Furtwangen im Schwarzwald (, ; Low Alemannic: Furtwange im Schwarzwald) is a small city located in the Black Forest region of southwestern Germany. Together with Villingen-Schwenningen, Furtwangen is part of the district (German: Kreis) of Schwarzwald-Baar. The Breg is a small stream which, coming from the mountainous areas around Furtwangen, flows down through the inner city to the east. The Breg is one of the two little rivers which unite to form the river Danube.
The population of Furtwangen comprises around 10,000 inhabitants <small>(as of 2016/17)</small>.
Clockmaking
thumb|267x267px|[[Cuckoo clock from the Black Forest|left]]Furtwangen owes its economic boom to the clock, which reached the Black Forest in the 17th century and brought the region an unexpected boom in the 18th century. The founding of the watchmaking school in 1850 was the expression and motor of this development. Its first rector Robert Gerwig also achieved fame as one of the builders of the Black Forest Railway. The trade association, to which the city also owes the establishment of the Sparkasse, gave the impetus to establish the watchmaking school. Today's Furtwangen University of Applied Sciences developed from the watchmaking school.
After the city elevation in 1873, industrialization began in Furtwangen through the watch industry. Large companies such as Baduf, Furtwängler and Siedle emerged. In total, they provided 2,000 jobs. At the turn of the century, the Furtwang industry was at its peak. The traffic conditions were improved by the Bregtalbahn, which opened in 1893.thumb|Aerial view of the inner city
Culture and tourism
The German Clock Museum exhibits more than 8,000 items related to clocks and clockmaking. The museum's history dates back to 1852, when Robert Gerwig, Director of the Grand Ducal Baden Clockmaking School in Furtwangen, began to collect old clocks as witnesses of traditional handicrafts. In 1978, the "Historic Clock Collection" is renamed into the "German Clock Museum".
The Hexenloch Mill was built in 1825. It has been in the family since 1839. The mill was built as a sawmill, its wheels are driven by the water from the hay stream (approx. 300 litres/second). The large water wheel (4m diameter, 13 HP) is the drive of a high-speed and a circular saw which are still functional today.
Education
The University of Applied Sciences Furtwangen was founded in 1850. It specialises in microelectronics, precision mechanics, computer sciences, informatics, digital media, industrial technologies, medical and life sciences, mechanical and medical engineering etc.
Infrastructure
Strongly frequented by traffic is the "B 500" (Bundesstraße 500) road which is also commonly known as the black forest "Panoramastraße". In 1972, the railway connection called Bregtalbahn was closed after 80 years of service. The railway track had led from Furtwangen to Donaueschingen.
Photo gallery
<gallery mode="nolines" widths="300">
File:Furtwangen Feb 05 GHB.jpg|Furtwangen
File:Furtwangen Jan 05 fog GHB.jpg|Furtwangen in January 2005 (in the mist)
File:University of Applied Sciences Furtwangen Germany.jpg|University of Applied Sciences Furtwangen
File:Deutsches-Uhrenmuseum-Aussenansicht.png|German Clock Museum
File:Furtwangen-Neukirch - Hexenlochmühle (01-2).jpg|Hexenloch Mill in Furtwangen
File:Furtwangen 1808.jpg|Drawing of Furtwangen (1808)
</gallery>
Notable people
- Johann Baptist Kirner (1806–1866), portrait and genre painter.
- Robert Gerwig (1825–1885), engineer, from 1850 to 1857 head of local watchmaking school; a designer of the Black Forest Railway
- Oscar Beringer (1844–1922), an English pianist, emigrated to London in 1849.
- Hugo Eberhardt (1874–1959), architect
- Fritz Faiss (1905–1981), abstract expressionist artist, emigrated to the USA in 1951
- Christabel Bielenberg (1909–2003), British writer, lived locally
Sport
140px|right|[[Martin Schmitt, 2018]]
- Siegfried Weiss (1933–2013), cross-country skier, competed in four Winter Olympics
- Thorsten Schmitt (born 1975), Nordic combined skier
- Alexander Herr (born 1978), ski jumper
- Martin Schmitt (born 1978), ski jumper, gold medallist at the 2002 Winter Olympics & silver medallist at the 1998 & the 2010 Winter Olympics
- Georg Hettich (born 1978), Nordic combined skier, gold medallist at the 2006 Winter Olympics & silver medallist at the 2002 & the 2006 Winter Olympics
- Manuel Faißt (born 1993), nordic combined skier, silver medallist at the 2022 Winter Olympics
- Dominik Koepfer (born 1994), professional tennis player
References
External links
- Official website of the municipality(in German)
- German Clock Museum
- Furtwangen: pictures & history (de)
