Rosenheim's development can be traced from its location on intersecting major trade routes. Even in early times, the town's intersecting traffic stimulated its development as a market town. It subsequently evolved from a market to a salt trade and then
railway town to today's wood and college city.
Pons Aeni Crucial to the establishment of Rosenheim were the Inn and the corresponding
Inn valley. The Romans arrived in the year 15 BC under the leadership of
Drusus and
Tiberius. They founded the province
Noricum to the East of the Inn and
Rhaetia to the west of the Inn. The
colonizers built a road through the
Brenner to
Castra Regina, and an east–west road from
Iuvavum to
Augusta Vindelicum. The intersection of these two enormously important trade routes were protected by a military station whose name was "Pons Aeni". Less frequently used terms were "Ponte Aoni", "Ad enum" or "stations Enensis". The Romano Celtic settlement existed for some 500 years with that name. Pons was between Aeni Isinisca (
Aying) and (today part of
Seeon-Seebruck), as shown on the Roman road map
Tabula Peutingeriana from the 4th century. The name "Pons Aeni" can still be recognised in local place names, "Pfunzen" in the name of the district "Langenpfunzen" and "Leonhardspfunzen".
Etymology The origin of the city's name is not entirely clear. First mentioned in 1234, Rosenheim castle is on the eastern bank of the Inn, on today's castle hill, overlooking a new bridge over the Inn. One theory is that the name comes from the Rosenheim Rose emblem of the
Wasserburger Earl Hall, who built the castle. Another theory is that the name Ross derives from the
Rössern steeds that were used in medieval times to pull the river transport vessels, and for which there were large stables in Rosenheim. The street names
Am Esbaum (the tree on which the horses were grazing) or
Am Roßacker add some weight to this suggestion. A third theory suggests that there could be a kindred word
Roas,
Roze or
Ried, that used to mean swamp and peat bogs, which are still to be found around Rosenheim – evident also by the name of the neighboring town of Rosenheim
Kolbermoor. An example of the old names, the nearby village of
Riedering. Another theory is that the name is also derived from Rosenheim personal names
Roso/
Hrodo. Yet another theory is based on the fact that "Rose" used to mean a beautiful girl. It was well known among the Inn boatmen that there were many beauties to admire in this town. The sailors of the town liked to control what was called "home of the Rose" – in other words, Rosenheim.
Development of Rosenheim At about the time of the first mention of Rosenheim castle in 1234, a settlement of boatmen developed on the western shore. The area around the Inn Bridge was not developed for a long time due to marshy soil at the proximity of the mouth of the river
Mangfall, so the settlement was located several hundred meters away. The centre of Rosenheim is therefore not directly on the riverside.
Market Rosenheim The town quickly grew in importance as a hub for all types of goods that were transported on the Inn (livestock, grain, silk, arms, salt) and in 1328 received
Market town status. The Rosenheim ship masters made Rosenheim very wealthy during this era through the transport of goods, due to the location between
Hall in Tirol the Inn and onwards to the Danube down to
Vienna and
Budapest. Until about 1600 the settlement had grown into one of the largest and most important markets in Bavaria, even though
town privileges were only attained in 1864 from the Bavarian King Ludwig II. Rosenheim experienced economic decline during the 17th century in the wake of the decline of Inn Shipping Company and the consequences of the
Thirty Years' War. There was also a plague epidemic in 1634 and a market fire in 1641. river in the foreground; the
Alps in the background In the 19th century Rosenheim developed as an economic centre in the Southeast of Bavaria due to
brine. In 1810 an early type of wooden pipeline brought brine from the
Reichenhall and
Traunstein salt mines to Rosenheim. Boiling the brine to make salt made Rosenheim the centre of Bavarian salt production until 1958. Expansion of the railways brought early connection to the railway network. In 1858 Rosenheim station was inaugurated, however it would soon be too small and prove a hindrance for further urban development. In 1876 the station moved to its present site. The old railway line was the straight through road (now the city hall and Prince Regent Street, main Rosenheimer transport axis, from the northwest to the southeast of the city), the
roundhouse of the original station is now an exhibition centre. The old station is directly opposite the 1878 City Hall and is used in the
ZDF evening series "
Die Rosenheim-Cops" as the police headquarters backdrop. The economic boom of the late 19th and early 20th century made the
Gründerzeit – and
Art Nouveau (and its regional characteristics, the
Swiss chalet style) the most important architectural style, which now determines the townscape. The evangelical Church of the Redeemer was built in the neo-Gothic clinker brick style, which is rare for Rosenheim, for the growing Evangelical Lutheran congregation in the official district around today's town hall. At the beginning of the 20th century, Rosenheim had nine breweries which are preserved in the names of some restaurants (Duschl-, Hof-, Mail-, Pernloher-, Stern-, Weißbräu). The only survivors being "" and "" who supply the "
Märzen" for the "" as well as the Bierbichler Weißbräu, among others.
Rosenheim in the Nazi era The number of Jews living in Rosenheim was high compared to other Bavarian cities. At the start of the 20th century the Jewish community consisted of about 50 people. A request was made to the city council for establishment of a separate Jewish religious association, with reference to the Bavarian-Jewish legislation, but it was refused, so the Rosenheim Jews remained attached to the state capital, where their dead also had to be buried. Even the funeral of the
First World War fallen son of a Jewish merchant based in Rosenheim at the city cemetery was refused and was "the biggest disappointment and the bitterest pain" for the father. With the creation of the first local Nazi group outside of Munich in 1920, the Rosenheim Jews saw increasing hostility. Centre of hate campaigns was the Rosenheim School. A scandal occurred in June 1920, after a reader accused the writer of a letter titled "Rosenheimer Jews" in the local press, who wanted to repeal the provisions of the Versailles Treaty and held military exercises at the Rosenheim School. Seven members of the high school and a member of the "Chiemgau" then raided a villa inhabited by Jews in the
Herbststrasse. The college of the city of Rosenheim, on 29 July 1920 came to the conclusion that Protests of the Bavarian Jewish Central Association were unsuccessful, only an unmistakable message of the Bavarian Interior Ministry September 1920 was able to maintain peace. On 1 April 1933, shortly after the Nazi seizure of power, guards were set up in front of Jewish shops, warning against buying in these stores but to desist assault and criminal damage. A large proportion of the population ignored these calls. The shops were therefore still frequented, much to the annoyance of Nazi activists who acted with the backing of then-Mayor Gmelch. Despite the support of the population, six of the eleven Jewish business owners gave up their businesses by 1937. The assassination of German diplomat
Ernst vom Rath by the Polish Jewish teenager Herschel Grynszpan on 7 November 1938 in Paris was taken as the pretext for
Kristallnacht, a final opportunity to strike against the Jews. The
SA came with 8 to 10 men on 10 November at 3–4 o'clock in the morning to the last two Jewish shops, and destroyed their inventory and merchandise. The fate of many Rosenheim Jews is documented. Those who could emigrate did so, mostly to the United States. However, many failed entry and exit applications, and many died in concentration camps.
Bombing during World War II From the beginning of
World War II bombing raids on German cities in the spring of 1942, Rosenheim was not spared. In November 1943 there were shelters for only 650 people for a population of approximately 22,000. However, by February 1944 shelters had been built for about 6400 people and in conjunction with other shelters a total of 10,525 people could be protected. During 14 bomb attacks, 201 people were killed and 179 injured. The focus of the air attacks was the railway station and the railway tracks, as Rosenheim was an important transportation hub between Munich, Salzburg and Innsbruck. The neighbouring communities of Ziegelberg, Stephanskirchen, Westerndorf St. Peter and Oberpfaffenhofen were also hit. The first air attack was on 20 October 1944 at lunch time from 12:47 to 13:17, with over a hundred aircraft dropping ~1,000 bombs, leaving 27 dead and 59 wounded. The heaviest air raid took place on 18 April 1945. From 14:40 to 14:55, around 200 aircraft dropped around 1300 bombs in the area around the station, resulting in 53 dead and 36 injured. This attack also made 800 people homeless. The station building was almost completely destroyed and a total length of 20 kilometres of railway tracks were destroyed. The last air attacks were made on 19 and 21 April 1945. During the war the majority of at least 173 unexploded bombs were recovered. In 1964, the
Oberbayerisches Volksblatt reported that the approximate location of 38 undiscovered unexploded ordnance was known. The city of Rosenheim's logo shows that same rose from the coat of arms. ==Landmarks and culture==