Limbach-Oberfrohna

Limbach-Oberfrohna

Limbach-Oberfrohna

Town in Saxony, Germany


Limbach-Oberfrohna is a town in the district of Zwickau in Saxony, Germany.

Quick Facts Country, State ...

History

From the City's Founding in 1950 to 1990

The twin city of Limbach-Oberfrohna was formed on 1 July 1950, through the merger of the two cities of Limbach and Oberfrohna.[3] The still young city was incorporated into the Chemnitz district during the territorial reform of 1952, then Karl-Marx-Stadt-Land, which was part of the corresponding district of the GDR. During GDR times, the Pioneer Holiday Camp Clara Zetkin was established, where children from West Germany could also spend their vacations.[4]

Since 1990

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the corresponding district continued as the Chemnitz district in the reconstituted Free State of Saxony. On October 1, 1994, Limbach-Oberfrohna was granted the special status of a major district town.[5] On 1 January 2000, the administrative community with Niederfrohna was formed. Since August 2008, Limbach-Oberfrohna has been part of the Zwickau district. For years, a group of youths and their meeting places were attacked by neo-Nazis. In order to protect them, their parents founded the Colorful Citizens Forum for Democracy. The city, police, and regional press spoke of conflicts between individuals "from the left and right of the spectrum spectrum." Later, the Zwickau District Court convicted Nico D. as the ringleader of the right-wing extremist scene for arson, bodily harm, and use of unconstitutional symbols, and sentenced him to 2½ years in prison. The prosecutor clarified that there had been no diffuse gang warfare in Limbach-Oberfrohna; rather, he only knew of cases with right-wing perpetrators and left-wing victims.[6] In 2011, the Colorful Citizens Forum for Democracy Limbach-Oberfrohna was awarded the Saxon Democracy Award.[7] During a hearing in the Interior Committee of the Saxon State Parliament on 9 February 2012, the head of the Chemnitz-Erzgebirge Police Directorate, Uwe Reißmann, stated that since 2008, there had been increased right-wing crime in the region, for which he held the Autonomous Nationalists Limbach-Oberfrohna (who later renamed themselves National Resistance Limbach-Oberfrohna) responsible; their stated goal had been to violently create a "nationally liberated zone." At the same event, the political scientist Hajo Funke stated that municipal politics and police had criminally neglected consistent law enforcement in Limbach-Oberfrohna, so that there was a danger that "everyday terror could escalate into something worse." Neo-Nazis in the region were capable of such massive violence that fear and intimidation disrupted the climate in the city.[8] In the summer of 2012, initial negotiations took place between the district of Meinsdorf in the municipality of Callenberg and Limbach-Oberfrohna regarding incorporation. The reason for this is the close cultural ties to Limbach-Oberfrohna and the expectation that Callenberg could merge with Hohenstein-Ernstthal in the future.[9] From 2 to 4 September 2016, the 25th Day of Saxony took place in Limbach-Oberfrohna. During this time (on Saturday, 3 September 2016), a new world record was set in Mensch ärgere Dich nicht with 1052 players.[10] In 2022, Limbach-Oberfrohna made national headlines due to the debate over the voting behavior of its municipal parliament: In September 2022, the city council of Limbach-Oberfrohna rejected two of five proposals for persons to be honored with Stolperstein. The rejection occurred with votes from the CDU, the Free Voters, and the AfD, on the grounds that Max Tennler and Arno Förster, who were shot by Nazis, were members of the KPD (Communist Party of Germany) and therefore "not well disposed towards democracy." As a result, the initiator of the action, councilor Albert Klepper (Greens), questioned the entire honoring, stating that "no distinctions should be made" among the victims.[11][12][13][14] Critics of the voting behavior accused the CDU of publicly positioning themselves before the vote in a way that they should have foreseen how the AfD would vote.[15]

Main sights

Town hall

Former manor house, now the Town Hall

The town hall was previously the manor house. It was acquired by Friedrich Ludwig Leuschner in 1863 and sold by Otto Leuschner to the municipality in 1911.[16]

Economy

Limbach-Oberfrohna is situated in the manufacturing district of Chemnitz. It has a public park and a monument to the composer Johannes Pache. Its industries in the past included the making of worsteds, cloth, silk and sewing-machines, dyeing and bleaching. However, these industries collapsed almost completely after the reunification of Germany in 1990. Today, the biggest employers in the town are Siemens VDO, a former branch of the Siemens AG and manufacturer of car-supplies together with other mechanical-engineering firms.

Transport

The town is situated near the Bundesautobahn 4 and Bundesautobahn 72. Chemnitz, a city with a long existing mechanical-engineering-industry, is situated about 15 km to the east of Limbach-Oberfrohna.

Notable people


References

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Limbach". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 691.

  1. Gemeinden 1994 und ihre Veränderungen seit 1. Januar 1948 in den neuen Ländern, Verlag Metzler-Poeschel, Stuttgart, 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7, Herausgeber: Statistisches Bundesamt
  2. Michael Kraske: Der Riss. Wie die Radikalisierung im Osten unser Zusammenleben zerstört. Ullstein Verlag, Berlin 2020, ISBN 978-3-550-20073-1, S. 145–148.
  3. Michael Kraske: Der Riss. Wie die Radikalisierung im Osten unser Zusammenleben zerstört. Ullstein Verlag, Berlin 2020, ISBN 978-3-550-20073-1, page 145–148.
  4. Michael Kraske: Der Riss. Wie die Radikalisierung im Osten unser Zusammenleben zerstört. Ullstein Verlag, Berlin 2020, page 344.
  5. Michael Kraske: Der Riss. Wie die Radikalisierung im Osten unser Zusammenleben zerstört. Ullstein Verlag, Berlin 2020, page 154.
  6. Archived 2016-10-29 at the Wayback Machine
  7. Keine Stolpersteine in Limbach-Oberfrohna mehr?, Blick.de, 3. Oktober 2022, abgerufen am 17. August 2023.
  8. Kein Stolperstein für Kommunisten, Unsere Zeit, 7 Oktober 2022, viewed on 17 August 2023.
  9. Eklat um Stolpersteine in Limbach-Oberfrohna: Stadtrat lehnt Gedenktafeln ab, Steffi Hofmann, Freie Presse, 27 September 2022, viewed on 17 August 2023.
  10. Ein fataler Vorschlag, taz.de, 29 July 2023, viewed on 17 August 2023.
  11. Dehn, Heyko. "Limbach". www.historisches-sachsen.net. Heyko Dehn. Retrieved 21 August 2020.



Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Limbach-Oberfrohna, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.