Middle Ages The name comes from the
German words
Ulmen (i.e.
Elms) and
Aue (i.e.
floodplain), in reference to the floodplain of the
Ilm river, which was covered with elms before the foundation of the town. The mascots ("town animals") of Ilmenau are the
hen and the
goat. The origins of Ilmenau are unknown. It is possible that the village was founded by the St. Peter's monastery of
Saalfeld, which encouraged the settlement of this part of Thuringia during the High Middle Ages. However, there are no written sources to verify or disprove this. A first church was built during the 12th century; its walls were found under today's St. James Church. The first written mention of Ilmenau followed later, in 1273, as the village had already existed many decades. At that time, Ilmenau belonged to the Counts of
Käfernburg. They died out in 1302 and Ilmenau became part of the
Schwarzburg County. After 1320, an important trade route from
Nuremberg in the south to
Erfurt in the north was relocated next to Ilmenau, so that a castle was established to control the traffic. Soon after, the Schwarzburgs founded a planned town (relatively similar to
Königsee) and Ilmenau received municipal rights in 1341. By 1343 the Schwarzburgs had sold their new town to the Counts of
Henneberg, who held it until their line died out in 1583. Nevertheless, the Hennebergs often mortgaged Ilmenau to other houses like the Schwarzburgs (1351–1420 and 1445–1464), the
Witzlebens (1420–1434) and the
Schaumbergs (1476–1498).
Early modern period Between 1471 and 1626, copper mining made an important contribution to the economy of Ilmenau. In 1611, the mines produced an estimated 38 tons of copper and 188 kg of silver. Production reached these levels again in the 1730s until the operations ceased in 1739 because of an ingress of water in the mines. A brief revival of copper mining under the leadership of
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe failed during the first decades of the 19th century. The Ilmenau
mint was in use between 1690 and 1705 producing silver
Talers and smaller copper coins. A subsequent blow to the economy after the end of mining in 1739 occurred in 1752, as the town was nearly completely destroyed by fire. The population was impoverished and living conditions were bad. Reconstruction took decades under the leadership of
Gottfried Heinrich Krohne, a famous late-Baroque architect in Germany, who planned the new church, town hall and street plan, and so on. After the Hennebergs died out in 1583, the city belonged to the
Wettins and since 1661 to the Wettin-Ernestine duchy of
Saxe-Weimar (until the end of monarchy in Germany in 1918). The dukes tried to foster the town's economy by founding porcelain and glass manufactures. Whereas the foundation of the porcelain manufacture in 1777 was successful, the glass industry failed twice until industrialisation started in the 1850s.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe visited Ilmenau often between 1776 and 1831, sometimes as minister of
Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach and sometimes for private holidays. Some Ilmenau-related parts of his written works are the poem "Ilmenau" (1783, the only town that Goethe dedicated a poem to), the poem "
Wanderer's Nightsong II" (1780, which was written at
Kickelhahn mountain) and the 4th act of "
Iphigenia" (1779, written at Schwalbenstein rock).
Since 1815 Since 1838, Ilmenau had been a spa ressort, based on water cure treatments at
hydropathic establishments. Ilmenau's hydropathic establishment was serviced by Drs Schwabe, Fitzler, Baumbach, and Preller. The later 19th century brought a boost to the town's development: the former 2000 people-small town arose to an industrial centre of glass, porcelain and toy production. Furthermore, mining saw a resurgence by gaining
fluorite and
Braunstein (
manganese ore). After being connected by railway in 1879, the
Industrial Revolution reached the town. Some factories for
porcelain (
Graf von Henneberg Porzellan since 1777),
glasswares (the
Sophienhütte since 1852) and
toys developed and grew until the
Great Depression. It weakened especially private consumption, so that Ilmenau's toy industry collapsed, same as some porcelain producers focused on bibelot. The precursor to the current university was founded in 1894 as the
Thüringisches Technikum. Now, it is the
Technische Universität Ilmenau, where the
ISWI takes place every two years. After the
German Revolution of 1918–19, the Thuringian small states, including Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, were merged into the new federal state of Thuringia in 1920 of which Ilmenau became part. It belonged to the
Arnstadt district, which was divided in 1952 into the new Ilmenau district (southern part, to
Bezirk Suhl) and the Arnstadt district (northern part, to
Bezirk Erfurt). In 1994, both districts were reunited with the new name "Ilm-Kreis" (by the river
Ilm) and Arnstadt as capital. The
FIL European Luge Championships of 1934 took place in the town. In the last few years of World War II, Ilmenau was the site of manufacture of the mock-up production of the single-seat fighter version of the
Horten Ho 229 V6 (Version 6) jet aircraft. The only surviving example of the Horten jet is the Horten Ho 229 V3. In December 2011, the Horten V3 was transferred to the Smithsonian Institution's Paul E. Garber Restoration Facility in Suitland, Maryland, US. ==Geography and demographics ==