Bad Urach ( German: Bad Urach [ˌbatˀˈuːrɑːx] , until 1983 Urach , ale. Aurich ) is a city in Germany , in the state of Baden-Württemberg .
| City | |||||
| Bad Urach | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bad urach | |||||
| |||||
| A country | |||||
| Land | Baden-Wurttemberg | ||||
| Area | Reutlingen (district) | ||||
| Internal division | 5 urban areas | ||||
| Chapter | Marcus Ewald | ||||
| History and Geography | |||||
| Square | 55.50 km² | ||||
| Center height | 463 m | ||||
| Timezone | UTC + 1 , in summer UTC + 2 | ||||
| Population | |||||
| Population | 12 317 people ( 2010 ) | ||||
| Digital identifiers | |||||
| Telephone code | 07125, 07381 | ||||
| Postcode | 72562-72574 | ||||
| Car code | RT | ||||
| Official code | 08 4 15 078 | ||||
| bad-urach.de (German) | |||||
Subordinate to the administrative district of Tübingen . It is part of the Reutlingen district. The population is 12,317 people ( as of December 31, 2010 ) [1] . It covers an area of 55.50 km². The official code is 08 4 15 078 . The city is divided into 5 urban areas.
In the Middle Ages and then from 1867 - the title residence of the counts, then the dukes of Urakh. The founder of the last-time Urakh house was William I (Duke of Urach) .
In 1609, the Urach Palace was rebuilt on the occasion of the wedding of Johann Friedrich of Württemberg and Barbara Sofia of Brandenburg .
The poem of the Russian poet Lev Druskin “Come on from gloomy thoughts ...”, which the author himself translated into German (“Laß der Gedanken Meute ...”), is dedicated to the city of Urach.

Town Hall





Notes
- ↑ Bevölkerungsentwicklung in den Gemeinden Baden-Württembergs 2010 Archived on May 1, 2013.