Antiquity In the area around the town, many
Celtic graves from the
Iron Age have been unearthed. The Celtic population adopted
Roman culture once
Julius Caesar had
conquered Gaul, and there have been
Gallo-Roman archaeological finds throughout the region as well as in Kusel itself. In the time of the
Migration Period (or
Völkerwanderung), the area was first conquered by the
Burgundians and then later by the
Alemanni. As a result of the 496
Battle of Tolbiac (
Zülpich), Kusel found itself under
Frankish hegemony, and became, either by sale or donation, part of the
Imperial domain around
Kaiserslautern.
Middle Ages In the 7th century, a Frankish kingly estate was built on the ruins of an old Roman estate. This served as a lodging, the
Curtis Cosla. Since the name
Cosla is of
Celtic origin, it cannot be ruled out that there might have been continuous habitation here since
prehistoric times. Thus, it is assumed that the town already existed when the so-called
Remigiusland was given to the
Bishopric of Reims. A royal donation to Reims did not come about through King
Clovis I’s efforts towards
Saint Remigius as it is claimed in
Flodoard’s account of the history of the Bishopric of Reims, but rather more likely through
Merovingian King
Childebert II’s efforts towards Archbishop Egidius of Reims sometime between 575 and 590. In 850, the estate had its first documentary mention. In the 9th century, the estate and the surrounding lands found themselves in the ownership of the
Archbishopric of Reims, whose founder was
Saint Remigius. The formerly kingly estate underwent changes by monks, who made of it a monastic estate, and thus it became the centre of ecclesiastical and economic interests in the
Remigiusland. A preserved altar text bears witness to a church consecration performed in 902 by Archbishop Herive from Reims. It was an earlier church, Saint Remigius’s Church (
Remigiuskirche), that stood where the Evangelical church now stands, on the marketplace. Herive declared it the first “mother church” for the whole area. In 931, the estate at Kusel along with the surrounding area was transferred to the
Abbey of Saint-Remi in
Reims. In 1127, the monks from Reims built a
Benedictine collegiate foundation on the nearby Remigiusberg (mountain), which made the Remigiusberg into the ecclesiastical hub of the whole
Remigiusland. The estate at Kusel, represented by a court
Schultheiß, became an administrative seat. From the beginning, Kusel was the centre of the
Remigiusland. After the
Carolingian Empire had been
partitioned, however, Reims had a great deal of difficulty exerting its claims over its more distant holdings in Germany. In 10th-century documents, Kusel is described as an
abbatia (“abbey”, by
Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor in 952) and once as a
curtis (“estate” by
Otto II, Holy Roman Emperor in 965). Kusel must thus in the 10th century still have been the location of a monastery and an estate. The town's and the
Remigiusland’s ownership by the Archbishopric of Reims was acknowledged by all German kings into the
High Middle Ages, as was ownership by the
Abbey of Saint-Remi in
Reims beginning in 952. Kusel, as an abbey and estate town, must have been a key location for the Archbishopric of Reims at this time. It is not known when the abbey was dissolved. It obviously no longer existed about 1125 when the new
Benedictine provostry was founded on the Remigiusberg east of town. This founding stripped Kusel of its importance to the Archbishopric of Reims as an estate. Further information from the High Middle Ages is sparse. If the “mystery poet” Cäsarius von Heisterbach's poem can be taken seriously, Kusel Market was plundered in the early 13th century, and this deed would surely have been perpetrated by vassals of neighbouring counts attacking Reims holdings. About 1112, a scion of the
Nahegau counts named Gerlach was hired as an
Advocatus (or, to use the
German form of the word,
Vogt) to protect the
Remigiusland. As
Vogt (lay church official charged with looking after church properties) over further ecclesiastical holdings of the Archbishopric of Reims and the
Bishopric of Verdun, and as holder in his own right of lands in the Nahegau, he founded the
County of Veldenz (1127–1444). Thus arose a power struggle between the owners of the
Remigiusland – since 952 the Abbey of Saint-Remi in Reims – and the Counts of Veldenz. Clear signs of the power struggle were the
castles, built unlawfully by the Counts of Veldenz,
Castle Lichtenberg and Michelsburg on the Remigiusberg. The former was built nearby about 1214, and is nowadays known as Germany's biggest
castle ruin (425 m long, 382 m above
sea level). In 1387, Kusel was mentioned in a document from the Counts of Veldenz as
Cuscheln der Stat, the last word being an archaic form of
Stadt, the
German word for “town”. Town fortification with moats, walls, towers and gates began. In 1444, Kusel was transferred to the Duchy of
Palatine Zweibrücken, for the Counts of Veldenz had died out in the male line. Castle Lichtenberg became the
Oberamt of Lichtenberg. The struggle over the small Reims area was also pursued by the Dukes (originally Counts Palatine) of Zweibrücken. This struggle ended only in 1552, when the
Remigiusland was sold to Zweibrücken for 8,500
Rhenish guilders. Kusel is known to have been granted town rights on the
Kaiserslautern model in 1347 by
Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, as witnessed by a text in the
Obermoschel town book. No document of the actual deed is preserved, however. Information appearing in some sources, according to which Kusel already had town rights in the 12th century, cannot be confirmed. In 1386, Kusel was first described as a town in a document that has survived to the present day. After the monastery on the Remigiusberg was founded and Castle Lichtenberg was built, the so-called
Kuseler Oberhof (“Kusel High Court”) continued to exist. This was a court of
Schöffen (roughly “lay jurists”) that kept its function as a legal institution even after the
Remigiusland was sold to the Counts Palatine of Zweibrücken. In 1758, Zweibrücken administration of the
Oberamt of Lichtenberg was moved back to Kusel.
Modern times In the 16th century, the Kusel region was thrice stricken by the
Plague. Several times, Kusel was utterly destroyed. The first great destruction came in 1635 during the
Thirty Years' War when
Croatian troops of the
Imperial army under General
Matthias Gallas got into the town by cunning, killed more than half the townsfolk and then set the town ablaze. It took 40 years to build the town back up, but then came the second great destruction in 1675 or 1677 (sources differ), wrought by
French King
Louis XIV's soldiers during the
Franco-Dutch War. Much of the town was once again burnt down. There were further great losses among the populace, and parts of the town were destroyed.
Recent times During the
French Revolution, Kusel was burnt down for the third time in 1794. Within half an hour, all the town's inhabitants
had to leave, under threat of death, before the soldiers set all the houses on fire. The town burnt down and only two houses were left standing, among them the
Reformed inspectorate house, today the
Evangelical deaconry building. Nevertheless,
French Revolutionary troops meant to spare the people's lives. One story has it that the town was burnt down because somebody there was printing
counterfeit assignats. This assertion cannot be proved, but there were certainly false assignats in town, as there were almost everywhere, and it is believed that the French were even offered false assignats in a bid to
ransom some
hostages. It is likelier, though, that the burning of Kusel was meant as a general example to others in the hope that they would thereafter desist from falsifying assignats. According to another version of the story, six houses were left standing afterwards. The deed is said in this case to have been a punishment for the town's having supplied a few townsmen who had been held hostage in
Metz with
money (not specifically assignats), which had then turned out to be counterfeit, and apparently made in Kusel. It has also been hypothesized that it was actually
Kasel (near
Trier) that was supposed to be destroyed, and that Kusel was burnt down instead owing to a spelling mistake in the soldiers’ orders. Kusel grew gradually into a town of craftsmen and
weavers. On 26 July 1794,
French Revolutionary troops occupied the town (and burnt it down). During the time of
French rule, Kusel kept its administrative function, but only as the seat of a
canton. As compensation for the town's destruction, though, the institution of a peace court was promised. The town lay during the time of French
annexation in the
Arrondissement of Birkenfeld and the
Department of
Sarre. In 1813 the army of
Napoleon, retreating to France after his defeat at the
battle of Leipzig, stopped at Kusel the 24 November; general
Frédéric Henri Walther died in town that night from sequels of the battle. After victory over Napoleon in 1815, Kusel was at first subject to a joint
Prussian-
Bavarian-
Austrian Landesadministrationskommission (“State Administration Commission”), which was responsible for ascertaining new borders. Under the new order, the town was assigned in 1818 to the Bavarian
Rheinkreis – a new
exclave of that kingdom created by the
Congress of Vienna – as the seat of a
Landkommissariat (later
Bezirksamt and now district). During the 19th century, the town's
industrialization began, which also led to the downfall of such traditional crafts as hat making,
linen weaving and
stocking knitting. Dwellers of the villages around Kusel for decades travelled worldwide plying their trade as travelling musicians (
Wandermusikanten). Kusel is often seen nowadays as the hub of this movement, even though the town itself yielded very few of these
Wandermusikanten. The first watermain was laid in 1824. Voluntary donations funded the
Maximilianbrunnen (fountain). Between 1850 and 1880, important cloth and
knitting yarn factories were founded (Zöllner, Ehrenspeck, Fickeissen). In 1868, the
railway from
Landstuhl to Kusel was built, which brought the town great economic advantages. In the local quarries, “cuselite” was being mined for use as paving stones and for building railways. Also springing up were
breweries, machine foundries,
wool weaving factories, brickyards, printing shops and smithies making chains or nails. The town also became the regional
agricultural hub with its
livestock markets (later the Autumn Fair). Towards the end of the
Second World War, the town was repeatedly
bombed by
Allied fighter-bombers and also by bigger aircraft. One air raid alone, on 6 January 1945, destroyed much of the town and killed 37 people. After 1945, new industrial operations arose, new building areas were opened (Holler-Siedlung) and
schools were built. Further political changes came only with the realignment of political entities after the war and with the founding of the new
state of
Rhineland-Palatinate. As early as 1939, the village of Diedelkopf was amalgamated with Kusel, while the same was done with the village of Bledesbach on 17 March 1974. In the course of administrative restructuring in
Rhineland-Palatinate in 1968, the town became the seat of a
Verbandsgemeinde administration. Today the
Verbandsgemeinde of Kusel-Altenglan consists of 34 municipalities. The
district has remained, although its boundaries have now and then been adjusted. After the
First World War, the Canton of Waldmohr in the
Bezirksamt of Homburg was grouped into the Kusel district, while after the Second World War, six municipalities in the
Oster valley passed to the
Saarland. Further realignments took place as part of the administrative restructuring of 1969 to 1972. In 1964, Kusel became a garrison town. A smaller garrison was already in the town in 1938, billeted in a simple barracks camp. Only after the Second World War did the barracks buildings on the
Windhof come into being. They are named the
Unteroffizier-Krüger-Kaserne.
Population development In 1609, a population count yielded a figure of 568 inhabitants. In the final stage of the
Thirty Years' War, there may have been few people left living in the town. The population figure was strongly bolstered, however, by returning refugees and newcomers by the time of the
Franco-Dutch War, but quickly fell down once again in the destruction wrought in that war. It was the French themselves who promoted quick repopulation. In 1693 there were 150 people living in Kusel. Only about the middle of the 18th century, though, did the town's population once again reach its 1609 level. According to lists of losses, at the time when the French burnt the town down, 1,334 people called Kusel home. The people now lived in the ruins or sought shelter in the outlying villages. By 1802, the town once again had 1,267 inhabitants. Population growth went into a marked upswing brought on by the
industrialization that was now setting in, although the trend was not quite as strong as it was in some of the Palatinate's other towns and cities. The 6,000 mark was reached only after the
Second World War, and only for a short time. In 1928, Kusel had 3,588 inhabitants who broke down denominationally thus: 3,019
Protestants, 486
Catholics, 66
Jews, 12 dissenters. The following table shows population development over the centuries for Kusel:
Town’s name The oldest known form of the town's name,
Cosla, is to be found in the
Remigiustestament, a document that is likely a forgery by Archbishop
Hincmar of Reims (806-882). It is a
Celtic word matching the names of a whole series of little brooks and rivers in
France that bear the name Côle, such as
this one. The
circumflex accent in this name indicates a suppressed S. The town's name originally referred to the brook that flowed through town, making its meaning simply “settlement on the Cosla brook”. Other forms of the name that the town has borne over the ages are
Chuosla (902),
abbatiam nomine Coslam (952),
Chusela (about 1200),
Cuslea (1217),
Cussla (1127),
Consula (1235),
zu Cuselen (1314),
Koschela (1347),
Cuscheln die Stadt (1387),
Kuschel (1395),
Cuselle (1428),
Cussel (1747) and
Cusel (1824).
Vanished villages and cadastral names Although
forestry and
agriculture only play a minor role in the town's economy these days, Kusel has a rather great area within its limits and extensive woodlands. These are found mainly in the Winterhell, on the Gaisberg and around the Gailbach. Rural cadastral names within town limits often refer to vanished villages, for example “Dimbsweiler Höh”, “Grehweiler” and “Haupweiler Grund”. Former owners’ names also show up in rural cadastral names such as “Lauers Bösch” and “Metternachs Wieß”. The Family Metternach was a
mediaeval noble family with great landholds in the Kusel area. Yet other rural cadastral names refer to the land's attributes, like “Bruchhell” (“wet sloped land”) or “Weingarten” (literally “wine garden”, and therefore “
vineyard”). Indeed, there was
winegrowing in Kusel until the 18th century. The rural cadastral name “Feist”, despite its meaning (“fat” or “adipose”), is
geological in origin, for it refers to a particular
Permian formation known in
German as
Feistkonglomerat. Vanished villages known from records to have existed within Kusel's current limits are Heubweiler, Dimschweiler and Peychnillenbach. ==Religion==