Aschara
Aschara is a village and part of the town of Bad Langensalza in Thuringia, central Germany, with 440 inhabitants.
Geography
The village lies about south of the outskirts of Bad Langensalza on the south-eastern slope of the Ascherberg hill, along the Weißer Bach stream. The nearest villages are Eckardtsleben to the north, Burgtonna to the east, Ballstädt to the southeast, Westhausen to the south, Wiegleben to the west and Henningsleben to the northwest. Transport links are via the Bundesstraße 247 between Gotha and Bad Langensalza, branching off at Aschara via the 2125 rural road, and from Burgtonna via the Ascharer Straße. The Fahner Höhe mountain range lies about west of the village.History
In the list of goods of the Hersfeld Abbey, the village appears among Charlemagne's donations to the monastery, which had been made until the death of its founder Lullus in 786. Thus, Aschara celebrated its 1,225th anniversary in 2011. In 932, Henry the Fowler exchanged the village for other possessions to the Abbot of Hersfeld Abbey. The Lords of Aschare gave the village to the Lords of Salza and these to the Lords of Gleichen. In 1634, as a result of a succession contract, the village and the lordship of Tonna passed to the baron of Tautenburg and Frauenprießnitz, and after his death in 1640 to the count of Waldeck. By deed of sale in 1677, Aschara fell to Frederick I, Duke of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg.To the north of the village rises a hill, on the southern side of which vines were grown in the Middle Ages, albeit with poor yields. Today, the hill is bisected by the railway line to Bad Langensalza; the western part is the Weinberg, high, on which stands a Dutch windmill dating from 1848, and the eastern part is called Wartberg.
On 1 January 1994, Aschara was incorporated into Bad Langensalza.