Contern

Contern (Luxembourgish: Conter) is a commune in Luxembourg. It is part of the canton of Luxembourg.[1][2] As of 2021, 3,968 people in the commune of Contern but the town itself in the middle of the commune is home to 1743 people as of 2022.[3] The other villages in Contern are Moutfort, Oetrange, Medingen and Milbech. Contern also has various hamlets

Conter
Conton
Village (Commune)
Contern church 3.jpg
Coat of arms of Contern
Map of Luxembourg with Contern highlighted in orange, and the canton in dark red
Map of Luxembourg with Contern highlighted in orange, and the canton in dark red
Coordinates: Lua error in Module:Coordinates at line 614: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
Country Luxembourg
CantonLuxembourg
First Settlement builtapprox. 2nd Century
Area
 • Total20.55 km2 (7.93 sq mi)
 • Land20.55 km2 (7.93 sq mi)
 • Rank54th of 102
Highest elevation
356 m (1,168 ft)
 • Rank81st of 102
Lowest elevation
237 m (778 ft)
 • Rank45th of 102
Population
 (1 January 2019)
 • Total3,865
 • Rank44th of 102
 • Density188.08/km2 (487.12/sq mi)
  • Rank56th of 102
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
LAU 2LU0000302
Websitecontern.lu

History

Early History

The Romans settled the country of Luxembourg in the BC era and at some point a road was constructed between Luxembourg City and Dalheim. This road passed through what is today within the borders of the commune of Contern and also through the settlement of Faerschthaff. The Construction of this road saw a bridge of the Trudlerbaach River constructed, which still remains today. There is no proof that the settlement of Contern was founded during roman times, although it is widely believed so. The name Contern was first seen in a charter in 879/880/903/904 AD, although its first official listing was in 1128 and it is almost certain Contern dated back to the Celtic Era. In the 14th century it was wirtten as Guntrein.[4] Contern in the 13th century got a lot of influence from Christianity and Chivalry. At this time Contern became a parish and has its church built. From 1945 onwards, Contern's municipal structure was made up of Contern, Oetrange, Moutfort and Medingen.[5] The Commune of Contern has existed since the 19th century

Medieval History

Formation of the Commune

Contern was formed as a parish in 1621. Later in 1684, neighbouring Oetrange became a parish and in 1707, Moutfort followed. At the time, the parish of Contern had no Lieu-dits although Oetrange was home to the settlement of Kackerterhaff. Moutfort was home to the setlements of Medingen and Millbech as well as the Moulin the Millbech and the farmstead of Pleitrange.[6][7] By 1796 Contern was founded as an Arrondissement, this was home to several localities:

Localities within the Arrondissement of Contern c.1800s[6][7]
Locality (French) Locality (German) Locality (Luxembourgish) Parish
Brücherhof Brücherhof Bricherhaff None
Brüchermühle Brichermillen None
Contern Contern Conter or Konter Contern
Contern-Barriére None
Conterweyer None
Kackerterhof Kackerterhaff Oetrange
Kroentgeshof or Croentgeshof Kroentgeshof or Kröntgeshof Kréintgeshaff None
Marxeknupp Marxeknupp None
Medingen Medingen Méideng or Méidéng Moutfort
Moutfort Mutfort Mutfert Moutfort
Mühlbach Mühlbach Millbech or Milbech Moutfort
Mühlbach-Moulin or

Moulin de Millbech

Millbechermillen or

Milbechermillen

Moutfort
Oetrange Oetringen Éiter Oetrange
Oetrange-Moulin Éitermillen None
Pleitrange Pleitringen Pläitreng Moutfort

Contern remained as an Arrondissement in the sense that it was formed in, in 1796 up until 1912, The exact time the commune as it is called today was formed is unknown, however the first census data from the commune dates back to 1821, so the commune is older than that.[8] The parish of Oetrange was absorbed into the parish of Moutfort in 1946, shortly after in 1948, the parishes of Contern and Moutfort were effectively dissolved.[6][7]

Early mentions of Commune and settlements

Early mentions in newspapers of Contern can be traced back to 1842, where it was mentioned in a long list of communes,[9] although both the settlement and name have been seen far further back. Further mentions happened in 1844, following the death of John the Blind, signatures were collected from many communes, some came from Contern, it was document across multiple lists.[10][11][12]

Recent Growth and Expansion

By 2001, the commune of Contern had a population of 3082, with the town itself having just 1065, the second largest in the commune.[8][13] Also in 2001, Contern joined the Climate Alliance of European cities.[14]

Archaeology

Although no prominent archaeological sites or artifacts date back to the Celtic times, plenty has been left over since the Romans including some housing and remnants of an aqueduct.[5] The most prominent thing from the Romans however is the Gallo-Roman villa, it stood on the current site of the town and there are still remains of it to this day.[15]

Etymology

Following World War II, the Luxembourgers had strong distaste for their former German overseers. This was why almost every place in the country was renamed from its original Luxembourgish name of German origin, to that of French origin without changing too much. Contern's name would have stayed Conter if it weren't for the French pronunciation of "er" being far too strong, thus an "n" was added on the end. It could have been possible to have followed what places like Hesperange did, but in the end it stuck to the name Contern. In the modern era, to encourage more Luxembougish in the commune, many documents and signs use "Conter" instead of Contern.

Pilgrimages

Conter has long been a target of many pilgrimages. In Contern, the sacred Walburga was offered to heal "evil eyes" or to do something against the "evil gaze". The Luxembourgish dialect poet Jakob Diedenhoven describes the course of these pilgrimages in an ironic way in 1830 in his prayer for Conter:

Zoo aalen Zeiten
Vun alle Seiten,
Zur Walburga,
Der heel'ger Fra
Gongen d'from Kreschten
Den Aelter reschten
Mat enger Kierz,
Engem selv'ren Hierz
Hier Aa'n ze g'nieren
Ville' mam Schmieren
Hoid se d'Gnood gin
'Rem ze gesin.
Hei an der Scheier,
D'Marre mam Freier,
D'Ketche ma'm Franz
Sti'schon am Danz

...

He'r we se sangen,
Kuck we se sprangen,
Daat weist de Kne,
Daat eppes me.

Geography

Overview

Geography of Contern
 
ContinentEurope
RegionRegion: Luxembourg District Canton: Luxembourg District
AreaRanked 54th out of 102
 • Total20.55 km2 (7.93 sq mi)
Highest pointPetténgerbesch 356 m (1,168 ft)
Lowest pointTrudlerbaach near Oetrange 237 m (778 ft)
Longest riverSyre (river) {5km)
Largest lakeResevoir in Chaux de Contern (1500sqm)
ClimateTemperate
TerrainMostly relatively flat with some hills around Moutfort and Medingen

Settlements

  • Faerschthaff
  • Moulin de Milbech
  • Maulin Diderich
  • Contern-Barriére
  • Conterweyer
  • Beriton
  • Shalten
  • Schleedervale
  • Ledenbierg
  • Millebridge
  • Schleederfalls
  • Stuwelshill
  • Fehreston
  • Eltercavern
  • Wilkon Hill
  • Millangswell
  • Rouvale
  • Canten
  • Linten
  • Kueledall
  • Stehaff
  • Reulendergassen

Villages

Lieu-dits

Suburbs

  • Hoehenhof

Industrial Zones

  • Chaux de Contern
  • Rosswénkel
  • Weiergewann

Demographics

In 2020 the commune of Contern had a population of 3939, with a population density of around 188 people per square kilometer. The town itself had a population of 1743 which is far higher than what it had in the 2001 census of 1065.[16][17][18]

Population of the entire commune 1821-2021[8]

Year Population +/- previous % Yearly Change %
1821 793 n/a n/a n/a n/a
1851 1404 +611 +77 +20.36 +2.57
1871 1249 -155 -11 -7.75 -0.55
1880
1890
1900
1910
1922
1930
1935
1947
1960
1970
1981
1991
2001
2011
2021

Transportation

The E29 runs from Contern through Moutfort to Luxembourg City. Other smaller roads link Moutfort with the rest of the commune. Contern is served by many different bus routes. Many other towns within the commune are also served by these routes.[19][20] CFL Line 30 provided train access to Contern. It runs through the commune with 2 stations in Sandweiler-Contern and Oetrange. There is also a freight railway which connects Oetrange with Berchem avoiding Luxembourg City.

References

  1. "Contern · Luxembourg". Contern · Luxembourg. Retrieved 2022-07-16.
  2. "Relation: Contern (411354)". OpenStreetMap. Retrieved 2022-07-16.
  3. "Statistiques". Contern (in français). Retrieved 2022-07-16.
  4. Wampach, Camille (1930). Geschichte der Grundherrschaft Echternach im Frühmittelalter (in Luxembourgish). Luxembourg: Luxemburger Kunstdruckerei. pp. 234–235.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Histoire de la commune". Contern (in français). Retrieved 2022-02-26.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Hansen, Kevin M. (2016). Map Guide to Luxembourg Parish Registers. Family Roots Publishing Company. p. 138. ISBN 9781628590807.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 "Luxembourg Gazetteers". www.familysearch.org. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 "État de la population | Population structure - Portail Open Data". data.public.lu. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  9. "BnL Viewer 2". viewer.eluxemburgensia.lu. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  10. "BnL Viewer 2". viewer.eluxemburgensia.lu. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  11. "BnL Viewer 2". viewer.eluxemburgensia.lu. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  12. "BnL Viewer 2". viewer.eluxemburgensia.lu. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  13. "Population by canton and municipality". lustat.statec.lu. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  14. "Strength in numbers". Archived from the original on 2018-08-06. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
  15. "Franziska Dövener - Academia.edu". independent.academia.edu. Retrieved 2022-03-02.
  16. "Présentation". Contern (in français). Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  17. "Affichage de tableau". Archived from the original on 2016-09-12. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  18. "Localities in Contern (Luxembourg, Luxembourg) - Population Statistics, Charts, Map, Location, Weather and Web Information".
  19. "Bus". Mobilitéit. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  20. Contern Media

    "Lignes RGTR". Contern (in français). Retrieved 2023-02-01.