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Günthersleben-Wechmar

Former municipality and part of Drei Gleichen, Gotha, Thuringia, Germany

Günthersleben-Wechmar

Former municipality and part of Drei Gleichen, Gotha, Thuringia, Germany

FieldValue
typeMunicipality
image_photoWechmar Dorfkirche.JPG
image_coaDEU Günthersleben-Wechmar COA.svg
coordinates
stateThüringen
districtGotha
elevation303
area26.80
population2999
Stand2016-12-31
postal_code99869
area_code036256
licenceGTH
website[www.wechmar-bach.de](http://www.wechmar-bach.de)
dissolved2018
_noautocatyes

Günthersleben-Wechmar is a former municipality in the German state (Bundesland) of Thuringia in the district of Gotha. Since July 2018, it is part of the municipality Drei Gleichen. The village of Wechmar is notable for having been the home of the Bach family of musicians and composers.

Geography

The A4, one of Germany's primary east-to-west Autobahnen, is located adjacent to Günthersleben-Wechmar. Its proximity to the nearby district capital of Gotha, which itself is one of a whole chain of cities and towns following the former Via Regia from Frankfurt to the east, makes it easily accessible and has contributed to the prosperity of its two constituent villages, Günthersleben and Wechmar.

Video Bach Place of Wechmar

History

The oldest extant document referring to both villages is the brevarium lulli, an inventory of possessions of the abbey of Hersfeld. In this document, dating from 786, they are referred to as Wehemare and Gonresleibin.

Up to the late Middle Ages, no specifically noteworthy historical events took place.

Sometime between 1590 and 1600, however, Veit Bach settled in Wechmar, who is seen by most as the "founding father" of the Bach musical family. The most prominent person in this lineage is, of course, Johann Sebastian Bach, who was the great-great-grandson of Veit Bach and whose grandfather Christoph Bach grew up in Wechmar before taking a position as city musician in Erfurt. Based on these facts, the Village of Wechmar proudly calls itself "Home of the founding fathers of the Bach musical family" (Urväterheimat der Musikerfamilie Bach). As of 2006, there are once again some descendants of the Bach family living in Wechmar.

During World War II several men and women were brought to the area as forced labour. A family with five children worked on the Swaine family farm in Günthersleben and 70 prisoners of war from Poland on Willy Hesse's estate. Men and women from Ukraine, Poland, and Russia, as well as military prisoners from Italy, were forced to work in the Thüringer Machine factory in Gothaer Straße. A Polish forced labourer was publicly hanged. A stone monument to his memory was erected in 2002..

Famous Residents

The family of the Freiherren von Wechmar can also trace its origins to the village of Wechmar. The former President of the UN General Assembly and former German ambassador to the UN, Rüdiger von Wechmar, who is also an honorary citizen of Wechmar, is currently their most prominent member.

Tourist attractions

Buildings in any way connected to the Bach family are, of course, the primary attractions, including the house of Veit Bach and the mill at which members of the Bach family worked as millers. There are, however, quite a few other places in both Günthersleben and Wechmar worth noticing:

  • The Landhaus Studnitz, with its rococo hall, famous for its ornately painted ceiling
  • The churches of St Vitus in Wechmar, St. Peter in Günthersleben
  • The remains of a moated castle in Günthersleben, a rather beautiful artificial island

Morgenstimmung in Wechmar.jpg|Sunrise in Wechmar Veit Bach Mühle.jpg|Veit Bach Mill Bachhaus + Bach Museum.jpg|Bach House + Bach Museum Schild am Bach Museum.jpg|Johann Sebastian Bach Logo at the Bach Museum

References

References

  1. [https://www.destatis.de/DE/Themen/Laender-Regionen/Regionales/Gemeindeverzeichnis/Namens-Grenz-Aenderung/2018.html Gebietsänderungen von Januar bis Dezember 2018], [[Statistisches Bundesamt]]
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