Hagen () is a city in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, in western Germany, on the southeastern edge of the Ruhr area, 15 km south of Dortmund, where the rivers Lenne and Volme meet the Ruhr. In 2023, the population was 197,677.
The city is home to the FernUniversität Hagen (University of Hagen), the only state-funded distance education university in Germany.
42 per cent of Hagen's municipal area consists of forest. The four rivers in Hagen stretch over a length of 52.2 km: Ruhr 11.5 km, Lenne 13.1 km, Volme 21.3 km and Ennepe 6.3 km. The difference in altitude from the lowest point on the Ruhr near Vorhalle (86 metres above sea level) to the highest point east of Bölling ♁51° 18′ N, 7° 34′ E (438 metres above sea level) is 352 metres.
There are various rocks and deposits from the Devonian to the Carboniferous in the municipal area. Marine and terrestrial deposits from the Cretaceous, Tertiary and Holocene periods have been preserved in Solutional cave in the Limestone.
Other fossil sites with animal and plant remains from the Paleozoic to the Mesozoic have also made important contributions to geoscientific research. In the area around Hagen, for example, the bones of land dinosaurs and early mammals as well as plant remains from the Lower Cretaceous period were found.
The former Hagen-Vorhalle brickworks quarry is considered an important site for the discovery of fossilised insects and other fossils, including early large dragonflies with wingspans of 40 cm, extinct primordial web-footed butterflies and giant centipedes and millipedes from the Upper Carboniferous period. The Hagen-Vorhalle quarry is considered a geotope of global importance for palaeontological research. Finds from the quarry and from the entire region can be seen in the Museum of Prehistory and Early History in Werdringen moated castle.
In a side valley of the Lenne near Holthausen, the remains of Stone Age people were discovered in the ‘Blätterhöhle’ cave. With a C14 age of up to 11,300 years, they date from the beginning of the Mesolithic period. This makes them the oldest evidence to date of anatomically modern humans in the post-glacial period on the European continent.
Hagen itself was first mentioned around the year 1200, and is presumed to have been the name of a farm at the confluence of the Volme and the Ennepe rivers. After the conquest of in 1324, Hagen passed to the County of Mark.
A major fire destroyed a significant part of Hagen's buildings in 1724. With the help of the Prussian state administration, Hagen was rebuilt within a short time.
Hagen was granted town privileges on 3 September 1746.
From 1817, Hagen was the seat of an office and a district within the administrative district of Arnsberg. In 1837, the revised town regulations and a magistrate were introduced.
In the course of industrialisation, Hagen was connected to the network of the Bergisch-Märkische Eisenbahngesellschaft in 1848 and developed into an important railway junction.
By 1865, Hagen had overtaken Iserlohn, which had previously been the leading town in South Westphalia in terms of population and economic power. During the German Empire from 1871 to 1914, Hagen experienced a period of prosperity. Through urbanisation and industrialisation of the 19th century, the city developed into the main centre for the entire region south of the river Ruhr. In 1887, Hagen was administratively separated from the district of Hagen and became an independent city (urban district).
In the years following the turn of the century, the banker and patron Karl Ernst Osthaus brought many later important architects to the city, including Henry van de Velde, Peter Behrens and Walter Gropius. They established Hagen's reputation as a link between Art Nouveau and Modernism (Hagener Impul). The centrepiece of this initiative was the Museum Folkwang and the (only partially built) garden city of Hohenhagen (Gartenstadt Hohenhagen).
In reaction to the Kapp Putsch in March 1920, when rightists tried to overthrow the elected government and set up an authoritarian regime, tens of thousands of leftist workers in the Ruhr Valley, Germany's most important industrial area, used the opportunity for a revolutionary uprising from the Left. In the Ruhr uprising of 13 March – 2 April 1920, the 50,000-man Ruhr Red Army took control of the industrial district. Government and paramilitary forces were ordered against the workers, suppressing the uprising, and killing an estimated 1,000 workers. A memorial to the uprising was installed in Hagen.
By 1928, Hagen had developed into a city of more than 100,000 inhabitants.
Hagen was bombed repeatedly, by both the Royal Air Force and the United States Eighth Air Force. On the night of 1 October 1943, 243 Avro Lancaster and 8 Mosquitoes from the Royal Air Force's Bomber Command attacked the city. According to the Bomber Command Campaign Diary, "This raid was a complete success achieved on a completely cloud-covered target of small size, with only a moderate bomber effort and at trifling cost." Hagen sustained severe damage from that raid, and hundreds of civilians were killed. After the war, the city centre was almost completely destroyed, so that only the surrounding districts still partially reflect the city's Wilhelminian architectural character.
The victims of the Second World War and National Socialism in Hagen: more than 2,200 people died in Allied bombing raids between 1940 and 1945. Over 10,000 Hagen citizens died on the various fronts of the Second World War. Dozens of Hagen citizens were murdered in concentration camps and prisons for racial, religious, ideological and political reasons.
In August 2021, discovery of a cache of Nazi Germany artifacts from a house was announced. A history teacher revealed a painted portrait of Adolf Hitler and medals decorated with eagles and , a newspaper from 1945, a pistol, , brass knuckles, and stacks of documents. It is also found out that the house once served as the headquarters of the Nationalsozialistische Volkswohlfahrt.
In the 1950s and 1960s, Hagen experienced another period of rapid growth, spreading mainly into the flatter, northern plain. Today's city centre therefore lies somewhat to the south of the main residential areas.
The pedestrian zone in the city centre was opened in the 1970s.
In the early 1980s, Hagen made a name for itself as the ‘Liverpool of New German Wave (Neue Deutsche Welle)’. Many well-known musicians and bands of this musical genre (including Nena, Extrabreit and the sisters Annette Humpe and Inga Humpe) have their roots in Hagen.
Economically, Hagen came under renewed pressure in the 1990s due to increasing globalisation. A further wave of deindustrialisation began in the steel sector, while Hagen's population declined at the same time. Hagen's debt level was €1.383 billion on 31 December 2012.
Since the 2000s, major new construction and renovation projects have been realised that have significantly shaped Hagen's cityscape today. Examples include the Volme- and Rathaus-Galerie, the redesign of Friedrich-Ebert-Platz and the station forecourt (Berliner Platz) as well as the construction of the new town hall on the riverside.
In mid-July 2021, Hagen was affected by a flood disaster caused by heavy rainfall. In particular, damage was caused in the Volme valley and Hohenlimburg.
In the early 21st century, Hagen is the home of the Suedwestfaelische Industrie- und Handelskammer, as well as Sparkasse Hagen, the local public savings bank. The bank's former headquarters, the Sparkasse Hagen Tower, was a regional landmark until its demolition in 2004.
The city is heavily indebted and in the process of cutting city services in order to balance its budget.
The city has capitalized on the export of a wide variety of breads, most notably Hagenschmagenbrot, a traditional dark bread.
The Historisches Centrum Hagen includes the city museum and Werdringen castle. In the Blätterhöhle cave in Hagen, the oldest fossils of modern people in Westphalia and the Ruhr were found. Some date to the early Mesolithic, 10,700 years B.C.E. It seems that the descendants of Mesolithic people in this area maintained a foraging lifestyle for more than 2000 years after the arrival of farming societies.
| 79.782 | 3.892 |
| 38.092 | 1.287 |
| 29.477 | 796 |
| 16.853 | 330 |
| 31.008 | 1.397 |
Since December 2005, the city has been permanently below the 200,000 population mark (according to the city administration), while the North Rhine-Westphalia State Office for Data Processing and Statistics was already assuming a population of just 196,934 at that time. The population reached a low point in 2012 with 187,810 people, since then it has been increasing again. In 2021, the balance of inflows and outflows was +592 (-1,112 for Germans and +1,704 for foreigners).
On 31 December 2023, the population was 197,677, including 150,505 Germans and 47,172 foreigners.
In the ranking of cities in Germany by population, Hagen is in 41st place behind Kassel and ahead of Hamm.
The proportion of under 20-year-olds in Hagen in 2023 was 20.3%, while the proportion of people aged 60 and over was 28.8%. The proportion of the foreign population in Hagen in 2023 was 23.9%. In 2021, 34.1% of the Hagen population had a migration background.
In March 2021, 41.7% of children in daycare centres had a migrant background and 43.2% of children in daycare centres had a mother tongue other than German.
At 12.1% (8.4% for Germans and 28.1% for foreigners), the unemployment rate in October 2022 was above the north rhine-westphalian average of 7.7%.
The following table shows the largest foreign resident groups in the city of Hagen.
| 7,340 |
| 5,125 |
| 4,805 |
| 3,580 |
| 3,475 |
| 2,755 |
| 2,360 |
| 2,020 |
| 1,465 |
| 1,235 |
Previous mayoral election was held on 13 September 2020, and the results were as follows:
! colspan=2| Candidate ! Party ! Votes ! % |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Erik O. Schulz | align=left| Independent (CDU/Green/FDP) | 31,086 | 51.1 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Wolfgang Jörg | align=left| Social Democratic Party | 15,547 | 25.5 |- | | align=left| Josef Bücker | align=left| Hagen Active | 5,214 | 8.6 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Michael Eiche | align=left| Alternative for Germany | 5,197 | 8.5 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Laura Knüppel | align=left| Die PARTEI | 1,704 | 2.8 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Ingo Hentschel | align=left| The Left | 1,534 | 2.5 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Thorsten Kiszkenow | align=left| Pirate Party Germany | 420 | 0.7 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Franco Flebus | align=left| The Republicans | 182 | 0.3 |- ! colspan=3| Valid votes ! 60,884 ! 98.1 |- ! colspan=3| Invalid votes ! 1,156 ! 1.9 |- ! colspan=3| Total ! 62,040 ! 100.0 |- ! colspan=3| Electorate/voter turnout ! 147,361 ! 42.1 |- | colspan=7| Source: State Returning Officer |}
The following is a list of mayors since 1746:
! colspan=2| Party ! Votes ! % ! ± ! Seats ! ± |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Christian Democratic Union (CDU) | 16,813 | 27.5 | 4.5 | 14 | 6 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Social Democratic Party (SPD) | 15,573 | 25.5 | 7.3 | 13 | 8 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne) | 8,114 | 13.3 | 4.3 | 7 | 1 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Alternative for Germany (AfD) | 5,692 | 9.3 | 5.6 | 5 | 3 |- | | align=left| Hagen Active (HA) | 4,186 | 6.8 | 1.3 | 4 | 1 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Free Democratic Party (FDP) | 2,829 | 4.6 | 1.0 | 2 | ±0 |- | | align=left| Citizens for Hohenlimburg (BfHo) | 2,066 | 3.4 | 1.1 | 2 | 1 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| The Left (Die Linke) | 1,762 | 2.9 | 1.4 | 2 | 1 |- | | align=left| Hagen Activist Circle (HAK) | 1,740 | 2.8 | New | 2 | New |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Die PARTEI (PARTEI) | 1,692 | 2.8 | New | 1 | New |- | colspan=7 bgcolor=lightgrey| |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Pirate Party Germany (Piraten) | 436 | 0.7 | 0.9 | 0 | 1 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| The Republicans (REP) | 194 | 0.3 | New | 0 | New |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Independents | 19 | 0.0 | – | 0 | – |- ! colspan=2| Valid votes ! 61,116 ! 98.7 ! ! ! |- ! colspan=2| Invalid votes ! 825 ! 1.3 ! ! ! |- ! colspan=2| Total ! 61,941 ! 100.0 ! ! 52 ! 10 |- ! colspan=2| Electorate/voter turnout ! 147,361 ! 42.0 ! 3.1 ! ! |- | colspan=7| Source: State Returning Officer |}
Hagen has been an important rail junction for the southeastern Ruhr valley since the first rail line opened in 1848. The marshalling yard of Hagen-Vorhalle is among Germany's largest, and the central station offers connections to the InterCityExpress network of Deutsche Bahn as well as to local and S-Bahn services. Since December 2005, Hagen has also been the starting point for a service into Essen, the Ruhr-Lenne-Express, operated by Abellio Deutschland. Since 2022, it has been operated by DB Regio.
Local traffic is handled by Hagener Straßenbahn (Hagen Tramways), which, despite its name, offers only bus services, as the last route in Hagen was abandoned in May 1976. All in all there is a large-scale network of 36 bus lines in Hagen. All local rail and bus services operate under the transport association VRR.
The nearest airports are Dortmund Airport, located north east and Düsseldorf Airport, located west of the city.
Sport clubs in Hagen:
Hagen is also famous of its annual equestrian show 'Horses & Dreams' in April at Hof Kasselmann. It is one of the greatest equestrian shows in Germany and abroad. In 2005 they were the host of the European Dressage Championships after Moscow withdrew. In 2021 Hagen is again host of the 2021 European Dressage Championships for seniors and U25.
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