Angelhausen-Oberndorf

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Angelhausen-Oberndorf
City of Arnstadt
Coordinates: 50 ° 49 ′ 29 ″  N , 10 ° 58 ′ 12 ″  E
Height : 315-340 m above sea level NN
Residents : 1092  (March 31, 2013)
Incorporation : 1922
Postal code : 99310
Area code : 03628

Angelhausen-Oberndorf is a district of Arnstadt in the Ilm district ( Thuringia ) with 1050 inhabitants.

geography

Angelhausen- Oberndorf is located one kilometer southeast of Arnstadt between the Reinsberge in the south and the Thuringian Basin in the north at an altitude of about 320 meters. The 388.9  m high Schlossberg , which is forested and belongs to the 101.9 hectare Hain nature reserve, rises south of the village . Angelhausen-Oberndorf is a street village, consisting of the lower part (Angelhausen) and the upper part (Oberndorf), which have merged over time.

history

Angelhausen-Oberndorf belonged to the Arnstadt office in the Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen ( suzerainty ) until 1920 . The place has belonged to Arnstadt since 1922.

Angelhausen

Church in Angelhausen

The name probably comes from the fishing people , who immigrated to what is now Thuringia in the 2nd century. The place was first mentioned in 948. The Thirty Years War wreaked havoc. Angelhausen owns a church, but it was not used until 1994 and fell into disrepair. Since 1994 it has been almost completely restored, mainly through donations from the community and the surrounding area and their physical exertion, and reopened in 2006. Its extraordinarily large winged altar is particularly worth seeing.

Oberndorf

Church in Oberndorf

Oberndorf was first mentioned in a document in 1350. It is one of the youngest places in the area. The village church of St. Nicolai dates from the 12th century. At that time it served the Kevernburg as a castle chapel. More than 200 years ago , a doll manufacture was established on the Dorotheenthal estate , which belonged to the Duchess of Arnstadt. Examples of the miniature figures and dollhouses made there can now be viewed in the Arnstadt Museum as part of the Mon Plaisir collection . After the doll factory was closed, the estate was used several times and is now part of a senior citizens' home in Arnstadt.

Attractions

Käfernburg

On the Schlossberg south of the village was the Kevernburg, today Käfernburg , from which the Counts of Kevernburg ruled in the early Middle Ages. The Kevernburgers died out in 1385. The castle was already in ruins in the 16th century. Some of their stones were used in construction work on Neideck Castle in Arnstadt. Today only one rampart remains from the Käfernburg.

Barrow field

About 600 meters east of the Käfernburg there is a group of barrows on the northern edge of the Hain hill . The largest barrow field in the northern foreland of the Thuringian Forest is divided into a slightly southwest and a north located burial field. Bronze Age additions were found during excavations in the 19th century . The location of the barrow field could also have influenced the choice of the location of the Käfernburg with its strategically favorable location. Similar examples can often be found in Thuringia, for example in Ranis .

Preißeiche natural monument

The Preißeiche is an oak and a registered natural monument, it stands on the edge of the Hain nature reserve, at the same time on the southern edge of the district and also served as a border marker to the neighboring village of Dannheim .

politics

Local mayor until mid-2014 was Hans-Werner Trefflich. Since then it has been Silvio Triebel.

Economy and Transport

Angelhausen-Oberndorf was originally an agricultural place. Today most of the residents work in Arnstadt. Angelhausen-Oberndorf has developed into a residential suburb in Arnstadt since 1990. There is a large stud in Angelhausen.

There are roads to Dannheim and Arnstadt .

Personalities

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Statistical surveys . Passport, registration / statistics, city administration Arnstadt. Retrieved July 5, 2013.
  2. Geoproxy on Geoportal Thuringia (DTK10, 1: 5,000)
  3. Nature reserves in the Ilmkreis: Hain. Thuringian State Institute for Environment and Geology (TLUG), 2011, accessed on May 20, 2011 .
  4. Chronicle of the City of Arnstadt (PDF file; 6.81 MB), p. 224
  5. Michael Köhler: Pagan sanctuaries. Jenzig-Verlag, 2007, ISBN 978-3-910141-85-8 , p. 145.