Lambrecht is a town in the Bad Dürkheim district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany lying roughly 6 km northwest of Neustadt an der Weinstraße.
In 1568, the disused convent's buildings together with houses, church and cropfields was turned over as an asylum by Frederick III, Elector Palatine to Walloons who had been driven from their homeland.
[citation needed] Lambrecht has an autonomous Catholic parish (Sacred Heart of Jesus/Herz Jesu).
The municipal election held on 7 June 2009 yielded the following results:[4] The German blazon reads: Von Schwarz und Grün geteilt, oben ein rotbewehrter, -bezungter und -bekrönter goldener Löwe, unten drei silberne Lämmer.
One also showed the lion holding a book in his paws to symbolize the University of Heidelberg, which was the local landlord after 1553.
The upper field in the escutcheon shows the Palatine Lion, although here passant (walking) instead of rampant (rearing up).
The sheep – or rather lambs, as the German blazon stipulates – symbolize the wool industry that throve here after the Walloon refugees arrived in the 16th century.
With the Huguenots, or more precisely the Walloons from Belgium who migrated here in the 16th century, a flourishing clothmaking industry grew up in Lambrecht.
The town also has at its disposal a variety of shopping places, craft businesses and service industries that fulfil daily demands.
Außer Hans Fell ist deshalb vorrangig auch Dr. Ernst Collofong zu nennen.