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Straubing (; : Strauwing) is an independent city in , southern Germany. It is seat of the district of . Annually in August the Gäubodenvolksfest, the second largest in Bavaria, is held.

The city is located on the forming the centre of the Gäuboden.


History
The area of Straubing has been continuously settled since the . The conquest by the in 16–14 BC had a dramatic impact on the whole region. Even today many traces of the 400-year Roman occupation can be found: for example, the famous 'Römerschatz' (Roman treasure) which was excavated in 1950 and which is shown in the Gäubodenmuseum. Sorviodurum, as the Romans called it, was an important military support base.

After the fall of the Roman Empire Straubing became a centre of settlement of the , mostly around St. Peter's Church (built in the 9th century) between Allachbach and Danube. According to the customs of the Bavarii the settlement was named after their leader Strupinga, which later evolved into the name Straubing.

In 1218 a new part of the city (called 'new town') was founded by Duke Ludwig I Wittelsbach of Bavaria. Straubing became the capital of the Duchy of Bavaria-Straubing under Duke Wilhelm I when Bavaria was divided among the sons of Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor in 1349. In 1429 Straubing passed to Ernest, Duke of Bavaria-, who ordered the murder of in Straubing. The grave of Agnes Bernauer cannot be found. But in the graveyard of St. Peter's Church is a chapel built by Duke Ernest.

In 1633, during the Thirty Years' War, the Swedish army successfully besieged the city.Helfferich, Tryntje, The Thirty Years War: A Documentary History (Cambridge, 2009), p. 287.

Nowadays, this new town is the centre of Straubing with many shops, offices, restaurants and a pedestrian area. Most buildings there still have medieval style. The nightlife of Straubing, with many pubs and discothèques, is concentrated in this area.

The most important buildings are the Gothic cathedral-like Basilica of St. Jacob, the Romanesque St. Peter's Church, the monastery with its Baroque church and library, St. Vitus's, where you can find a life-size personification of "state and church" joined in holy matrimony.

Between 1933 and 1945 most of the members of the then small Jewish community of Straubing were murdered or forced to emigrate. In 2006, Straubing had a lively Jewish community with around 950 members.

During a rally in June 1940, when Straubing and Bogen held its Kriegskreistag, some 20,000 people gathered at the Großdeutschlandplatz. Among the speakers were Wächtler and Gauamtsleiter Erbersdobler. Hitlers Nibelungen, Samples Grafenau 2015, pp. 247f In July 1940, the Donau-Zeitung reported that the Straubing Kreisleiter, Anton Putz, had flown toward France and not returned. Hitlers Nibelungen, Samples Grafenau 2015, pp. 261f

In 1944 and 1945, Straubing suffered from several American air raids. The local military hospital was destroyed to the extent of 80 percent with a loss of 45 patients.

In November 2016 a fire destroyed a greater part of the medieval city hall.

Straubing has many industrial areas and a port at the river Danube with access to the Rhine-Main-Danube Canal, a connection from the to the . It is the centre of the Bavarian high tech offensive in .


Main sights
As one of five ducal residences of medieval Bavaria (besides , Munich, and Burghausen) the old town of Straubing especially features many Gothic buildings.
  • The Romanesque Church of St. Peter (12th century)
  • The Gothic City Tower (begun in 1316)
  • The Gothic city hall (large parts have been destroyed by a fire on November 25, 2016)
  • The medieval ducal castle or Herzogsschloss. Duke Albert I began the construction in 1356.
  • The Gothic Basilica of St. Jacob (present-day church begun in 1393), a Gothic hall church and the largest main church of Straubing. The church was built according to plans of the architect Hans von Burghausen.
  • The Church of St. Vitus – home of the oldest still existing confraternity in Germany, the St. Salvator-Confraternity
  • The monastery and Church of the Holy Spirit (since 1368, by Hans von Burghausen; the only monastery which survived the dissolution of 1802).
  • Church of St. Ursula by the
  • The Baroque Trinity Column at the Theresien Square
  • The Water Tower
  • Sossau pilgrimage church
  • Straubing Zoo (the only zoo in East Bavaria)


Climate

Festivals and cultural events
  • Straubinger Frühlingsfest, a spring festival (annual)
  • Gäubodenvolksfest and Ostbayernschau
  • Museum containing artifacts
  • Agnes-Bernauer-Festspiele, a historical play to remind of the murdered Agnes Bernauer
  • A festival – bluetone (former name Jazz an der Donau) – one of the greatest jazz-festivals in Europe
  • Bürgerfest (burgher festival) is held every two years in the historical centre of Straubing


Sports
  • : – DEL (Highest German League)
  • American football: Straubing Spiders – founded in 1985
  • : Trabrennbahn Straubing (Highest German Level)
  • : German Women's Volleyball League (Highest German League)


Education
The Technical University of Munich has one of its campuses in Straubing. It is specialised on .

A Fraunhofer Institute for is also located in Straubing.

Straubing has four gymnasiums (grammar schools):

  • Anton-Bruckner-Gymnasium
  • Gymnasium der Ursulinen
  • Johannes-Turmair-Gymnasium
  • Ludwigsgymnasium


Twin towns – sister cities
Straubing is with:
  • Romans-sur-Isère, France
  • , Ireland
  • , Austria


Notable people
  • ( – 1435), mistress of Albert III, Duke of Bavaria
  • Thomas Naogeorgus (1508–1563), dramatist and humanist
  • (1510–1579), mercenary, explorer, chronicler and councilor
  • (16th century), master turner
  • Emanuel Schikaneder (1751–1812), impresario, dramatist, actor and composer
  • Joseph von Fraunhofer (1787–1826), optician and physicist
  • (1808–1885), romanticist painter, worked here
  • Arthur Achleitner (1858–1927), writer
  • Otto Ritter von Dandl (1868–1942), politician
  • (1883–1945), member of the Reichstag
  • (1936–1999), pop singer
  • (1948–2001), guitarist
  • (1945–1997), actress
  • (born 1948), journalist
  • Gerda Hasselfeldt (born 1950), politician (CSU), Vice-President of the Bundestag, former federal minister
  • (born 1950), CDU politician
  • (born 1954), pianist and musicologist
  • (born 1965), politician (CSU)
  • (born 1965), director and Oscar winner
  • (born 1969), pianist
  • Christian Gerhaher (born 1969), baritone
  • (born 1970), systems biologist
  • (born 1974), football player and coach
  • (born 1979), singer-songwriter


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