Kotzen: Population development within the current boundaries (2013)[3]
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1875
965
—
1890
951
−0.10%
1910
924
−0.14%
1925
1,002
+0.54%
1933
878
−1.64%
1939
814
−1.25%
1946
1,352
+7.52%
1950
1,368
+0.29%
1964
953
−2.55%
1971
950
−0.05%
1981
763
−2.17%
1985
798
+1.13%
1989
733
−2.10%
1990
724
−1.23%
1991
697
−3.73%
1992
702
+0.72%
1993
667
−4.99%
1994
659
−1.20%
1995
650
−1.37%
1996
653
+0.46%
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1997
653
+0.00%
1998
659
+0.92%
1999
664
+0.76%
2000
640
−3.61%
2001
642
+0.31%
2002
659
+2.65%
2003
650
−1.37%
2004
644
−0.92%
2005
651
+1.09%
2006
643
−1.23%
2007
629
−2.18%
2008
614
−2.38%
2009
631
+2.77%
2010
590
−6.50%
2011
588
−0.34%
2012
582
−1.02%
2013
577
−0.86%
2014
571
−1.04%
2015
585
+2.45%
2016
600
+2.56%
Translation
Since one English translation of the German verb "kotzen" is "to vomit", the town was jokingly[original research?] incorrectly referred to in Ripley's Believe It or Not! under the title "Barfburg". More prosaically the name probably comes from the Slavonic-German noun "Kotzen" which means market place, as per the Theater an der Kotzen, Divadlo v Kotcích in Prague.