Stadtfriedhof (Göttingen)
The old Stadtfriedhof (City Cemetery) in Göttingen is a historic cemetery with graves of important scholars. It is the final resting place of no less than nine Nobel Prize winners: Max Born, Otto Hahn, Max von Laue, Walther Nernst, Max Planck, Otto Wallach, Adolf Windaus, Richard Zsigmondy and Manfred Eigen.
Location and history
[edit]The cemetery is located at the western edge of the city of Göttingen. The site has an area of about 36 acres (15 ha), on which there are approximately 60,000 burial and urn sites.[1]
Due to the growing population of Göttingen in 1879 Mayor Georg Merkel decided to create a new cemetery at the city limits at Grone, today a suburb of Göttingen. The first section, which covered an area of 7.5 acres (3.0 ha), was inaugurated in December 1881, and replaced the Albanifriedhof as a burial site. The cemetery chapel was designed by city architect Heinrich Gerber during the first expansion of the cemetery around the turn of the century. This was the first of five expansions, the last of which was in 1963. In 1975 the town burial site was moved to the newly created Parkfriedhof Junkerberg. Since then, only existing burial rights are allowed at the Göttingen City Cemetery. A redesign of the site to a park has been repeatedly discussed, but has not yet been done.[1][2]
In the centre of the cemetery about 1000 graves form a memorial cemetery for the victims of war and tyranny. There is also an old, small, Jewish cemetery on the northwest side of the cemetery, with burial sites dating back to 1843.[1]
Graves
[edit]Eight Nobel Prize winners are buried here:
- Max Born, Physics 1954 [3]
- Otto Hahn, Chemistry 1944 [3]
- Max von Laue, Physics 1914 [3]
- Walther Nernst, Chemistry 1920 [3]
- Max Planck, Physics 1918 [3]
- Otto Wallach, Chemistry 1910 [3]
- Adolf Windaus, Chemistry, 1928 [3]
- Richard Zsigmondy, Chemistry 1925 [3]
- Manfred Eigen, Chemistry 1967[4]
In addition, the city cemetery is also the final resting place of:
- Friedrich Carl Andreas, Iranist and orientalist
- Lou Andreas-Salomé, essayist and psychoanalyst
- George Frideric Calsow, politician, mayor of Göttingen [3]
- Hermann Foege, lawyer and politician [3]
- David Hilbert mathematician
- Bruno Karl August Jung, Göttingen politician, mayor [3]
- Gottfried Jungmichel, university teacher and politician [3]
- Walter Meyerhoff, lawyer and politician [3]
- Karl Schwarzschild, astronomer and physicist [5]
- Wilhelm Eduard Weber, physicist [6]
- Konrat Ziegler, classical scholar, Righteous Among the Nations[3]
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c Hemmecke, Maik. "Der alte Göttinger Stadtfriedhof" (in German). Retrieved 11 March 2013.
- ^ The cemeteries in Göttingen (brochure), Göttingen, 2011, p. 11
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Der Nobelpreis und das Ehrenmal "Nobel-Rondell" auf dem Stadtfriedhof" (PDF) (in German). City of Göttingen. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
- ^ Mischke, Christoph (2021-10-14). "Der Stadtfriedhof: Erholung und Kunstgenuss". Mein Göttingen Magazin (in German). Retrieved 2022-08-20.
- ^ "Karl Schwarzschild". NNDB. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
- ^ "Wilhelm Eduard Weber". School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St Andrews, Scotland. Retrieved 10 March 2013.