The name Bitterfeld most likely comes from the
Middle High German words
bitter and
Feld and so means "boggy land". Bitterfeld was built by a colony of
Flemish immigrants in 1153. The first documentary mention is from 1224. It was captured by the
landgrave of
Meissen in 1476, and belonged thenceforth to
Saxony, until it was ceded to
Prussia in 1815. By 1900,
Bitterfeld station was an important junction of the
Berlin–Halle and the
Magdeburg–Leipzig railways. The population at that time was 11,839; it manufactured drainpipes, paper roofing, and machinery, and had sawmills. There were also several coal mines in the vicinity. Owing to its pleasant situation and accessibility, it became a favoured residence of businessmen of Leipzig and Halle. In the 21st century Bitterfeld is still an industrial town and it stages the annual
United Metal Maniacs metal festival. The former
brown-coal open cast mine of Goitzsche, south-east of Bitterfeld, is a source of numerous
fossils in
Bitterfeld amber. Bitterfeld-Wolfen Herz-Jesu-Kirche asv2023-06 img1.jpg|Catholic church Bitterfeld Kirche.jpg|Evangelical church Villa am Bernsteinsee.JPG|Villa am Bernsteinsee Pegelturm Goitzschesee.jpg|Pegelturm tower in Goitzschesee lake Bitterfeld Berufschulzentrum.jpg|Vocational school center "August von Parseval" Pouch Giotzsche2.jpg|
Großer Goitzschesee (lake)
Historical population (from 1840 to 2006): ==Notable residents==