Greifswald
Greifswald, officially the University and Hanseatic City of Greifswald is a city in northeastern Germany.
It is situated in the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, at an equal distance of about from Germany's two largest cities, Berlin and Hamburg, and 80 km from the Polish border. The city belongs to Western Pomerania and flanks the Baltic Sea, and is crossed by a small river, the Ryck.
It is also located near Germany's two largest islands, Rügen and Usedom, and it is close to three of Germany's 14 national parks. It has been the capital of the newly established district of Vorpommern-Greifswald since the September 2011 district reforms. Together with Stralsund, Greifswald forms one of four urban centers of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.
The city's population was listed at 55,659 in 2013, including many of the 12,500 students and 5,000 employees of the University of Greifswald. Greifswald draws international attention due to the university, its surrounding BioCon Valley, the Nord Stream gas pipeline and the Wendelstein 7-X nuclear fusion projects.
Geography
Greifswald is located in the northeast of Germany, approximately equidistant from Germany's two largest islands, Rügen and Usedom. The town is situated at the south end of the Bay of Greifswald, the historic centre being about up the river Ryck that crosses the town. The area around Greifswald is mainly flat, and hardly reaches more than 20 metres above sea level. Two islands, Koos and Riems, are also part of Greifswald. Three of Germany's fourteen national parks can be reached by car in one hour or less from Greifswald.Greifswald is also roughly equidistant from Germany's two largest cities, Berlin and Hamburg. The nearest larger towns are Stralsund and Rostock.
The coastal part of Greifswald at the mouth of the Ryck, named Greifswald-Wieck, evolved from a fishing village. Today it provides a small beach, a marina and the main port for Greifswald.
History
Early history
Greifswald was founded in 1199 when Cistercian monks founded the Eldena Abbey. In 1250, Wartislaw III, Duke of Pomerania, granted town privileges to Greifswald according to the Lübeck law.Middle Ages and Reformation
In medieval times, the site of Greifswald was an unsettled woodland which marked the border between the Danish Principality of Rügen and the Pomeranian County of Gützkow, which at that time was also under Danish control. In 1199, the Rugian Prince Jaromar I allowed Danish Cistercian monks to build Hilda Abbey, now Eldena Abbey, at the mouth of the River Ryck. Among the lands granted the monks was a natural salt evaporation pond a short way up the river, a site also crossed by an important south–north via regia trade route. This site was named Grypswold, which is the Low German precursor of the city's modern name – which means "Griffin's Forest." Legend says the monks were shown the best site for settlement by a mighty griffin living in a tree that supposedly grew on what became Greifswald's oldest street, the Schuhagen. The town's construction followed a scheme of rectangular streets, with church and market sites reserved in central positions. It was settled primarily by Germans in the course of the Ostsiedlung, but settlers from other nations and Wends from nearby were attracted, too.The salt trade helped Eldena Abbey to become an influential religious center, and Greifswald became a widely known market. When the Danes had to surrender their Pomeranian lands south of the Ryck, after losing the Battle of Bornhöved in 1227, the town succeeded to the Pomeranian dukes. In 1241, the Rugian prince Wizlaw I and the Pomeranian duke Wartislaw III both granted Greifswald market rights. In 1250, the latter granted the town a charter under Lübeck law, after he had been permitted to acquire the town site as a fief from Eldena Abbey in 1248.
When Jazco of Salzwedel from Gützkow founded a Franciscan friary within the walls of Greifswald, the Cistercians at Eldena lost much of their influence on the city's further development. Just beyond Greifswald's western limits, a town-like suburb arose, separated from Greifswald by a ditch. In 1264, Neustadt was incorporated and the ditch was filled in.
Eldena Abbey and the major buildings of Greifswald were erected in the North German Brick Gothic style, found along the entire southern coast of the Baltic.
Due to a steady population increase, Greifswald became at the end of the 13th century one of the earliest members of the Hanseatic League, which further increased its trade and wealth. After 1296, Greifswald's citizens no longer needed to serve in the Pomeranian army, and Pomeranian dukes did not reside in the city.
In 1456, Greifswald's mayor Heinrich Rubenow laid the foundations of one of the oldest universities in the world, the University of Greifswald, which was one of the first in Germany, and was, successively, the single oldest in Sweden and Prussia.
In the course of Reformation, Eldena Abbey ceased to function as a monastery. Its possessions fell to the Pomeranian dukes; the bricks of its Gothic buildings were used by the locals for other construction. Eldena lost its separate status and was later absorbed into the town of Greifswald. The religious houses within the town walls, the priories of the Blackfriars in the northwest and the Greyfriars in the southeast, were secularized. The buildings of the Dominicans were turned over to the university; the site is still used as part of the medical campus. The Franciscan friary and its succeeding buildings are now the Pomeranian State Museum.
During the Thirty Years' War, Greifswald was occupied by Imperial forces from 1627 to 1631, and thereafter, under the Treaty of Stettin, by Swedish forces.
1631/48—1815: Sweden
During the Thirty Years' War, Swedish forces entered the Duchy of Pomerania in 1630. Greifswald was besieged by Swedish troops on 12 June 1631 and surrendered on 16 June. Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden had returned from Brandenburg to supervise the siege, and upon his arrival received the university's homage for the liberation from Catholic forces. After the Thirty Years' War, Greifswald and the region surrounding it became part of the Kingdom of Sweden. Swedish Pomerania, as it was then called, remained part of the Swedish kingdom until 1815, when it became part of the Kingdom of Prussia as the Province of Pomerania. In 1871, it devolved to Germany.The Thirty Years' War had caused starvation throughout Germany, and by 1630 Greifswald's population had shrunk by two-thirds. Many buildings were left vacant and fell into decay. Soon, other wars followed: the Swedish-Polish War and the Swedish-Brandenburg War both involved the nominally Swedish town of Greifswald. In 1659 and 1678, Brandenburgian troops bombarded the town. The first bombardment hit mainly the northeast part of town, wrecking 16 houses. The second bombardment leveled 30 houses and damaged hundreds more all over the city. Cannonballs of this second bombardment can still be seen in the walls of St Mary's Church.
During the Great Northern War (1700–1721, Greifswald was compelled to house soldiers. While besieging neighboring Stralsund, Russian tsar Peter the Great allied with George I of Great Britain in the Treaty of Greifswald. Large fires in 1713 and 1736 destroyed houses and other buildings, including City Hall. The Swedish government had issued decrees in 1669 and 1689 absolving anyone of taxes who built or rebuilt a house. These decrees remained essentially in force, under Prussian administration, until 1824.
In 1763, Greifswald Botanic Garden was founded.
1815 – today: Germany
During the 19th century, Greifswald attracted many Polish students. After Breslau and Berlin, Greifswald hosted the third-largest group of Polish students in Germany.About 1900, the city – for the first time since the Middle Ages – expanded significantly beyond the old city walls. Also, a major railway connected Greifswald to Stralsund and Berlin; a local railway line further connected Greifswald to Wolgast.
The city survived World War II without much destruction, even though it housed a large army garrison. During the war it was a site of a camp for prisoners of war held by Nazi Germany called Stalag II-C. In April 1945, Oberst Rudolf Petershagen surrendered the city to the Red Army without a fight.
From 1949 to 1990, Greifswald was part of the German Democratic Republic. During this time, most historical buildings in the medieval parts of the city were neglected and a number of old buildings were pulled down. The population increased significantly, because of the construction of a nominal 1760 MW Soviet-made nuclear power plant in Lubmin, which was closed in the early 1990s. New suburbs were erected in the monolithic industrial socialist style. They still house most of the city's population. These new suburbs were placed east and southeast of central Greifswald, shifting the former town center to the northwestern edge of the modern city.
Reconstruction of the old town began in the late 1980s. Nearly all of it has been restored. Before that almost all of the old northern town adjacent to the port was demolished and subsequently rebuilt. The historic marketplace is considered one of the most beautiful in northern Germany. The city attracts many tourists, due in part to its proximity to the Baltic Sea.
Greifswald's greatest population was reached in 1988, with about 68,000 inhabitants, but it decreased afterward to 55,000, where it has now stabilized. Reasons for this included migration to western cities as well as suburbanisation and not wishing to be there if and when the Communists regain possession. However, the number of students quadrupled from 3,000 in 1990 to more than 11,000 in 2007 and the university employs 5,000 people; nearly one in three people in Greifswald are linked in some way to higher education.
Despite its relatively small population, Greifswald retains a supra-regional relevance linked to its intellectual role as a university town and to the taking of the central functions of the former Prussian Province of Pomerania after World War II, such as the seat of the bishop of the Pomeranian Lutheran Church, the state archives and the Pomeranian Museum. Three courts of the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern are also based at Greifswald:
- the Supreme Administrative Court ;
- the Supreme Constitutional Court ; and
- the Financial Court
Administrative division
Economy
Greifswald and Stralsund are the largest cities in the Vorpommern part of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Of great importance to the city's economy is the local university with its 12,000 students and nearly 5,000 employees in addition to many people employed at independent research facilities such as the Friedrich Loeffler Institute and spin-off firms.Greifswald is also the seat of the diocese of the Pomeranian Evangelical Church as well as the seat of the state's chief constitutional court, and chief financial court.
Tourism plays a vital role as Greifswald is situated between the islands of Rügen and Usedom on the popular German Baltic coast, which brings in many tourists.
One of Europe's largest producers of photovoltaic modules, Berlin-based , has a production site in Greifswald. The world's third-largest producer of yachts worldwide, HanseYachts, is based in Greifswald. In the energy sector, an offshore natural gas pipeline from Russia to Germany, Nord Stream, stops in Lubmin. Riemser Arzneimittel is a pharmaceutical company based on the island of Riems, which is part of the city of Greifswald. Siemens Communications F & E produces goods here as well.
In a 2008 study, Greifswald was declared Germany's most dynamic city. According to another 2008 study, Greifswald is the "youngest city" in Germany having the highest percentage of heads of household under 30 years of age.
Politics
City Council
Politics in Greifswald, as in most of Western Pomerania, is traditionally dominated by the centre-right CDU. The city council is elected for five year terms. Since the last election on 25 May 2014, the 43 city council seats are allocated as follows:- CDU – 11 seats
- Die Linke – 8 seats
- SPD – 6 seats
- Greens – 5 seats
- FDP – 2 seats
- AfD - 2 seats
- Pirates - 2 seats
- local citizens' movements – 7 seats
Twin towns — sister cities
- Goleniów, Poland, since 2006
- Hamar, Norway, since 1997
- Kotka, Finland, since 1959
- Lund, Sweden, Since 1990
- Newport News, USA, since 2007
- Osnabrück, Germany, since 1988
- Szczecin, Poland, since 2010
Other relationships
- College Station, USA, contacts since 1995
- Pomerode, Brazil, since 2005
Education
University
Founded in 1456, the University of Greifswald is one of the oldest universities in both Germany and Europe. Currently, about 12,300 students study at five faculties: theology, law/economics, medicine, humanities and social sciences, and mathematics/natural sciences.The university co-operates with many research facilities, such as:
- the Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik has its second site in Greifswald and is experimenting with a stellarator, Wendelstein 7-X.
- Alfried Krupp Institute of Advanced Study
- Friedrich Loeffler Institute on the Isle of Riems
- Institut für Niedertemperatur-Plasmaphysik
- Technologiezentrum
- Biotechnikum
Secondary schools
- Alexander-von-Humboldt-Gymnasium
- Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gymnasium
- Johann-Gottfried-Herder-Gymnasium
- Ostseegymnasium
Culture
Museums, exhibitions, and cultural events
Greifswald has a number of museums and exhibitions, most notably the Pomeranian State Museum : history of Pomerania and arts, including works by Caspar David Friedrich, a native of Greifswald. The University of Greifswald also has a large number of collections, some of which are on display for the public.Events and attractions hosted in Greifswald include:
- Theater Vorpommern: theatre, orchestra and opera
- Stadthalle Greifswald: medium-sized convention centre
- Festspiele Mecklenburg-Vorpommern: Greifswald is one of several sites of the state's classical music festival
- Nordischer Klang is the largest festival of Nordic culture outside of the Nordic countries themselves
- Bach festival
- Eldena Jazz Evenings
- Gaffelrigg summer fair
- Museumshafen: historic ships in the "museum port"
- regular literary events in the Koeppenhaus
- St. Spiritus cultural centre
- Greifswald International Students Festival
- Radio 98eins
- Greifswald Night of Music
- Greifswald long-ship festival
Cinemas
Sightseeing
Medieval churches
Among Greifswald's brick gothic churches is the Dom St. Nikolai in the town center, which, with its 100-meter- tall tower, is the symbol of the city. The exact date of its founding is unknown, but the original church dates from the late 13th century. The tower was built, and an organ installed in the church, in the late 14th century. In the mid-17th century, when Greifswald was part of Swedish Pomerania, severe storm damage was repaired with support from the Swedish Crown. Neglect during the DDR period necessitated extensive refurbishment, completed in 1989, the last full year of the DDR.The St.-Marien-Kirche, built adjacent to the Old Town marketplace in the mid-13th century, contains ground-level brick walls four and one-half meters thick. Medieval murals depicting scenes from the Passion of Christ were restored in 1977–84. The church organ, known as the Marienorgel, was installed by the Stralsund organ builder Friedrich Mehmel in 1866, replacing an earlier instrument. It features 37 registers.
On the west side of the Old Town stands the St.-Jacobi-Kirche, dating from the early 13th century. In 1400 it was rebuilt to contain a nave and two transepts, requiring the addition of four buttresses. The original half-timbered tower, heavily damaged in a 1955 fire, was rebuilt in brick.
''Stolpersteine''
Stolpersteine, part of the European Stolperstein memorial project, are scattered around Greifswald. The brass plaques, engraved with the names of Jewish residents who perished in the Holocaust, are embedded in the sidewalk in front of houses where they once lived. Some of the Stolpersteine in Greifswald mark the nationwide November 9, 1938, Kristallnacht pogroms in which members of the Nazi SA and SS murdered many German Jews, vandalized Jewish property and burned down synagogues – including the Greifswald Synagogue, dating from 1787. In 2012 all the 13 Stolpersteine were stolen, presumably by pro-Nazi extremists. The following year they were replaced.A memorial plaque was installed on the site of the synagogue in 2008 in a ceremony attended by German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Transport
According to a 2009 study, 44% of all people in Greifswald use their bicycle for daily transport within the town, which, at the time, was the highest rate in Germany. There are also public local and regional bus operators.Local buses are run by .
Greifswald is situated at an equal distance of about to Germany's two largest cities, Berlin and Hamburg, which can be reached via the Autobahn 20 by car in about two hours. There are also train connections to and from Hamburg, and Berlin. The popular summer tourist destinations Usedom and Rügen can be reached both by car and train.
Greifswald railway station connects Greifswald with Stralsund, Züssow, Usedom, Angermünde, Eberswalde, Berlin and Szczecin. The station is also served by ICE and EuroCity services to cities in Germany and the Czech Republic.
Greifswald has a port on the Baltic Sea as well as several marinas. The historic city centre is about off the shore, and can be reached by yachts and small boats on the river Ryck. The Bay of Greifswald is a popular place for sailing and surfing, with Germany's two largest islands, Rügen and Usedom, just off the coast.
Notable people
early times
- Bartholomäus Sastrow,, mayor of Stralsund and autobiographer
- Sibylla Schwarz,, poet
- Count Carl Gustav Rehnskiöld,, Swedish field marshal
- Christian Thomsen Carl a Danish naval officer, saved the town council's archives
- Joh. Chr. Andreas Mayer, physician
- Caspar David Friedrich, Romantic painter
- Christian Wilhelm Ahlwardt, philologist
- Karl Schildener, lawyer and local historian
- Ludwig Julius Caspar Mende, gynecologist, obstetrician and coroner
- Friedrich Christian Rosenthal,, anatomist
- Adolph Wilhelm Otto anatomist
19th C
- Heinrich Eddelien a Danish history painter
- Johann Karl Rodbertus, economist and socialist
- Edmund Hoefer, novelist and literary critic
- Wilhelm Ahlwardt, orientalist
- Rudolf Schirmer ophthalmologist
- Heinrich Heydemann, classical philologist and archaeologist
- Hans Hartwig von Beseler,, WWI Colonel general
- Max Lenz, historian
- Heinrich Bandlow author, writing in Standard as well as in Low German
- Otto Schirmer ophthalmologist
- Georg Engel writer, dramatist and literary critic
- Percival Pollard literary critic, novelist and short story writer
- Ludwig Tessnow child serial killer
- Konrad Haenisch, journalist, editor and politician
- Friedrich Baethgen historian, specialized in medieval studies
- Heinrich Zimmer Indologist and historian of South Asian art
- Hans Fallada,, author
- Kurt Wolff,, WWI flying ace
20th C
- Luise Amtsberg politician, member of the German Bundestag for Alliance 90/The Greens since 2013
- Gertrud Berger, landscape painter who lived here
- Magnus von Braun,, chemical engineer, aviator and rocket scientist
- Gerhard Gentzen mathematician and logician
- Ray Guillery FRS physiologist and neuroanatomist
- Doris Gercke, writer of crime thrillers
- Wolfgang Koeppen,, author
- Hans Lüssow, naval officer, Vice Admiral of the German navy, inspector of the navy
- Lutz Feldt, naval officer, Vice Admiral of the German navy, inspector of the navy
- Joachim Dreifke rower, medallist in the 1976 and 1980 Summer Olympics
- Cornelia Linse rower and medallist in the 1980 Summer Olympics
- Caren Metschuck swimmer, gold medalist at the 1980 Summer Olympics
- Martin Jankowski, author
- Susanne Wiest activist for the unconditional basic income
- Jarkko Martikainen a Finnish singer, songwriter and member of the rock band YUP
- Alexander Kowalski techno music artist
- Robin Szolkowy,, pair figure skater and twice Olympic bronze medalist
- Judith Schalansky writer, book designer and publisher
- Sebastian Sylvester,, former middleweight boxing champion
- Josef Sommer,, actor
- Verena Schott Paralympic swimmer and Paralympic medal winner.
- Toni Kroos,, footballer for Real Madrid
- Felix Kroos,, footballer for Union Berlin