Görlitz (; ; ; ; ; East Lusatian: , , ) is a town in Saxony, Germany. It is on the river Lusatian Neisse and is the largest town in Upper Lusatia, the second-largest town in the region of Lusatia after Cottbus, and the largest town in the German part of the region of Silesia. Görlitz is the easternmost town in Germany and lies opposite the Polish town of Zgorzelec, which was the eastern part of Görlitz until 1945. The town has approximately 56,000 inhabitants, which make Görlitz the sixth-largest town in Saxony. It is the seat of the district of Görlitz. Together with Zgorzelec it forms the Euro City of Görlitz/Zgorzelec, which has a combined population of around 86,000.

Görlitz, first mentioned in 1071, developed as a key trading town on the Via Regia route linking Western and Eastern Europe. In the Late Middle Ages, it prospered through the cloth trade and became a member of the Lusatian League, enjoying considerable autonomy. The town came under Bohemian, Austrian and Saxon rule before becoming part of Prussia in 1815 after the Congress of Vienna. During World War II, Görlitz was spared major destruction, but the new Oder–Neisse line in 1945 divided it from its eastern districts, which became Zgorzelec in Poland. In the GDR era, Görlitz was a border town with limited cross-border contact, but after German reunification and Poland’s EU accession, cooperation with Zgorzelec increased. Today, Görlitz is renowned for its well-preserved historic architecture and frequent use as a film location.

Görlitz is culturally diverse. Immediately to the west of Görlitz lie Sorbian-speaking parts of Lusatia, and Görlitz was founded and first settled by the Sorbs, a Slavic people. This is evidenced by the name of the town and the etymology of some of its surrounding villages and geographical features being of Slavic origin. Görlitz itself speaks the East Lusatian dialect of German ('), which is related to Silesian German dialects and differs from the Upper Saxon dialects spoken in most parts of Saxony. It is home to the ' and ', a Silesian Museum (), and the Silesian Christmas Market (').

History

Early Middle Ages

thumb|left|[[Landeskrone (Sedło), a hill that was the site of the main stronghold of the Slavic Bieżuńczanie tribe in the Early Middle Ages]]

Slavs migrated into the area during the Early Middle Ages. The nearby Landeskrone () mountain, as Businc, is considered the main stronghold of the Bieżuńczanie tribe referring to the technique used to clear land for settlement. Polish Zgorzelec and Czech Zhořelec have the same derivation.

In the Early Middle Ages, the area was inhabited by the Bieżuńczanie tribe, one of the old Polish tribes. In the late 9th or 10th century, the Bieżuńczanie were subjugated by the Sorbian Milceni tribe, who bordered from the west, who in turn were subjugated in 990 by the Margraviate of Meissen, a frontier march of the Holy Roman Empire. The area was then conquered by Polish ruler Bolesław I the Brave in 1002 and formed part of Poland until 1031, after which the region fell back to the Margraviate of Meissen.

Earliest record and urban formation

Görlitz, as Goreliz, was first mentioned in a document from the King of Germany, and later Holy Roman Emperor, Henry IV in 1071. This document granted Görlitz to the religious Diocese of Meissen, then under Bishop Benno of Meissen. This document can now be found in the Saxony State Archives in Dresden. In 1075 the village was assigned to the Duchy of Bohemia. In 1126–1131 Bohemian Duke Soběslav I erected a castle, one of several new castles on the Bohemian-Polish border. It may have been on the site of the present St Peter and Paul church. The date the town was founded is unknown but in the 13th century the village gradually became a town. Owing to its location on the Via Regia, an ancient and medieval trade route, the settlement prospered. In 1319 it became part of the Piast-ruled Duchy of Jawor, and Duke Henry I of Jawor confirmed the town's privileges. In 1329, the town fell back to Bohemia.

From 1346, Görlitz was a wealthy member of the Lusatian League, which consisted of Bautzen, Görlitz, Kamenz, Lubań, Löbau and Zittau. Around 1348 a Jewish woman, Adasse, was made a citizen of the town. In 1352 during the reign of Polish King Casimir III the Great, Lusatian German colonists from Görlitz founded the town of Gorlice in southern Poland near Kraków. From 1377 to 1396 it was the capital of an eponymous duchy. As a result, the city lost important privileges, including customs and toll rights, which weakened its economic position.

In 1623, during the Thirty Years' War, the town was captured and occupied alternately by Sweden and the Holy Roman Empire. In 1635, the region of Upper Lusatia (including Görlitz) was ceded to the Electorate of Saxony. From 1639, the town was occupied by Sweden again; it was besieged by Imperial and Saxon forces in 1641. Napoleon visited the town several times in 1807, 1812 and 1813.

After the Napoleonic Wars, the 1815 Congress of Vienna transferred the town from the Kingdom of Saxony to the Kingdom of Prussia. Görlitz was subsequently administered within the Province of Silesia and, after World War I, the Province of Lower Silesia, until 1945. During World War I an internment camp for Greek soldiers was located in present-day Zgorzelec, whilst 500 Greek officers lived in private quarters throughout the town. A burial ground for Greek soldiers was located in the local cemetery. Political prisoners were held and tortured in the camp before it was dissolved in August 1933 and the prisoners were deported to other Nazi concentration camps. On Kristallnacht, in November 1938, an arson attack was carried out on the Görlitz Synagogue. The building survived the attack without major damage because firefighters resisted the order not to extinguish the fire. It is the only synagogue in present-day Saxony that survived Nazi rule. In the interwar period most of the Jews had left the city and their number dropped from 567 in 1925 to 134 in 1939. Many remaining Jews were then killed in the Holocaust. The Nazis also established and operated two subcamps of the Gross-Rosen concentration camp, located in present-day districts of Biesnitz and Kunnerwitz, in which over 1,500 Jewish men and women were used as forced labour, and 470 of whom died. Numerous subcamps of the Stalag VIII-A prisoner-of-war camp were located in the town, in which over 10,000 POWs worked as forced labour in 1942, and one of the largest subcamps was located in nearby Weinhübel (district of Görlitz since 1949). After the Soviet offensive of 1944 and the partial evacuation of the German court staff from the General Government in German-occupied Poland, a special court of the General Government was established at the local courthouse. Several Polish citizens were detained in Görlitz and sentenced to prison or death at this court for rescuing Jews from the Holocaust. Near the end of World War II German troops destroyed all bridges crossing the Lusatian Neisse.

German Democratic Republic and reunited Germany

thumb|St. Peter and Paul in December 2004

The redrawing of boundaries in 1945—in particular the location of the German-Polish border to the present Oder-Neisse line—divided the town. The right bank was placed under the administration of the Polish People's Republic and was initially renamed Zgorzelice, and then Zgorzelec in 1948, with both names being historically used in the Polish language, while the main portion on the left bank became part of the state of Saxony in the Soviet occupation zone in Germany, from which the German Democratic Republic (GDR) emerged in 1949.

The residents of the part of the town located east of the Neisse River (modern-day Zgorzelec) were almost entirely expelled to the western part of the town. In the 1950s, about 40 percent of the population in and around Görlitz consisted of expellees from the former eastern territories of Germany. A bus line connects the German and Polish parts of the town and there is a common urban management, with annual joint sessions of both town councils.

Since reunification and as of 2013, more than 700 buildings in Görlitz have been renovated. It is a popular place for retirement among the elderly of Germany, being quiet and relatively affordable by German standards. Its tourist potential is rapidly expanding since it is very much an eastern counterpart to towns such as Heidelberg. In the case of Görlitz much of the funding for the renovations of the town's buildings has come from an anonymous donor, who, since 1995, has sent an annual donation of more than €500,000, totalling more than €10,000,000.

In 2021, the surviving old synagogue was reopened.

In 2006, the twin cities of Görlitz and Zgorzelec applied to be the European City of Culture for 2010. It was hoped that the concept of Polish-German cooperation would be sufficient to convince the jury, but Essen won and Görlitz was placed second. As a result of the campaign Görlitz was renamed the City of Culture in order to further German-Polish relations and to attract tourists from all over the world.

As Görlitz was part of Silesia from 1815 onward, it has a Silesian Museum dedicated to the region (). The exhibition features the 1000-year-old cultural history of Silesia.

Görlitz is also the birthplace of the German version of nonpareils, popularly known in Germany as (German for love pearls). Invented by confectioner Rudolf Hoinkis (1876–1944), the name derives from a conversation Hoinkis had with his wife, proclaiming his love for her was like these 'pearls', the nonpareil. Unsure of what to call the treat he invented, his wife suggested calling them love pearls and the name stuck. The factory where he first manufactured the treat, founded in 1896, is now run by his great-grandson, Mathias.

Film location

Due to the historical parts of the city, many movie-makers have used the various sites as locations. Eli Roth shot the movie-in-a-movie Nation's Pride () for Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds (which incidentally purports to be France) in the Lower Market Square and Upper Market Square in the oldest parts of the city. Other films shot in Görlitz include the 2013 war drama The Book Thief and the teen years in The Reader. Görlitz was used as the primary shooting location for the Wes Anderson film The Grand Budapest Hotel, with Görlitz standing in for a resort in the fictional Eastern European country of Zubrowka. A vacant department store in the city was redecorated to serve as the hotel itself.

Sport

The town is represented by the football club Gelb-Weiss Görlitz.

Geography

Görlitz is situated on the border with Poland, adjacent to the Polish town of Zgorzelec on the opposite bank of the Lusatian Neisse. The municipality measures from north to south, and from east to west. Its area is .

Divisions

Görlitz is divided into 9 Stadtteile (town divisions) and 8 Ortsteile (formerly independent municipalities). These are:

  • The Przedsiębiorstwo Komunikacji Samochodowej (PKS) provides bus service over the river between Görlitz and its sister city, Zgorzelec.

Climate

The climate is oceanic (Köppen: Cfb) or on the western edge of humid continental (Dfb) at the 0 °C isotherm. The location on the easternmost border of Germany, far from the sea, gives a climate less affected by prevailing westerly winds although these do reach further into the western half of Poland. Summers can be warm, though not as much as in Southern Europe, and the winters are cold; snow is sporadic, not persisting all winter.

The Görlitz weather station has recorded the following extreme values:

|source 2 = Deutscher Wetterdienst / SKlima.de

Governance

Mayor and city council

thumb|[[Town Hall of Görlitz|The New Town Hall]]

The first freely elected mayor after German reunification was Matthias Lechner of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), who served from 1990 to 1998. The mayor was originally chosen by the city council, but since 1994 has been directly elected. Rolf Karbaum served from 1998 until 2005, Joachim Paulick from 2005 to 2012, and Siegfried Deinege from 2012 to 2019; all were independents. In 2019, CDU politician Octavian Ursu was elected mayor. The most recent mayoral election was held on 26 May 2019, with a runoff held on 16 June, and the results were as follows:

! rowspan=2 colspan=2| Candidate

! rowspan=2| Party

! colspan=2| First round

! colspan=2| Second round

|-

! Votes

! %

! Votes

! %

|-

| bgcolor=|

| align=left| Sebastian Wippel

| align=left| Alternative for Germany

| 9,710

| 36.4

| 11,390

| 44.8

|-

| bgcolor=|

| align=left| Octavian Ursu

| align=left| Christian Democratic Union

| 8,077

| 30.3

| 14,043

| 55.2

|-

| bgcolor=|

| align=left| Franziska Schubert

| align=left| Green/BfG/MG/SPD/PARTEI

| 7,436

| 27.9

|-

| bgcolor=|

| align=left| Jana Lübeck

| align=left| The Left

| 1,470

| 5.5

|-

! colspan=3| Valid votes

! 26,693

! 98.7

! 25,433

! 98.6

|-

! colspan=3| Invalid votes

! 339

! 1.3

! 370

! 1.4

|-

! colspan=3| Total

! 27,032

! 100.0

! 25,803

! 100.0

|-

! colspan=3| Electorate/voter turnout

! 46,120

! 58.6

! 46,135

! 55.9

|-

| colspan=7| Source: Wahlen in Sachsen

|}

The most recent city council election was held on 6 June 2024, and the results were as follows:

! colspan=2| Party

! Votes

! %

! +/-

! Seats

! +/-

|-

| bgcolor=|

| align=left| Alternative for Germany (AfD)

| 28,496

| 37.2

| 6.4

| 14

| 1

|-

| bgcolor=|

| align=left| Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

| 19,765

| 25.8

| 3.8

| 10

| 1

|-

|

| align=left| Citizens for Görlitz (BfG)

| 10,679

| 13.9

| 3.6

| 5

| 2

|-

|

| align=left| Motor Görlitz (MG)

| 6,266

| 8.2

| 2.5

| 3

| 1

|-

| bgcolor=|

| align=left| The Left (Die Linke)

| 4,727

| 6.2

| 2.3

| 2

| 1

|-

| bgcolor=|

| align=left| Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne)

| 3,309

| 4.3

| 3.3

| 2

| 1

|-

| bgcolor=|

| align=left| Social Democratic Party (SPD)

| 1,951

| 2.5

| 0.2

| 1

| 0

|-

| bgcolor=169340|

| align=left| Free Saxons

| 1,377

| 1.8

| New

| 1

| New

|-

! colspan=2| Valid votes

! 76,570

! 100.0

!

!

!

|-

! colspan=2| Invalid ballots

! 428

! 1.6

!

!

!

|-

! colspan=2| Total ballots

! 26,964

! 100.0

!

! 38

! ±0

|-

! colspan=2| Electorate/voter turnout

! 45,068

! 59.8

! 1.1

!

!

|-

| colspan="7"| Source: City of Görlitz

|}

Twin towns – sister cities

thumb|Görlitz seen from its twin town [[Zgorzelec, Poland]]

Görlitz is twinned with:

  • Amiens, France
  • Molfetta, Italy
  • Nový Jičín, Czech Republic
  • Wiesbaden, Germany
  • Zgorzelec, Poland

Being the easternmost town in the country, Görlitz has formed a 'Compass Alliance' () with the northernmost, westernmost and southernmost towns, List, Selfkant and Oberstdorf respectively. They participate in the annual German Unity Day celebrations to represent the modern limits of Germany.

Notable people

thumb|Michael Ballack

  • Adasse (fl.1348), money lender
  • Michael Ballack (born 1976), football player
  • Jakob Böhme (1575–1624), mystic and theologian
  • Johann Christoph Brotze (1742–1823), educator
  • Hans Georg Dehmelt (1922–2017), co-recipient of the 1989 Nobel Prize in Physics
  • Hans-Jürgen Dörner (1951–2022), football player and coach
  • Werner Finck (1902–1978), comedian, actor and writer
  • Richard Foerster (classical scholar) (1843–1922), classical scholar
  • Johann Carl Gehler (1732–1796) physician, anatomist and mineralogist
  • Gottlob Harrer (1703–1755), composer
  • Clara Hepner (1860–1939), German-Jewish writer
  • Torsten Gütschow (born 1962), football player
  • Herbert Hirche (1910–2002), architect and designer
  • Hanna von Hoerner (1942–2014), astrophysicist
  • Emil Jannings (1884–1950), first actor to win the Academy Award for Best Actor
  • Jens Jeremies (born 1974), football player
  • Reinhart Koselleck (1923–2006), historian
  • Michael Kretschmer (born 1975), politician (CDU), Minister President of Saxony
  • Lars Kaufmann (born 1982), handball player
  • Mira Lobe (born 1913), writer of more than 100 children's books
  • Selma Lohse (1883–1937), politician
  • Oskar Morgenstern (1902–1977), economist
  • Gustavus Adolphus Neumann (1807–1886), publisher
  • Arthur Pohl (1900–1970), set designer, director and screenwriter
  • Hans Ulrich Rudel (1916–1982) highly decorated WWII pilot for Nazi Germany
  • Pavle Jurišić Šturm (1848–1922), Serbian Army general, born in Görlitz
  • Alfred Wagenknecht (1881–1956), American Marxist politician
  • Sebastian Wippel (born 1982), politician
  • Giorgio Zur (1930–2019), Catholic Archbishop and Apostolic Nuncio in Austria

<gallery>

File:Peterskirche Goerlitz.jpg|St. Peter and Paul church, the Woad House and the river Lusatian Neisse in Görlitz

File:Görlitz Peterskirche Orgel.jpg|Interior of St. Peter and Paul with its Sonnenorgel (sun organ)

File:Goerlitz-Schoenhof von Westen-20110626.jpg|The Schönhof, the oldest Renaissance building in Görlitz

File:Görlitz-Karstadt-Jugendstil.jpg|Interior of the Görlitzer Warenhaus department store

File:Obermarkt Görlitz @20201001 b.jpg|View over Upper Market Square taken from Reichenbach Tower, residential buildings of Zgorzelec in the background

File:Görlitz Altes Rathaus am Untermarkt.JPG|Old town hall on the Lower Market Square

File:Görlitz - Brüderstraße - Altes Rathaus - Corvinuswappen 02 ies.jpg|Royal coats of arms of Hungarian King Matthias Corvinus (Old Town Hall)

File:Görlitz - Obermarkt13-Reichenbacher Turm 02 ies.jpg|Reichenbach Tower

File:Görlitz - Postplatz - Gericht 06 ies.jpg|Courthouse

File:Landeskrone view from zgorzelec.JPG|The Landeskrone, literally "land's crown", the local mountain of Görlitz

File:Gerh'HauptmannTheather Görlitz.jpg|Theatre

File:Dreifaltigkeitskirche Goerlitz.jpg|Gothic Holy Trinity church

File:Görlitz - Marienplatz - Frauenturm 04 ies.jpg|Thick Tower

File:Nikolaikirchhof Görlitz 01.jpg|Nikolai Cemetery

File:Görlitz-Nikolaistr.JPG|Nikolai Tower

File:St Peter and Paul Church, Gorlitz from south-east.jpg|St. Peter and Paul

File:Altes Rathaus Görlitz 1.jpg|Old town hall

File:Wilhelmsplatz-1-goerlitz.jpg|Wilhelmsplatz

File:Synagoge Görlitz 01.jpg|Görlitz Synagogue

</gallery>

Notes

See also

  • Ludwigsdorf
  • Pließnitz

References

  • Official website
  • DW-World 'trial living' report.
  • "Görlitz/ZgorzelecUrban development from 12th to 21st century" on YouTube