Place:Königslutter, Braunschweig, Germany

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NameKönigslutter
Alt namesKönigsluttersource: Getty Vocabulary Program
Königslutter am Elmsource: Müllers Deutsches Ortsbuch (1991)
Königslutter am Elmsource: Wikipedia
Konigslutter
TypeTown
Coordinates52.25°N 10.817°E
Located inBraunschweig, Germany
Also located inHelmstedt, Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Germany    
source: Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names
source: Family History Library Catalog


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Königslutter am Elm is a city of 16,000 inhabitants (2010) in the district of Helmstedt, Lower Saxony, Germany, near the Elm hills. Königslutter is twinned with Taunton in Somerset, in the southwest of England.

Königslutter is located on the tourist route designated the German Half-Timbered House Road (Deutsche Fachwerkstraße).

Königslutter proper is situated on the Lutter stream and developed from the village of Lutter (first mentioned in 1150). It became a market town around 1300, then a city around 1400. In early modern times, beer brewing and Elm limestone mining and cutting were its main industries.

In 1924, the village of Oberlutter and the monastery church of Königslutter became part of the city. The Benedictine monastery was founded near the village of Lutter in 1135 by Holy Roman Emperor Lothar II. The monastery church is known for its sculptural art and the tomb of the emperor.

In its current form, the city was created in 1974 by joining the following 18 municipalities:

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