The city's name derives from its
Celtic toponym,
Beda. Bitburg originated approximately 2,000 years ago as a stopover for traffic from
Lyon through
Metz and
Trier to
Cologne. The first name mentioned was
Vicus Beda. Emperor
Constantine the Great expanded the settlement to a road castle around 330, the central part of which forms the town centre today. Bitburg is first documented only after the end of the
Roman Empire around 715 as
castrum bedense. It subsequently became part of
Franconia. The first mention of Bitburg in historic annals occurred in connection with the signing in 1239 of the Trier-Luxembourg Treaty between Archbishop Theoderich II of Trier and Countess Ermesinde II of Luxemburg, under which the town came under the archbishopric's protection. Bitburg received a town charter in 1262 from
Count Henry V of Luxembourg. In 1443, Bitburg came under the sway of the
Duchy of Burgundy, then in 1506 was acquired by the
Austrian Netherlands, which controlled most of modern Belgium. In 1794 the city came under
French administration, and in 1798 became part of the newly created
Département des Forêts. This led to a short lived economic upturn, and Bitburg received among other things a court and a land registry. In 1815, under agreements at the
Congress of Vienna following the final defeat of
Napoleon Bonaparte, Bitburg was, after having been a part of the
Duchy of Luxembourg for centuries, transferred to the
Kingdom of Prussia, where until 1822 it belonged administratively to the province of Lower Rhine, and afterwards to the Rhine province. With the unification of Germany under Prussian dominance in 1871, Bitburg became part of the German Empire, and after World War I the
Weimar Republic of Germany. In the interwar years, Bitburg, like most of the
Eifel region, was impoverished and comparatively backward. Economic growth began after the
Nazi Seizure of Power and the Nazi regime's introduction of employment-boosting public works projects, including infrastructure for war, particularly the
Westwall; new armed forces barracks; and the development of the
Nims-
Sauer Valley railway. It is said that the building now used as the post office at Bitburg Annex (what is left of Bitburg Air Base) was the headquarters for
Adolf Hitler when he was in the city. In late December 1944, Bitburg was 85 percent destroyed by Allied bombing attacks, and later officially designated by the U.S. military as a "dead city." Subsequently, the town was occupied by
Luxembourg soldiers, who were replaced by French forces in 1955. In 1952 a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (
NATO) base was opened at Bitburg by the U.S. Air Force. At the end of the 1980s, French troops were withdrawn and NATO took over the former French barracks. After the
First Gulf War most of the USAF forces were moved to the larger
Spangdahlem Air Base, about 12 km east of Bitburg. In 1994, NATO turned the
Bitburg Air Base over to the city, which devoted it to public works projects. The
Nims-
Sauer Valley railway was abandoned step by step, beginning in 1969. Parts of it were converted into a bicycle path (
Radweg). In 1985, Bitburg
came to international attention due to a ceremonial visit by U.S. President
Ronald Reagan and German Chancellor
Helmut Kohl to the nearby Kolmeshöhe Military Cemetery – which among its 2,000 graves included those of 49 members of the
Waffen-SS. ==Economics and industry==