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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the city of Wurzen
Spice up
Map of Germany, position of the city of Wurzen highlighted

Coordinates: 51 ° 22 ′  N , 12 ° 44 ′  E

Basic data
State : Saxony
County : Leipzig
Height : 124 m above sea level NHN
Area : 69.03 km 2
Residents: 16,209 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 235 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 04808
Primaries : 03425, 034261
License plate : L , BNA, GHA, GRM, MTL, WUR
Community key : 14 7 29 410
City structure: 16 districts

City administration address :
Friedrich-Ebert-Strasse 2
04808 Wurzen
Website : www.wurzen.de
Lord Mayor : Jörg Röglin ( SPD )
Location of the city of Wurzen in the Leipzig district
Sachsen-Anhalt Thüringen Landkreis Mittelsachsen Landkreis Nordsachsen Leipzig Bennewitz Böhlen (Sachsen) Borna Borsdorf Brandis Colditz Frohburg Grimma Groitzsch Großpösna Kitzscher Lossatal Machern Markkleeberg Markranstädt Neukieritzsch Neukieritzsch Thallwitz Trebsen/Mulde Bad Lausick Otterwisch Geithain Belgershain Naunhof Parthenstein Elstertrebnitz Pegau Pegau Regis-Breitingen Wurzen Zwenkau Röthamap
About this picture

Wurzen is a large district town in the northeast of the Leipzig district in Saxony . The city has been the cathedral city ​​for 900 years and thus at the same time the center and namesake of the Wurzener Land . As the birthplace of the poet Joachim Ringelnatz the city leads unofficially nicknamed Ringelnatz city .

geography

Wurzen is located on the eastern high bank of the Mulde , about 30 kilometers east of Leipzig , on the oldest German long - distance railway line Leipzig – Dresden and on federal highway 6 . The B 107 runs west of the city. In the southeast the urban area borders on the Wermsdorfer Forest . The Mühlbach that rises there flows through the urban area. The A 14 south of the city can be reached via the Grimma junction (about 20 kilometers).

Local division

history

lock

On the Wurzener Stadtflur (Crostigall), recent archaeological excavations have demonstrated a settlement continuity of around 6000 years. The region was inhabited by Germanic people until the 6th century. The oldest (?) Settlement cells of today's city are - like the place name - of Slavic origin. Wurzen is mentioned for the first time in 961 in a document from Otto I as Vurcine and Civitas . The castle and the market settlement drew their importance from their location at the junction of the Via Regia over the Mulde river and its intersection with an old salt road from Halle to Prague . Wurzen belonged temporarily to the diocese of Merseburg and after 995 came to the diocese of Meißen . Bishop Herwig founded the Wurzen collegiate monastery in 1114 , which became Protestant in the 16th century and still exists ( cathedral chapter ). A market settlement was established east of the older castle settlement around 1150 by the bishops of Meissen . The expansion of the country , especially through the settlement of farmers from the western territories of the empire (" Kührener settlement contract" 1154 for 15 Flemish farming families) and the establishment of their own secular territorial rule ( Wurzener Land ) made the newly founded market settlement as a central location grow rapidly.

The development of the city reached a high point in the 15th and 16th centuries, when the bishops of Meissen temporarily resided here and undertook significant building activities (castle, cathedral extension, St. Wenceslai church). After the division of the Wettin lands (1485), the patronage over Wurzen and Wurzener Land was jointly exercised by the Ernestines and Albertines . Both lines were ultimately aimed at secularization of the episcopal territory, which u. a. 1542 led to the so-called " Wurzener Feud " ("Fladenkrieg"). Wurzen and the so-called "Wurzener Land", which surrounds the city mainly east of the Mulde, did not belong to the Wettin lands until 1581, but were secular property of the bishops of Meissen, who resided in Wurzen several times, since 1487 more and more often and longer. Even after the "surrender" and "resignation" of the last bishop Johann von Haugwitz in 1581, the area was administered until 1818 by a specially appointed Saxon monastery government. Only then did the Wurzener Land become part of Saxony as an administrative district in the true sense of the word.

Wurzen around 1650
Oldest railway bridge in operation in Germany from 1838 near Kornhain
View around 1850
New Mulde bridge
Wurzen 2013, with castle, cathedral, Wenzeslaikirche and mill works

In 1581 Wurzen came to Albertine Saxony , which in the meantime, as a result of the Schmalkaldic War, had acquired the electoral dignity in 1547 and which now had Wurzen and the monastery area ( Wurzener Land ) administered by a specially appointed monastery government (until 1818).

In Wurzen 1570-1659 persecutions of witches were carried out: five people were involved in witch trials, one man was whacked with “fruit of the body” on charges of sorcery in 1570, one woman died in custody. The economic and demographic decline of the city, caused by the plague epidemics (especially in 1607), city fires and the consequences of war, took place in the 17th and 18th centuries . During the Thirty Years' War , the town was plundered by the Swedes in 1637 ("Wurtznian Creutz and Torture Week") and almost completely burned down. The Northern War , but especially the Seven Years' War and the Napoleonic Wars , let the city wither away. Only after the downsizing of Saxony after the Congress of Vienna (1815) and the construction of road bridges over the Mulde and Flussaue (1830/1832) did a remarkable upswing set in again.

On July 31, 1838 Wurzen was connected to the German railway network ( Leipzig-Dresden Railway ). The first railway bridge in Germany was built over the Mulde , the bridge over the B 6 is today the oldest German railway bridge in operation. Then it developed rapidly as an industrial city (especially food and textile industry, metal processing). The population quadrupled between 1850 and 1914. This development also continued in the 20th century until the 1970s. After German reunification, there was another strong economic and demographic decline, the number of inhabitants fell to a threatening extent and the average age of the inhabitants rose.

As a result of the stormy industrialization in the second half of the 19th century, the workers' movement developed early in Wurzen . For a time in the 1880s, Julius Künzel was the only social democratic city councilor in Saxony. In 1903 a subdistrict of the SPD was founded in Wurzen . During the November Revolution, one of the first workers and soldiers' councils in what was then Saxony acted in Wurzen . Albert Kuntz worked as a prominent KPD member in Wurzen until 1923 . a. in the city council. In 1926 a coalition of the SPD and KPD succeeded in establishing a majority in the city council and electing Georg Boock for the first time as a social-democratic mayor.

Wurzen, which previously belonged to the administrative authority of Grimma , became a district-free town in 1924 , one of the smallest in Germany, and became part of the Grimma district in 1946 and the Wurzen district in 1952 until its dissolution in 1994.

From 1935 to 1945 the city housed a military district command and during the Second World War several anti-aircraft units. From October 1943 to April 1945, Wurzen experienced several American air raids , with over 40 fatalities. The most severe took place on October 7, 1944, when 13 “Flying Fortresses” B-17 dropped around 85 high-explosive explosive bombs on Wurzen, which were actually intended for the Brüx hydrogenation works in northern Bohemia.

From July 1939 to May 1945 Armin Graebert (1898–1947) was Lord Mayor of the city; On April 24, 1945, together with members of the SPD, KPD and the pastors of the Protestant and Catholic churches, he achieved the surrender of the city to Major Victor G. Conley of the 273rd US Infantry Regiment and thus saved it from destruction.

The town's high school, named after Magnus Gottfried Lichtwer since 1993, moved to a new building in 1996 northeast of the historic town center.

Wurzen has been one of the pilot projects in the Free State of Saxony for urban redevelopment east since 2002 . Due to the demographic and economic development of the last few decades, for the first time in the history of Saxony it is necessary to organize a planned demolition of urban housing and the sensible reuse of the cleared areas.

The construction of a new Mulde bridge began in 2004 and was handed over in 2007.

From September 4th to 6th, 2015, Wurzen hosted the 24th day of the Saxons .

Population development

date Residents
1875 7,273
1880 8,042
1890 14,635
1925 18,286
1933 18,961
1939 18,483
08/31/1950 26,456
December 31, 1960 23,523
date Residents
01/01/1971 24,228
December 31, 1981 19,281
December 31, 1988 19,421
December 31, 1995 20,276
December 31, 2001 18,702
05/09/2011 16,928
December 31, 2012 16,521
December 31, 2013 16,356

Incorporations

Bismarck Tower in Dehnitz
Elephant fountain in Kühren
Former parish date annotation
Burkartshain January 1, 1994 Merger with Kühren to form Kühren-Burkartshain
Dehnitz July 1, 1950
Corn grove before 1880 Incorporation to Mühlbach
Cooling January 1, 1994 Merger with Burkartshain to form Kühren-Burkartshain
Kühren-Burkartshain October 1, 2006
Mühlbach January 1, 1952 Incorporation to Burkartshain
Nemt March 1, 1993
Nischwitz July 1, 1950
January 1, 1957
January 1, 1993
Incorporation to Wurzen
Ausgemeerung from Wurzen
Incorporation to Thallwitz
Nitzschka 1st February 1974 Incorporation to Burkartshain
Oelschütz June 1, 1936 Incorporation to Nitzschka
Pyrna January 1, 1956 Incorporation to Burkartshain
Roitzsch July 1, 1950
Saxon village 1st January 1974 Incorporation to Burkartshain
Scatter July 1, 1950 Incorporation after Kühren
Trebelshain July 1, 1950 Incorporation after Kühren
Forests June 1, 1936 Incorporation to Sachsendorf

politics

Local elections 2019
Turnout: 55.2% (2014: 41.6%)
 %
30th
20th
10
0
24.3%
22.9%
15.7%
12.0%
11.0%
10.9%
3.2%
n. k.
BfW
NFW
Gains and losses
compared to 2014
 % p
 20th
 15th
 10
   5
   0
  -5
-10
-15
-20
-25
-22.2  % p
+ 6.9  % p
+ 15.7  % p.p.
-6.1  % p
+ 11.0  % p
-4.7  % p.p.
+1.0  % p
-1.6  % p
BfW
NFW
Old Town Hall

Since the 1990s, the right-wing radical scene has gained more influence in the city than in other comparable municipalities in Eastern Germany, especially among young people. The President of the State Office for the Protection of the Constitution of the Free State of Saxony, Eckehard Dietrich , classified Wurzen in 1996 as “probably the most important center of neo-Nazis in Germany”. The city has been the scene of repeated physical and armed attacks on migrants, journalists and politically more left-wing politicians. Activists count hundreds of incidents over the past 20 years. Attacks in neighboring cities are also sometimes planned and staffed by the Wurzen scene. Sports facilities that offer combat training are also important.

The network for democratic culture, the Wurzen location initiative, the parishes and the city administration are committed to countering the concentration of right-wing violence in Wurzen, which has been spread through the media, and are therefore themselves exposed to right-wing violence. Nonetheless, it represents a persistent problem for the city. The reluctance of the police and the judiciary to perceive and prosecute right-wing crimes is also lamented.

City council

Distribution of seats in the
Wurzen City Council 2019
      
A total of 26 seats
  • Left : 3
  • SPD : 3
  • BfW : 6
  • CDU : 7
  • AfD : 4
  • NFW : 3

After the local elections on May 26, 2019 , the city council is composed as follows (changes compared to 2014):

  • CDU : 7 seats (−6)
  • BfW - Citizens for Wurzen - Independent voters' association: 6 seats (0)
  • AfD  : 4 seats (+4, 2 of which are unoccupied)
  • SPD : 3 seats (−1)
  • LEFT : 3 seats (−2)
  • NFW - New Forum Wurzen: 3 seats (+3)

The group of voters “Neues Forum für Wurzen” has connections to the neo-Nazi scene.

mayor

In June 2008, Jörg Röglin was elected to succeed Jürgen Schmidt in the second ballot. He was confirmed in office in 2015.

coat of arms

Description : In black, a golden horse jumping to the left , red bridled and with a red saddlecloth, it is carrying a golden rider with a hat and crosier . The person in question is St. Wenceslas

Twin cities

economy

Felt factory
hospital

Despite the decline in population and the loss of some important industrial companies (including Wurzener Carpet Factory), Wurzen is an important location with a large number of medium-sized companies, mostly with special products on the world market. Unemployment is currently the lowest in the employment district. An economic focus is the production of pastries and confectionery at a subsidiary of Griesson - de Beukelaer . In addition, a large number of high-performance medium-sized mechanical engineering companies and specialist companies (transport systems, lighting equipment manufacture, felt manufacture) are based in the city.

The hospital is a house of standard care run by the district. With the hospital in Grimma, it belongs to the Muldentalkliniken GmbH.

traffic

railway station

Wurzen is on the B 6 , the B 107 runs on the left bank of the Mulde through Bennewitz . The A 14 can be reached via the B 107 in the south (connection point Grimma) approx. 15 km away and in the west via the B 6 (connection point Leipzig-Ost) approx. 18 km away. The S3 line of the S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland connects Wurzen with Leipzig city center, the Regional Express connects the city with the main train stations of Dresden and Leipzig. The city is part of the Central German Transport Association and is connected by the Leipzig regional bus with two PlusBus and other regional bus routes.

Municipal gallery on the market

Regular exhibitions take place in the gallery on the market. In 2013, on the occasion of Joachim Ringelnatz's 130th birthday, an exhibition entitled Die Frauen um Ringelnatz was organized .

tourism

St. Mary's Cathedral
Wenceslas Church
Kath. Herz-Jesu-Kirche

Wurzen is located on the Ecumenical Pilgrimage Route , which was set up in 2003 by the Saxon youth pastor's office. In Wurzener Land, this hiking trail largely follows the old route of the medieval Via Regia . Like no other city in central Germany has Wurzen memories of the medieval Jacob pilgrimage : Jakobsplatz, Jakobgasse and - until the Thirty Years' War keen - Jacob Church, Jakobskirchhof and Jacob Hospital.

In the urban area (Gerhart-Hauptmann-Platz) the Via Regia also crosses a second old transcontinental long-distance route, an old salt road from Halle to Prague . This old road , which runs from north to south, is part of the future transcontinental cultural route Via Salaria ( Lübeck - Trapani / Sicily ). In addition, the Lutherweg leads through the city, the next stops are Schildau in the northeast and Trebsen in the south.

The former Glauchau – Wurzen railway line is used as part of the Mulderadweg as far as Grimma . The paved path is also suitable for inline skiers.

Architectural monuments and places of remembrance

Old post office
Joachim Ringelnatz's birthplace
Postage stamp with the Wurzner Post Gate
museum
Pest house
Tower in the city park
Wrba-Plastik by Elsa Brändström
Water tower in Wurzen
Water tower in Roitzsch
Church in Nemt
Church in Sachsendorf

Personalities

Great personalities

mayor

In Wurzen there is the Bürgermeister-Schmidt-Platz and the Boockweg - as a thank you and in memory of the former city leaders Julius Theodor Schmidt and Georg Boock .

Honorary citizen

The following people are honorary citizens of the city of Wurzen (with the year of honorary citizenship) as recognition and thanks for their achievements :

Varia

See also

literature

  • Cordia Schlegelmilch : A city tells of the turning point. 1989 Wurzen / Saxony 1990 . Sax-Verlag, Markkleeberg, Beucha 2019, ISBN 978-3-86729-239-9 .
  • City administration Wurzen; Wurzen in transition. An illustrated foray through the city from 1850 to the present , ( Horb am Neckar ) 2011.
  • Wolfgang Ebert: Wurzen and the Muldenaue. A guide to the city, its landscape and history , Beucha 2010, ISBN 978-3-86729-076-0 .
  • Wolfgang Ebert: Historical-topographical lexicon of the city of Wurzen and the districts of Dehnitz, Roitzsch and Nemt . Published in the series "Terra Wurcinensis - The Wurzener Land in the past and present". 3rd edition, Beucha 2008, ISBN 978-3-930076-55-0 , DNB 991585763 .
  • Cordia Schlegelmilch: Wurzen . Erfurt 2006, ISBN 978-3-86680-066-3 , DNB 980196620 .
  • NovoPrint Verlags GmbH Fellbach and Wurzen City Administration (ed.): Large district town of Wurzen - information brochure with a multi-colored city map. 80 pages, 4th edition, Fellbach / Wurzen 2005.
  • City administration Wurzen (ed.): Wurzen - a good piece of Saxony. History & stories of a 1040 year old city. Wurzen 2001, without ISBN.
  • Hans Abicht, Reiner Herrig, Rolf and Rosemarie Kunze, Gerhard Marchewitz (eds.): Wurzen - a thousand-year-old city in Saxony . Wurzen 1990, ISBN 3-9700003-0-0 .
  • Wurzen 961-1961. Festschrift for the millennium. Published by the council of the city of Wurzen and the editorial team “Der Rundblick” Wurzen. Format A 5, 256 pages. Wurzen 1961.
  • Joseph Richter (retired headmaster): Wurzen in words and pictures - A guide through home (= title on the title page; different title on the cover sheet: guide through Wurzen and surroundings ). With city map and area map. 160 pages (A5), Wurzen 1936.
  • Joseph Richter: Chronicle of the city of Wurzen. Published with the support of the Wurzener Geschichts- und Altertumsverein, 40 pages, format <A5, Wurzen 1930.
  • Max Mucker : What we created - three years of purposeful socialist development work for manual and mental workers and for the entire population of the city of Wurzen. Published by the board of the social democratic people's association Wurzen, 36 pages, Wurzen 1929.
  • Cornelius Gurlitt : Wurzen. In:  Descriptive representation of the older architectural and art monuments of the Kingdom of Saxony. 20. Issue: Amtshauptmannschaft Grimma (2nd half) . CC Meinhold, Dresden 1898, p. 270.
  • Christian Schöttgen : History of the Electoral Saxon Abbey City of Wurzen . Leipzig 1717 ( full text ).
  • An extensive tradition of the city of Wurzen for the period 1488-1969 on imperial, constitutional and community affairs, finances, military and war affairs, health and social affairs, trade, commerce, industry, agriculture, order and security police, statistics, elections, School, church, building administration, fire protection, associations, guilds, traffic, foreign and forced laborers, the city court, the office for resettlers, the communities of Grubnitz and Roitzsch are located in the Saxon State Archives, Leipzig State Archives, stock 20629 Stadt Wurzen.

Web links

Commons : Wurzen  - collection of images, videos and audio files
Wikivoyage: Wurzen  - travel guide

Individual evidence

  1. Population of the Free State of Saxony by municipalities on December 31, 2019  ( help on this ).
  2. Wurzener OBM Röglin joins the SPD . In: Leipziger Volkszeitung . No. 197 , August 24, 2017, p. 5 .
  3. The city of Wurzen with its cathedral is in line with cathedral cities such as Meißen , Merseburg , Halle (Saale) , Naumburg (Saale) and Magdeburg .
  4. ^ City of Wurzen: Interesting facts
  5. Manfred Wilde: The sorcery and witch trials in Saxony. Cologne / Weimar / Vienna 2003, pp. 647–649.
  6. ↑ City Chronicle. In: Website of the Wurzener Geschichts- und Atstadt-Verein e. V. Accessed November 11, 2017 .
  7. ^ Annette Kaminsky: Places of Remembrance: Memorial signs, memorials and museums on the dictatorship in the Soviet occupation zone and GDR. 2nd edition Ch. Links Verlag, 2007, ISBN 978-3-86153-443-3 . P. 383.
  8. http://www.tagdersachsen-2015.de/
  9. Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. wurzen.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  10. Numbers on citipopulation
  11. a b c d State Statistical Office of the Free State of Saxony: Area changes
  12. a b c d e f g h i Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Municipalities 1994 and their changes since 01.01.1948 in the new federal states . Metzler-Poeschel, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 .
  13. a b c The Book of Saxony. Municipal publishing house Saxony, Dresden 1943.
  14. a b c d lists of the municipalities incorporated since May 1945 and evidence of the breakdown of the independent manor districts and state forest districts. 1952, publisher: Ministry of the Interior of Saxony.
  15. Municipal council election 2019. State Statistical Office of the Free State of Saxony , accessed on June 2, 2019 .
  16. Peter Maxwill, Carolin Katschak (Video) report from Wurzen: Violence in Wurzen: "For some a foreigner problem, for others a Nazi problem" . In: Spiegel Online . January 27, 2018 ( spiegel.de [accessed September 23, 2019]).
  17. ^ Heike Baldauf: Neo-Nazis in the East: hatred of Jews in the children's league . In: Spiegel Online . May 31, 2007 ( spiegel.de [accessed September 23, 2019]).
  18. ^ Smashed the window of the refugee apartment in Wurzen. Retrieved September 23, 2019 .
  19. Henrik Merker: Attack on refugees in Wurzen: "We cannot stay here" . In: The daily newspaper: taz . January 15, 2018, ISSN  0931-9085 ( taz.de [accessed on September 23, 2019]).
  20. Wurzen: Neo-Nazis attack journalists with weapons. In: Belltower.News. Retrieved September 23, 2019 .
  21. "We'll get you, you fat pig!" - kreuzer online. Retrieved September 23, 2019 .
  22. Wurzen in Saxony - "A quiet city, but with not good people" . In: Deutschlandfunk . ( deutschlandfunk.de [accessed on September 23, 2019]).
  23. ^ Wurzen: Chronicle of a right stronghold | de.indymedia.org. Retrieved September 23, 2019 .
  24. ^ Henrik Merker: Neo-Nazi violence and belittlement in Wurzen. January 23, 2018, accessed September 23, 2019 .
  25. Jennifer Stange: Halle for fighting evening: University of Leipzig falls for right-wing extremist freefighters . In: Spiegel Online . March 18, 2015 ( spiegel.de [accessed September 23, 2019]).
  26. http://www.ndk-wurzen.de/ ndk.de
  27. http://www.standortinitiative-wurzen.de/ standortinitiative-wurzen.de
  28. ^ Telepolis: right-wing extremism on the football field.
  29. ^ Oppressive things from Wurzen. ( Memento from May 24, 2008 in the Internet Archive )
  30. ^ Thugs, agitators and ideologues in Saxony: Cultural Revolution from the Right? Retrieved October 22, 2019 .
  31. ^ Sarah Ulrich: Right scene in Wurzen near Leipzig: Right of the Mulde . In: The daily newspaper: taz . August 26, 2019, ISSN  0931-9085 ( taz.de [accessed on September 23, 2019]).
  32. Incidents in Wurzen reveal: “The city has an image problem”. Retrieved September 23, 2019 .
  33. ^ Henrik Merker: Neo-Nazi violence and belittlement in Wurzen. January 23, 2018, accessed on September 23, 2019 (German).
  34. Henrik Merker: Neo-Nazis are powerful in the provinces. August 28, 2019, accessed September 23, 2019 .
  35. ^ Sarah Ulrich: Right scene in Wurzen near Leipzig: Right of the Mulde . In: The daily newspaper: taz . August 26, 2019, ISSN  0931-9085 ( taz.de [accessed on September 23, 2019]).
  36. ^ Police Saxony - Police Directorate Leipzig - Assembly events on January 20, 2018. Accessed on September 23, 2019 .
  37. ^ Sarah Ulrich: Right scene in Wurzen near Leipzig: Right of the Mulde . In: The daily newspaper: taz . August 26, 2019, ISSN  0931-9085 ( taz.de [accessed on September 23, 2019]).
  38. Peter Maxwill, Carolin Katschak (Video) report from Wurzen: Violence in Wurzen: "For some a foreigner problem, for others a Nazi problem" . In: Spiegel Online . January 27, 2018 ( spiegel.de [accessed September 23, 2019]).
  39. ^ Kai-Uwe Brandt: AfD and New Forum in the Wurzen City Council. Leipziger Volkszeitung , accessed on June 2, 2019 .
  40. https://www.statistik.sachsen.de/wpr_alt/pkg_w04_bmlr.prc_erg_bm?p_bz_bzid=BM081&p_ebene=GE&p_ort=14729410
  41. ^ City arms of Wurzen
  42. Kai-Uwe Brandt: Wurzen forges an alliance with Milicz - Lord Mayor Röglin and District Administrator Lech sign partnership document. In: Leipziger Volkszeitung , Muldental edition, September 17, 2014, p. 34
  43. Wurzen felt factory
  44. Kai-Uwe Brandt: There is music in it: Filzfabrik Wurzen sets the tone worldwide again , Leipziger Volkszeitung , Muldentalkreis edition, August 4, 2016, page 26, almost full-page newspaper article
  45. ^ Gallery on the market
  46. ^ Stadt Wurzen (ed.): The women around Ringelnatz , revised new edition 2013, ISBN 978-3-95488-702-6
  47. History and current affairs on St. Wenceslai on the Domkantorei-Wurzen website
  48. ^ LVZ of April 28, 2010
  49. Kai-Uwe Brandt: “The Angel of Siberia” - Wurzen wants to pay tribute to Elsa Brändström - memorial of the famous nurse Subject in the culture committee / consul: “A huge treasure for Wurzen”. In: Leipziger Volkszeitung, Muldental edition, May 30, 2015, page 29
  50. Bismarck Tower Wurzen on bismarcktuerme.de
  51. "Johannas Höh" observation tower Pyrna on navigator-leipzig-mittelachsen.de
  52. Archive link ( Memento from October 6, 2014 in the web archive archive.today ).
  53. Archive link ( Memento from December 5, 2014 in the Internet Archive ).
  54. p. 27 in: Wurzen information brochure , Fellbach 2010, online as a pdf at: http://www.staedte-verlag.de/blaetterbroschueren/ib-wurzen.pdf
  55. a b c d https://www.wurzen.de/stadt-wurzen/stadtportrait/persoenitäten/
  56. Laudation on honorary citizenship for Wolfgang Ebert ( Memento from July 1, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  57. Kai-Uwe Brandt: Wurzen gives Dietrich Hoffmann honorary citizenship. Leipziger Volkszeitung , online portal. Accessed on November 26, 2018 : “Dietrich Hoffmann is the 17th honorary citizen of the city of Wurzen. Mayor Jörg Röglin (SPD) honored the old entrepreneur for his life's work on Friday evening in the plenary hall of the town hall. "
  58. ^ Verlag Schöffling & Co., Frankfurt am Main 2018, ISBN 978-3-89561-142-1
  59. Haig Latchinian : Bernd Wagner with Wurzen-Roman as a guest at the Leipzig Book Fair. In: Leipziger Volkszeitung , online portal. Retrieved May 15, 2018 .
  60. Jörg Schüttauf reads "The Flood in Saxony" by Bernd Wagner. In: Website MDR Kultur. Retrieved May 15, 2019 .
  61. Cordia Schlegelmilch : A city tells of the turning point. 1989 Wurzen / Saxony 1990.
  62. DNB entry
  63. 20629 City of Wurzen. In: State Archives Leipzig. Retrieved March 27, 2020 . (Info text under "Introduction")