Schleiden
Schleiden is a town in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It lies in the Eifel hills, in the district of Euskirchen, and has 12,998 inhabitants as of 30 June 2017. Schleiden is connected by a tourist railway to Kall, on the Eifel Railway between Cologne and Trier. The town consists of 18 settlements, the largest of which are Gemünd and Schleiden proper.
Subdivisions
The borough of Schleiden is divided into 18 settlements :| Settlement | Population |
| Berescheid | 192 |
| Broich | 375 |
| Bronsfeld | 572 |
| Dreiborn | 988 |
| Ettelscheid | 275 |
| Gemünd | 3,868 |
| Harperscheid | 426 |
| Herhahn | 463 |
| Kerperscheid | 80 |
| Morsbach | 556 |
| Nierfeld | 451 |
| Oberhausen | 838 |
| Olef | 1,120 |
| Scheuren | 371 |
| Schleiden | 2,289 |
| Schöneseiffen | 424 |
| Wintzen | 85 |
| Wolfgarten | 209 |
| Total | 13,582 |
Neighbouring municipalities
- North: Heimbach
- East: Mechernich, Kall
- South: Hellenthal
- West: Monschau, Simmerath
Geographie
History
In the Middle Ages and Early Modern times, Schleiden was the centre of a lordship, later the County of Schleiden, which itself was part of the Duchy of Luxembourg, from 1441/43 as part of the Burgundian Netherlands. After the division of the Netherlands, the Duchy of Luxembourg with Schleiden remained as part of the Spanish line of the Habsburgs. After the War of Spanish Succession, the Duchy of Luxembourg, along with Schleiden, went to the Austrian line of the House of Habsburg. When revolutionary France conquered the Austrian Netherlands in 1794/95, the Duchy of Luxembourg was quickly divided into the three French departments: Forêts, Sambre-et-Meuse and Ourthe. Schleiden was in Ourthe. At the Vienna Congress of 1815, the formerly Luxembourgian areas east of the Our, Sauer and Moselle rivers were given to the Kingdom of Prussia. Thus, Schleiden became "Prussian" and, in 1871, part of the German Empire after having belonged to the Duchy of Luxembourg for centuries.The small town of Schleiden has produced two important Christian humanists: Johannes Sleidanus and Johannes Sturm, also known as Ioannes Sturmius.
In 1944 the Battle of Wahlerscheid took place nearby.
Schleiden had been affected by 2021 European floods. Nine persons in Schleiden died while the floods. Pedestrian zones in Gemünd and Schleiden main town, with commercial and residential buildings had been severly damaged.
Mayors
- 1972−1975: Max Fesenmeyer
- 1975−1984: Herbert Hermesdorf
- 1984−1995: Alois Sommer
- 1995−1997: Dieter Wolter
- 1997−2004: Christoph Lorbach
- 2004−2012: Ralf Hergarten
- 2012–2018: Udo Meister
- 2018– : Ingo Pfennings
Education
- Municipal Johannes-Sturmius-High School
- Clara-Fey-High School, Schleiden
- Municipal Secondary School
- Primary school
- Elementary school
- Elementary school Gemünd
- Elementary school Dreiborn
- Astrid Lindgren School, Schleiden
Sights
- Castle and church
- From 1900 to 1905 the Urft Dam was built as the largest dam in Europe at the time. Today it is part of the Eifel National Park.
- Ordensburg Vogelsang on the former Vogelsang Training Area
- "Tempelchen" war memorial for the victims of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/71 and the First World War
- Jewish Cemetery
- Forest Experience Centre
Olef Valley Railway
Until 1997 there was regular freight traffic via Schleiden to Hellenthal, after that only military traffic to Schleiden-Höddelbusch. The last troop loading took place there in winter 2002 with diesel and steam locomotives from a private railway. Belgium handed back the Vogelsang Training Area on 1 January 2006. The training area on the Dreiborn Plateau was turned over to non-military use and has a documentation centre and hiking area.
Public figures
- Johannes Sturm , educator and scholar of the Renaissance, a professor in Paris and founder of the University of Strasbourg
- Johannes Sleidanus, historian, professor, Schleiden / Strasbourg
- Leopold Schoeller, industrialist and Privy Councillor of Commerce
- Gustav Poensgen, industrialist and Privy Councillor of Commerce
- Rudolf Poensgen, industrialist and councillor of commerce
- Carl Poensgen, industrialist and Privy Councillor of Commerce
- Larres Albert, painter
- Francis Albert Heinen, journalist and nonfiction writer
- George Schreiber, photographer
- Vera Hilger, painter