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During the 15th century, the lords of Sickingen assumed responsibility for Landstuhl and the surrounding area. [2] The most famous member of this dynasty was Franz von Sickingen . He converted the castle – Nanstein Castle ( German : Burg Nanstein ), the most visible landmark in Landstuhl and the surrounding area – into a dominating fortress.
The Municipal Association of Landstuhl was formed on 1 September 1971 from a combination of the municipalities of Bann, Hauptstuhl, Kindsbach, Landstuhl, Mittelbrunn, and Oberarnbach. On 1 July 2019, it was expanded to include the six municipalities of the former Verbandsgemeinde Kaiserslautern-Süd .
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Court seals were found dated 1674 and 1774. After the invasion of the French in 1793 the court was dissolved. The Napoleonic Administrative Reform made Ramstein and Landstuhl into one mayoral district. Ramstein became its own mayoral entity in 1818. Ramstein was almost completely depopulated in the Thirty Years War of the 17th century. Nine ...
Nanstein Castle (German: Burg Nanstein) is a ruined medieval spur castle above the town of Landstuhl, Germany, which has been partially reconstructed.Built in the 12th century, the red sandstone rock castle was once owned by Franz von Sickingen who was mortally wounded during a siege of the castle in 1523.
Landstuhl Regional Medical Center (originally known as the Landstuhl Army Medical Center) was established on October 15, 1951. [2] Completion of the 1,000-bed Army General Hospital building occurred on April 7, 1953. In 1980, soldiers who were injured in Operation Eagle Claw were brought to the hospital.
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The Homburg–Kaiserslautern section—including Landstuhl station—followed on 18 May 1961 and the line could be electrically operated along its entire length from 12 March 1964. [ 11 ] During the gradual dissolution of the Mainz railway division in the early 1970s, its counterpart in Saarbrücken again became responsible for the station.