Geography
The city is situated in north of the district of Bautzen, close to the borders of Saxony with Brandenburg. It dists 36 km from Bautzen, 44 from Cottbus and 65 from Dresden. Hoyerswerda is part of Upper Lusatia and lies on a rural plain characterized by the presence of several lakes and some swamps.
Districts
Hoyerswerda divides into old town, new town and following districts:
- Bröthen-Michalken (Upper Sorbian: Brětnja/Michałki)
- Dörgenhausen (Upper Sorbian: Němcy)
- Knappenrode (Upper Sorbian: Hórnikecy)
- Schwarzkolm (Upper Sorbian: Čorny Chołmc)
- Zeißig (Upper Sorbian: Ćisk)
Old Town
The old town of Hoyerswerda divides into eleven districts (literal interpretation in brackets):
Neida, Dresdner Vorstadt, Am Bahnhof (on railroad station), Am Stadtrand (on the outskirts), an der Neupetershainer Bahn, An der Thrune, Innere Altstadt (Downtown/historical center), Senftenberger Vorstadt, Spremberger Vorstadt, Nördliche Elsteraue, Südliche Elsteraue.
New Town
The new town of Hoyerswerda divides into 14 districts (literal interpretation in brackets):
Neustadt Zentrum (New Town Center), Kühnicht, Grünewaldring, Gondelteich (Gondola Lake), Wohnkomplex I, Wohnkomplex II, Wohnkomplex III, Wohnkomplex IV, Wohnkomplex V/VE, Wohnkomplex VI, Wohnkomplex VII, Wohnkomplex VIII, Wohnkomplex IX, Wohnkomplex X.
History
The city was first mentioned in 1268. In 1371 it was granted an official marketplace. It received municipal rights from Freiherr von Duba in 1423, as well as the right to elect its own council.
In the 18th century the elector of Saxony, Augustus the Strong, gave the duchy of Hoyerswerda to Katherina von Teschen, who helped the town to develop trade and manufacture. The Battle of Hoyerswerda occurred nearby in 1759 during the Seven Years' War.
In 1815 Hoyerswerda became part of the Prussian Province of Silesia. Positive effect on the economic development of the city had the new railway between Hoyerswerda and Ruhland opened in 1873. The organisation of the Sorbs founded the Domowina in the city in 1912. The town became part of the Prussian Province of Lower Silesia in 1912.
At the end of the Second World War the town was declared a core center of German defence and was therefore heavily damaged. Red Army set fire to the town during invasion. After the war, Hoyerswerda became part of Saxony again. Between 1952 ad 1990, when the states of East Germany were abolished, the city was administered by the Bezirk (Region) of Cottbus.
Hoyerswerda became an important industrial town during the time of the German Democratic Republic. The lignite processing enterprise, "Schwarze Pumpe", was established in 1955 (it is today in the federal state of Brandenburg). Since 1957, the demand for new living space rose dramatically. Soon 10 new big living areas with tens of thousands of apartments were built. In 1981 Hoyerswerda reached its maximum number of inhabitants, with about 71,054 people living there. At that time, there was no other city in the GDR where more children per inhabitant were born than Hoyerswerda. Upon reunification in 1990, the people of the city decided to become part of the reconstituted state of Saxony.
With the end of the German Democratic Republic and the reconstruction of the East German economy, many enterprises in the industrial region of Hoyerswerda were endangered, closed or had to lay off employees. The social situation in the city became especially dangerous: in 1991, for example, a xenophobic attack took place on a hostel containing refugees. It became necessary to develop an anti-violence program for the city. Between 1993 and 1998 several smaller villages became part of the city, but the number of overall inhabitants declined rapidly, from about 70,000 people in the 1980s to about 41,000 people by the end of 2000. There are attempts to renovate Hoyerswerda: many of the apartment blocks built in the time of the GDR have been demolished. This project, like others, was financed with money from the EU and the Federal Republic of Germany.
Its role as an independently ruled town in Saxony disappeared in 2008 with the reshaping of the regional administration of Saxony.
Famous Hoyerswerda personalities
Gabriele Faehnrich
Matthias Heidrich
Tony Jantschke
Petra Pfaff
Marcel Rozgonyi
Rudolf von Sebottendorf
Otto Dammerau
Matthias Höll