Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Rüsselsheim am Main

Rüsselsheim am Main
Aerial view
Aerial view
Coat of arms of Rüsselsheim am Main
Location of Rüsselsheim am Main within Groß-Gerau district
Ginsheim-GustavsburgBischofsheimRüsselsheim am MainRaunheimKelsterbachTreburNauheimMörfelden-WalldorfRiedstadtGroß-GerauBüttelbornStockstadt am RheinBiebesheim am RheinGernsheimWiesbadenMain-Taunus-KreisFrankfurtRhineland-PalatinateBergstraße (district)Offenbach (district)DarmstadtDarmstadt-Dieburg
Rüsselsheim am Main is located in Germany
Rüsselsheim am Main
Rüsselsheim am Main
Rüsselsheim am Main is located in Hesse
Rüsselsheim am Main
Rüsselsheim am Main
Coordinates: 50°00′N 08°26′E / 50.000°N 8.433°E / 50.000; 8.433
CountryGermany
StateHesse
Admin. regionDarmstadt
DistrictGroß-Gerau
Government
 • Lord mayor (2023–29) Patrick Burghardt[1] (CDU)
Area
 • Total
58.3 km2 (22.5 sq mi)
Elevation
88 m (289 ft)
Population
 (2022-12-31)[2]
 • Total
67,277
 • Density1,200/km2 (3,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
65428
Dialling codes06142
Vehicle registrationGG
Websitewww.ruesselsheim.de

Rüsselsheim am Main is the largest city in the Groß-Gerau district in the Rhein-Main region of Germany. It is one of seven special status cities (implementing several functions that counties normally provide) in Hessen and is located on the Main, between Frankfurt and Mainz, only a few kilometres from its mouth in Mainz. The suburbs of Bauschheim and Königstädten are included in Rüsselsheim. Rüsselsheim has attained international recognition through the presence of the German car company Opel.

History

Rüsselsheim's foundation goes back to a Frankish colony in the first half of the 5th century. The first written mention of "Rucilesheim", or "the house of Rucile", is in an inventory of royal hunting rights around the year 840. Rüsselsheim emerged from a settlement of the Count of Katzenelnbogen.

circ. 1655

Over time, the name of the city evolved from Rucilesheim to the current Rüsselsheim:

  • 764/5 Rucile(n)sheim
  • before 1130 Ruozcelenesheim
  • 1336 Ruzelnsheim
  • 1275 Ruozelsheim
  • 1640 Ruselsem
  • 1840 Rüsselsheim

In the year 1435 the high noble Count John IV of Katzenelnbogen[3] was the first to cultivate Riesling in Rüsselsheim. Annual reports record that his administrator bought new vines for 22 Schilling. In the following years riesling grapes were planted down the river Rhine and up the river Mosel. In the 18th and 19th centuries, Rüsselsheim made a new contribution to the history of wine when famous wine-growing estates in the Rheingau recultivated their vineyards with vines from the Rüsselsheim and Flörsheim Area (Allendorf, Rheingauer Weinbauverband EV 1980). After the First World War viticulture disappeared in Rüsselsheim. In 1980 the mayor of Rüsselsheim Dr. Karl-Heinz Storsberg set up a museum-vineyard near the castle which celebrates 550 Years of Riesling.

The town's population reached 1,422 by 1829, then doubled between 1875 and 1914 from 3,500 to 8,000. At the beginning of the Second World War, 16,000 people lived in Rüsselsheim; only 9,500 remained at the conflict's end. The population reached a new record of 63,000 inhabitants in 1978, with rapid post-war reconstruction fed first by refugees from the former German territories in Eastern Europe (Heimatvertriebene), then by immigrants attracted by the Opel factories. The proportion of people born overseas was 23% on 31 June 2014.[4]

Politics

Coat of arms

The city's coat of arms features a silver "Doppelhaken" (double hook) and two silver stars on a blue background.

The "Doppelhaken" is also called a "Wolfsangel" (wolf hook), once possibly used to kill wolves, or as a grappling hook. It is now forbidden in Germany to use this symbol on the grounds that it has been used in the past as a symbol of some right-wing extremist groups, now banned. Civic coats of arms which traditionally used the Wolfsangel are exempt from the ban.[5]

The two stars indicate that Rüsselsheim used to belong to Katzenelnbogen County, which also bore these stars on its coat of arms.

World War II

During World War II, Rüsselsheim was bombed several times by the British RAF. The RAF followed a policy of "area bombing" of cities. The day after one such bombing, August 26, 1944, an American B-24 Liberator was shot down after bombing Hanover (American policy did not allow for area bombing as did the British; the American crew had been bombing an airport). The nine member American crew was captured and under guard was placed on a train to a POW camp routed thorough Rüsselsheim. Due to damage done to the railyards, the captured crew and their guards were forced to alight and walk to another location to catch another train. During this walk, residents of Rüsselsheim saw the crew and vented their anger on the crew, shouting insults and spitting. Assuming the crew were "Canadians" and that they had taken part in the bombing of their city the night before, this group grew larger. One woman shouted out "There are the terror flyers. Tear them to pieces! Beat them to death! They have destroyed our houses!" She threw a brick at the crew and that precipitated a riot during which the residents attacked the crew with rocks, hammers, lumber and shovels. Six of the crew were killed. A local Nazi official administered a final shot to four of the men. The bodies of the dead crew were hidden at the rear of the city cemetery.

After the War (1946) when Rüsselsheim was under occupation by the American Army, the killings came to light and the bodies located. In the first war trials of Germans prior to the Nuremberg trials, five of the residents were tried as war criminals, found guilty and hanged. Three others received sentences to hard labour and were released in the 1950s. A later trial was held for two more citizens, one of whom was hanged. In all, eleven citizens were tried for war crimes and murder stemming from this incident, six of whom were executed. (see Wolfsangel: A German City on Trial 1945–48, by August Nigro (Brassey's Inc, London, August 2000; 186pp) (ISBN 1574882457))

Lord mayors

  • 1954–1965 Dr Walter Köbel, SPD
  • 1966–1981 Karl-Heinz Storsberg, SPD
  • 1981–1994 Norbert Winterstein, SPD
  • 1994–1999 Ottilia Geschka, CDU
  • 1999–2011 Stefan Gieltowski, SPD
  • 2011–2016 Patrick Burghardt, CDU
  • 2016–2024 Udo Bausch, (independent politician)
  • 2024–present Patrick Burghardt, CDU

Economy

The car manufacturer Opel and the ideal transportation location with many motorway connections and direct train connections from Rüsselsheim station to Mainz, Frankfurt am Main, Wiesbaden and Darmstadt have resulted in the establishment of many businesses and the attraction of many commuters in Rüsselsheim.

Local companies

Opel

Above all, Rüsselsheim is known for its car manufacturer Opel. The founder, Adam Opel, began as a trainee mechanic and founded a sewing machine factory. The first cars were built in 1899, after Opel's death, when the company was owned and operated by Opel's widow and their five sons.

Hyundai (and Hyundai-Kia European Technical Center)

The European Centre of the Korean car manufacturer Hyundai was inaugurated in 2003.

Electronic Data Systems

The German centre of the outsourcing division of Hewlett-Packard (formerly EDS) was located in Rüsselsheim.

Velodyne Lidar

San Jose, CA, USA-based lidar technology company Velodyne Lidar has its European office in Rüsselsheim.

Public institutions

Culture

The Rüsselsheim Theatre provides 865 seats in stalls and tiers. The theatre's programming consists of plays, concerts, operas, operettas, musicals, ballet, and dancing.

The Rüsselsheim Museum, which was designated in 1980 with the Council of Europe's museum award as a "Model Museum", focuses in particular on the development of labor procedures and labor conditions from prehistory to the present.

Educational institutions

Hochschule RheinMain (RheinMain University of Applied Sciences)

The Hochschule RheinMain is an advanced technical college which has a branch in the city of Rüsselsheim. The technical departments are primarily located here.[citation needed]

These include:[citation needed]

  • Electrical engineering, information technology and television engineering
  • Automotive, industrial, energy, and design engineering
  • Environmental technology
  • Physical technology, nanotechnology, computational engineering and medical technology
  • Air traffic systems, marketing, and control
  • Media technology, information technology, and electrical engineering

Recreational and sports facilities

Event spaces: Großsporthalle (formerly known as Walter-Köbel-Halle) (2,500 spectators)
Swimming pools: Freizeitbad an der Lache, Waldschwimmbad, Opelbad (no longer in use)
Stadiums: Stadion am Sommerdamm, with a field including bleachers and an artificial field for hockey
Boathouses: Bootshaus des Rudervereins Rüsselsheim am Main

Clubs

Rüsselsheim features a large number of clubs. Some of them are members of national and international leagues.

  • tg 1862 Rüsselsheim is the biggest of Rüsselsheim's clubs with approx. 4,000 members. 30 sports are offered in 12 divisions. The volleyball and dancing teams are members of their respective national leagues.
  • JC Rüsselsheim offers judo and other martial arts. A few German champions, as well as world champions, originate from this club.
  • Rüsselsheimer Ruder-Klub 08 is best known for hockey. The women's and men's teams have won German championships and were the winners of the European Cup.
  • Flug-Sport-Club Rüsselsheim flies from its airfield on the Hoherodskopf.
  • DPSG Stamm Partner Erde is the Scout Group in Rüsselsheim. It is a member of the Deutsche Pfadfinderschaft Sankt Georg, the German Catholic Scout Association and as such a member of the World Organization of the Scout Movement. It has around 80 members and its headquarters at Georg-Jung-Str. 64.

In 2004, the Volunteer Fire Brigade of the city of Rüsselsheim was 125 years old.

Development of the city

Additions

  • 1951 Haßloch
  • 1956 Königstädten
  • 1970 Bauschheim

Twin towns – sister cities

Rüsselsheim am Main is twinned with:[6]

Notable people

Honorary citizens

  • Ludwig Dörfler, former mayor of Rüsselsheim
  • Roland Plaisance, former mayor of Rüsselsheim's twin town Évreux

References