Baiersdorf was first mentioned in 1062 AD and has been chartered since 1460. As Baiersdorf is famous for farming and processing
horseradish, the Meerrettich Museum for horseradish ("the spiciest museum of the world") is located in the old center of the town. A horseradish queen is even chosen every year on the third Saturday in September. The margrave Johann der Alchimist (1401–1464) started the cultivation of horseradish in the region. Baiersdorf's Jewish cemetery attests to the fact that the town has been home to Jews since the 15th century. Among others the family of
Joseph Seligman who emigrated to the United States and founded an international bank lived there. Joseph's brother James who later followed him to the United States, is the grandfather of American art collector and socialite
Peggy Guggenheim. The district of Hagenau was founded in 1939 as a German
Luftwaffe base. French prisoners of war lived there. After 1945, Hagenau was a home for refugees from the
Sudetenland. Today it is a part of the town, and the
Karl Höfner Corporation is located there, world famous for its guitars and bass guitars. In July 2007, the town was flooded by torrential rain. Over 1000 homes were flooded, and the Bundesautobahn was temporarily closed to traffic. ==Government==