In 1096 Bad Lausick was mentioned for the first time asLuzke. In later documents the namesLuzic (1181),Luzich (1219) andLußigk (1414) were used. In 1497 the place was described asLaussigk for the first time.[3]
In 1106 the construction of theSt. Kilian church was begun under the supervision of Pegau monastery, which like the church had been founded byWiprecht von Groitzsch. It is known as the oldest preserved church in Saxony.[4] In 1158Luzeche was mentioned as a fortified place with market rights. Following theTreaty of Leipzig,Laussigk became part of theDuchy of Saxe-Wittenberg.
A school started work in 1529. In 1605 the place was awardedtown privileges, but was destroyed in a fire in the same year. More fires causing major damages occurred in 1649, 1667, 1693, and 1719. During theThirty Years' War theplague caused the death of the larger part of the population in 1633. The old schoolhouse near the church was first mentioned in 1736. In 1739 the old town hall and the current church tower were built. A crop failure in 1772 caused a famine in the town.[5]
Lignite mining in the vicinity of the town started in 1813, supplying fuel forlime kilns. In the course of the mining operations, a medicinal spring was discovered in 1820. One year later, the first spa opened, namedHermannsbad after its founder. In 1840 a new school with four classrooms and four teachers' quarters was built, serving 500 pupils. 1878 can be considered as the zenith of the lignite mining and lime burning industries, with 36 pits and 20 kilns in Köllsdorf alone. In 1882 the spa was acquired by the town, and textile merchant Johann Gottfried Becker established his business in the town centre. Construction of theBügerschule (civic school) for 900 pupils started in 1886, and in 1887 theLeipzig–Geithain railway via Lausick opened. A fire in the town hall in 1890 destroyed a large inventory of documents. 25 felt-making businesses in the town in 1890 signified the heyday of this industry. At this time, there were also 11 lignite mines, five lime kilns, 30 agricultural businesses, 20 bakers, 25 shoemakers, 25 tailors, 17 weavers, 10 butchers and 43 other craftsman's establishments as well as 23 restaurants and inns. Starting around 1895, clay processing developed and gave later rise to the silicate factory. A new town hall and a post office were built in 1897, and a court of law in 1898.[6]
In 1913, after almost 100 years of spa operations, the town was awarded the titleBad Lausick. In 1920 construction of the eastern section of theBorna–Großbothen railway, known asQuerbahn, started.[7] The spa was modernised in 1928, and Bad Lausick became a popular health resort. In 1935, Reichersdorf and Heinersdorf were incorporated into the town.[6] The western part of the Borna–Großbothen railway opened in 1937, allowing through trains from October of that year on.[7] From 1939 to 1945 a Wehrmacht hospital operated on theHermannsbad premises. DuringWorld War II, the town was spared from aerial attacks and did not suffer from destructions.[6] TheQuerbahn railway line was dismantled forwar reparations in 1948.[7]
From 1951 on Bad Lausick was part of Geithain district and became the seat of the district court of law. In 1956 a rural department store (Landwarenhaus) opened on the market square, and in 1957 the romanic character of St Kilian church was restored. ASilbermann organ dating from 1722 and extended by Johann Gottlob Trampeli was installed in the church at the same time. Based on a document byEmperor Frederick Barbarossa, the town celebrated its 800th anniversary in 1958. The spa was modernised again until 1962 and became a specialist sanatorium for cardiac and circulatory disorders in 1972. Former enterprises with state holdings were fully nationalized by that time, in particular the house shoe factory and the mill works. The school was extended in 1967/1968. Theagricultural cooperatives of Bad Lausick, Ballendorf, Buchheim, and Ebersbach merged in 1976. The silicate works were modernised and expanded between 1979 and 1988, and in 1988 construction of a new town quarter was started as a major public housing project.[8]
A new spa building, a hotel, and the spa and leisure bathsRiff were opened in 1995. The 900th anniversary of the first documentary mention of the town was celebrated in 1996, and a new thermal spring was drilled in 1998. Spa operations are the main economic activity in Bad Lausick now. The neighbouring villages Steinbach, Beucha, Kleinbeucha, and Stockheim were incorporated into Bad Lausick in 1999. The spa and town museum opened in 2008, and in 2010 the town was officially rated asHeilbad.[8] Bad Lausick together withMuldentalkreis district joined the new districtLandkreis Leipzig in 2008.
Spa operations and health care are the main economic activities. TheHermannsbad spa was opened in 1821 and developed into a sanatorium for cardiac and circulatory disorders. It was namedHermannsbadklinik in 1989. The old spa building was replaced by 1995. In 1993 two private rehabilitation clinics opened, of whichMedian Klinik specialises in the treatment of cardiac and circulatory disorders and orthopedic complaints, whileSachsenklinik specialises in orthopedics,neurology, andpsychosomatic medicine.[11]
Further, mostly medium-sized enterprises include the manufacturing of steel furniture and of surgical dressing materials, cleaning contractors, and businesses in engineering construction (namely of pipework and of solar energy plants).
The secondary school, named after the antifascistWerner Seelenbinder, occupies the schoolhouse opened in 1886. A primary school has been established in 1992 in a modern building erected in the second half of the 20th century. A vocational training establishment is present in the town with theEvangelische Schule für Sozialwesen (Evangelical School for Social Welfare) "Luise Höpfner", founded in 1953.[12]
Deutsche Bläserakademie, an educational institution specialising inwind instrument music andSächsische Bläserphilharmonie, Germany's only symphonicconcert band, are based in Bad Lausick.[13]
Several members of thepowerlifting club KSV Bad Lausick e.V., founded in 1982 and organising multiple yearly competitions, have also advanced to thenational sports team in this discipline.