Oberkassel, Bonn


Oberkassel is a suburb in the Bonn municipal district of Beuel and lies on the right bank of the Rhine on the edge of the Siebengebirge mountains. Oberkassel has about 7,200 inhabitants.

History

In 1914, workers in a quarry detected a grave with a 50-year-old man, a 20-25-year-old woman and a dog. Carbon-14 datings estimated an age between 13,300 and 14,000 years. A study of the mitochondrial genome sequences in 2013 showed that the animal is indeed Canis lupus familiaris, not a wolf.
Oberkassel was first mentioned as Cassele in 722/723 and as Cassela in 1144. The name Oberkassel refers to a Roman fortification; in the course of time "Romerkastell" became "Oberkassel". Oberkassel absorbed the previously separate settlements of Berghoven, Büchel, Broich and Meerhausen.
In 1870 the East Rhine Railway reached Oberkassel and crossed the Rhine by train ferry to the West Rhine Railway. The train ferry was abandoned 1919.

Transport

is on the East Rhine Railway.
The Bonn Stadtbahn with its lines 62 and 66 serves three stations in Oberkassel: Oberkassel Nord, Oberkassel Mitte and Oberkassel Süd/Römlinghoven.
The Bundesstrasse 42 traverses the south-eastern part of Oberkassel within an long tunnel. It has an exit near.

Economy

Oberkassel is home of several divisions of the DLR, the German Aerospace Center.

Notable residents