Walsrode
Walsrode is a town in the district of Heidekreis, in Lower Saxony, Germany. The former municipality Bomlitz was merged into Walsrode in January 2020.History
Middle Ages
986 Foundation of Walsrode Abbey by Count Walo. The first recorded mention
of the town is dated May 7, 986.
1383 The dukes of Brunswick and Lüneburg grant Walsrode a town charter.
1479 First recorded instance of Walsrode's coat of arms. At the end of the
15th century the sculptor Hans Brüggemann, creator of the renowned Bordesholm Altar of Schleswig Cathedral, is born in the town.1626 Extensive destruction in the town by the troops of Count Tilly during the Thirty Years' War.
1757 The town is totally destroyed by a catastrophic fire.
1811 During the Napoleonic era, Walsrode becomes
a border town between France and the Kingdom of Westphalia.
1814 Walsrode is incorporated in the Kingdom of Hanover.
1866 Annexation of Walsrode by Prussia.
1890 Railroad first extends to Walsrode.
1897 The poet Hermann Löns first visits the town.20th century
1935 Löns, who died in 1914, is reburied in Walsrode.
1957 The German border patrol agency establishes
a training school in the town.
1984 The state legislature of Lower Saxony allows the town to incorporate
as an "independent community".Places of interest
Walsrode is twinned with:
- Gernrode, Germany
- Hibbing, Minnesota, United States
- Kovel, Ukraine
- Zaltbommel, Netherlands
Notable people
- Hans Brüggemann, German artist
- Louis Harms, German lutheran pastor
- Hermine Overbeck-Rohte, German landscape painter
- Maren Kroymann, German actress and singer
- Gaby Papenburg, German sports journalist
- Frank Glorius, German chemist
- Onur Ayık, German footballer