Geesthacht
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 53 ° 26 ' N , 10 ° 22' E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Schleswig-Holstein | |
Circle : | Duchy of Lauenburg | |
Height : | 27 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 33.19 km 2 | |
Residents: | 30,688 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density : | 925 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 21502 | |
Area code : | 04152 | |
License plate : | RZ | |
Community key : | 01 0 53 032 | |
LOCODE : | DE GET | |
City administration address : |
Markt 15 21502 Geesthacht |
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Website : | ||
Mayor : | Olaf Schulze ( SPD ) | |
Location of the city of Geesthacht in the Duchy of Lauenburg district | ||
Geesthacht is the largest city in the Duchy of Lauenburg district in Schleswig-Holstein and part of the Hamburg metropolitan region . It is located southeast of Hamburg directly on the banks of the Elbe ; the distance to Hamburg city center is about 30 kilometers. The lower Elbe , influenced by the tides, begins below the Geesthacht weir .
The urban area borders directly on the Hamburg district of Altengamme and is only separated from Lower Saxony by the Elbe , so the city is located on a three-country corner . After the Elbe bridges in Hamburg, the Geesthacht Elbe bridge is the second fixed Elbe crossing to Lower Saxony - seen from the mouth of the Elbe - and at the same time one of two Elbe crossings in Schleswig-Holstein next to the Lauenburg Elbe bridge .
City structure
The city consists of the following districts: Altstadt, Besenhorst, Düneberg, Edmundstal-Siemerswalde, Grünhof, Hasenthal, Heinrichshof (formerly also HEW settlement on the Geestrücken), Heinrich-Jebens-Siedlung, Krümmel , Oberstadt (on the Geestrücken), Tesperhude.
history
Prehistory, early history and antiquity
The house of the dead in Tesperhude near Grünhof-Tesperhude , which was discovered in 1932 and excavated in 1933, dates from the Bronze Age . The urns and stone settings on the Päpersberg, which were uncovered in 1886 and 1893, also date from the Bronze Age. In 1928 an urn cemetery was discovered on Worther Weg, which is dated to the 1st century BC. The urns in stone wrapping from this period, which were found in 1912 during the paving of the street at the end of Mühlenstrasse in Geesthacht, are evidence of settlement during the migration period .
middle Ages
Foundation and name of the place
Research assumes that the first church in Geesthacht was founded about 100 years after Ludwig the Pious , who fortified the border of the Frankish Empire north of the Elbe in the area of the Sadelbande in 822 to protect against the Slavs. The place Geesthacht was first mentioned in 1216 as "Hachede" . In this document from 1216, Count Albrecht von Orlamünde , governor of the Danish King Waldemar II , granted the citizens of Hamburg exemption from customs at some customs offices , including Hachede. In the Ratzeburg tithe register of 1230, the name of the parish place is "Hagede" , although this spelling apparently reflects the older phonetic form of the place name. The origin of the place name Hacht or Hagede or Hachede (also Haghede ), as the place is called differently in the traditions, can be determined by looking at the oldest sound form Hagede and by comparing analogous formations such as "Mestethi" (= Meschede), can be determined, so that a reconstructed form * Hagithi or * Hagithja is to be used for the place name Hagede . The place name * Hagithi is probably a formation from the Old Saxon field name * hag- : " Umzäunung , Gehege, Hecke, Wileplatz" and the widespread place name suffix -ithi. -ithja (hag-ithi> hag-ede (hach-ede)> hach-t). Due to the name formation, the first settlement can be concluded in the 9th century at the latest. The name Geesthacht (composite of Geest and Hacht ) appears for the first time in 1402 in a document. In the 17th century, the ancient spelling "Geisthachede" was still used in isolated cases . “Gesthagt” and “GeistHachd” in use.
13-15 century
A change in the course of the river cut the place in two, creating the older Hacht an der Geest (Geesthacht) north of the Elbe and a younger Hacht an der Marsch ( Marschacht ) south of the Elbe . It is believed that the course of the river changed in the 12th century, as today's Elbe already existed in 1162 when the southern border of the Ratzeburg diocese was determined. The final separation of these two places is said to have taken place at the latest in the middle of the 13th century, when the common church sank into the Elbe between 1230 and 1258.
Hachede or Hacht an der Geest was rebuilt after the flooding in the 13th century in a horseshoe shape that was still clearly recognizable in 1830. Starting from the market with the church as the middle piece of the horseshoe, the two legs were the Bergedorfer Straße to the mill and the Lauenburger Straße to the round mountain. It was not until the 19th century that Geesthacht developed into a real clustered village.
The second church in Geesthacht was the St. Peter Church, which was built after the flooding and destruction of the old church on a hill of the Geesthacht Pastorenwerders (probably in 1261). According to the information in the Ratzeburg tithe register of 1230, the villages of Wiershop , Hamwarde , Hasenthal, Besenhorst , Fahrendorf , Hohenhorn and Worth belonged to the parish of Geesthacht ("Hagede") . Hamwarde, Wiershop and Worth were the first villages that were separated from Geesthacht. In the estimate of the churches of the Ratzeburg diocese of 1319, the village of Worth is listed as a separate parish ("Ecclesia in wort"). The village of Fahrendorf became desolate as early as the 14th century. Hohenhorn (Horn) was initially temporarily separated from Geesthacht with the establishment of the Nikolaipfarre in the 15th century, but was again reunited with Geesthacht.
In 1420, Geesthacht, like the city of Bergedorf and other areas, fell to the Hanseatic cities of Hamburg and Lübeck in the Peace of Perleberg . From then on, Geesthacht remained under the joint administration of the two Hanseatic cities in the Bergedorf office .
Modern times
16th Century
In 1598, the villages of Hasenthal and Tesperhude, which had been parish off to Geesthacht, were parish off to Hamwarde, and with the establishment of the new parish of Hohenhorn, the villages of Besenhorst and Hohenhorn were separated from the Geesthacht church.
Thirty Years War 1618–1648
During the Thirty Years War , the village of Geesthacht was not spared from raids. In 1627 the village of Geesthacht was plundered several times by Wallensteins and Tillys mercenaries . In contrast to the Vierlanden , who were able to avoid billeting by the troops of Wallenstein and Tilly in return for contributions , Geesthacht, as the exclave of the Bergedorf office , was defenseless against the raids of the mercenaries. In 1642, Geesthacht was plundered by Swedish mercenaries. In the summer of 1644, imperial troops raided the village. Here, the clerk was killed at Geesthacht and it came to looting and arson .
The time after the Peace of Westphalia until 1679
With the Peace of Westphalia of 1648, however, the Bergedorf office did not end the wars and horrors. In 1658 the imperial and Brandenburg soldiers who helped the King of Denmark in the fight against the Swedes attacked the village of Geesthacht. The Geesthachts were again robbed of their goods, which they had previously brought to the church for protection as in 1644. However, the stolen sacrament implements were brought back to the church by a horseman. In November 1675 the Danish colonel von Oertzen moved from the east into the Vierlande and probably also into Geesthacht, killed some residents and stayed in the country until June 4, 1676. In order to prevent the Vierlande from being annexed by the Danes, the cities of Hamburg and Lübeck approved the billeting of a Braunschweig-Lüneburg protection force, which occupied the Vierlande (also Geesthacht?) From 1676 to 1679.
1679 to the end of the 18th century
A flood disaster in 1684 led to the complete destruction of St. Peter's Church. The St. Salvatoris Church was subsequently built on higher ground in 1685 .
Trades in the 17th and 18th centuries
The timber trade was an important trade in the 17th and 18th centuries for the Geesthacht Hufner and some Kätner. An overview of the traders in Geesthacht has come down to us from 1758. There were 42 tradespeople (not counting boatmen), of whom the band tears , 13 people, were most represented. There were also 5 shoemakers and 5 grocery makers , several of whom also ran a hooping and one ran a white bakery. The most important trades were also represented: 2 shipbuilders, 2 linen weavers and 3 brandy distillers.
19th century to World War I
In 1805 the old village of Besenhorst in the Elbe meadows (located on the site of today's Geesthacht lock ) was destroyed by ice plugging in the Elbe.
In 1849 the Geesthacht Hufner JCH Meyer bought the site on Table Mountain, also called Katzberg, and sold it in 1851 to Christian Brauer from Karow in Mecklenburg, who founded a glass factory there in 1852. As a result, many workers from Mecklenburg moved to Geesthacht, who lived with their families on the Katzberg. After the bankruptcy, JHC Meyer took over the factory and the site in 1854 and also introduced basketry there. The goods were exported to America, which revitalized the willow industry in Geesthacht.
In 1865/66 the Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel and his partner “auf dem Krümmel” founded a factory for glycerine and invented dynamite (a mixture of nitroglycerine and diatomite , a breakdown product of dead algae). In Krümmel , the Krümmel dynamite factory was the first dynamite factory in the world.
In 1867 Lübeck ceded his rights to the Bergedorf office in both cities in return for the agreed payment of 200,000 Prussian thalers to Hamburg. Geesthacht has therefore belonged entirely to the Hamburg state territory since January 1, 1868, as part of the newly formed Bergedorf estate.
In 1886, under Johann Friedolf Wahlgreen, the first social democratic organization was founded in Geesthacht. In 1906 the Bergedorf-Geesthachter Railway (BGE) was opened, in 1916 the Krümmelbahn .
Time of the Weimar Republic
From 1918 to 1933 Geesthacht was the stronghold of the left parties USPD (in elections 1919–1920 between 26.4% and 41.6%) and later KPD (1921–1933 between 31.2% and 44.0%) and SAPD (local election 1932 10.5%) and is therefore popularly nicknamed Little Moscow .
In 1924 the town was granted city status after entry into force of the Hamburg city order of 2 January 1924, the City Charter of the Hamburg city Geesthacht of 13 June 1924. In 1928 the historic center was destroyed by a fire disaster.
In the Reichstag election in March 1933 , 28.6% voted for the NSDAP , 2.5% for the DNVP , 28.6% for the SPD and 31.5% for the KPD with a turnout of 94.6%. Thus, in 1933, Düneberg was one of the few strongholds of left-wing politics in the state of Schleswig-Holstein, which in this election was more of a stronghold of the NSDAP.
In the time of National Socialism
In the course of the Greater Hamburg Law , Geesthacht was assigned to the Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein in 1937 and has been part of the Duchy of Lauenburg since then . In 1937, Düneberg was incorporated with the Besenhorst, which was incorporated in 1928. In 1939/1942 Grünhof-Tesperhude was added with the Krümmel incorporated in 1928.
Up to 20,000 forced laborers were used in the Geesthacht factories . Accommodation was usually in barracks, including: Camp "Am Grünen Jäger", Camp Schmiedestrasse, Camp Grünhof, Camp Spakenberg, Camp Reichsstrasse, Camp Grenzstrasse, Camp Sandstrasse, Camp Birke or Knollgraben, Camp Heidberg, POW Camp Besenhorst, POW Camp Sielstrasse, Katzberg camp. During the Second World War, Krümmel in particular was the target of air raids by the Allies , for example on April 7, 1945. Finally, the city was also shelled with artillery. Factory director Hans Mayer successfully campaigned for the Hamburg governor Karl Kaufmann to hand over the city without a fight. On May 1, 1945, British troops entered Geesthacht.
Post-war until today
In 1945 Geesthacht housed many refugees and displaced persons who lived in makeshift shelters. To counter the threat of epidemics, the laboratory doctor Dr. Siegfried Kramer received permission from the occupation authorities to operate a laboratory doctor's practice. From this one of the most important medical laboratories in Germany developed.
A referendum to reintegrate the city into the state of Hamburg after the Second World War failed on April 19, 1956 before the Federal Constitutional Court .
1953 the passenger traffic was stopped at the BGE .
On January 22, 1963, the prominent supporter of National Socialism, Grand Admiral Karl Dönitz , gave a speech on the history of the Third Reich at the city's Otto Hahn Gymnasium at the invitation of the then student representative Uwe Barschel . The teachers hadn't prepared their students for this appointment, so none of them asked a critical question. There was also no question from the teachers. The coverage of these hours of National Socialist history lessons startled the democratic public, and the European press became interested in this political scandal.
Geesthacht was also the location of nuclear energy research and energy generation with nuclear energy. There are several decommissioned nuclear reactors in the Krümmel district. The facilities include the GKSS research center (today Helmholtz Center Geesthacht) with the nuclear reactors
- Research reactor Geesthacht I (FRG-1) (1958-2010),
- FRG-2 (1963-1993),
- System for zero power experiments as a test system for fuel rod assemblies (1964–1975)
- and the decommissioned pressurized water reactor of Otto Hahn (expanded 1979 in the Hamburg harbor basin, transported in 1981 together with other radioactively contaminated ship materials and by 2010 also 52 nuclear fuel rods) as well as a few hundred meters further west the Krümmel nuclear power plant (1984-2011) with its Castoren interim storage facility. The citizens' initiative for environmental protection in Oberelbe Geesthacht protested against the building. In 1983, extensive safety retrofits were achieved in the lawsuit. Nevertheless, there were several incidents. On April 24, 2010, the chain of actions and people from Krümmel to Brunsbüttel demonstrated against nuclear power plants with over 100,000 people from the Krümmel nuclear power plant to the Brunsbüttel nuclear power plant 120 kilometers away . On May 30, 2011, the federal government announced the end of the Krümmel nuclear power plant.
In addition to the storage facility for high-level radioactive waste, there is a storage facility for low- and medium-level radioactive waste on the site of the Krümmel nuclear power plant. According to Vattenfall , there are 1,100 drums with radioactive waste, but in 2012 Vattenfall was unable to provide any information about their condition.
The dismantling of the FRG-1 facility is expected to take ten years and will cost around 150 million euros. The dismantling concepts for the nuclear power plant and the associated costs are still being disputed.
environment
There is a statistical increase in radiation exposure in the vicinity of the two nuclear facilities Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht and Krümmel nuclear power plant. Between 1989 and December 2005 there were 15 to 17 cases of leukemia associated with the nuclear facilities. However, long-term investigations could not reveal any causes. One speaks of the leukemia cluster Elbmarsch .
Eyewitnesses reported a fire at the research center in 1986. Official bodies state leaked radon as the cause of the radiation exposure - the Elbe slope is after all a terminal moraine . For critics, however, geological and meteorological conditions speak against radon as the cause.
In addition, various radioactive substances could be detected in the ground that could come from a nuclear facility, such as the radioactive PAC beads . However, such a material could never be used in the types of nuclear reactors available there, and thermal decomposition of entire fuel elements should have had more consequences. The dynamite factory Krümmel would also be a plausible historical cause of such metallic fly ash .
politics
City council
In the municipal elections on May 6, 2018 and the previous two elections in 2013 and 2008, the election results led to the following allocation of seats:
Party / list | Seats 2008 | Seats 2013 | Seats 2018 | |
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SPD | 10 | 15th | 11 | |
CDU | 12 | 13 | 10 | |
GREEN | 5 | 7th | 5 | |
FDP / FWB | 4th | 2 | 3 | |
left | 2 | 2 | 2 | |
Free voters | - | - | 2 | |
Rule of Law League | - | 1 | - | |
Total number | 33 | 40 | 33 |
The increase in the number of seats in 2013 was due to overhang mandates .
List of mayors
- Julius Weltzien , from 1924 to 1931
- Walter Bornemann , from 1931 to 1933
- Rudolf Lilie , NSDAP, from July 4, 1933 to March 24, 1937, then provisional
- Harald Boysen , NSDAP, from 1938 to 1945 (?)
- Carl Bung , SPD, 1946 (installed by the military government)
- ?
- Carl Bung , SPD, from 1950 to 1958
- ? (Alfred Hufeld?)
- Otto-Wilhelm Krause , from 1960 to 1972
- Siegfried Weisse , SPD, from 1972 to 1982
- Karsten Ebel , from 1982 to 1988
- Peter Walter , SPD, from 1988 to 2000
- Ingo Fokken , independent, from 2000 to 2009
- Volker Manow , independent, previously First City Councilor, from December 2009 to February 2016
- Olaf Schulze , SPD, previously a member of the state parliament, since February 12, 2016.
coat of arms
Blazon : “Split by silver and blue. In front on a green three-mountain a black wicker with seven green leafy saplings, behind on silver and blue waves a single-masted golden boat with a silver sail. "
Town twinning
- Hoogezand-Sappemeer ( Netherlands ), since 1966.
- Plaisir ( France ), since 1975.
- Kuldīga ( Latvia ), since 1991.
- Oldham ( UK ), since 1966 (ended in 2004)
Economy and Infrastructure
Geesthacht is the largest nuclear and energy location in northern Germany ( pumped storage plant , Geesthacht research reactor , nuclear power plant in Krümmel ) and, with 50 million euros in reserves, is the richest city in Schleswig-Holstein - mainly due to the payments made by the Krümmel nuclear power plant. The Stadtwerke Geesthacht operate our own fiber-optic network , enabling the broadband Internet access for private individuals.
traffic
Streets
The following national roads lead in or through the city area:
- In the east-west direction, the federal highway 25 from Hamburg to Geesthacht relieves the much older parallel federal highway 5 , which leads from Hamburg in the west to Lauenburg in the east.
- The federal highway 404 is connected from the south ( Lüneburg ) via the weir of the Elbe leading to the federal highway 25 (to Hamburg) and continues on the federal highway 5 into the city center in order to establish a connection to Schwarzenbek and Kiel in the north .
railroad
There is a railway line to Hamburg-Bergedorf ( Bergedorf-Geesthachter Railway ). Several times a year special trips between Krümmel and Bergedorf Süd are carried out by the Geesthacht Railway Working Group .
In 2016, plans were made to reactivate the route for passenger traffic.
Ship / air traffic
Geesthacht's inland port for the cruise on the Elbe and has due to the barrage a Elbe lock .
The nearest seaport is the port of Hamburg .
The next airport is Hamburg-Fuhlsbüttel .
Established businesses
- Kernkraftwerk Krümmel GmbH
- Depesche Vertrieb GmbH is the sales company of the well-known Diddl Mouse.
- Neuland-Verlag (specialist literature on addiction, social work, self-help)
- Leuchtturm Albenverlag (stamp and coin collection systems)
- North German Carpet Factory GmbH
- With around 50 graduates per year, the Helmholtz Center Geesthacht is one of the largest training centers in the region.
- LADR is one of the largest providers of laboratory diagnostics in Germany. Other service companies in the medical sector are connected to this.
societies
- Alevi community of Geesthacht
- Anglersportverein "Frühauf" -Düneberg from 1919 e. V.
- Arbeiter-Samariter-Bund RV Duchy of Lauenburg
- AWO Geesthacht e. V.
- Civic Association Grünhof-Tesperhude e. V.
- Christian Scouting Royal Rangers
- DRK local association Geesthacht
- Duneberger SV
- Fraueninitiative e. V.
- FSV Geesthacht 07
- Geesthacht Initiative Culture Association (GIK)
- Hz. Ebu Bekir mosque DITIB e. V.
- Geesthacht youth fire brigade
- Canoe Club Geesthacht e. V.
- Motorsport Club Geesthacht e. V.
- Motor-Yacht-Club e. V.
- Rowing group Geesthacht from 1912 e. V.
- Seglervereinigung Geesthacht e. V.
- TCG Tennis Club Geesthacht from 1980 e. V
- VfL Geesthacht from 1885.
- VfL Grünhof-Tesperhude from 1909 e. V.
- Water sports community Tesperhude e. V.
- Economic Association Geesthacht (WVG)
- German Life Saving Society Upper Elbe
- Association of sports anglers Geesthacht from 1929 e. V.
Public facilities
State institutions
- Helmholtz Center Geesthacht - institution of the federal government and four northern German states
Educational institutions
The following educational institutions exist in Geesthacht:
- Alfred Nobel School - Community school with upper secondary school level (formerly Integrated Comprehensive School Geesthacht)
- Otto Hahn High School
- Bertha von Suttner School (formerly Geesthacht Realschule and Geesthacht Upper Town School)
- Silberberg School
- Buntenskamp School
- Hachede School, support center with a focus on intellectual development
- Grünhof forest school
- Geesthacht special school
- Vocational schools Mölln, Geesthacht branch
Leisure and sports facilities
- Outdoor swimming pool on the Elbe
- Hiking trail along the Elbuferstraße between Geesthacht and Krümmel, past the Osterquelle and a high ropes course
- High rope course on the Elbe in Krümmel at the lower outlet of the Geesthacht pumped storage plant , which was built in the natural treetops
- Jetty on the Elbe with departures from passenger ships according to the timetable z. B. the MS Aurora
Culture and sights
The list of cultural monuments in Geesthacht includes the cultural monuments entered in the list of monuments of Schleswig-Holstein.
Cinema / theater
- kTS - Kleines Theater Schillerstraße GmbH - cinema, in-house productions and touring theater: the kTS was opened in September 1994. From the beginning, cinema and theater performances were offered in one hall. Since July 2010, another hall has been available with Kino 2, which is operated by the local laboratory LADR GmbH MVZ Dr. Kramer & Kollegen was donated. The cinema schedule is compiled from the current, successful Hollywood or national productions. The cinema program is updated every 14 days by the selection of the Geesthachter Filmkiste e. V. supplemented with arthouse films. From the 2005/2006 season, the kTS will also be offering the theater schedule. Guest performances by well-known German-speaking touring theaters are purchased for this and sold as an optional subscription or with tickets for individual performances. In May 2002 the foyer of the theater was rebuilt and a more spacious restaurant area was created. At the same time, the studio stage was set up, on which cabaret programs , chanson and jazz evenings have been performed and classical theater has been produced.
Museums
- GeesthachtMuseum! in the Kruger house. The historic half-timbered house contains a permanent exhibition on the history of the city: first settlers, first supplier industries to the dynamite works, Alfred Nobel, film about the occupation at the end of the Second World War.
- Museum railway of the Geesthachter Eisenbahn e. V. between Bergedorf and Geesthacht on certain operating days
- House of the dead from Tesperhude - on the federal road 5 exit Grünhof-Tesperhude towards Lauenburg / Elbe
Archives
- The Geesthacht district group of the Heimatbund and history association Herzogtum Lauenburg e. V. conducts research into local history, maintains an image archive and its own archive.
- The Geesthacht city archive stores documents (including approved civil status data).
- The virtual archive of the Geesthacht Industrial Museum presents data on the architectural / technical side of the former factories.
music
- Geesthacht's city anthem has been the song "Kompass und Magnet" by the band "Die Medizinmänner" since 2016.
Buildings
- Krümmel nuclear power plant
- Pumped storage plant
- St. Salvatoris Church
- Geesthacht barrage (built in 1960) with Elbe sluice and fish ladder
- Geesthacht-Krümmel water tower
- Geesthacht railway water tower
- Heidbergring , an 850 meter long race track on the northern outskirts of Geesthacht. Not far from the route is a 12 meter high observation tower
Former companies
- Dynamite factory Krümmel by Alfred Nobel (until 1945)
- Powder factory Düneberg (until 1945)
Regular events
- Elbe festival with dragon boat races, Menzer-Werft-Platz and harbor, every two years, always on the second weekend in September (most recently in 2019)
- Music at the harbor - stage in front of the terrace seating at the harbor. Open-air music series with seven concerts from late May to mid / late August
- Rockbi Festival: annual open-air event on Menzer-Werft-Platz (Red Square at the harbor). Since 2009.
- Guided tours by the Geesthacht industrial museum support group on the grounds of the Krümmel dynamite factory and the Düneberg black powder factory
- Trips with the museum train from Geesthacht to Hamburg-Bergedorf
Personalities
Born in Geesthacht
- Friedrich Wilhelm Christern (1816–1891), German-American bookseller and publisher
- Wilhelm Bergner (1835–1905), industrialist
- Carsten Adolf Krüger (1847–1930), German politician and promoter of the Bergedorf-Geesthacht Railway
- Alfred Christern (1856–1929), farmer and mayor
- Wilhelm Holert (1867–1961), entrepreneur and the only honorary citizen of Geesthacht
- August Ziehl (1881–1965), politician
- Rudolf Basedau (1897–1975), politician (SPD)
- Joachim Ritter (1903–1974), philosopher
- Hans Joachim Beyer (1908–1971), historian , National Socialist folk researcher and SS - Hauptsturmführer
- Helmut Dau (1926–2010), lawyer
- Karl-Heinz Warnholz (* 1944), politician (CDU)
- Holger Svensson (* 1945), civil engineer
- Gerd Knesel (1946–1992), songwriter
- Uwe Harden (* 1952), politician (SPD)
- Thomas Kleemann (* 1954), painter
- Dieter Riemer (* 1955), lawyer and historian
- Ulrich Jaehde (* 1961), pharmacist and professor for clinical pharmacy
- Christel Oldenburg (* 1961), politician (SPD) and historian
- Hauke Harms (* 1961), scientist (environmental microbiologist)
- Frank Peterson (* 1963), music producer
- Dirk Kruse (* 1964), journalist and writer
- Olaf Schulze (* 1967), politician (SPD)
- Michael Meziani (* 1967), actor
- Halil Ibrahim Mustafa Horuz from the Millionarts (* 1989) producer team, music producer & composer
- Iftikhar Malik (* 1990), politician (SPD)
Associated with Geesthacht
- Johann Ludwig Uhland (1787–1862), poet, literary scholar, worked in Geesthacht
- Alfred Nobel (1833–1896), inventor, chemist and industrialist, worked in Geesthacht-Krümmel
- Johann Friedolf Wahlgreen (1855–1941), politician and trade unionist, died in Geesthacht
- Albert Bülow (1883–1961), politician, died here
- Fritz Rienecker (1897–1965), publicist, theologian and pastor in Geesthacht from 1941–1946
- Karl-Otto Dummer (1932–2009), seaman and one of six survivors when the sailing ship Pamir sank in 1957, lived in Geesthacht
- Uwe Barschel (1944–1987), Prime Minister, was a student at the Otto Hahn Gymnasium in Geesthacht
- Roland Garve (* 1955) ran a dental practice and is an ethno dentist
- Thomas Wüppesahl (* 1955), politician, lives in the Krümmel district
- Uwe Bahn (* 1958), NDR presenter, graduated from the Otto Hahn Gymnasium in Geesthacht
literature
- J. Klefeker: Extract from a written Geesthacht church history by the former pastor Webers, because of the churches that were to be built there one after the other. In: Collection of Hamburg laws and constitutions in civil and ecclesiastical matters, including Cammer action and other policey matters and business, including historical introductions. Volume 11, Hamburg 1772, pp. 297-308.
- M. Prüß: Geesthacht Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on ancient sources and modern representations; Printing and publishing house Wilh. Matzke, Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929.
- W. Mittendorf: Geesthacht 25 years city. Printed by Wilhelm Matzke, Geesthacht 1949.
- Wilhelm Stölting: Geesthacht - life picture of a city. Nordwestdeutscher Verlag Ditzen & Co., Bremerhaven 1963 (with time table 3000 BC to 1962).
- William Boehart: Geesthacht - A city history. Contributions to landscape development, regional history and cultural perspectives of an Elbe settlement. Viebranz Verlag, Schwarzenbek 1993, ISBN 3-921595-18-5 .
- Bernhard Michael Menapace: Little Moscow turns brown: Geesthacht in the final phase of the Weimar Republic (1928–1933). Kiel 1991, ISBN 3-89029-923-7 .
- Heinz Bohlmann: fists, guides, refugee treks. A contribution to the history of the cities of Geesthacht and Lauenburg / Elbe 1930–1950. Schwarzenbek 1990, ISBN 3-921595-15-0 .
- August Ziehl: Geesthacht - 60 years of the labor movement 1890–1950. Geesthacht 1958.
- Janine Ullrich: Forced laborers and prisoners of war in Geesthacht 1939–1945. LIT Verlag, 2001, ISBN 3-8258-5730-1 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ North Statistics Office - Population of the municipalities in Schleswig-Holstein 4th quarter 2019 (XLSX file) (update based on the 2011 census) ( help on this ).
- ^ Ernst Probst: The Lüneburg Group in the Bronze Age. In: Ernst Probst: Germany in the Bronze Age. Farmers, bronze casters and lords of the castle between the North Sea and the Alps. Bertelsmann, Munich 1996/1999, p. 36.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations, Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 90 u. 91.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations, Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, pp. 92–94.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the collaboration of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations, Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 91.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, pp. 99, 123 f.
- ↑ Hamburg Document Book. Edited by Johann Martin Lappenberg. Volume 1. Anastat. Reprod. the edition of the year 1842. Hamburg 1907 = 1842. No. 401. See website of the University of Hamburg: Archive link ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) accessed on March 12, 2016.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 99 f.
- ^ Nissen, T. (1956): Das Kirchspiel Hachede, in: Lauenburgische Heimat , Heft 10/1956, copy in: Sonderheft Lauenburgische Heimat 31, 2017, p. 44.
- ^ G. Köbler: Old Saxon dictionary. 3. Edition. 2000ff, p. 497.
- ^ G. Neumann: Name studies on Old Germanic; Real Lexicon of Germanic Antiquity. Supplementary Volumes, Volume 59; Editors: Heinrich Hettrich, Astrid Van Nahl. Verlag De Gruyter, 2008, p. 108.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 99 f.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 101.
- ↑ See church records from Gülzow (near Lauenburg) and von Hohenhorn from the 17th century, KB Gülzow, page 27 March 1649: "Baltzer Ahrens zu Geisthachede", KB Gülzow, page 4 March 1687: "Gesthagt." KB Hohenhorn, pl. April 12, 1669: "Hein Uhrbrock Vogt zu GeestHachd".
- ^ W. Prange: Settlement history of the state of Lauenburg in the Middle Ages, sources and research on the history of Schleswig-Holstein. Society for Schleswig-Holstein History (Ed.), Volume 41, Neumünster 1960, p. 22 u. 23.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 54.
- ↑ J. Klefeker: Extract from a written Geesthacht church history by the former pastor Webers, because of the churches that had to be built there one after the other. In: Collection of Hamburg laws and constitutions in civil and ecclesiastical matters, including Cammer action and other policey matters and business, including historical introductions. Volume 11, Hamburg 1772, p. 299.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 124.
- ^ A b F. Voigt: The Church of Geesthacht at the end of the 16th century. In: Communications from the Association for Hamburg History. Volume 3, Vol. 9, 1886, p. 23.
- ^ W. Prange: Settlement history of the state of Lauenburg in the Middle Ages, sources and research on the history of Schleswig-Holstein. Editor: Society for Schleswig-Holstein History, Volume 41, Neumünster 1960.
- ^ J. Braden: The Great War and the Small Village. The Thirty Years War and Geesthacht. Geesthacht 2012, pp. 20-27.
- ^ J. Braden: The Great War and the Small Village. The Thirty Years War and Geesthacht. Geesthacht 2012, pp. 32–38.
- ↑ J. Klefeker: Extract from a written Geesthacht church history by the former pastor Webers, because of the churches that had to be built there one after the other. In: Collection of Hamburg laws and constitutions in civil and ecclesiastical matters, including Cammer action and other policey matters and business, including historical introductions. Volume 11, Hamburg 1772, p. 302.
- ↑ J. Klefeker: Extract from a written Geesthacht church history by the former pastor Webers, because of the churches that had to be built there one after the other. In: Collection of Hamburg laws and constitutions in civil and ecclesiastical matters, including Cammer action and other policey matters and business, including historical introductions. Volume 11, Hamburg 1772, p. 304.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 120 and p. 121.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 121.
- ↑ J. Klefeker: Extract from a written Geesthacht church history by the former pastor Webers, because of the churches that had to be built there one after the other. In: Collection of Hamburg laws and constitutions in civil and ecclesiastical matters, including Cammer action and other policey matters and business, including historical introductions. Volume 11, Hamburg 1772, pp. 304-308.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, pp. 126–129.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1 | 929, pp. 147–148.
- ^ W. Boehart, H. Knust and others: Besenhorst / Düneberg. A district story. Contributions to the development of a Lauenburg village into the Geesthacht district, publisher: Stadt Geesthacht, 1997.
- ↑ M. Prüß: Geesthachter Heimatbuch. With the cooperation of local teachers based on old sources and modern representations. Geesthacht / Hamburg 1929, p. 12 u. 13.
- ↑ AKENS Information 39, Omland: "All of us 'yes' to the leader". Retrieved November 26, 2019 .
- ↑ State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein (ed.): The population of the communities in Schleswig-Holstein 1867 - 1970 . State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein, Kiel 1972, p. 72 .
- ↑ Janine Ullrich: Forced laborers and prisoners of war in Geesthacht taking into account DAG Dünebeg and Krümmel 1939–1945. Lit. Verlag, Münster / Hamburg / Berlin / London 2001, ISBN 3-8258-5730-1 . In: Series of publications by the Geesthacht City Archives. (StaG), Volume 12, p. 78.
- ↑ Katharina Kreuder-Sonnen: Ukrainian forced laborers in Geesthacht - contemporary witness reports. In: Lauenburg homeland. Issue 170 (September 2005), pp. 62–81.
- ↑ Janine Dressler and others: Deported to Schleswig-Holstein: Forced labor in the ammunition factories in Geesthacht - A stumbling block for Ernst Oberfohren? and other contributions (information on Schleswig-Holstein's contemporary history). AKENS, Kiel 2009.
- ^ List based on Janine Ullrich
- ↑ NDR (online)
- ^ The Dönitz affair: cf. The Grand Admiral and the Little Town . Contribution to the history competition of the Federal President Sensation, indignation, annoyance: scandals . 2011. Work of 13a at Otto Hahn Gymnasium Geesthacht, February 2011 (PDF; 2.3 MB)
- ↑ Nuclear waste. In: Der Spiegel . 27/1981.
- ↑ Network Rainbow (online)
- ↑ Thomas Wüppesahl: With full force against atomic energy
- ^ Kai Gerullis: Nuclear waste - 1100 barrels with dangerous radiation under crumbs. ( Memento from August 11, 2014 in the web archive archive.today ) In: Bergedorfer Zeitung . March 15, 2012.
- ↑ The slow death of the republic's breakdown pile
- ↑ Nuclear power plant is shut down , taz of October 24, 2008.
- ^ NDR : Dispute over the dismantling of Krümmel and Brunsbüttel ( Memento from March 31, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Kai Gerullis: Krümmel - Vattenfall limits liability for nuclear power plant dismantling , August 21, 2012.
- ↑ https://www.geesthacht.de/Pektiven/Ratsammlung Ratsammlung 2018 in Geesthacht
- ↑ a b c d e Kim Nadine Müller: 13 men for one city. In: bergedorfer-zeitung.de. Bergedorfer Zeitung , March 28, 2013, accessed on March 31, 2018.
- ↑ Lily, Rudolf . In: Franklin Kopitzsch, Dirk Brietzke (Hrsg.): Hamburgische Biographie . tape 6 . Wallstein, Göttingen 2012, ISBN 978-3-8353-1025-4 , p. 189 – William Boehart .
- ↑ Carl Bung in the Stadtlexikon Geesthacht ( Memento of the original from February 24, 2018 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ^ Siegfried Weisse . In: SPD history workshop . ( spd-geschichtswerkstatt.de [accessed on July 27, 2018]).
- ↑ Kai Gerullis: Book presentation Memories of the Mayor's Adventure , September 24, 2010.
- ↑ Peter Walter: My time with Helmut Schmidt and as Mayor Geesthachts.
- ↑ heart attack? - Geesthacht mourns Ingo Fokken. ( Memento from February 10, 2013 in the web archive archive.today ) June 23, 2009.
- ↑ Volker Manow elected the new mayor with 81%. December 13, 2009.
- ↑ Schleswig-Holstein's municipal coat of arms
- ↑ 50 million euros in reserves. In: Hamburger Abendblatt. March 30, 2007.
- ↑ Internet, telephony, TV for your home - Stadtwerke Geesthacht. Retrieved July 27, 2018 .
- ↑ 1,500 people test test train rides to Geesthacht. August 13, 2016, archived from the original on August 13, 2016 ; accessed on October 3, 2016 .
- ↑ State portal Schleswig Holstein - Ministry of Economy, Labor, Transport and Technology - "Dare more public transport". August 13, 2016, archived from the original on August 13, 2016 ; accessed on October 3, 2016 .
- ↑ Timo Jann: In the modern laboratory on a journey of discovery , Bergedorfer Zeitung , June 2, 2013
- ↑ Karin Lohmeier: On the trail of the bad guys in food , Bergedorfer Zeitung , January 17, 2012, PDF ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Timo Jann: VSW visits Intermed ( PDF ), Bergedorfer Zeitung , October 18, 2009
- ^ City of Geesthacht: Schools / Geesthacht. Retrieved on July 27, 2018 (German).
- ↑ Friends of the Forest School Geesthacht e. V. ( Memento of the original from February 26, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ LADR history: 65 years of Labor Dr. Kramer and colleagues
- ^ City of Geesthacht: / Geesthacht. (No longer available online.) Formerly in the original ; accessed on July 27, 2018 (German). ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ Home and history association Herzogtum Lauenburg e. V .: Geesthacht. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on July 27, 2018 ; accessed on July 27, 2018 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ ertelt-net: Exhibition - Förderkreis Industriemuseum Geesthacht e. V. Accessed July 27, 2018 .
- ^ Heidbergring on the website of Heidbergring Betriebsgesellschaft mbH
- ↑ Rockbi Festival (official website). Retrieved October 29, 2019 .