The first use of the name Lindau was documented in 882 by a monk from
St. Gallen, stating that Adalbert (
count of Raetia) had founded a
nunnery on the island. However, the remains of an early
Roman settlement dating back to the 1st century were found in the district of Aeschach. In 1180, St. Stephan's church was founded. In 1224, the
Franciscans founded a monastery on the island. In 1274–75, Lindau became an
Imperial Free City under King
Rudolf I. In 1430, about 15 of Lindau's
Jews were burned at the stake after being accused of murdering a Christian child. In 1528, Lindau accepted the
Protestant Reformation, following the
Tetrapolitan Confession at first and subsequently the
Augsburg Confession. In 1655, after the
Thirty Years' War, the first
Lindauer Kinderfest (children's festival) was held, in memory of the war. This festival, introduced by Councillor Valentin Heider, still makes up an important part of the town's identity. Lindau lost its status as an
Imperial Free City in 1802, after the dissolution of the
Holy Roman Empire. The city went to
Karl August von Bretzenheim, a son of the
Elector of Bavaria Charles Theodore, who gave Lindau and the monastery to the
Austrian Empire in 1804. In 1805, Austria returned Lindau to
Bavaria. In 1853, a causeway was built to connect the
railway from Munich to the island. In 1856, a new
harbour was built, with its characteristic landmarks, the big
lion sculpture and
Bavaria's only lighthouse. In 1922, the independent municipalities of
Aeschach, Hoyren and
Reutin merged with the Lindau district. After World War II, Lindau fell under French military administration and went first to
Württemberg-Hohenzollern and then to the State of
Baden-Württemberg. In 1955, Lindau again returned to
Bavaria. The
Nobel Laureate Meetings at Lindau began in 1951 and bring many
Nobel Prize laureates to Lindau each year. == Tourist attractions ==