Lampertheim () is a town in the BergstraÃÂe district in Hesse, Germany. In 1984, the town hosted the 24th Hessentag state festival.
Lampertheim lies in the southwest corner of Hesse in the Rhine rift at the Biedensand Conservation Area (an old arm of the Rhine) and borders on Baden-Württemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate. It is on the right bank of the Rhine across from Worms (Rhineland-Palatinate), roughly north of Mannheim (Baden-Württemberg). The town is broadly, but visibly surrounded by the Odenwald and the Palatinate Forest.
Lampertheim is one of HesseâÂÂs southernmost towns and borders on Bürstadt, Lorsch, Viernheim and Mannheim (Baden-Württemberg).
Lampertheim has the outlying centres of Hofheim, Hüttenfeld, Neuschloàand Rosengarten, which are all Stadtteile. Furthermore, there are residential neighbourhoods named Heide, Oberlach-Rosenau, Am Küblinger Damm, Lache, An der Wormser StraÃÂe, In den Böllenruthen, In den Ruthen, Wehrzollhaus, Wildbahn and Seehof.
The earliest forms of the townâÂÂs name handed down from 832 were Langobardonheim or Langbardheim, which led to the conclusion that the town was founded by the Lombards (Langobarden in German). There is however today no further doubt that Lampertheim arose at the time of Frankish settlement and that the name is to be taken as meaning âÂÂLantberthsâ HomeâÂÂ, the name âÂÂLantberthâ â also âÂÂLampertâ or âÂÂLambertâ â meaning âÂÂLand-brightening onesâÂÂ. In 1716, the town was granted market rights, and on 4 August 1951 town rights.
The Stadtteil of Rosengarten was originally part of the city of Worms; however, with the post-WWII division of Germany, Worms became part of Rhineland-Palatinate in the French occupation zone, so Rosengarten was incorporated into Hesse in the American occupation zone. In 1971, it became part of Lampertheim.
Mayors in Lampertheim since 1960:
Lampertheim has these parishes:
Stadtmuseum Lampertheim is the town museum. It is found in an old house and there are guided tours.
At the Musikschule Lampertheim is a childrenâÂÂs choir led by Sabine Nicolai. One can also learn to play various instruments at the music school, such as violin, piano, flute, trumpet, and others. There is also singing instruction there, either singly or in groups of 3 or 4 pupils.
Worth mentioning is the Schloss Rennhof built by Baron Rothschild in 1853 and the old schoolhouse built in 1906 and 1907, both in Hüttenfeld. In the Schloss Rennhof is found the Litauisches Gymnasium Hüttenfeld (âÂÂLithuanian GymnasiumâÂÂ), originally established as a school for Lithuanian émigrésâ children after their homeland was overrun by the Soviet Union in the Second World War. It is the only recognized Lithuanian school in Western Europe.
The many transmission masts of the shortwave broadcaster Radio Free Europe Lampertheim, one of the biggest shortwave transmission facilities in Germany, are up to 125 m tall. They are guyed steel-lattice masts, set in pairs in a row, bearing dipole antennae. Some of these transmission masts are linked to each other by crossbeams furnished with catwalks.
The Lampertheimer Spargellauf ("Asparagus Walk") is a public walking event that is traditionally held a week before the Lampertheim Asparagus Festival (Lampertheimer Spargelfest). It is staged by the Lampertheim Gymnastic Club. Every finisher gets a Spargellauf T-shirt, which comes in a different colour every year.
Lampertheim is on BundesstraÃÂe 47, the NibelungenstraÃÂe, which leads from Worms to Michelstadt in the Odenwald.
Lampterheim is also on BundesstraÃÂe 44, which runs from Mannheim towards Biblis and further.
Near Lampertheim, the American foreign broadcasting service Radio Free Europe runs a shortwave transmission facility, and US troops run a United States Army and USAF base, Coleman Barracks, in neighbouring Mannheim-Sandhofen. Furthermore, American soldiers also train at a shooting range in the Lampertheim woods.
In Lampertheim itself are four secondary schools, the Lessing Gymnasium Lampertheim, a Gymnasium that also received a certificate for âÂÂPromotion of the GiftedâÂÂ. There are also the Alfred-Delp-Schule, a joint Hauptschule-Realschule, and the Biedensandschule, a special school for special-needs pupils. There is also the district vocational school.
Lampertheim is twinned with: