Thale

Thale (pronounced [ˈtaːlə]) is a town in the Harz district in Saxony-Anhalt in central Germany. Located at the steep northeastern rim of the Harz mountain range, it is known for the scenic Bode Gorge stretching above the town centre.

Thale
View from Harz range (Roßtrappe)
Coat of arms
Location of Thale within Harz district
Thale
Thale
Coordinates: 51°45′N 11°3′E
CountryGermany
StateSaxony-Anhalt
DistrictHarz
Government
  MayorThomas Balcerowski (CDU)
Area
  Total137.62 km2 (53.14 sq mi)
Elevation
156 m (512 ft)
Population
 (2019-12-31)[1]
  Total17,247
  Density130/km2 (320/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
06502
Dialling codes03947, 03946, 039456
Vehicle registrationHZ
Websitewww.thale.de

Geography

The town is situated on the river Bode, approximately 8 km (5.0 mi) west of Quedlinburg. Served by Transdev Sachsen-Anhalt trains, Thale Hauptbahnhof is the terminus of the Magdeburg–Thale railway line. The town has access to the Bundesstraße 6n highway.

History

Wendhusen Abbey, westwork

The settlement of Thale probably emerged at the beginning of the 10th century. It was documented in 936 in connexion with the neighbouring Wendhusen Abbey, which had been founded around 825 AD as a chapter of canonesses (Kanonissenstift). Established by an Eastphalian comital family and based on the model of Herford Abbey, it was one of the first monasteries in the medieval Duchy of Saxony. After Queen Dowager Matilda, wife of the late King Henry the Fowler, tried in vain to relocate the convent in 936, it came under the guardianship of the newly established Quedlinburg chapter.

The adjacent village was first mentioned in a 1231 deed as Dat Dorp to dem Dale (from 1288 it was given the Latinised description de valle, and from 1303 as von Thale). In the late Middle Ages, the estates were held by the Saxon Counts of Regenstein, vassals of the Halberstadt prince-bishops. The monastery premises were stormed and devastated in 1525 during the German Peasants' War.

From 1445 the records show that there had been an ironworks in Thale. It was rebuilt from 1648 onwards after the devastations of the Thirty Years' War as the Berghaus zum Wilden Mann, but was fully destroyed in 1670. After the secularised Halberstadt territories were incorporated by Brandenburg-Prussia, a small hammer mill was established in 1686 out of which a new ironworks later developed that benefited especially from its proximity to the ore deposits and the availability of wood. It lasted until 1714. In 1740 a business was opened again. For a short time this ironworks was owned by the Prussian king Frederick the Great.

1912 map of Thale

Part of the Prussian Province of Saxony since 1815, the first wrought-iron wagon axle to be made in the German lands was manufactured here in 1831. In 1835 the oldest sheet steel enamel works in Europe was founded in Thale. Following the town's connexion to the railway network in 1862 with a line to Berlin the place flourished as did the number of workers. Whilst the iron industry had only 350 workers in 1872, by 1905 there were as many as 4,400. In particular, the production of enamel contributed to Thale's international renown; in its heyday Thale produced no less than 10% of the world's production. In 1910 Karl Liebknecht, Rosa Luxemburg and Clara Zetkin spoke to Thale's workers. From 1916 steel helmets were produced in Thale. In the World War II Thale had the monopoly on this product (from 1934).

Tourism blossomed from the 19th century onwards in connexion with the radon rich water of the Hubertus Spring, which had been opened up in 1836. As a result, various literary figures visited the place, including Heinrich Heine (Die Harzreise) and Theodor Fontane and especially the Bode Gorge. In addition tourists from Berlin enjoyed the summer resort of Thale. This encouraged the connexion of Thale in 1862 to the railway line from Wegeleben. In 1909 a branch line from Blankenburg (Harz) followed. In 1922 the resort was given town rights. From 12 to 14 June 2009 Thale was the venue for the Saxony-Anhalt Day held under the motto Thale sagenhaft ("Legendary Thale"), and attracted around 200,000 visitors.

Incorporation of other parishes

Warnstedt was incorporated in 2003.[2][3] In 2009 a total of seven municipalities were incorporated on four separate dates.[4] Westerhausen was added in 2010.[5] Allrode became a part of the borough of Thale in 2011.[6]

The changes in area are shown in a special table.

Former parish Date
Allrode1 January 2011
Altenbrak1 July 2009
Friedrichsbrunn23 November 2009
Neinstedt1 January 2009
Stecklenberg23 November 2009
Treseburg1 July 2009
Warnstedt21 December 2003
Weddersleben1 January 2009
Westerhausen1 September 2010
Area of the borough of Thale
Date Area
21 December 200338.13 km2
1 January 200950.13 km2
1 July 200978.47 km2
23 November 2009102.79 km2
1 September 2010120.21 km2
1 January 2011137.62 km2

Population growth

The growth of population (from 1995 censuses were taken every 31 December):[7]

  • 1825 – 1,406
  • 1875 – 3,311
  • 1880 – 3,683
  • 1890 – 6,292
  • 1925 – 13,545
  • 1933 – 13,557
  • 1939 – 13,520
  • 1946 – 18,082 (29 October)
  • 1950 – 17,968 (31 August)
  • 1960 – 17,391 (31 December)
  • 1971 – 17,620 (1 January)
  • 1981 – 16,830 (31 December)
  • 1984 – 16,423 (31 December)
  • 1990 – 17,560 (3 October)
  • 1995 – 16,230
  • 2000 – 14,539
  • 2001 – 14,167
  • 2002 – 13,877
  • 2003 – 13,631

Politics

Town council

Thale town hall

(according to the official result of the elections for the Thale town council on 7 June 2009; Voter participation: 42.88%, Changes from the previous election in brackets)

  • CDU – 59.2%, 17 seats (unchanged)
  • Die Linke – 13.3%, 4 seats (unchanged)
  • FDP – 8.2%, 2 seats (+1)
  • SPD – 7.4%, 2 seats (-1)
  • GRÜNE Bürger Fraktion – 4.9%, 3 seats (+3)
  • Wählergruppen – 4.1%, 1 seat (-1)
  • Einzelbewerber – 2.9%, 0 seats (-1)

Coat of arms

The coat of arms was approved on 11 July 1996 by the Magdeburg Regional Council (Regierungspräsidium).

Partnerships

Since 1990 Thale has had a town partnership with Seesen (Lower Saxony) on the northwest edge of the Harz and, since 1998, with the French town of Juvisy-sur-Orge, 18 km from Paris, as well as Tillabéri in Niger, northwest of the River Niger.

Culture and places of interest

St. Peter's Church (1908)
Windmill in Warnstedt
View from Witches' Dancefloor above Thale
View from the Witches' Dancefloor at Thale around 1900
Enamel wall picture near Thale Central Station

Museums

  • Wendhusen Abbey which specialises in the theme of "canoness chapters" (Kanonissenstifte)
  • Thale Smelting Museum
  • Walpurgis Hall

Buildings

  • The former Wendhusen Abbey, dating to the Carolingian period
  • The Hotel Zehnpfund, built in 1863 and once the biggest summer hotel in Germany
  • St. Peter's Church, completed in 1906
  • The Roman Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart (Herz-Jesu-Kirche), completed in 1910 and 1911
  • The prominent windmill in the village of Warnstedt

Other cultural sites

Natural monuments

Population history

  • 1825 - 1,406
  • 1910 - 15,000
  • 1939 - 13,535
  • 1946 - 18,082
  • 1950 - 17,968
  • 1960 - 17,391
  • 1971 - 17,620
  • 1981 - 16,830
  • 1984 - 16,423
  • 1999 - 15,153

Media

Thale is the setting of Theodor Fontane's novel Cécile. Fontane stayed in Thale a number of times between 1868 and 1884.

Sons and daughters of the city

Personalities associated with Thale

Theodor Fontane in 1883
  • Friedrich Wilhelm Leopold Pfeil (1783–1859), forestry scholar, spent time relaxing and hunting in the forest near Thale
  • Theodor Fontane (1819–1898) stayed in Thale 1868, 1877, 1881, 1882, 1883 and 1884, wrote the novel playing in Thale Cécile
  • Karl Bonhoeffer (1868–1948), psychiatrist, neurologist, medical expert, married to Paula von Hase, had a summer house in Friedrichsbrunn since 1913
  • Hans Schemm (1891–1935), NSDAP-Gauleiter, directed the bacteriological-chemical laboratory Hubertusbad until 1921
  • Axel von dem Bussche (1919–1993), officer and resistance fighter, knight-owner in Thale
  • Werner Oberländer (1921–2002), footballer at Stahl Thale and Eintracht Braunschweig, with both clubs he played at the highest level of football
  • Gojko Mitić (born 1940), actor, played various roles in the Harz mountain theater
  • Leni Riefenstahl (1902–2003), film director and actress, attended girls' boarding school in the village

References

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