Bad Lobenstein, Thuringia, Germany

Geography | History | Districts | Neighbouring communities | Incorporating communities | Sights

🇩🇪 Bad Lobenstein is a spa town in the Saale-Orla-Kreis district, in Thuringia, Germany. Until 2005, the town was named Lobenstein. The town, grouped round a rock, upon which stand the ruins of an old castle, is exceedingly picturesque. It contains a spacious parish church, a palace, and a hydropathic establishment. Local industries include dyeing, brewing and cigar-making.

Geography The town is located in the Thuringian Highlands between Thuringian Forest and Franconian Forest, south-westerly of the large Saale river dams at Hohenwarte and Bleiloch near Gräfenwarth.

History The high medieval castle of Lobenstein lies above the centre of the town on the right side of the river Lemnitz on a mountain dome. It was used to monitor traffic on the route from Leipzig to Bamberg. Lobenstein was first mentioned in 1250 as the seat of a knight. It was probably a foundation of the Lords of Lobdeburg. An Otto von Lobenstein was mentioned in 1250 at the castle, the first written mention of Lobenstein. In the 13th century, the fortress belonged to the vogts of Gera. From 1597 until 1601 it was the residence of the junior line of the House of Reuss. By 1600 the castle had greatly decayed, and the Reuss then moved to the palace. During the Thirty Years War the castle played a small role, when, in 1632, imperial troops stormed the fortress then occupied by Sweden. Today only the remains of the keep and the fortification wall announce the presence of the castle.

Lobenstein was called already a city by 1278. A Mayor and Council are mentioned in 1411, serving as the lower courts.

On October 8, 1806, the army of Napoleon marched through the city. At 9:00 o'clock Emperor Napoleon I. left Kronach in Bavaria, where he had he visited the fortress and strengthened it with its own and allied Bavarian troops to have a retreat in case of defeat by Prussia. He arrived in Lobenstein around 12:30. His way led over the Gallenberg to Ebersdorf, where he spent the night with 32 generals and staff officers. Day and night Around 190,000 men marched through Lobenstein. The city and the surrounding area were affected. Bivouac and looting were the order of the day. Despite their neutrality the population suffered greatly.

In the new palace was the Marshal and later King of Norway-Sweden Bernadotte. On October 14 the Battle of Jena–Auerstedt was fought, sealing the fate of Prussia.

A citizen of Lobenstein, town clerk Christian Gottlieb Reichard, was known as far as Paris for his extraordinary geographic knowledge. Napoleon invited him to accompany the army as a cartographer. Reichard refused, citing his health, and took to his bed; it is not known Whether he was really ill. From 1597 to 1918, the city belonged to the junior line of the House of Reuss, where, in 1824, it was the residence of the sub-line Reuss-Lobenstein and from then to 1848 to the line Ebersdorf. In 1848, together with Schleiz and Hirschberg, it formed a centre of the bourgeois movement.

In 1862 almost all historic buildings were destroyed in a fire. From 1868, healing earth extracted from the nearby high moor and an iron mineral spring brought about the development of a spa in Lobenstein.

The city got railway connections in 1896 to Triptis, in 1901 to Hof, and 1907 to Saalfeld.

During the Second World War 60 women and men from Eastern Europe who were housed in two "Eastern Labor Camps" (Ostarbeiterlagern) had to do forced labor in the metal works of Werner Schröder, in the sawmill, and in the railway maintenance works. In the cemetery of Lobenstein a wooden cross commemorates a concentration camp prisoner who was shot dead by SS men during a death march on the Gallenberg. In the spa park, a memorial with a sculpture "Mourning Mother" by a Polish artist commemorates all victims of fascism of Bad Lobenstein.

Since March 21, 2005, the city officially bears the name "Bad Lobenstein", making it the twelfth spa town in Thuringia. Lobenstein had previously fought for decades for the title of "Spa".

Districts • Bad Lobenstein, main district with town center • Helmsgrün • Lichtenbrunn • Mühlberg • Oberlemnitz • Saaldorf • Unterlemnitz;

Neighbouring communities • Gefell (in Thuringia) • Saalburg-Ebersdorf • Tanna • Wurzbach • Birkenhügel • Harra • Neundorf (bei Lobenstein) • Remptendorf • Schlegel;

Incorporating communities On 4 August 1993 previously independent municipalities Helmsgrün and Lichtenbrunn got incorporated into the community of Bad Lobenstein. On 1 January 1997 also Unterlemnitz and in 1999 Oberlemnitz got in incorporated.

Sights • New Palace with Palace garden: a baroque complex north of the old town, built between 1714 and 1718. Residence of the princes of Reuß-Lobenstein until 1824. In the garden is a pavilion, built 1746–1748. In front of the palace is the old guardhouse in classical style and the former princely carriage house. • Ruins of Castle Lobenstein: a castle ruin above the old town. There are two towers, including the 35 metres (115 ft) meter high keep, and some foundations. The complex was built around 1300 by the Lobdeburgers and destroyed during the Thirty Years' War. • Town's church St. Michaelis: erected after the city fire of 1862. • Thermal bath: since 2002 spa and moor treatments in the Ardesia-Therme • "Markt Höhler" - a historical beer cellar which is located in the rocks below the city • Regional Museum • "Lommesteener Fäßlesächer" is a small figure located in the town hall tower who seems to urinate through a funnel into a barrel. He is the mascot of Bad Lobenstein. He is hidden behind two doors and is visible several times a day. This figure reflects the nickname of the Lobensteiner, who as economical craft weaver in the 19th century collected the ammonia to produce the finish of the cloth from human urine. Several times a day the figure splashes directly on the marketplace. • Market place of Bad Lobenstein

Europe/Berlin/Thuringia 
<b>Europe/Berlin/Thuringia</b>
Image: Adobe Stock Edler von Rabenstein #233720128

Bad Lobenstein has a population of over 6,570 people. Bad Lobenstein also forms part of the wider Saale-Orla District which has a population of over 79,632 people. Bad Lobenstein is situated near Schleiz.

Twin Towns - Sister Cities Bad Lobenstein has links with:

🇩🇪 Leonberg, Germany 🇵🇱 Ujazd, Poland
Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

Antipodal to Bad Lobenstein is: -168.359,-50.451

Locations Near: Bad Lobenstein 11.641,50.4505

🇩🇪 Schleiz 11.817,50.583 d: 19.3  

🇩🇪 Hof 11.914,50.317 d: 24.4  

🇩🇪 Saalfeld 11.367,50.65 d: 29.5  

🇩🇪 Kronach 11.317,50.233 d: 33.4  

🇩🇪 Kulmbach 11.453,50.108 d: 40.4  

🇩🇪 Plauen 12.117,50.483 d: 33.9  

🇩🇪 Jena 11.586,50.927 d: 53.1  

🇩🇪 Bayreuth 11.582,49.949 d: 55.9  

🇩🇪 Wunsiedel 12.017,50.017 d: 55.1  

🇩🇪 Eisenberg 11.9,50.967 d: 60.2  

Antipodal to: Bad Lobenstein -168.359,-50.451

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🇦🇸 Pago Pago -170.701,-14.279 d: 15987.5  

🇼🇸 Apia -171.76,-13.833 d: 15931.8  

🇵🇫 Papeete -149.566,-17.537 d: 15991.6  

🇺🇸 Hilo -155.089,19.725 d: 12103.8  

🇺🇸 Maui -156.446,20.72 d: 12015.1  

🇺🇸 Maui County -156.617,20.868 d: 12001.3  

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🇺🇸 Kahului -156.466,20.891 d: 11996.6  

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