Eichstätt
Eichstätt is a town in the federal state of Bavaria, Germany, and capital of the district of Eichstätt. It is located on the Altmühl river and has a population of around 13,000. Eichstätt is also the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Eichstätt.
Geography
Location
Eichstätt lies on both sides of the river Altmühl in the district of Eichstätt of the Oberbayern region of Bavaria, in the heart of Altmühl Valley Nature Park.Geology
Eichstätt is located in a valley of the Franconian Jura and is famous for the quarries of Solnhofen Plattenkalk. On the Blumenberg the Berlin specimen of Archaeopteryx was found by Jakob Niemeyer.History
St. Willibald founded the Diocese of Eichstätt on the site of an old Roman station in 741. The city was given walls and chartered in 908. It was ruled by a prince-bishop, and in the Holy Roman Empire was the seat of the Bishopric of Eichstätt until secularization in 1802. In 1806, it became a part of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Eichstätt was included as part of the Principality of Eichstätt, which King Maximilian I granted to his son-in-law Eugène de Beauharnais in 1817 and an episcopal see was reestablished in 1821. It reverted to the Bavarian crown in 1855.In 870, the remains of St. Walpurga were transferred from their original Heidenheim interment to Eichstätt, where in 1035 the newer burial site was enshrined as the Benedictine Abbey of St. Walburga, which continues to this day.
In 1943, the painter Karl Friedrich Lippmann moved to Eichstätt and stayed until 1955.
Hortus Eystettensis is the name of an important botanical book first published in 1613 and written by Basilius Besler.
World War II
Allied prisoners of war were held at Oflag VII-B in Eichstätt during World War II. Activities carried on by the prisoners there included attempted escapes and the production of plays and musical works. These included Hamlet and the Comedy of Errors by William Shakespeare, the premiere of Post-Mortem by Noël Coward - featuring Desmond Llewelyn, later best known as Q in the James Bond movies - and of the Ballad of Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard by Benjamin Britten.Attractions
The town is dominated by the Willibaldsburg. Besides the cathedral, Eichstätt also has 12 churches and 10 monasteries.Mayors
- 1944–1945: Hans Rösch, NSDAP
- 1945–1948: Romuald Blei
- 1948–1949: Richard Jaeger CSU
- 1949–1951: Romuald Blei
- 1951–1976: Hans Hutter, CSU
- 1976–1994: Ludwig Kärtner, CSU
- 1994–2012: Arnulf Neumeyer, SPD
- 2012–2020: Andreas Steppberger, FW
- 2020–present: Josef Grienberger, CSU
Education
Eichstätt is home to the Katholische Universität Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, the lone Catholic university in Germany. The KU was founded in 1980, and was granted full rights of a university, including Ph.D. and Habilitation degrees by the State of Bavaria.Sons and daughters of the town
- Tobias Barnerssoi, alpine skier and sports reporter
- Erhard Bauer, municipal architect of Eger
- Erich Emminger, politician, minister of justice from 1923 to 1924
- Anton Fils, composer
- Edmund Harburger, Munich draftsman and painter
- Johann Philipp Jeningen, catholic priest
- Anna Knauer, cyclist
- Konrad Kyeser, nobleman and war technician of medieval Europe
- Jörg Mager, electronic music pioneer and inventor
- Caritas Pirckheimer, abbess in Nuremberg during the Reformation
- Willibald Pirckheimer, lawyer, author humanist
- Max von Widnmann, sculptor and successor of Schwanthaler as professor at the academy of fine arts in Munich
Personalities connected with the city
- Pope Victor II, fifth German pope 1055–1057
- Gundekar II of Eichstätt, bishop, church politician,.
- Loy Hering, Renaissance sculptor from Kaufbeuren, councilor and mayor in Eichstätt
- Elias Holl, master builder from Augsburg, architect of the Willibaldsburg
- Karl Engel, brother of Jakob Engel, carpenter and builder
- Franz Xaver Witt, church musician, composer, reformer, founder of the general German Cäcilienvereine, 1870-1871 conductor of Eichstätt
- Prince Maximilian of Saxony (1870–1951), prince of the albertine branch, priestly and chaplain activity in Eichstätt, church researcher
- Cesare Orsenigo, from 1930 to 1945 apostolic Nuncio in Germany, successor of Pius XII as Apostolic Nuncio in Germany
- Karl Friedrich Lippmann, art painter,, 1943–1955 in Eichstätt
- Saint Walpurga, also spelled Valderburg or Guibor, was an Anglo-Saxon missionary to the Frankish Empire. She was canonized on 1 May c. 870 by Pope Adrian II. Saint Walpurgis Night is the name for the eve of her feast day, which coincides with May Day. At Eichstätt, her bones were moved to a rocky niche, which allegedly began to exude a miraculously therapeutic oil, which drew pilgrims to her shrine.