Ancient history ) The Minden area shows continuing settlement activity from the 1st to the 4th century, when it belonged to the
Weser–Rhine Germanic development sphere. During the
Roman campaigns in Germania, this part of Westphalia came into the focus of military activities. It remains a matter of discussion whether or not the Minden region was the location of the military camp from where commander
Publius Quinctilius Varus began marching to the, for Rome disastrous,
Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in . Likewise, the localization of the
Battle of Idistaviso and the
Battle of the Angrivarian Wall, both taking place in , to the eastern part of Minden or its neighbour town of
Porta Westfalica is uncertain. Definite archaeological proofs for these locations have not been found . However, relicts of a temporary Roman military camp were found in Barkhausen in 2008, about south of the centre of Minden.
Middle Ages houses along the street () between lower and upper town centre The name
Minda was firstly mentioned in a
Royal Frankish Annals record referring to an army assembly held by
Charlemagne in . The location of the so-named settlement is supposed at the left river side, where today's
Fischerstadt exists. Directly neighbouring was the suspected site of a permanent frankish army camp and a royal estate, located favourably at the place where ways from the south were bundled by the Porta Westfalica gap, connected with a west–east way parallel to the Wiehen and Weser hills, and at a ford through the Weser. The region had already been converted to Christianity, when around a bishopric was founded in Minden, one of the seven diocese foundations established under the rule of Charlemagne. The first cathedral was built nearby to the older village. After the dissolution of the
Duchy of Saxony in 1180 the bishop became sovereign of the
Prince-Bishopric of Minden as a constitutional territory of the
Holy Roman Empire, and remained in this status until 1648. During the
Investiture controversy two bishops were nominated at the same time in 1080 both by the papal supporters and those of King
Henry IV. The
Cathedral close on the lower Weser terrace was soon surrounded to the north and west by a settlement of artisans and merchants, who lived in a parish of their own. The development of the upper town began with the activities of ecclesiastical convents. A convent of
Benedictine nuns removed from the Wiehen Hills to the northwestern edge of the town around St Mary approximately . In 1029, the Canonical Convent of St Martin appears, and a 1042-founded Benedictine monastery removed in 1434 from the Weser shore to a new upper site, where the monastery of St Mauritius was founded. The
Dominicane convent St Paul was established in 1236. German medieval sovereigns governed their realms with an
itinerant court, travelling from town to town.
Louis the German hold an imperial assembly in Minden in 852. The Emperors of the
Ottonian and
Salian dynasty visited Minden several times. When Henry IV came to visit in 1062, a dispute between members of his entourage and citizens caused a fire that destroyed the cathedral and parts of the town. The imperial visit of
Charles IV in October 1377 was the last one until the end of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806. In 1168,
Henry the Lion, Duke of Saxony, married his second wife
Matilda, daughter of
Henry II of England, in
Minden Cathedral; with this marriage Henry maintained the continuance of the
House of Welf. The rights to hold a market, to mint coins, and to collect customs duties were granted in 977 by Emperor
Otto II. Until the beginning of the 13th century, the bishop appointed the as secular administrator of the town. The citizens of Minden and their council obtained independence from the bishop's rule around 1230 and received a town charter in 1301. The increased self-confidence of the citizens was demonstrated by the construction of the town hall, probably adjoining the separately governed cathedral precinct. As a result, the Bishop moved his official residence from Minden to
Petershagen in 1307. The economic development of Minden was influenced by its location on a navigable river and by its success in grain trading since the Middle Ages. Minden got the right to store goods and could force passing ships to unload their cargo; furthermore the town became a flourishing member of the
Hanseatic League. The precise year of the first Weser bridge construction is not known. A previous wooden pedestrian bridge was replaced in the late 13th century by another one fit for wagon transport. In the early 16th century Minden got a stone
arch bridge.
Modern era since the Reformation At the end of the medieval age the
papal legate Cardinal
Nicholas of Cusa visited some German
church provinces to remedy deficits in pastoral care and clerical administration. During his journey he stayed in Minden for one week in August 1451, where he signed various decrees, but on the whole this project did not achieve the intended aims. The
Lutheran Reformation was introduced in 1529 during a vacancy after the death of the not very respected Bishop
Francis of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, and a 36-man unit constituted itself as town regiment. A new church order, based on
Martin Luther's principles, was announced from the pulpit of St Martin's Church () on 13 February 1530. The Dominican convent was dissolved in 1529, and its buildings have been used since 1530 as a location of the new founded municipal
Gymnasium, the first Protestant in Westphalia. Imperial Catholic troops occupied Minden from 1625 to 1634 during the
Thirty Years' War. Protestant Swedish troops laid
siege to Minden and captured it in 1634. Queen
Christina of Sweden () granted Minden full sovereignty in internal and external affairs. During the Catholic occupation the bishop ordered the introduction of the
Gregorian calendar in 1630; the calendar was re-set in 1634 under the Swedish régime, but finally standardized to the new style in 1668. The
Peace of Westphalia in 1648 secularized the Prince-Bishopric to the
Principality of Minden and assigned the territory to the
Prince Electorate of Brandenburg, In 1698, a French Reformed congregation was founded in the town. The
Battle of Minden took place some miles to the north of Minden on 1 August 1759, during the
Seven Years' War of 1756 to 1763. The allied forces of Prussia,
Great Britain, and some German allies defeated the allied
French and
Saxonian troops in a decisive battle. The region remained Prussian, with the adjacent region in the possession of the British King
George II (being the Prince-elector of
Hanover in
personal union). Because French troops had occupied the town twice during the war, King
Frederick the Great realized that it could no more be defended in the old manner; thus he gave order to annul Minden's status as a fortress in 1764. The town functioned as the capital of the Prussian territory of
Minden-Ravensberg from 1719 to 1807 and as the seat of the upper administrative authority named (Chamber of War Affairs and State Property), that ruled Minden-Ravensberg together with the Prussian territories of the County of Lingen and the
County of Tecklenburg. The most prominent president of the chamber was the
Baron vom Stein (in office from 1796 to 1803). The Weser had long been an important trade route, and the legal regulation of trading had immense significance. In 1552 Emperor
Charles V conferred the privilege of its merchants' unhindered trading on the whole Weser to the town of Minden. During the Thirty Years' War, Emperor
Ferdinand II confirmed the
staple right to Minden in 1627, meaning that all passing merchants had to offer their goods for sale for some days. As other towns on the Weserlike
Bremen and
Mündenhad similar rights, many conflicts arose about the partly contradictory legal positions.
From the Napoleonic Wars to World War I and the
Emperor William Monument from 1896 In course of the
War of the Fourth Coalition, French troops occupied the town on 13 November 1806. In the following year
Napoleon founded the
Kingdom of Westphalia, governed by his brother
Jerome Bonaparte as king, and Minden became part of this
client state until 1810 as district capital in the Weser department. On 1 January 1811 Napoleon moved Minden to the department
Ems-Supérieur of the
French Empire; now the Weser formed the eastern frontier between France and Westphalia. The rights of the
Cathedral chapter in the cathedral close were abolished, the still existing convents were dissolved, and some ecclesiastical buildings like St John's church were secularized and used for military purposes. Before the French troops abandoned Minden on 3 November 1813 after the disastrous
Battle of Leipzig, they blew up some of the arches of the Weser bridge, with the damage replaced for decades by a wooden auxiliary construction only. Minden became part of the Kingdom of Prussia again as capital both of the District of Minden and the
government region () in the new formed
Province of Westphalia. By royal order it was declared a fortress once more. The fortress regulations ordered a area in front of the wall being free of any buildings, not even vertical gravestones were allowed. The refortification had severe consequences, hindering any extension of the town area and thus economic development. The was stationed in the garrison from 1820 to 1919, when it was dissolved; the naming
Colonel-in-chief was
Prince Frederick of the Netherlands and after his death
Queen Emma of the Netherlands. Frederick's wife
Princess Louise of Prussia was Colonel-in-chief of the , that was partly stationed in Minden, too. Since 1999, the encamped a new barracks area in the nordwest of the town centre. The
Hanoveran Pionier-Battalion No. 10 was part of the
X Corps, that was incorporated into the Prussian Army after the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, and had its barracks near to Minden station. The main
military training area was a large location in today's quarter of Minderheide at the very northwest edge of the town, an area that had already been part of the main fighting during the Battle of Minden in 1759. After the
Congress of Vienna of 1815 had passed general principles of free traffic on the main rivers, the six Weser-states of the
German Confederation annulated all restrictions and most of the financial burdens for shipping on the river by the Weser Shipping Act () of 1823. The first steam ship was put in operation in 1836, and a first harbour basin was built in 1859 on the east side of the river, connected with the railway in 1863. In the following decades, the great majority of transferred goods were imported goods, as export was of low importance. Inland shipment grew enormously after the completion of the
Mittelland Canal and its connection to the Weser by the
shaft lock in 1915. The dominant industry, as well as in the whole district, was the manufacture of
cigars; this branch decreased after World War I and finally vanished, because the growing market share of
cigarettes had been ignored. Minden was seat of a
Chamber of commerce from 1849 to 1932, when it was merged with those of Bielefeld. Overpopulation and unemployment were the reasons for an enormous emigration from the
Minden Land; various emigration agencies had their location in Minden. The town remained a Prussian fortress until 1873, when Germany's
Imperial Diet () passed the law to remove the fortress status of several fortified places, among them Minden. The fortress walls were razed by 1880the town had to pay for itand a new Weser bridge was constructed, permitting the town to catch up economically. However, it was never able to regain its former political and economic importance. The upper class used the new conditions for construction of a new town quarter in a half-circle to the north and west of the old centre with prestigious buildings on spacious plots, but the urgent narrowness inside the centre maintained. A lot of buildings in the style of historicism replaced older ones at the market place and in the main streets. The lack of buildings outside the fortifications was favourable for planning a road network in the outer areas of the town. Since the 1890s, a sequence of six ring roads in the west and north of the town has formed the backbone of the road network. Grandiose festivities took place when Emperor
William II and Empress
Auguste Victoria visited Minden and the southern village of Barkhausen for inauguration of the
Emperor William Monument on the
Wittekindsberg above the
Porta Westfalica gap on 18 October 1896. Since then the monument has been a visible element of the southern view from Minden. The first line of the Minden tramway has connected the primary site of the memorial with Minden since 1893 when the memorial was still under construction. The Minden District Railways (), founded in 1898, built up a
narrow-gauge railway net with three lines until World War I. Minden got a municipal water supply system in the 1880s and an electric power station in 1902.
The Weimar Republic and the Nazi Regime The republican
November Revolution of 1918 passed with only small disturbances that occurred in a few barracks of the Minden garrison on 7 and 8 November 1918. A
workers' and soldiers' council, most of them members or supporters of the Social Democratic Party, took control in the afternoon of 18 November, but co-operated both with the town council and the military and civil administration as well and was successful in calming the situation. The situation became more critical during the
Kapp Putsch of March 1920, when right-wing officers tried to overthrow the legitimate government of the
German Reich. A majority of the town council declared their loyalty to President
Friedrich Ebert and Chancellor
Gustav Bauer, who for their part confirmed the authority of the Minden Workers' Council. The assassination of Foreign Minister
Walther Rathenau on 24 June 1922 resulted in serious rioting in Minden. A demonstration of 15,000 people in support of the government was held at the market square on 27 June. Public opinion changed during the time of the
Great Depression, and in the 1930-election of the town council, the
NSDAP received 6 of 31 seats, and in the 1933-election, the last democratic one, they won a majority comprising 16 of 28 seats. The NSDAP increased their Minden results of the
Reichstag elections from 2.0 percent in
May 1928 to 40.1 percent in
July 1932. Although the German armed forces were restricted considerably by the regulations of the
Treaty of Versailles, Minden remained a garrison town of the
Reichswehr with the Pioneer Battalion No. 6 and the Artillery Regiment No. 6, both parts of the
6th Division. However, soldiers became more and more connected with right-wing groups, although officially obliged to political neutrality. The military units put forward the construction of sporting facilities: a stadium (, now ), a public open-air pool (now ), and a horse racecourse. Both
Walther von Brauchitsch (who organized annual horse tournaments from 1925 to 1927) and
Wilhelm Keitel (who succeeded him in the same function until 1929) spent part of their career in Minden. When the
Reichswehr was transformed to the
Wehrmacht in 1935, army units were enlarged. Minden received another pioneer battalion (No. 46), new barracks (, after WWII
Clifton barracks) and an exercise area at the Weser shore were built. After the last prisoners of war had left the camp area Minderheide in 1922, the place was used again for military exercise, horse and motorcycle sport, and a part from it as a place to land for small planes, as had already been happened starting in 1910. Two hangars and workshops for repairing and overhauling were built in this area beginning in 1936, where new types of planes were also tested. After the war, the Minden District railway opened a fourth line to the coal mine of Meißen and the ore mine of Kleinenbremen, and in 1924 began to convert the narrow gauge to standard gauge tracks. The Minden tram was electrified in 1920, and three lines were added by 1930.
World War II '' in Minden During World War II, underground factories were built in the
Weser Hills and
Wiehen Hills near Minden.
Slave labourers from a nearby
subcamp of the
Neuengamme concentration camp were forced to produce weapons and other war
materiel. After the war the machinery was removed by American troops and the entrances were sealed. Most of the Jewish citizens of Minden were
deported, dispossessed and murdered.
Stolpersteine (literally 'stumbling stones', metaphorically 'stumbling blocks') have begun to be laid within Minden's pavements as a memorial to them. Minden sustained severe damage from
Allied bombings during World War II. These attacks were minor during the early phase of the war. The raid on 26 October 1944 on the canal aqueduct damaged the wall of the
Mittelland Canal, and numerous workers in a nearby air raid shelter were drowned. The last and most devastating air raid was conducted by
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress aircraft of the
United States Army Air Forces on 28 March 1945 and destroyed great parts of the town centre, including the town hall and cathedral, and resulted in the death of over 180 people. At the end of the war 13% of all buildings were destroyed or damaged. When the
Allied troops were approaching, the
Nazi officials were ordered to leave the town to the east or the north; even the police and the firebrigade drew back, but Mayor Werner Holle remained. The
1st Canadian Airborne Battalion of the
3rd Parachute Brigade came from Bad Oeynhausen in the south, not through the Porta Westfalica gap but over the Wiehen Hills at the
pass of Bergkirchen. On the evening of 4 April 1945 they took the town centre nearly without resistance. Almost all the bridges over the Weser and Mittelland Canal as well as the canal aqueduct had just been blown up by the
German Army in a futile attempt to delay the Allied advance, according to Hitler's
Nero Decree. Before the retreat the army set fire to the Granary and the Army bakery; the spreading out of fire to the St Martin's church could be avoided only with great difficulties for lack of the fire brigade. In the first days of occupation a lot of plunder took place in the now police-less town.
Postwar time In the early post-war time the Minden region became an important part of the
British Occupation Zone. The British Military Government took its main location in Bad Oeynhausen before it moved to Berlin. The headquarter of the
British Forces remained there until 1954. All the German Wehrmacht barracks in Minden were taken over by the British Army, as well as the former exercise area on Minderheide, where the St George's barracks were built in the following years, and on a nearby location the Kingsley barracks. 466 houses were confiscated in 1945. As immediate measure, the British Army set up an auxiliary bridge (the
Francis bridge), that was in use until the regular bridge was restored in 1947. The Economic Council for the British Occupation Zone () was founded in Minden on 11 March 1946 for reactivation of the German economy and supervised the work of the Central Office for Economy () at the same place. The under its head
Viktor Agartz fought against the policy of industrial dismantling and tried to reorganize the economy with perspectives of
planned economy. After the partial conjunction of the American and British Occupation Zones in 1947 to the
Bizone, the
Bizonal Economic Council continued the activities of the Minden in
Frankfurt in the American occupation zone, where with
Ludwig Erhard the course was changed to a
market economy. The town administration resumed its work on 9 April 1945 on a provisional basis. Subsequent to the foundation of the state of
North Rhine-Westphalia in 1946, the
Free State of Lippe was adjoined to it in 1947. Consequently Minden lost its position as a
regional capital to the former Lippian capital
Detmold in 1947. In contrast to the other
Allied Powers, the British changed the German community regulation for their occupation zone in the way of strict
separation of powers. Beginning in 1946, the mayor was merely an honorary position as head of town and chairman of the town council, with a professional town director () being chief of administration. In North Rhine-Westphalia these regulations were in force until 1998. Parts of the
Federal Railways Central Offices were moved to Minden in 1950. In the course of
West German rearmament, the (Duke of Brunswick Barracks) was built for the new garrison of the Federal Forces (
Bundeswehr) in 1959 in the western quarter of Rodenbeck and another barracks in the quarter of Minderheide. The town centre reconstruction adapted largely to the pre-war situation, the previous road system remained, and the destroyed houses were rebuilt in a 1950s style. Even in the undestroyed areas, dilapidated buildings were replaced by new ones that deviated from the quarter's character by form and volume. The renewal of the main shopping street
Scharn was planned by
Werner March. The serious lack of housing in the 1950s and 1960s, caused by bombing and the post-war migration of refugees, was addressed with new housing areas, especially in the west and north of the centre. Furthermore, some housing estates for British soldiers' families were developed. The Minden tramway reduced the lines and finally stopped running in 1959; a trolley bus line on the right side of the Weser ran from 1953 to 1965. The administration of the enlarged town required a new building. Architect
Harald Deilmann planned this complex directly from the old town hall to the cathedral court in the style of
structuralism. Since its completion in 1977 it has been a matter of public discussion, not only for the look of the façade, but also for blocking the scenic view of the cathedral from the arches of the old town hall. In 2006 a controversial resolution by the town council proposed the demolition of the town hall extensions to make room for a new shopping mall. However, a 57% majority opposed this plan in a
referendum. Today the whole town hall building complex is classified as
historical monument, and extensive renovation has been in progress since 2019. The shoreline of the Weser was improved in 1976 by extending the promenade to the (Fishermen's Town). The
Glacis, a park-like open space in front of the old fortifications, which was important as a green belt, was altered and made more accessible. The old town wall fronting the Fischerstadt was restored to its former height. The opposite shore area () has been made accessible by a footbridge. This improves access to a large parking area and festival site. When British troops had left Minden in 1994, their barracks areas became valuable sites for further town development ("conversion areas").
Place of prosecution and imprisonment Minden was the location of criminal prosecution or imprisonment in a number of very different cases. • After the
reformation, Minden was a stronghold of
witch-hunts in Germany. There were 128 prosecutions for witchcraft between 1603 and 1684. As in nearby regions, almost all those sentenced persons were women. •
Clemens August Droste zu Vischering (1773–1845),
Archbishop of Cologne, was brought to Minden, where he was taken under
house arrest from November 1837 to April 1839; he never returned to Cologne. During the so-called Cologne confusions (), Droste zu Vischering got in trouble with the Prussian state on the question of interconfessional marriages and the independence of the Faculty of Catholic Theology at the
University of Bonn. • The physician
Abraham Jacobi was born in the nearby village of
Hartum and educated at the gymnasium in Minden. Though being acquitted as defendant in the
Cologne Communist Trial in 1852, he was afterwards imprisoned and condemned of
lese-majesty by the district court of Minden. After his release he emigrated to the US, where he became an important
pediater. • During
World War I, a large
prisoner-of-war camp was established in the western quarter of Minderheide. In September 1914 the first French and British soldiers were brought there, but only at the end of the year barracks were built for about 3,300 prisoners. Over the years more than 25,000 prisoners lived there. The camp was a main camp (
Stammlager) with several external labour camps (
Arbeitslager). Apart from British and French soldiers (including auxiliary troops from the colonies) Italians, Russians, Serbians, Croats, Poles, and Armenians were captured. The camp was dissolved after the
Armistice of 11 November 1918, but the total dismantling lasted until 1922. The name (Cemetery of the French) of the nearby cemetery derives from a war memorial for French soldiers and is misleading, as the buried French, British, and Italian soldiers were transferred to their home countries after war. However, the gravesites of others, such as Russian, Serbian and Armenian, remain to date. In September 1917,
Apostolic Nuncio Eugenio Pacelli visited the camp. •
Auschwitz concentration camp commander
Rudolf Höss was brought to Minden after being captured by the British in
Schleswig-Holstein. In Minden, he was examined in the so-called
Camp Tomato, where he, for the first time, confessed the murders of millions of Jews in his camp and signed a protocol on 15 March 1946. On 31 May he was brought to
Nuremberg, where he repeated the confession as witness in the
Nuremberg trials. == Demography ==