Schwindegg

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the community of Schwindegg
Schwindegg
Map of Germany, position of the municipality Schwindegg highlighted

Coordinates: 48 ° 16 '  N , 12 ° 15'  E

Basic data
State : Bavaria
Administrative region : Upper Bavaria
County : Mühldorf am Inn
Height : 431 m above sea level NHN
Area : 20.77 km 2
Residents: 3577 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 172 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 84419
Area code : 08082
License plate : MÜ, VIB , WS
Community key : 09 1 83 144
Community structure: 52 districts
Address of the
municipal administration:
Mühldorfer Strasse 54
84419 Schwindegg
Website : www.gemeinde-schwindegg.de
Mayor : Roland Kamhuber ( CSU )
Location of the municipality of Schwindegg in the Mühldorf am Inn district
Mühldorfer Hart Zangberg Waldkraiburg Unterreit Taufkirchen (Landkreis Mühldorf am Inn) Schwindegg Schönberg (Oberbayern) Reichertsheim Rechtmehring Rattenkirchen Polling (bei Mühldorf am Inn) Obertaufkirchen Oberneukirchen (Oberbayern) Oberbergkirchen Niedertaufkirchen Niederbergkirchen Neumarkt-Sankt Veit Mühldorf am Inn Mettenheim (Bayern) Maitenbeth Lohkirchen Kraiburg am Inn Kirchdorf (bei Haag in Oberbayern) Jettenbach (Oberbayern) Heldenstein Haag in Oberbayern Gars am Inn Erharting Egglkofen Buchbach (Oberbayern) Aschau am Inn Ampfing Landkreis Landshut Landkreis Rottal-Inn Landkreis Rosenheim Landkreis Ebersberg Landkreis Altötting Landkreis Erding Landkreis Traunsteinmap
About this picture

Schwindegg is a rural community in the Upper Bavarian district of Mühldorf am Inn .

geography

Schwindegg Castle and former castle restaurant (front left, conversion to a community center)
The parish church from the north
The castle from the southwest
The castle from the northwest

Geographical location

Schwindegg is located in the southeast Upper Bavaria region in the Isen valley (where the Goldach flows into it ) and borders the Erding district in the west . Schwindegg is located about 60 km east of the state capital Munich , 10 km east of Dorfen , 22 km west of Mühldorf , 17 km north of Haag and 43 km from Munich Airport. The village has a train station on the Munich – Simbach railway line .

Community structure

The community of Schwindegg has 52 districts:

Neighboring communities

history

Until the church is planted

Schwindegg was first mentioned in a document in 1389, but some parts of the community (Walkersaich, Reibersdorf) were already mentioned in the ninth century. Schwindegg was an independent Hofmark and later belonged to the Landshut Rent Office and the Neumarkt an der Rott district court of the Electorate of Bavaria.

As early as the 14th century, there was a manor house in Schwindegg; this includes the mighty moated castle and the castle ensemble. In 1394, the Lords of Fraunhofen became the owners, a Bavarian aristocratic family with ancestral headquarters in Alt- and Neufraunhofen in the Landshut district . Schwindegg remained in their possession for over 100 years. Jakob I von Fraunhofen was the last male representative of his family on Schwindegg. Rule passed through his daughter Anna to her husband Ulrich Marschall von Pappenheim († 1539), who was enfeoffed by Emperor Maximilian I with Schwindegg in 1518 . In 1553 Anna's son Veit zu Pappenheim became the owner of Hofmark Schwindegg. In 1591, Veit zu Pappenheim, who was born in Schwindegg, sold the property and castle to the knight Sebastian von Haunsperg . The closed four-wing building with corner towers and gate tower was built between 1594 and 1620 on an older basis. The so-called Vorloss with two stable wings from around 1750 and the castle park from the 19th century belong to the castle. The castle is privately owned and is not open to the public. Former residential or farm buildings from the 17th and 18th centuries, which belong to the protected castle ensemble, are located directly around the castle.

In the course of the administrative reforms in Bavaria , today's municipality was created with the municipal edict of 1818 .

Incorporations

In 1973 the administration and large parts of the former Walkersaich community were incorporated as part of the municipal area reform. An administrative community was formed with the community of Obertaufkirchen in 1978, which was dissolved on December 31, 1993.

On May 1, 1978, the districts of Endsberg and Stetten were incorporated into the dissolved municipality of Tegernbach .

Population development

Between 1988 and 2018, the municipality grew from 2,726 to 3,588 by 862 inhabitants or 31.6%.

politics

mayor

Mayor has been Roland Kamhuber (CSU) since May 1, 2020.

Municipal council

The municipal council currently consists of five parliamentary groups: CSU with five members, FWG / UWG with four members, Schwindegg citizens' list with three members and Einig Walkersaich / Wörth and Greens with two members each.

coat of arms

Blazon: In blue a silver castle building with two onion domes, above it two diagonally crossed golden beech leaves with the stems upwards.

The dominant feature of the coat of arms is a stylized view of the castle, which characterizes the townscape of Schwindegg with its large complex. The two crossed beech leaves above the castle were previously included in the Walkersaich coat of arms. The government of Upper Bavaria approved the use of this coat of arms on August 8, 1977.

Eastern Alliance

The community participates in the Eastern Alliance .

Infrastructure

Schwindegg station (2016)

The Munich – Simbach railway runs through the municipality , where the Schwindegg train station is to the west of the town center . The Royal Bavarian State Railways opened the railway line and the station on May 1, 1871. The station is served every hour, in rush hour every half hour, by regional trains of the Südostbayernbahn between Munich and Mühldorf .

At the end of 2006, the northern bypass of State Road 2084 was completed to relieve the village of through traffic. Drivers can thus bypass the place on an approx. 4 km long road. Furthermore, the extensive flood protection dam to secure the entire village of Schwindegg was completed in 2008.

The A 94 (Munich-Pocking) , which opened on October 1, 2019 and connects Schwindegg via junction 16, runs in the southern municipal area . The B 15n , the construction of which is currently not being pursued (as of February 2015), would affect Schwindegg in one of the planned routes in the east.

Culture and sights

Buildings

  • Schwindegg Castle , an important Renaissance moated castle in the center of the village, around 400 years old, characterizes the townscape (private property).
  • Schwindegg Church
  • the Gothic branch church of St. Martin in the Loinbruck district.

societies

  • Sports club Schwindegg e. V. (including basketball, soccer, athletics, skiing, stick shooting, gymnastics, volleyball)
  • Tennis-Club-Schwindegg e. V.
  • Shooting Society Goldaria Schwindegg e. V.
  • Musikkapelle Schwindegg e. V.
  • Voluntary fire brigade Schwindegg e. V.
  • Cultural Association Schwindegg e. V.
  • Fluderer Schwindach e. V.

Personalities

Individual evidence

  1. "Data 2" sheet, Statistical Report A1200C 202041 Population of the municipalities, districts and administrative districts 1st quarter 2020 (population based on the 2011 census) ( help ).
  2. http://www.bayerische-landesbibliothek-online.de/orte/ortssuche_action.html ? Anzeige=voll&modus=automat&tempus=+20120105/182516&attr=OBJ&val= 419
  3. ^ Historical lexicon of Bavaria : Fraunhofen, noble family
  4. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer GmbH, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 573 .
  5. Reinhard Wanka, Wolfgang Wiesner: The main line Munich-Simbach and its branch lines . Bufe-Fachbuch-Verlag, Egglham 1996, ISBN 3-922138-59-4 , p. 10 .

Web links

Commons : Schwindegg  - collection of images, videos and audio files