The Salzach Valley, an ancient
copper mining area, has been settled at least since the
Bronze Age. The settlement was first mentioned as
Sanctum Johannem in Villa in a 1074 deed, named after
John the Baptist. For centuries, it was a possession held by the
Prince-Archbishops of
Salzburg. In the course of the
German Peasants' War of 1525/26, large parts of the population became
Protestant. Under the rule of Prince-Archbishop
Count Leopold Anton von Firmian in 1731, numerous inhabitants (called
Exulanten) were forced to leave the country. Many of them found refuge in the
Kingdom of Prussia, choosing to settle in
Gumbinnen (now
Gusev). In 1939, following the Austrian
Anschluss to
Nazi Germany, St. Johann was renamed
Markt Pongau and from 1941 was the site of the
World War II Stalag XVIII-C (317)
German prisoner-of-war camp run by the
Wehrmacht. Mainly
French, Serbian and
Red Army POWs, but also Polish, Belgian, Dutch, British, American, Hungarian and Italian POWs, were interred here. On 24 June 2000 St. Johann completed the
Stadtserhebung process and received official
city privileges from the Austrian government. == Sport ==