Quedlinburg
{{short description|Town in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{more citations needed|date=May 2016}}
{{Expand German|Quedlinburg|fa=yes|topic=geo|date=December 2015}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Infobox German location
|type = Stadt
|image_photo = {{Photomontage
|border=0
|size=250
|spacing=1
|color=none
|photo1a = Quedlinburg asv2018-10 img04 pano from Muenzenberg.jpg
|photo2a = Quedlinburg asv2018-10 img11 Markt.jpg
|photo3a = Quedlinburg, Schloßberg von Südwesten 20170713 016.jpg
}}
|image_caption = Top: View over Quedlinburg. Middle: Market Square. Bottom: Quedlinburg Castle and Abbey
|image_coa = DE-ST 15-0-85-235 Quedlinburg COA.svg
|coordinates = {{coord|51|47|30|N|11|8|50|E|format=dms|display=inline,title}}
|image_plan = Quedlinburg in HZ.png
|state = Sachsen-Anhalt
|district = Harz
|elevation = 123
|area = 120.42
|postal_code = 06484, 06485
|area_code = 03946, 039485
|licence = HZ, HBS, QLB, WR
|Gemeindeschlüssel = 15 0 85 235
|divisions = 7 Stadtteile
|mayor = Frank Ruch[https://wahlergebnisse.sachsen-anhalt.de/wahlen/bmbm/index.html Bürgermeisterwahlen in den Gemeinden, Endgültige Ergebnisse], Statistisches Landesamt Sachsen-Anhalt, accessed 10 November 2022.
|leader_term = 2022–29
|party = CDU
|website = [http://www.quedlinburg.de/ www.quedlinburg.de]
{{Infobox UNESCO World Heritage Site
|child = yes
| Official_name = Collegiate Church, Castle, and Old Town of Quedlinburg
| Criteria = Cultural: iv
| ID = 535
| Year = 1994
| Area = 90 ha
| Buffer_zone = 270 ha
}}
}}
Quedlinburg ({{IPA|de|ˈkveːtlɪnbʊʁk|-|De-Quedlinburg.ogg}}) is a town situated just north of the Harz mountains, in the district of Harz in the west of Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. As an influential and prosperous trading centre during the early Middle Ages, Quedlinburg became a center of influence under the Ottonian dynasty in the 10th and 11th centuries.{{cite web |url = https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/535 |title = Collegiate Church, Castle and Old Town of Quedlinburg |website = UNESCO World Heritage Centre |publisher = United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization |access-date = 25 Jun 2022}} The castle, church and old town with around 2,100 timber houses,{{Cite web |last=Welterbestadt |first=Quedlinburg- |title=Fachwerkmuseum im Ständerbau |url=https://www.quedlinburg.de/Familie-und-Leben/Kultur/St%C3%A4dtische-Museen/Fachwerkmuseum-im-St%C3%A4nderbau/?La=1&NavID=3771.150 |access-date=2024-05-22 |website=Quedlinburg - Welterbestadt |language=de}} dating from this time of influence, were added to the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1994 because of their exceptional preservation and outstanding Romanesque architecture.
Quedlinburg has a population of more than 24,000. The town was the capital of the district of Quedlinburg until 2007, when the district was dissolved. Several locations in the town are designated stops along a scenic holiday route, the Romanesque Road.
History
File:Quedlinburg asv2018-10 img03 Castle.jpg
File:Quedlinburg asv2018-10 img27 Roland.jpg]]
File:Quedlinburg asv2018-10 img07 Schlossberg Finkenherd.jpg
The town of Quedlinburg is known to have existed since at least the early 9th century, when there was a settlement known as Gross Orden on the eastern bank of the River Bode. It was first mentioned as a town in 922 as part of a donation by King Henry the Fowler (Heinrich der Vogler). The records of this donation were held by the abbey of Corvey.
According to legend, Henry had been offered the German crown at Quedlinburg in 919 by Franconian nobles, giving rise to the town being called the "cradle of the German Reich".{{rp|85}}
After Henry's death in 936, his widow Saint Matilda founded a religious community for women (Frauenstift) on the castle hill, where daughters of the higher nobility were educated. The main task of this collegiate foundation, Quedlinburg Abbey, was to pray for the memory of King Henry and the rulers who came after him. The Annals of Quedlinburg were also compiled there. The first abbess was Matilda, a granddaughter of King Henry and St. Matilda.
The Quedlinburg castle complex, founded by King Henry I and built up by Emperor Otto I in 936, was an imperial Pfalz of the Saxon emperors. The Pfalz, including the male convent, was in the valley, where today the Roman Catholic Church of St. Wiperti is situated, while the women's convent was located on the castle hill.
In 973, shortly before the death of Emperor Otto I, a Reichstag (Imperial Convention) was held at the imperial court in which Mieszko, duke of Polans, and Boleslav, duke of Bohemia, as well as numerous other nobles from as far away as Byzantium and Bulgaria, gathered to pay homage to the emperor. On the occasion, Otto the Great introduced his new daughter-in-law Theophanu, a Byzantine princess whose marriage to Otto II brought hope for recognition and continued peace between the rulers of the Eastern and Western empires.
In 994, Otto III granted the right of market, tax, and coining, and established the first market place to the north of the castle hill.
The town became a member of the Hanseatic League in 1426. Quedlinburg Abbey frequently disputed the independence of the town, which sought the aid of the Bishopric of Halberstadt. In 1477, Abbess Hedwig, aided by her brothers Ernest and Albert, broke the resistance of the town and expelled the bishop's forces. Quedlinburg was forced to leave the Hanseatic League and was subsequently protected by the Electorate of Saxony. Both town and abbey converted to Lutheranism in 1539 during the Protestant Reformation.
In 1697, Frederick Augustus I of Poland–Saxony sold his rights to Quedlinburg to Elector Frederick III of Brandenburg for 240,000 thalers. Quedlinburg Abbey contested Brandenburg-Prussia's claims throughout the 18th century, however. The abbey was secularized in 1802 during the German Mediatisation, and Quedlinburg passed to the Kingdom of Prussia as part of the Principality of Quedlinburg. Part of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Westphalia from 1807 to 1813, it was included within the new Prussian Province of Saxony in 1815. In all this time, ladies ruled Quedlinburg as abbesses without "taking the veil"; they were free to marry. The last of these ladies was a Swedish princess, an early fighter for women's rights, Sofia Albertina.
During the Nazi regime, the memory of Henry I became a sort of cult, as Heinrich Himmler saw himself as the reincarnation of the "most German of all German" rulers. The collegiate church and castle were to be turned into a shrine for Nazi Germany. The Nazi Party tried to create a new religion. The cathedral was closed in 1938 and during the war. The local crematory was kept busy burning the victims of the Langenstein-Zwieberge concentration camp. Georg Ay was local party chief from 1931 until the end of World War II. During the war, Quedlinburg was the location of a subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp and a subcamp of the Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp.{{cite book|last=Megargee|first=Geoffrey P.|year=2009|title=The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933–1945. Volume I|publisher=Indiana University Press, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum|pages=409, 995|isbn=978-0-253-35328-3}} American occupation during the last months of World War II brought back the Protestant bishop and the church bells, and the Nazi-style eagle was removed from the tower. However, in the 1980s, upon the death of one of the US military men, the theft of medieval art from Quedlinburg came to light.
Quedlinburg was administered within Bezirk Halle while part of the Communist East Germany from 1949 to 1990. It became part of the state of Saxony-Anhalt upon German reunification in 1990.
During Quedlinburg's Communist era, restoration specialists from Poland were called in during the 1980s to carry out repairs on the old architecture. Today, Quedlinburg is a center of restoration of Fachwerk houses.
Quedlinburg is the setting for the acclaimed 2016 Frantz, serving as a quintessential small German town in the wake of WWI, home to a family who is reeling from the death of a son in the war.
Geography
=Location=
The town is located north of the Harz mountains, about 123 m above NHN. The nearest mountains reach 181 m above NHN. The largest part of the town is located in the western part of the Bode river valley. This river comes from the Harz mountains and flows into the river Saale, a tributary of the river Elbe. The municipal area of Quedlinburg is {{convert|120.42|km2|abbr=off}}. Before the incorporation of the two (previously independent) municipalities of Gernrode and Bad Suderode in January 2014,[https://www.destatis.de/DE/Themen/Laender-Regionen/Regionales/Gemeindeverzeichnis/Namens-Grenz-Aenderung/2014.html Gebietsänderungen vom 01. Januar bis 31. Dezember 2014], Statistisches Bundesamt it was only {{convert|78.14|km2|abbr=off}}.
= Divisions =
The town Quedlinburg consists of Quedlinburg proper and the following Ortsteile or municipal divisions:[https://www.quedlinburg.de/de/datei/anzeigen/id/61778,1148,1/1.02_hauptsatzung_2018.pdf Hauptsatzung der Welterbestadt Quedlinburg] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220120101258/http://www.quedlinburg.de/de/datei/anzeigen/id/61778,1148,1/1.02_hauptsatzung_2018.pdf |date=20 January 2022 }}, December 2018.
{{div col|colwidth=15em}}
- Bad Suderode
- Gernrode
- Gersdorfer Burg
- Morgenrot
- Münchenhof
- Quarmbeck
{{div col end}}
=Neighbouring communities=
{{Geographic location
|Centre = Quedlinburg
|North = Oschersleben
|Northeast = Magdeburg
|East = Aschersleben
|Southeast = Halle
|South = Sangerhausen
|Southwest = Nordhausen
|West = Blankenburg
|Northwest = Halberstadt
}}
=Climate=
Quedlinburg has an oceanic climate (Cfb) resulting from prevailing westerlies, blowing from the high-pressure area in the central Atlantic towards Scandinavia. Snowfall occurs almost every winter. January and February are the coldest months of the year, with an average temperature of 0.5 °C and 1.5 °C. July and August are the hottest months, with an average temperature of 17 °C (63 °F) and 18 °C (64 °F). The average annual precipitation is close to 438 mm with rain occurring usually from May to September. This precipitation is one of the lowest in Germany, which has an annual average hovering around 440 mm. In August 2010, Quedlinburg was the driest place in Germany, with only 72.4 L/m2.[https://web.archive.org/web/20150923230049/http://www.dwd.de/bvbw/generator/DWDWWW/Content/Oeffentlichkeit/KU/allgemeines/spitzenreiter/2010/bms__201008,templateId=raw,property=publicationFile.pdf/bms_201008.pdf Press release of the Deutsche Wetterdienst] (pdf, German)
{{Weather box
|location = Quedlinburg
|metric first = yes
|single line = yes
|Jan high C = 2
|Feb high C = 4
|Mar high C = 8
|Apr high C = 13
|May high C = 19
|Jun high C = 21
|Jul high C = 22
|Aug high C = 23
|Sep high C = 19
|Oct high C = 13
|Nov high C = 6
|Dec high C = 3
|Jan mean C = 0.5
|Feb mean C = 1.5
|Mar mean C = 4.5
|Apr mean C = 8.0
|May mean C = 13.5
|Jun mean C = 15.5
|Jul mean C = 17.0
|Aug mean C = 18.0
|Sep mean C = 14.0
|Oct mean C = 9.5
|Nov mean C = 3.5
|Dec mean C = 1.5
|Jan low C = -1
|Feb low C = -1
|Mar low C = 1
|Apr low C = 3
|May low C = 8
|Jun low C = 10
|Jul low C = 12
|Aug low C = 13
|Sep low C = 9
|Oct low C = 6
|Nov low C = 1
|Dec low C = 0
|Jan precipitation mm = 23
|Feb precipitation mm = 22
|Mar precipitation mm = 28
|Apr precipitation mm = 38
|May precipitation mm = 53
|Jun precipitation mm = 57
|Jul precipitation mm = 47
|Aug precipitation mm = 54
|Sep precipitation mm = 33
|Oct precipitation mm = 27
|Nov precipitation mm = 30
|Dec precipitation mm = 26
|Jan humidity= 87
|Feb humidity= 83
|Mar humidity= 82
|Apr humidity= 74
|May humidity= 67
|Jun humidity= 71
|Jul humidity= 72
|Aug humidity= 69
|Sep humidity= 78
|Oct humidity= 82
|Nov humidity= 87
|Dec humidity= 86
|Jan rain days= 11
|Feb rain days= 9
|Mar rain days= 10
|Apr rain days= 10
|May rain days= 10
|Jun rain days= 11
|Jul rain days= 10
|Aug rain days= 10
|Sep rain days= 9
|Oct rain days= 9
|Nov rain days= 11
|Dec rain days= 12
|Jan sun= 47.2
|Feb sun= 66.9
|Mar sun= 107.5
|Apr sun= 136.7
|May sun= 182.6
|Jun sun= 172.2
|Jul sun= 186.4
|Aug sun= 183.6
|Sep sun= 139.0
|Oct sun= 104.9
|Nov sun= 63.2
|Dec sun= 42.1
|source 1 = Deutscher Wetterdienst, Normalperiode 1961–1990{{cite web
| title = Deutscher Wetterdienst, Normalperiode 1961–1990
| url = http://www.dwd.de
| publisher=Deutscher Wetterdienst | language =de}}
|date=August 2010
|source 2 = Zoover{{cite web
| title = Zoover data by DWD
| url = http://www.zoover.de/deutschland/sachsen-anhalt/quedlinburg/wetter
| date = December 2010
| access-date = 12 December 2010
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190426200652/http://www.zoover.de/deutschland/sachsen-anhalt/quedlinburg/wetter
| archive-date = 26 April 2019
| url-status = dead
}}
}}
Demographics
{{Historical populations|type=Germany
| 1786|8382
| 1807|10476
| 1820|11507
| 1830|12001
| 1840|13431
| 1852|13886
| 1861|14835
| 1871|16800
| 1880|18437
| 1890|20761
| 1900|23378
| 1910|27233
| 1919|28190
| 1939|30320
| 1946|35142
| 1950|35555
| 1955|33125
| 1960|30965
| 1965|30840
| 1970|30829
| 1975|29711
| 1980|28585
| 1985|29394
| 1990|28663
| 1995|25844
| 2000|24114
| 2005|22607
| 2009*|21203
|footnote=Source:{{Cite web
|url = http://www.statistik.sachsen-anhalt.de/download/stat_berichte/6A102_hj_2009_02.pdf
|title = Annual Estimates of the Resident Population
|publisher = Statistisches Landesamt Sachsen-Anhalt – Bevölkerung der Gemeinden nach Landkreisen; Stand: 31. Dez. 2009
|url-status = dead
|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110716064242/http://www.statistik.sachsen-anhalt.de/download/stat_berichte/6A102_hj_2009_02.pdf
|archive-date = 16 July 2011}}
}}
Governance
=Town twinning=
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany}}
Quedlinburg is twinned with:
- {{flagicon|FRA}} Aulnoye-Aymeries, France, since 1961
- {{flagicon|GER}} Herford, Germany, since 1991
- {{flagicon|GER}} Celle, Germany, since 1991
- {{flagicon|GER}} Hameln, Germany, since 1991
- {{flagicon|GER}} Hann. Münden, Germany, since 1991
Attractions
In the centre of the town are a wide selection of half-timbered buildings from at least five different centuries (including a 14th-century structure, one of Germany's oldest), while around the outer fringes of the old town are examples of Jugendstil buildings, dating from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
The old town of Quedlinburg is among the largest in Germany with a size of around 90 hectares. 2000 half-timbered houses can be found here. The oldest, the "Ständerbau", dates back from 1347.
Another famous building is called "Klopstockhaus", the birthplace of poet Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock.{{Cite web|title=Quedlinburg Germany {{!}} Top 12 sights to see|url=https://www.furnishedinside.com/en/blog/quedlinburg-germany-sights|access-date=2020-06-12|website=www.furnishedinside.com|date=12 June 2020 }}
Since December 1994, the old town of Quedlinburg and the castle mount with the Stiftskirche (collegiate church) are listed as one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites.{{cite web| url = https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/535| title = Unesco World heritage list}} Quedlinburg is one of the best-preserved medieval and Renaissance towns in Europe, having escaped major damage in World War II.
In 2006, the Selke valley branch of the Harz Narrow Gauge Railways was extended to Quedlinburg from Gernrode, giving access to the historic steam narrow gauge railway, Alexisbad and the high Harz plateau.
The castle and Stiftskirche St. Servatius still dominate the town like in the early Middle Ages. The church is a prime example of German Romanesque style. The treasure of the church, containing ancient Christian religious artifacts and books, was stolen by an American soldier but brought back to Quedlinburg in 1993 and is again on display here.
The former Stiftskirche St. Wiperti was established in 936 when the Kanonikerstift St. Wigpertus (of male canons) was moved from the castle hill to make way for what became Quedlinburg Abbey. The church was built at the location of the first Ottonian Royal palace at Quedlinburg. Around 1020, a three-aisled crypt was added to the basilica. The crypt, which survived all later alterations to the church, is also a designated stop on the Romanesque Road today.{{cite book|editor-last=Antz|editor-first=Christian|title=Strasse der Romanik (German)|publisher=Verlag Janos Stekovics|year=2001|isbn=3-929330-89-X}}{{rp|91}}
File:Quedlinburg asv2018-10 img48 Castle.jpg|Castle
File:Quedlinburg St. Nikolai 10.jpg|St. Nikolai church
File:Altstadt Quedlinburg- Rathaus- Markt, IMG 1244WI.jpg|Market with Town Hall
File:Finkenherd 3 in Quedlinburg.jpg|Quedlinburg old town
File:2021 Quedlinburg 21.jpg|Breits Straße (Old town)
File:Quedlinburg Hohe Straße 8.jpg|Half-timbered house
File:Münzenberg Quedlinburg.jpg|Münzenberg
File:Kuranlage Bad Suderode2.jpg|Spa Bad Suderode
File:Gernrode - Romanische Stiftskirche St. Cyriacus.jpg|St Cyriacus Church Gernrode
Infrastructure
=Transport=
File:Verkehrsknoten Quedlinburg.jpg connects with a Transdev Harz-Berlin-Express train on the line from Magdeburg at Quedlinburg station.]]
==Air==
The nearest airports to Quedlinburg are Hannover, {{convert|120|km|abbr=off}} northwest, and Leipzig/Halle Airport, {{convert|90|km|abbr=off}} southeast. Much closer, but only served by a few airlines, is Magdeburg-Cochstedt. An airfield is located at Ballenstedt-Assmussstedt for general aviation.
==Railway==
Regional trains operated by Deutsche Bahn and the private Transdev company run on the standard-gauge Magdeburg–Thale line connecting Quedlinburg station with Magdeburg, Thale, and Halberstadt.
In 2006, the Selke Valley branch of the Harz Narrow Gauge Railways was extended into Quedlinburg from Gernrode, giving access via the historic steam-operated narrow-gauge railway to Alexisbad and the High Harz plateau.
==Bus==
Quedlinburg is connected by regional buses to the surrounding villages and small towns. Additionally, there are long-distance buses to Berlin.
Media, literature, and film
The Mitteldeutsche Zeitung (Central German Newspaper) maintains a local newsroom in Quedlinburg. In addition, the newspapers SuperSonntag (SuperSunday), Wochenspiegel (Weekly Mirror), and Harzer Kreisblatt (Harz District Newspaper) are published locally.
The local public broadcaster is Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk (MDR; Central German Broadcasting), whose regional office is located in Halberstadt.
Regionalfernsehen Harz (RFH; Harz Regional Television) broadcasts on the local cable television network.
A number of novels have been set in Quedlinburg and the surrounding area, such as Wilhelm Raabe's Der Schüdderump. The first part of Theodor Fontane's novel Cécile (1887) takes place in Quedlinburg and Thale, as do the various novels of Dorothea Christiane Erxleben and Julius Wolff's The Robber Count: A Story of the Harz Country (1884). Other novels set in the area include Gerhard Beutel's Der Stadthauptmann von Quedlinburg (1972), Helga Glaesener's Du süße sanfte Mörderin (You Sweet, Gentle Murderess; 2000), and ten novels by Christian Amling about the fictional private investigator Irenäus Moll.{{Cite web |url=https://www.buechertreff.de/buchreihe/100817-privatdetektiv-irenaeus-moll-christian-amling-reihenfolge/ |title=Entry on buechertreff.de |access-date=9 April 2023 |archive-date=27 March 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190327135517/https://www.buechertreff.de/buchreihe/100817-privatdetektiv-irenaeus-moll-christian-amling-reihenfolge/ |url-status=bot: unknown }}
Because of its historical architecture, Quedlinburg has been used as the backdrop for various film and television projects. Several episodes (64, 67--70, 76) of the series Ärger im Revier (Trouble in the Precinct) broadcast by RTL Zwei were filmed in Quedlinburg.{{Cite web |url=https://www.fernsehserien.de/aerger-im-revier/episodenguide/staffel-4/18278 |title=Episode guide on fersehserien.de |access-date=9 April 2023 |archive-date=27 March 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190327131941/https://www.fernsehserien.de/aerger-im-revier/episodenguide/staffel-4/18278 |url-status=bot: unknown }} From 2012 to 2017, the ARD daytime series Heiter bis tödlich: Alles Klara was filmed in the city and its vicinity, with 48 episodes over three seasons.{{Cite web |url=http://www.daserste.de/unterhaltung/serie/alles-klara/index.html |title=Website for Alles Klara from ARD |access-date=9 April 2023 |archive-date=26 November 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171126234814/http://www.daserste.de/unterhaltung/serie/alles-klara/index.html |url-status=bot: unknown }} The following films were partially filmed in Quedlinburg:{{Cite web |url=http://www.filmstadt-quedlinburg.de/itemlist.php?category=1&type=movie |title=List of 17 DEFA Films |access-date=9 April 2023 |archive-date=31 March 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130331094648/http://www.filmstadt-quedlinburg.de/itemlist.php?category=1&type=movie |url-status=bot: unknown }}{{Cite web |url=http://www.imdb.com/search/text?realm=title&field=locations&q=Quedlinburg |title=30 film titles in IMDb |website=IMDb |access-date=9 April 2023 |archive-date=20 December 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151220002250/http://www.imdb.com/search/text?realm=title&field=locations&q=Quedlinburg |url-status=bot: unknown }}
- 1938: Spiel im Sommerwind, director: Roger von Norman
- 1954: Pole Poppenspäler (Paul the Puppeteer), director: Arthur Pohl
- 1960: Fünf Patronenhülsen (Five Cartridge Cases), with Manfred Krug and Armin Mueller-Stahl, director: Frank Beyer
- 1964: Mir nach, Canaillen! (Follow Me, Plebs!), with Manfred Krug, director: Ralf Kirsten
- 1971: Polizeiruf 110, four episodes
- 1972: Nicht schummeln, Liebling! (Don't Cheat, Darling!), with Frank Schöbel, Chris Doerk, Christel Bodenstein, Dorit Gäbler, Rolf Herricht, director: Joachim Hasler
- 1972: Lützower, with Jürgen Reuter, director: Werner W. Wallroth
- 1974: Kasimir der Große (Casimir the Great), in church and castle yard, with 800 extras
- 1974: Hans Röckle und der Teufel (Hans Röckle and the Devil), director: Hans Kratzert
- 1975: Till Eulenspiegel, with Winfried Glatzeder, director: Rainer Simon
- 1979: Schneeweißchen und Rosenrot (Snow-White and Rose-Red), director: Siegfried Hartmann
- 1981: Zwei Zeilen, kleingedruckt ({{lang|ru|Две строчки мелким шрифтом}}; Two Lines, Small Print), director: Witali Melnikow
- 1982: Der lange Ritt zur Schule (The Long Ride to School), with Frank Träger and Iris Riffert, director: Rolf Losansky
- 1992: Wunderjahre (Years of Wonder), with Gudrun Landgrebe and Christian Müller-Stahl, director: Arend Agthe
- 2000: Bilderbuch Deutschland (Picturebook Germany), episode: Von Quedlinburg nach Halberstadt (From Quedlinburg to Halberstatt), director: Carla Hicks
- 2003: Pfarrer Braun (Father Brown), a German detective series with Ottfried Fischer, two episodes
- 2003: Wenn Weihnachten wahr wird (When Christmas Comes True), director: Sherry Hormann
- 2006: 7 Zwerge – Der Wald ist nicht genug (7 Dwarves - The Forest Is Not Enough) with Otto Waalkes, director: Sven Unterwaldt
- 2010: Goethe! with Moritz Bleibtreu and Alexander Fehling, director: Philipp Stölzl
- 2011: Der ganz große Traum (The Whole Big Dream) with Daniel Brühl, Burghart Klaußner and Thomas Thieme, Regie: Sebastian Grobler
- 2012: Der Medicus (The Physician), director: Philipp Stölzl
- 2013: Das kleine Gespenst (The Little Ghost) with Uwe Ochsenknecht, director: Alain Gsponer
- 2014: Till Eulenspiegel with Jacob Matschenz, director: Christian Theede
- 2015: Heidi with Anuk Steffen, Bruno Ganz and Quirin Agrippi, director: Alain Gsponer
- 2016: Frantz with Pierre Niney and Paula Beer, director: François Ozon
- 2016: Stadtlandliebe with Jessica Schwarz, Tom Beck and Uwe Ochsenknecht, director: Marco Kreuzpaintner{{IMDb title|qid=Q25706622|title=Stadtlandliebe}}
- 2020: Army of Thieves
Notable people
File:Julius Wolff Schriftsteller - von Wilhelm Rohr.jpg
- Johann Gerhard (1582–1637), theologian, mean Denter representatives of Lutheran orthodoxy
- Andreas Werckmeister (1645–1706), German theorist, organist, organ examiner and composer
- Wilhelm Homberg (1652–1715), naturalist, born apparently during a trip in Batavia / Jakarta, but parents living in Quedlinburg
- Dorothea Erxleben (1715–1762), was the first female medical doctor in GermanySchiebinger, L. (1990): "The Anatomy of Difference: Race and Sex in Eighteenth-Century Science" p. 399, Eighteenth Century Studies 23(3) pp. 387–405
- Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock (1724–1803), German poet and contemporary of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- Gottfried Christian Voigt (1740-1791), law clerk, antiquarian and influential writer about witchcraft
- Johann Christian Polycarp Erxleben (1744–1777), naturalist
- Johann Christoph Friedrich GutsMuths (1759–1839), father of German gymnastics
- Carl Ritter (1779–1859), founder of scientific geography
- Julius Wolff (1834–1910), Freeman, poet and writer
- Gustav Albert Schwalbe (1844–1916), anatomist and anthropologist
- Carl Schroeder (1848–1935), cellist, composer, conductor and Hofkapellmeister
- Georg Ay (1900–1997), politician (NSDAP), member of Reichstag 1933–1945
- Fritz Grasshoff (1913–1997), poet, painter, pop lyricist
- Bernhard Schrader (1931–2012), chemist, pioneer of experimental Raman and infrared spectroscopy
- Peter Kramer (born 1933), physicist
- Leander Haußmann (born 1959), film and theater director (e.g. "Sun Alley (film) Sonnenallee", "Herr Lehmann", "NVA")
- Petrik Sander (born 1960), football coach
- Petra Schersing (born Muller, 1965), sprinter and Olympic silver medalist
- Silvio Meier (1965–1992), activist killed by neo-Nazis
- Dagmar Hase (born 1969), swimmer and Olympic champion
- Sascha Ring (born 1978), electronic musician known as Apparat
See also
References
{{Reflist|30em}}
Further reading
- {{Cite book|last=Honan|first=William H.|author-link=William H. Honan|year=1997|title=Treasure Hunt. A New York Times Reporter Tracks the Quedlinburg Hoard|location=New York|publisher=Fromm International Publishing Corporation|isbn=0-88064-174-6|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/treasurehuntnewy00hona}}
- {{Cite book|last=Kogelfranz|first=Siegfried |author2=Willi A. Korte |year=1994|title=Quedlinburg – Texas and Back. Black Marketeering with Looted Art}}
External links
{{Sister project links|Quedlinburg}}
- {{wikivoyage inline|Quedlinburg}}
- [http://www.quedlinburg.de/ The town's official website] {{in lang|de}}
- [https://www.quedlinburg-info.de/en/en/welcome.html Official tourist-information website] {{in lang|en}}
- [https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/535 UNESCO page on Quedlinburg]
- [http://www.fachwerkfreunde.de/sachsen-anhalt/halle-harz-region/385-quedlinburg Pictures and information about timber frame houses in Quedlinburg] {{in lang|de}}
- [https://web.archive.org/*/www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/QQ/kjqem.html The Quedlinberg Art Affair]
{{World Heritage Sites in Germany}}
{{Cities and towns in Harz (district)}}
{{Hanseatic League}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:World Heritage Sites in Germany