User:TableSpinnerTurnMaker/Neuried (Baden)

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Neuried (Baden)

Being worked on
Neuried
Coat of arms of Neuried
Location of Neuried within Ortenaukreis district
CountryGermany
StateBaden-Württemberg
Admin. regionFreiburg
DistrictOrtenaukreis
Government
 • MayorTobias Uhrich
Elevation
150 m (490 ft)
Population
 (2022-12-31)[1]
 • Total10,049
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
77743
Dialling codes07807, 07808
Websitewww.neuried.net

Neuried (Low Alemannic: Neiriäd) is a municipality in the district of Ortenau in Baden-Württemberg in Germany.

Geography

Geographical Location

Neuried is located in the Upper Rhine Plain directly on the Rhine and thus on the German-French border, exactly in the middle between Kehl and Lahr, only a few kilometers south of Strasbourg, a few kilometers from Offenburg.

Neighbouring Communities

The municipality borders the town of Kehl to the north, Schutterwald and Hohberg to the east, Friesenheim and Meißenheim to the south and the Alsatian municipalities of Plobsheim and Eschau to the west.

Municipal structure

The municipality of Neuried consists of the formerly independent municipalities of Altenheim, Dundenheim, Ichenheim, Müllen and Schutterzell. Today, these form the districts of the municipality and are also localities as defined by the Baden-Württemberg municipal code, each with its own local council and local head as its chairman.

The Altenheim district includes the village of Altenheim, the Rohrburger Mühle farmstead and the Altenheimer Mühle and Rheinwärterhaus residences. The district of Dundenheim includes the village of Dundenheim and the Dundenheimer Mühle farmstead. The district of Ichenheim includes the village of Ichenheim, the Ottenweierhof farmstead and the single dwelling house. The Müllen district includes the village of Müllen with the former moated castle of Müllen. The district of Schutterzell includes the village of Schutterzell and the Schutterzeller Mühle farmstead.

Location in the district of Ortenau

The district of Altenheim was home to the abandoned Waseneck Castle. The deserted villages of Rode and Zellhof are located in the district of Dundenheim. The abandoned Blankenmoos castle and the Trudenheim deserted settlement are located in the district of Ichenheim.

History

Municipal Merger

Former town hall of Müllen

Neuried was created in the course of the Baden-Württemberg municipal reform on January 1, 1973 through a voluntary merger of the formerly independent municipalities of Altenheim, Dundenheim, Ichenheim and Müllen. The municipality of Schutterzell was already incorporated into Ichenheim on January 1, 1972.[3] Until 1972, Altenheim and Müllen belonged to the district of Kehl, while Dundenheim, Ichenheim and Schutterzell belonged to the district of Lahr. With the dissolution of these two districts, the current municipality became part of the new Ortenau district.

Coat of arms of the districts

Altenheim
Dundenheim
Ichenheim
Müllen
Schutterzell

Politics

Municipal council

The local elections on May 26, 2019 led to the result shown in the diagrams with a voter turnout of 60.3%[5].

In 2019, the Free Voters gained two seats compared to 2014, the UL list gained one seat, the CDU lost three seats and the SPD was able to maintain its number of seats.

Mayors

  • 1973-1973: Hermann Mild (independent, † January 14, 2024)
  • 1997-2013: Gerhard Borchert (FDP)
  • 2013-2020: Jochen Fischer (independent, † November 21, 2020)
  • since 2021: Tobias Uhrich (independent)

Partnerships

On January 24, 2022, the Alsatian municipality of Plobsheim officially entered into a partnership with the district of Altenheim[7].

Religions

In addition to two Protestant and two Roman Catholic parishes, the New Apostolic Church, the Jehovah's Witnesses and the Seventh-day Adventists are also represented in Neuried. Since the deanery reform on January 1, 2008, Neuried and its districts with the St. Ulrich, St. Nikolaus, St. Johannes and St. Michael churches have been part of the Offenburg-Kinzigtal deanery and also belong to the Schutterwald-Hohberg-Neuried pastoral care unit.

Evangelical Church of Peace in Altenheim
Seventh-day Adventist Church in Altenheim
St. John Evangelical Church in Dundenheim
St. Nicholas Catholic Church in Ichenheim
Pilgrimage church of St. Ulrich in Müllen
St. Michael's Church in Schutterzell (shared church)

Sights

Buildings

  • The Protestant Friedenskirche church in the Altenheim district was designed by Friedrich Weinbrenner himself and built in 1813 and restored after being destroyed in World War II.[8] The building is one of the most beautiful neoclassical churches in Baden. There is an exciting contrast between its smooth and unadorned façade, typical of the style, and the surrounding delicate half-timbered houses. The interior of the church was extensively renovated between 2004 and 2006 and a new organ with 30 stops on two manuals and pedal was built by the organ builder Karl Göckel to plans by Markus Artur Fuchs and Christoph Manuel Beysser.
  • The Catholic church of St. Nicholas in the district of Ichenheim was built in 1822 by Hans Voß, a student of Weinbrenner. It is one of the most formally reduced church buildings of Baden classicism. Like the Altenheim church, it benefits from the monumental effect of clearly defined structures.
  • The Catholic church of St. Johannes in the Dundenheim district, built between 1823 and 1824, was also designed by Hans Voß. The original high altar was replaced in 1880 by a work by Franz Josef Simmler. The local scribe Markus Weißenegger had already made a Mother of God altar for the church in 1860 and a St. Joseph altar in 1864[9].
  • Schutterzell is home to one of the rare simultaneous churches that are used for both Catholic and Protestant services. It is one of two such church buildings in Baden used by two denominations (see St. Juliana's Collegiate Church (Mosbach)) and was already planned as such[10] This church, completed in 1862, is also in the "Weinbrenner style".
  • The Emilie museum bunker, which was part of the Westwall and a "Regelbau 11" type structure, is located in Altenheim. It was built in 1938 to guard the hinterland in order to prevent an attack on Offenburg. The bunker could accommodate 27 soldiers in two crew quarters. The bunker also had two gas locks, an entrance defense and a separately accessible fighting compartment. The armament consisted of 2 MG 34 on a gun carriage and 2 MG for the soldiers in trenches around the bunker. The ceiling was 2 meters thick. The bunker was disguised as a residential building, where a woman, "Emilie", found shelter during the war. Filled with concrete after the war, the bunker was emptied again by the new owners in 1990 and used as a motorcycle clubhouse. It has served as a museum since the end of 2009[11].
  • The European Forum on the Rhine, which opened in 2019, is located in the north-west of Altenheim
  • The Pierre-Pflimlin Bridge connects Neuried with the south of the Strasbourg conurbation.

Local Recreation

Since 2014, there has been a 2.5 km long floodplain wilderness trail through the Rhine floodplains in the north of Altenheim[12][13].

Culture

Altrhein river in Neuried-Altenheim

The bi-national Theater Eurodistrict Baden Alsace is located in the European Forum on the Rhine.[14] Under the artistic direction of Diana Zöller and Edzard Schoppmann, contemporary plays are performed in German and French. The theater seats 150 guests.

Economy and Infrastructure

Agriculture still plays a major role, especially tobacco growing. With an area of around 470 hectares, Neuried is the largest tobacco-growing community in Germany. The municipality has around 1000 local jobs, which means that the majority of the workforce commutes to the surrounding towns of Offenburg, Kehl and Lahr/Black Forest.

Altrhein river in Neuried-Altenheim during summer

Education

Neuried has five Protestant (three in Altenheim, one each in Ichenheim and Dundenheim) and two Catholic (Ichenheim and Schutterzell) kindergartens. The Johann-Henrich-Büttner-Schule in Altenheim has a primary and secondary school, while Ichenheim has a secondary and intermediate school and an elementary school in both Ichenheim and Dundenheim. From the 2014/2015 school year, no more primary school pupils were enrolled in Dundenheim[15], and the elementary school in Dundenheim was closed in 2018. Secondary schools are located in the nearby district towns of Offenburg, Lahr/Schwarzwald and Kehl.

Geothermial Energy

The first borehole for a geothermal energy utilization project in the municipality was to be drilled in 2014. This was postponed until 2016 due to an ongoing lawsuit by the town of Kehl[16] against the deep geothermal plant and a citizens' protest. Possible use was intended to supplement the biomass power plant launched in 2007 as a hybrid power plant.[17] In July of the same year, a citizens' initiative was formed in the affected municipalities of Kehl, Neuried, Schutterwald and Willstätt against the deep geothermal drilling. [18] The regional plan blocks the area near the planned geothermal power plant. 19] After the Freiburg Regional Council withdrew its approval to explore geothermal energy in March 2021,[20] the city bought back the land earmarked for geothermal energy in September 2021. 21]

Transport

The towns in the current municipality were served by the Mittelbadische Eisenbahn until 1959. There is currently no longer a connection to the German rail network. Neuried is connected to Lahr, Offenburg and Kehl by regional bus services.

The districts of Altenheim, Dundenheim and Ichenheim are crossed by the L 75 in a north-south direction. In the north of the municipality, the L 98 forms a link to the national route 353 and federal highway 5, which crosses the municipality in the Schutterzell area.

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the community

  • Ernst Friedrich Kärcher (1789-1855), classical philologist and pedagogue.
  • Klaus Wurth (1861-1948), theologian and church president of the Evangelical Church in Baden.
  • Erwin Baur (1875-1933), geneticist.
  • Brigitte Tast (* 1948), artist
  • Kerstin Scheidecker, journalist.

Other personalities

  • Hans Voß (1783-1849), architect, architect of St. Nicholas Church in Ichenheim.
  • Wilhelm Ludwig Frommel (1795-1869), clergyman, lived in Ichenheim
  • Ludwig Leiner (1830-1901), pharmacist, completed his training in Ichenheim
  • François Sevez (1891-1948), French officer, died in Ichenheim
  • Alois Beichert (1893-1945), clergyman, was a priest in Ichenheim
  • Fred K. Prieberg (1928-2010), musicologist, died in Ichenheim
  • Jonathan Fischer (* 1997), handball player, played for SF Ichenheim in his youth

Literature

  • Albert Köbele und Eugen Eble: Ortssippenbuch Altenheim, Gemeinde Neuried, Ortenaukreis, Baden. Grafenhausen: Köbele 1973 (= Badische Ortssippenbücher 30), Bearbeiteter Zeitraum 1634–1971.
  • Albert Köbele und Hans Scheer: Ortssippenbuch Dundenheim, Gemeinde Neuried, Ortenaukreis, Baden. Grafenhausen: Köbele 1977 (= Badische Ortssippenbücher 38), Bearbeiteter Zeitraum 1633–1976
  • Albert Köbele, Hans Scheer und Peter Bläsi: Ortssippenbuch Ichenheim, Gemeinde Neuried, Ortenaukreis in Baden. Grafenhausen: Köbele 1978 (= Badische Ortssippenbücher 41), Bearbeiteter Zeitraum 1633–1977.
  • Albert Köbele: Ortssippenbuch Müllen im Ortenaukreis in Baden, 1727–1967. Grafenhausen: Köbele 1981 (= Badische Ortssippenbücher 47).
  • Albert Köbele und Hans Scheer: Ortssippenbuch Schutterzell, Gemeinde Neuried, Ortenaukreis in Baden. Mit der Ortschronik von Schutterzell von Emil Ell. Grafenhausen: Köbele 1982 (= Badische Ortssippenbücher 48), Bearbeiteter Zeitraum 1660–1980.

References

  1. ^ "Bevölkerung nach Nationalität und Geschlecht am 31. Dezember 2022" [Population by nationality and sex as of December 31, 2022] (CSV) (in German). Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg. June 2023.