
On the island of Lindau in the eastern
Lake Constance is the ''
Altstadt'' of the
Bavaria
Bavaria ( ; ), officially the Free State of Bavaria (german: Freistaat Bayern, link=no ), is a state in the south-east of Germany. With an area of , Bavaria is the largest German state by land area, comprising roughly a fifth of the total l ...
n county town of
Lindau, which occupies the eastern part of the island. The island of Lindau, which forms 2% of the area and 12% of the population of the entire town, is one of the town's ten administrative districts. The district is just called ''Insel'' ("Island").
History
The present island of Lindau originally consisted of three separate islands, which were formed by the
moraine
A moraine is any accumulation of unconsolidated debris ( regolith and rock), sometimes referred to as glacial till, that occurs in both currently and formerly glaciated regions, and that has been previously carried along by a glacier or ice sh ...
of the
Rhine Glacier
The Rhine Glacier was a glacier during the last glacial period and was responsible for the formation of the Lake Constance.
References
Glaciers of Switzerland
Rhine
{{switzerland-glacier-stub ...
:
#''Vordere Insel'' or ''Hauptinsel'' ("Anterior Island" or "Main Island") with Lindau's ''Altstadt'' east of the historical town wall, separated from the ''Hintere Insel'' by the town ditch
#''Hintere Insel'' ("Far Island") west of the old town ditch with the present-day station and tracks
#''Römerschanze'' ("Roman
Schanze") or ''Auf Burg'' ("On the Castle"), the smallest of the former islands, in front of the subsequent harbour on the south side
On an 1822 map (long before the construction of the railway, which opened in 1854) the three individual islands can be made out:
Lindau-St Lin 1822 l11.jpg, 1822 map of the island of Lindau
Even in 1831 it was said that: ''the little town of Lindau lies on three islands in Lake Constance, linked by bridges…''
The remaining history of the island of Lindau is inextricably bound up with the
history of the town of Lindau itself.
Geography
The island of Lindau currently has about 3,000 inhabitants on an area of 68
hectare
The hectare (; SI symbol: ha) is a non-SI metric unit of area equal to a square with 100- metre sides (1 hm2), or 10,000 m2, and is primarily used in the measurement of land. There are 100 hectares in one square kilometre. An acre is ...
s (0.68 km²). The last official figures from the
population census of 25 May 1987 gave the population as 2755, making Lindau the second-largest
island in Lake Constance after
Reichenau in terms of area and population. For centuries, Lindau was the most populous island and it was only after the decline in population in the old town in the late 1980s that it passed the baton to Reichenau at the other end of the lake, which was six times the size and more rural in character. In the 1970 census, the island's population was still 4,413, and in 1904 as much as 5,853.
The island is separated from the Lindau quarter of
Aeschach on the mainland by the
Kleiner See. The ''Kleiner See'' is bounded in the east by the 150-metre-long Landtor Bridge (''Landtorbrücke''), over which the ''Chelles Allee'' runs, and in the west by the 410-metre-long railway causeway and covers an area of around 20 hectares. There was a bridge at this spot as early as the 13th century; by contrast the railway embankment was built in the 19th century.
[Wolfgang Hartung: ''Die Anfänge des Damenstifts Lindau.'' In: Uwe Ludwig und Thomas Schilp (ed.): ''Nomen et Fraternitas.'' Berlin, 2008, , pp. 699–717, here p. 717. ()] The railway causeway carries four tracks and has a heavily used cycleway and footpath on its eastern side. It has two bridges under which boats may pass. The railway running over the causeway from Aeschach to the island of Lindau was the last section of the
Ludwig South-North Railway The Ludwig South-North railway (''Ludwig-Süd-Nord-Bahn''), built between 1843 and 1854, was the first railway line to be constructed by Royal Bavarian State Railways. It was named after the king, Ludwig I, whose infrastructure priorities had ear ...
, to be taken into operation. It was opened on 1 March 1854 as part of the
Buchloe–Lindau railway.
The old town of Lindau, which is a listed monument, occupies the large eastern part of the island of Lindau, also known as the "main island" (''Hauptinsel''). In the centre is the main street of
''Maximilianstraße'' with the two gable fronts of the town hall on the ''Reichsplatz''. Parallel to ''Maximilianstraße'' there is the ''Ludwigstraße'' in the south and the ''Grub'' in the north. The curvature of both roads enables the line of the medieval fortifications of the island to be seen. The smaller formerly separate island of ''Hintere Insel'' is located west of the historical
town wall
A defensive wall is a fortification usually used to protect a city, town or other settlement from potential aggressors. The walls can range from simple palisades or earthworks to extensive military fortifications with towers, bastions and gates ...
and the old moat. This rear part of the island was enlarged around 1970 by a good four hectares, by the reclamation of an area of the lake between the ''Pulverschanze'' and the ''Sternschanze''. It now covers an area of eleven hectares, about one sixth of the island and is dominated by the
Lake Constance Clinic of ENT physician and cosmetic surgeon, Werner Mang. The westernmost point of the ''Hintere Insel'' and of the whole island is marked by the 1508
Powder Tower and the former
Luitpold-Kaserne built in 1902/03.
References
External links
* Hans Gasser
Großer Bahnhof Artikel in der Süddeutschen Zeitung vom 30. September 2015
{{Authority control
Islands of Bavaria
Islands of Lake Constance in Germany
Lindau (district)
Upper Swabia