Old Bridge (Heidelberg)

Old Bridge

The Old Bridge (Alte Brücke)
Coordinates 49°24′52″N 8°42′34″E / 49.414338°N 8.70954°E / 49.414338; 8.70954Coordinates: 49°24′52″N 8°42′34″E / 49.414338°N 8.70954°E / 49.414338; 8.70954
Crosses Neckar River
Locale Heidelberg:
– north side: Neuenheim
– south side: The Old City
Official name Karl Theodor Bridge (Karl-Theodor-Brücke)
Followed by Theodor-Heuss-Brücke
Characteristics
Total length 656 feet (200 m)
Height 23 feet (7 m)
History
Opened 1788

The Karl Theodor Bridge (German: Karl-Theodor-Brücke), commonly known as the Old Bridge (German: Alte Brücke), is a stone bridge in Heidelberg, crossing the Neckar River. It connects the Old City with the eastern part of the Neuenheim district of the city on the opposite bank. The current bridge, made of Neckar Valley Sandstone and the ninth built on the site, was constructed in 1788 by Elector Charles Theodore, and is one of the best-known landmarks and tourist destinations in Heidelberg.

History

Although the Karl Theodor Bridge was completed nearly 250 years ago, compared to the city of Heidelberg it is comparatively young. The nickname "Old Bridge" dates from the construction of the Theodor Heuss Bridge in 1877 (then known as the Friedrichs Bridge).[1] Since the thirteenth century there have been eight bridges on the site; the current bridge is built on their foundations. The bridge gate (German: Brückentor) at the south end of the bridge also dates from the Middle Ages.

Precursors

The Romans built the first bridge in the region of what is now Heidelberg in the first century CE. This wooden pile bridge, located between what are now the districts of Neuenheim and Bergheim, was rebuilt in stone around the year 200.[2] After the Roman bridge collapsed Heidelberg was without a bridge for nearly a thousand years.

The next mention of a bridge over the Neckar is in 1284. Although the exact date of construction is unknown, it is believed to have been built shortly after the foundation of the city of Heidelberg in the late twelfth or early thirteenth century. The bridge was positioned on the site of the current one, directly aligned with the marketplace. As well as connecting the town with Schönau Abbey, the bridge may have encouraged north-south traffic to pass through Heidelberg, rather than around it.[3] The bridge marked the border of the County Palatinate of the Rhine, as the northern bank of the Neckar belonged to the Electorate of Mainz until 1460. The bridge therefore formed part of Heidelberg's defences, secured by the gate on its southern end.

The first bridge was destroyed by an ice floe in 1288, with several other bridges meeting the same fate after brief life spans. The second bridge was destroyed by an ice flow in 1308, the third in 1340, the fourth around 1400 and the fifth in 1470.[4] Although there are no surviving depictions of these first five bridges, there are two depictions of the sixth by Sebastian Münster, hence its nickname, 'the Münster bridge' (German: Münster-Brücke). A small, round woodcut in Münster's 1527 Calendarium Hebraicum shows a simple view of Heidelberg, including the bridge, but there is a much more detailed depiction in the artist's Cosmographia of 1550. In the Heidelberg Panorama a bridge on eight stone pillars is visible, with a covered wooden roadway that is open at the sides. The two towers of the bridge gate can be made out at the southern end of the bridge, while the monkey tower (German: Affenturm) is on the seventh pillar, towards the north end of the bridge.[5]

References

  1. Oliver Fink: Kleine Heidelberger Stadtgeschichte. Friedrich Pustet, Regensburg 2005, p. 14.
  2. Fink: Kleine Heidelberger Stadtgeschichte, p. 14.
  3. Jochen Goetze: Die Brücke im Rahmen der Heidelberger Stadtentwicklung. In: Helmut Prückner (Hrsg.): Die alte Brücke in Heidelberg. Braus, Heidelberg 1988, p. 19.
  4. Ludwig Merz: Die Ahnen der Alten Brücke. In: Helmut Prückner (ed.): Die alte Brücke in Heidelberg. Braus, Heidelberg 1988, p. 25.
  5. Merz: Die Ahnen der Alten Brücke, p. 26.
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