Augsburg-Göggingen

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Coat of arms of Augsburg
Göggingen
planning room (XIV) of Augsburg
Location of the Göggingen planning area in Augsburg
Coordinates 48 ° 20 '20 "  N , 10 ° 52' 20"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 20 '20 "  N , 10 ° 52' 20"  E
surface 9,034.1 km²
Residents 19,700 (Dec. 31, 2013)
Population density 2181 inhabitants / km²
Post Code 86199
structure
Townships
  • 37 Göggingen-Northwest
  • 38 Göggingen-Northeast
  • 39 Göggingen-Ost
  • 40 Göggingen-South
Source: area population

Göggingen is a district in the south of Augsburg . It comprises the four city districts 37 Göggingen – Northwest , 38 Göggingen – Northeast , 39 Göggingen-East and 40 Göggingen – South . Together they form the XIV planning area of Augsburg, have an area of ​​around 9.03 km² and around 19,700 inhabitants. In the south of Göggingen are the deserted areas of Radau and Radaumühle , towards Leitershofen the sheep pasture settlement .

geography

The old community of Göggingen, located on Wertach and Singold , extends south of Pfersee and the Antonsviertel . Here it had largely grown together with the city as early as the 19th century. In the east Göggingen is bordered by Hochfeld and the university district , in the south it borders on Inningen , in the southwest on Bergheim and in the west on the city of Stadtbergen and its district of Leitershofen.

history

The city coat of arms of the former city of Göggingen

The area above the Wertachufer on the edge of the elevated terrace was already settled in the Bronze and Hallstatt Ages, and there are also settlement and grave finds from the Roman period from the 1st to the 4th century. Perhaps the aqueduct to supply the capital, Augusta Vindelicorum , ran here , and the route of a Roman road in the area of ​​the municipality has been proven . The Allgäustraße from Augsburg to Kempten and on to Bregenz and across the Alps to Lake Como ran for almost 4 km through the district, corresponding to today's Römerweg and Gögginger Straße; however, a milestone has only been found in the Inninger area just south of the municipal boundary. After the end of Roman settlement, the area was settled by the Alamanni . The place "Geginga" is mentioned for the first time in 969 in a document of St. Ulrich von Augsburg .

From 1804 to 1862 Göggingen was the seat of the regional court and district office. Through the orthopedic sanatorium of Friedrich Hessing , the Augsburg suburb became known nationwide as a health resort, the twisting and sewing thread factory Göggingen (now the Amann Group) was the largest employer until the 1970s. In 1954 Göggingen took over the sponsorship of the residents of the city and the district of Neudek in the Sudetenland who were disenfranchised, expropriated and displaced from their traditional homeland due to the Beneš decrees in 1945 . With the influx of the Sudeten Germans and the economic development, Göggingen grew to 16,000 inhabitants. In 1969 the market town of Göggingen was elevated to a town, but was incorporated into Augsburg on July 1, 1972 as part of the major Bavarian regional reform together with the neighboring towns of Haunstetten, Inningen and Bergheim.

Culture and sights

Buildings

Hessingburg within the area of ​​the Hessing Clinic

Green spaces and recreation

The Wertach am Ackermannwehr, the Gögginger Wäldle is reflected in the water

Augsburg-Göggingen has a stake in the Wertach and Singold. The "Gögginger Wäldle" is part of the Gögginger Wäldchen landscape protection area . The Göggingen cemetery is also used as a park.

Sports

The TSV Göggingen was founded in 1875 and reached particularly in handball and in the Athletics greater success, but also owns and departments for football , gymnastics , table tennis , gymnastics and volleyball . The Skater Union Augsburg , also based in Göggingen, was a founding member of the Bundesliga in inline skater hockey in 1996 and was able to hold out there until 2001.

Economy and Infrastructure

Companies

Public facilities

  • St. Johannes eV nursery
  • Gögginger Children's Ark
  • University bears
  • Somersault (TVA)
  • Municipal day care center at Fabrikstrasse
  • Municipal day care center at Josef-Felder-Straße
  • Catholic kindergarten St. Anna
  • Day care center of the Evangelical Lutheran. Parish Dreifaltigkeitskirche
  • AWO "Rumpelstiltskin"
  • Hessing Kindergarten
  • Villa Kunterbunt PLUS

education

  • Primary school Göggingen-West "Park School"
  • Friedrich-Ebert-Grundschule Göggingen-Ost
  • Friedrich-Ebert-Hauptschule with secondary school leaving certificate
  • Maria Stern secondary school and secondary school
  • Schubert School (part of the Ulrich Special School)

traffic

Federal roads 17 and 300 run through Göggingen as Lord Mayor Müller-Ring . To the east is the Augsburg Messe train station with a connection to the Augsburg-Buchloe railway line . The district is accessed by local public transport with buses and the tram line 1, which runs via Königsplatz to Lechhausen.

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the place

Other personalities associated with the place

literature

  • Heinz Friedrich Deininger (Ed.): Göggingen: Contributions to the history of the city. Self-rel. of the city of Göggingen in 1969.
  • Bernt von Hagen (Ed.) City of Augsburg: Ensembles, architectural monuments, archaeological monuments. Lipp, Munich 1994. ISBN 3-87490-572-1 (Monuments in Bavaria 83: VII, Swabia)
  • Siegfried Stoll: The history of the parish Saint Georg and Michael in Augsburg-Göggingen. Parish office of St. Georg and Michael, Göggingen, Augsburg, 2000.
  • Munzenrieder, Heinz: The hall was decorated with a bust of Lassalle…: 100 years of social democracy in Göggingen. H. Munzenrieder, Augsburg-Göggingen 2003. ISBN 3-00-010657-X

Web links

Commons : Augsburg-Göggingen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Structural Atlas of the City of Augsburg 2013 (PDF) December 31, 2013, accessed on June 21, 2014 .
  2. Statistics Augsburg interactive. December 31, 2018, accessed April 1, 2019 .
  3. ^ Siegfried Stoll: 1000 years of Göggingen 969-1969 , Göggingen 1969.
  4. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 600 .
  5. Gögginger Neue Presse (March 2007) Did Wolfgang Amadè Mozart come and go here?
  6. TSV Göggingen Augsburg: Contact addresses ( Memento from April 11, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) - Retrieved on June 27, 2011.
  7. ^ Skater Union Augsburg: Chronicle ( Memento from August 2, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) - Retrieved on July 16, 2012.