Alsenbrück-Langmeil

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Alsenbrück-Langmeil
Local community Winnweiler
Alsenbrück-Langmeil coat of arms
Coordinates: 49 ° 33 '54 "  N , 7 ° 52' 55"  E
Height : 244  (244-258)  m above sea level NHN
Residents : 747  (Jun 30, 2007)
Incorporation : June 10, 1979
Postal code : 67722
Area code : 06302
Alsenbrück-Langmeil (Rhineland-Palatinate)
Alsenbrück-Langmeil

Location of Alsenbrück-Langmeil in Rhineland-Palatinate

Alsenbrück-Langmeil as seen from Donnersberg
Alsenbrück-Langmeil from Thunder Mountain seen from

Alsenbrück-Langmeil - until 1880 Alsenbrück - is a district of the municipality of Winnweiler in the Donnersberg district in Rhineland-Palatinate . Until 1979 it was an independent community.

location

The place is located in the southeastern North Palatinate Uplands not far from the northern foothills of the Palatinate Forest . It consists of the two suburbs Alsenbrück and Langmeil, which are separated from each other by the Alsenz . The Gonbach , an orographically right tributary of the Alsenz, flows through the southern part of the district. In the south-eastern part of the district, the 400.6 meter high Bocksrück stretches along the boundary with Börrstadt and Sippersfeld .

Alsenbrück-Langmeil includes the residential areas Langmeil station, Salomonsmühle, Sattelhof, Waschbacherhof and Ziegelhütte.

history

From modern times Alsenbrück was part of the County of Falkenstein , which from 1782 was in turn part of the Upper Austrian Upper Office of Winnweiler . From 1798 to 1814, when the Palatinate was part of the French Republic (until 1804) and then part of the Napoleonic Empire , Hochstein was incorporated into the canton of Winnweiler . In 1815 the place belonged again to Austria . A year later it was slammed into Bavaria . From 1818 to 1862 Alsenbrück was part of the Kaiserslautern Land Commissioner , which was then converted into a district office. In 1880 the community was renamed Alsenbrück-Langmeil. On December 1, 1900, she moved to the newly created district office in Rockenhausen.

From 1938 the place was part of the district of Rockenhausen . After the Second World War , Alsenbrück-Langmeil became part of the then newly formed state of Rhineland-Palatinate within the French occupation zone . In the course of the Rhineland-Palatinate administrative reform, the community moved to the newly created Donnersbergkreis together with most of the other places in the district . Three years later it became part of the Winnweiler Association , before it was incorporated into Winnweiler on June 10, 1979. Since then Alsenbrück-Langmeil has been one of a total of three local districts.

politics

Alsenbrück-Langmeil is designated as a local district and therefore has a local advisory board and a local director . The local council consists of seven local council members who were elected by majority vote in the local elections on May 26, 2019 . The head of the village is Monika Frick. She was unanimously elected by the local advisory board in August 2019, following the previous incumbent Marcel Huschitt, who was no longer a candidate. The election in the local advisory board became necessary because the only candidate had not achieved the necessary majority in the primary election, and a renewed call for election was inconclusive.

Infrastructure

In the course of the opening of the Alsenz Valley Railway section Hochspeyer - Winnweiler on October 29, 1870, the Langmeil district with the Langmeil-Münchweiler station was connected to the railway network. Half a year later the line to Bad Münster was tied through. By 1873 completed Zellertal train after Monsheim and 1874 consistently navigable thunder mountain railway to Alzey the later renamed Langmeil (Pfalz) Bahnhof an important railway junction developed, especially since all three long-distance routes ran. After the Second World War, the Donnersberg Railway and, a few decades later, the Zellertal Railway was closed for passenger traffic. Due to the lack of profitability and its peripheral location, the regional trains no longer stop in Langmeil since the end of 2006, which has thus been downgraded to a pure depot.

In the south-eastern part of the district, the federal motorway 63 runs in an east-west direction . Alsenbrück is on Kreisstraße 10 and Langmeil on Landesstraße 401 and Kreisstraße 41. Under Napoleon , the Kaiserstraße Paris – Mainz was passed through the town; the name was retained as a street name in Langmeil. The bypass road built in the meantime - identical to Landesstraße 401 - is also called Kaiserstraße. The Alsenz cycle path leads through the village. The software company Mobotix has had its headquarters in the Langmeil district since 2009 and its production site since 2011. Another company that is based in Alsenbrück-Langmeil are the Schramm workshops.

Attractions

There are a total of six objects on site that are listed . In the south-east of the district on the road to Sippersfeld there is also a menhir called the Long Stone .

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the place

  • Karl Eymann (born February 29, 1888 - † October 22, 1962), engineer and corps student, recipient of the DECHEMA medal

People who worked on site

Web links

Commons : Alsenbrück-Langmeil  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. State Statistical Office Rhineland-Palatinate (ed.): Official directory of the municipalities and parts of the municipality. Status: January 2019 [ Version 2020 is available. ] . S. 145 (PDF; 3 MB).
  2. ^ Wilhelm Volkert, Richard Bauer: Handbook of the Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 , p. 558.
  3. Official municipality directory (= State Statistical Office of Rhineland-Palatinate [Hrsg.]: Statistical volumes . Volume 407 ). Bad Ems February 2016, p. 182 (PDF; 2.8 MB).
  4. ^ The regional returning officer RLP: Local council elections 2019 Alsenbrück-Langmeil. Retrieved September 1, 2019 .
  5. ^ The Rhine Palatinate: Alsenbrück-Langmeil: Monika Frick is the head of the village. August 18, 2019, accessed September 1, 2019 .
  6. ^ General Directorate for Cultural Heritage Rhineland-Palatinate (ed.): Informational directory of cultural monuments - Donnersbergkreis. Mainz 2018, p. 56 (PDF; 5.3 MB).