Wangen an der Aare is a municipality in the Oberaargau administrative district in the canton of Bern in Switzerland.
On 1 January 2024 the former municipality of Wangenried merged to form the municipality of Wangen an der Aare.
This small town lies between Olten and Solothurn in rural surroundings on the Aare, a major river of the west-central lowland region of Switzerland, the Mittelland. An ancient wooden covered bridge crosses the Aare at this point. Wangen an der Aare was the administrative centre of the former district of the same name.
thumb|250px|left|Wangen an der Aare
Transport links
Wangen is situated on the Biel/Bienne - Olten railway line and close to the A1 motorway.
History
Wang(en) means an area at the foot of a slope; in this case the slope in question is almost certainly that of the nearby Jura mountain range. Wangen's coat of arms shows crossed St Peter's keys in blue on a white ground. The nobles (or Vögte) who held the lordship of Wangen adopted this symbol which had been the badge of the Upper Aargau estates of the Abbey of Saint Peter in the Black Forest. The earliest document to be sealed with the crossed-keys symbol dates from the year 1380.
The castle, built by the Kyburger dynasty in 1407, became the seat of the Bernese regional governorship, and some departments of the regional administration are still housed in the building today. The settlement occupied a strategically important spot, guarding the river-crossing and serving as a customs and staging-point for waterway traffic on the Aare. When the latter trade came to an end the little town experienced a serious economic crisis. The salt house of 1775 remains today as a testament to this past.
Geography
thumb|Aerial view by [[Walter Mittelholzer (1932)]]
Wangen has an area of . Of this area, 42.8% is used for agricultural purposes, while 28.8% is forested. Of the rest of the land, 20.3% is settled (buildings or roads) and the remainder (8.1%) is non-productive (rivers, glaciers or mountains).
Notable people
- Arnold Rikli (1823 in Wangen an der Aare – 1906) a Swiss natural healer, he proposed exposing the body to sun and air, called sun tanning
Army base
The modern-day Swiss Army base at Wangen is a link to the town's history as a military centre. The base grew up around the riverside warehouses, where field howitzer units were stationed in World War I. Today Wangen an der Aare is the Transport Corps' main centre and a training-place for disaster relief and rescue units. The Corps of Engineers' bridge-builders, the Pontoniers, also train here.
Economy
The bedware company Roviva Roth & Cie. AG developed from a horsehair spinning-mill first mentioned in 1748.
References
External links
- Homepage of Wangen a. A.
