, an early telephone inventor Gelnhausen is located on the
German Fairy Tale Route, a tourist route, and nicknamed "
Barbarossastadt". The
Imperial Palace Gelnhausen was founded by
Emperor Frederick Barbarossa between 1169 and 1170 because the Gelnhausen settlements were at the intersection of the
Via Regia trade road. Gelnhausen received
town privileges. The emperor also granted
trade privileges like the
staple right which forced traveling merchants to offer their goods in the town for three days. In 1180 the Gelnhausen Act was passed and
Henry the Lion exiled.
Westphalia became a district of
Cologne, while the rest of Henry's Saxony territory passed to
Count of Anhalt Bernhard. Henry's Bavarian territories were bestowed upon
Otto of Wittelsbach who had been a loyal ally of Emperor Barbarossa. Gelnhausen was a thriving trade town and head of a league of 16 towns of the
Wetterau region. However prosperity came to an end in 1326 when
Emperor Louis IV gave the town in pawn to the counts of
Hanau, redeemed shortly afterwards. In 1349 Count
Günther von Schwarzburg received Gelnhausen from
Emperor Charles IV for renouncing his claims as elected
King of the Romans, in
condominium with the
counts of Hohnstein, who sold their share to Schwarzburg in 1431. Schwarzburg was acquired in 1435 by
Elector Palatine Louis III and the
Hanau, since raised to a county. Repeated plundering in the
Thirty Years' War as depicted by
Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen in his novel
Simplicius Simplicissimus made it nearly uninhabitable. In 1736, the extinction of the comital line of Hanau meant the condominium share was inherited by the
Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel, who acquired the Palatinate's share ten years later. The varying lords made continued attempts to challenge Gelnhausen's
imperial immediacy, it however formally remained a
Reichsstadt. During the
German Mediatisation of 1803 the city became a part of the
Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel, which was raised to an electorate and, after the
Austro-Prussian War of 1866, was annexed by
Prussia. At this time Gelnhausen had completely recovered, and with the
Gründerzeit economic boom it became a centre of the German rubber industry. == The Holocaust ==