubled to 30,000.
On 1 January 1977, as part of Hesse's municipal reforms, Wetzlar was united with the neighbouring town of Gießen and fourteen outlying communities to form the city of Lahn. This district-free city had about 156,000 inhabitants. The amalgamation was very unpopular, and after persistent protests – not least of all from Wetzlar – the city of Lahn was dissolved on 31 July 1979, and Wetzlar once again became an independent town. The municipal reforms, however, had been "worth the trouble" for Wetzlar inasmuch as the town gained eight new outlying communities in the deal, making both the town's area and population considerably greater than they had been. Moreover, Wetzlar has since this time been the seat of the Lahn-Dill-Kreis, which also came into being at the same time.
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Note: FWG is a citizens' coalition.
The majority of seats, and thereby the power, is held by a CDU-FWG-FDP coalition which holds, as also before the elections, 31 of the 59 seats.
The black Imperial eagle on a red background and with a golden crown stands for the town's former Imperial immediacy as a Free Imperial City (see History). The silver cross stands for the former Imperial City's right to mint coins. The arms are almost unchanged from those borne in the 12th century.
A new version of the coat of arms was to have been introduced in 2003, but it did not catch on. In the end, the "old" arms were kept.
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Also in the old outlying towns of Langgasse and Neustadt ("New Town"), connected to the Old Town by the Old Lahn Bridge (Alte Lahnbrücke), a number of historic buildings are preserved and are worth seeing. The New Town, however, has lost its mediaeval feel owing to its 20th-century four-lane streets.
The stone Alte Lahnbrücke was first mentioned in 1288. A building meant to serve as the town hall, built in the mid 14th century, was used by the Reichskammergericht as their seat and offices from 1689 to 1806, after many remodellings. Considerable remains of the town's 13th- and 14th-century fortifications are still preserved, for instance a fortress tower known as the Schneiderturm ("Tailor's Tower") or Säuturm ("Sow's Tower"), the Kalsmuntpforte ("Kalsmunt Gate" – see History) which was the town gate for the earlier suburb of Silhofen, as well as great parts of the town wall.
The Wetzlarer Dom (Wetzlar Cathedral) is one of Wetzlar's landmark buildings. Building work began on the cathedral in 1230 and is still not finished. It is the successor to a former "Church of the Saviour" consecrated in 897. The monastery and parish church was called Cathedral as of the late 17th century. This designation was accomplished during the time that the Reichskammergericht was active in Wetzlar (1693 – 1806), when the Elector-Archbishop of Trier was Monastery Provost, making the church a "Bishop's Church".
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Wetzlar". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
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Historic Old Town
The tightly woven ensemble of historic buildings and houses in the Old Town (Altstadt) with its Timber framing|half-timbered houses and stone buildings from Romanesque (Wetzlar Cathedral) to Gothic architecture|Gothic to Renaissance and Baroque is to a great extent as it was in the late 18th century, preserved and extensively restored. Thus the great squares of Buttermarkt/Domplatz ("Butter Market/Cathedral Square"), Fischmarkt ("Fish Market"), Eisenmarkt ("Iron Market"), Kornmarkt ("Corn Market"), and the former Franziskanerhof ("Franciscan Yard"), now called Schillerplatz. From the roughly 50 noteworthy buildings, a few are listed here:
A straight-walled half-timbered house from 1356
The "Old Coin" (Alte Münze) at the Iron Market
The "Roman Emperor" (Römische Kaiser) from the 15th century, a former theatre and ballroom
The former Teutonic Knights' Court (Deutschordenshof), today a town museum
The Lottehaus, Charlotte Buff's house
The Jerusalemhaus in which Karl Wilhelm Jerusalem shot himself, thus attaining sad fame as The Sorrows of Young Werther|Werther
The princely Palais Papius in which is nowadays found the collection of historical furniture gathered by Dr. Irmgard Freiin von Lemmers-Danforth Wetzlar Cathedral
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