Nauen

{{other uses|Nauen (disambiguation)}}

{{Infobox German location

| type = Stadt

| image_photo = Nauen Rathaus 2.jpg

| image_caption = Town hall

| image_coa = Wappen_Nauen.png

| coordinates = {{coord|52|36|00|N|12|52|59|E|format=dms|display=inline,title}}

| image_plan = Nauen in HVL.png

| state = Brandenburg

| district = Havelland

| elevation = 35

| area = 266.78

| postal_code = 14641

| area_code = 03321

| licence = HVL (alt NAU)

| Gemeindeschlüssel = 12 0 63 208

| website = [http://www.nauen.de/ www.nauen.de]

| mayor = Manuel Meger[https://wahlen.brandenburg.de/wahlen/de/kommunalwahlen/bm-wahlen/ergebnisse/~12063000 Landkreis Havelland Wahl der Bürgermeisterin / des Bürgermeisters], accessed 1 July 2021.

| leader_term = 2017–25

| party =

}}

Nauen is a small town in the Havelland district, in Brandenburg, Germany. It is chiefly known for Nauen Transmitter Station, the world's oldest preserved radio transmitting installation.

Geography

Nauen is situated within the Havelland Luch glacial lowland, the heart of the Havelland region north of the Nauen Plateau, about {{convert|38|km|mi|abbr=on}} west of the Berlin's city center ({{convert|18|km|mi|abbr=on}} from the Berlin city limits) and {{convert|27|km|mi|abbr=on}} northwest of Potsdam. It is one of Germany's largest municipalities by area, comprising Nauen proper and fourteen surrounding villages, including Ribbeck whose landowners were perpetuated in Theodor Fontane's poem Herr von Ribbeck auf Ribbeck im Havelland.

History

File:Nauen St. Jacobi Südfassade.JPG

The settlement of Nowen was first mentioned in an 1186 deed issued by the Bishop of Brandenburg. The citizens received town privileges by the Brandenburg margraves in 1292; a first town hall was built in 1302. The Ascanian margrave Waldemar vested Nauen with market rights in 1317. A Jewish community already existed in medieval times.

During the Thirty Years' War, in 1631, Nauen was devastated by Imperial troops led by Field Marshal Count Johann Tserclaes of Tilly. On 27 June 1675, Swedish and Brandenburg troops met at the Battle of Nauen during the Scanian War. Under Prussian rule, Nauen became a garrison town. In 1846 it received access to the Berlin–Hamburg Railway.

Nauen is well known for the location of a transmission site. It was used from 1906 to 1945 for VLF and shortwave. After 1945 the installations were dismantled, but after 1955 the GDR started building up a shortwave transmission center at Nauen. Since 1997 four turnable shortwave transmission aerials have been sited there.

Demography

File:Bevölkerungsentwicklung Nauen.pdf|Population trends since 1875 within the current boundaries (blue line: population; dotted line: comparison to population trends in the state of Brandenburg; grey background: time of Nazi rule; red background: time of Communist rule)

File:Bevölkerungsprognosen Nauen.pdf|Recent Population Development and Projections (Population Development before Census 2011 (blue line); Recent Population Development according to the Census in Germany in 2011 (blue bordered line); Official projections for 2005-2030 (yellow line); for 2017-2030 (scarlet line); for 2020-2030 (green line)

{{historical populations

|align=none | cols=3 | percentages=pagr

|title = Nauen: Population development
within the current boundaries (2020)Detailed data sources are to be found in the Wikimedia Commons.[http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Population_projection_Brandenburg Population Projection Brandenburg at Wikimedia Commons]

| 1875 | 13072

| 1890 | 14330

| 1910 | 15534

| 1925 | 18154

| 1939 | 19448

| 1950 | 24208

| 1964 | 20320

| 1971 | 19688

| 1981 | 18422

| 1985 | 18109

| 1990 | 17140

| 1995 | 16329

| 2000 | 16695

| 2005 | 16649

| 2010 | 16684

| 2015 | 16943

| 2020 | 18540

| 2021 | 18854

| 2022 | 19352

| 2023 | 19563

}}

Twin towns - sister cities

Nauen is twinned with:

Notable people

See also

References

{{Reflist}}