Beuren (near Nürtingen)
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 48 ° 34 ' N , 9 ° 24' E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Baden-Württemberg | |
Administrative region : | Stuttgart | |
County : | Esslingen | |
Height : | 435 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 11.69 km 2 | |
Residents: | 3655 (December 31, 2018) | |
Population density : | 313 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 72660 | |
Primaries : | 07025, 07022 | |
License plate : | ES, NT | |
Community key : | 08 1 16 011 | |
Community structure: | 2 districts | |
Address of the municipal administration: |
Linsenhofer Strasse 2 72660 Beuren |
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Website : | ||
Mayor : | Daniel Gluiber | |
Location of the municipality of Beuren in the Esslingen district | ||
The health resort Beuren is a municipality in the Esslingen district on the Albtrauf of the Swabian Alb in Baden-Württemberg . It belongs to the Stuttgart region (until 1992 the Middle Neckar region ) and the peripheral zone of the European metropolitan region of Stuttgart . Beuren is part of the Swabian Alb biosphere area with the majority of its boundary (95.2%) .
geography
Geographical location
Beuren is located in the Neuffen Valley directly on the Albtrauf below the Hohenneuffen castle ruins . The state capital Stuttgart is around 28 km away, and Reutlingen is around 16 kilometers southwest of Beuren. The lowest point of the Beurener district is in the Tiefenbachtal at 335 meters above sea level , the highest point on the Alb plateau at the Burghörnle near the Beurener Felsen at 733 meters. The protected location in the valley basin between Hohenneuffen and Beurener Fels has a positive effect on the climate and also on fruit and wine growing.
Beuren is located in the area of the Swabian volcano , and six former volcanic vents have been identified on the Beuren marker. The mountain cones of Engelberg, Spitzenberg and Hohbölle are such former volcanoes. The long extinct mountains of fire have left behind a special kind of treasure: hot thermal mineral water. The geothermal depth in Beuren is eleven meters (the temperature of the earth's crust increases by one degree every eleven meters). That is three times as much as is usual in Germany.
Community structure
The village of Beuren and the village of Balzholz belong to Beuren . The Haldenhof (Balzholz marking) and Sonnenhof residential areas in the Tiefenbachtal also belong to Beuren. The Sonnenhof is connected to Beuren by a municipal road. The residential buildings of the Sonnenhof are an exception in that the supply of energy, telephone, etc. is completely from Nürtingen.
Neighboring communities
Neighboring communities are Nürtingen in the north, Dettingen unter Teck and Owen in the east, Erkenbrechtsweiler in the south, Neuffen and Frickenhausen in the west.
Division of space
According to data from the State Statistical Office , as of 2014.
history
Beuren was first mentioned in a document in 1304 when the Habsburgs waived all claims to the place against Count Eberhard I of Württemberg . Since then, Beuren has been part of Württemberg without interruption. The place belonged to the Neuffen office within Württemberg . Via the Oberamt Nürtingen (from 1938: District of Nürtingen ) the place came to the district of Esslingen in 1973 .
Religions
Beuren has been evangelical since the Reformation . The Protestant parish of Beuren, which holds its services in the Nikolauskirche, has around 2050 members (as of 2005).
Only the influx of expellees after the Second World War led to a significant number of Roman Catholic believers who, with St. Paulus, also have their own church in town. Organizationally, they form the Catholic parish of St. Michael with Neuffen and Kohlberg .
The New Apostolic congregation has joined forces with Frickenhausen, the church used to be in the street “An der Raise”.
The Christian community Beuren e. V. meets in Johannesstr. 3. Organizationally, it belongs to the Wendlingen Christian community .
Incorporations
In 1938 the municipality of Balzholz was incorporated into Beuren. The place name means a settlement in the forest of Bald . The place is first mentioned in 1298. In 1521 Balzholz consisted of six houses. During the Thirty Years' War , Balzholz was uninhabited for several years. When it was incorporated in 1938, Balzholz had 319 inhabitants. The coat of arms was adopted in 1930. It goes back to an old seal stick that showed a fishing rod. On a gold plate over green ground an erect black fishing hook between green beech trees. The fishing rod is supposed to be a reminder of the foot rods that were formerly laid out on Balzholzer mark to protect the Hohenneuffen fortress.
Population development
The population figures are taken from the Ortssippenbuch; they are census results (¹) or official updates from the State Statistical Office ( main residences only ).
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politics
coat of arms
The local coat of arms, adopted after 1930, shows a black goat head facing to the right in a gold shield. It ties in with the second place name Geißbeuren, which was previously used in the vernacular . This has been traceable since 1640 and is said to go back to goat husbandry, which was once particularly widespread here.
In order to avoid an overlap with the colors of the national flag, the colors of the coat of arms were not adopted in the municipal flag. The flag, awarded by the Ministry of the Interior in 1973, therefore has the colors blue-yellow (blue-gold).
mayor
- 1804–1839: Christian Friedrich Löw
- 1839: Nicolaus Klaß
- 1840–1853: Ludwig Friedrich Brotbeck
- 1853–1879: Nicolaus Klaß
- 1879–1888: Jacob Klaß
- 1888–1890: Philipp Friedrich Nestel
- 1890–1927: Wilhelm Eugen Schraft
- 1927–1934: Karl Friedrich Schminke
- 1934: Wilhelm König (official administrator)
- 1934–1945: Wilhelm Spanagel
- 1945–1946: August Reuss (official administrator)
- 1946–1948: Helmut Link
- 1948–1983: Willi Gras
- 1983–2015: Erich Hartmann
- since 2016: Daniel Gluiber
After Erich Hartmann no longer took office, Daniel Gluiber was elected mayor with 59.2% of the valid votes in the mayoral election on October 25, 2015, and he took office on January 1, 2016.
Municipal council
The municipal council in Beuren has 14 members. The local elections on May 26, 2019 led to the following final result. The municipal council consists of the elected voluntary councilors and the mayor as chairman. The mayor is entitled to vote in the municipal council.
Parties and constituencies |
% 2019 |
Seats 2019 |
% 2014 |
Seats 2014 |
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FW | Free voters Beuren-Balzholz | 51.5 | 7th | 53.8 | 8th | |
CDU | Christian Democratic Union of Germany | 39.6 | 6th | 46.2 | 6th | |
SPD | Social Democratic Party of Germany | 8.9 | 1 | - | - | |
total | 100.0 | 14th | 100.0 | 14th | ||
voter turnout | 63.6% | 57.1% |
Sponsorship
In order to give the former residents of the Danube Swabian village of Jarek a place where they can meet again after their escape in 1944, the municipality of Beuren took over the sponsorship of the former municipality of Jarek on September 25, 1987. A "Jareker Platz" with a fountain and memorial stone was created at the entrance to the new cemetery, and a Jareker meeting takes place once a year in Beuren.
Economy and Infrastructure
Beuren and Balzholz are wine-growing locations whose locations belong to the large Hohenneuffen location in the Remstal-Stuttgart area. Today around eight hectares are cultivated in the Beuren district and around two hectares in the Balzholz district.
traffic
The connection to the supra-regional rail network takes place by bus to Neuffen and from there with the valley railway to Nürtingen . Nürtingen is about nine kilometers away. The next junction of the A 8 is around ten kilometers away in Kirchheim unter Teck -Ost. There are bus connections to Erkenbrechtsweiler and via Neuffen to Metzingen .
The state road L 1210 runs through Beuren from Neuffen to Owen . In order to relieve traffic in the narrow and steep town through, the state of Baden-Württemberg built a 1.2-kilometer bypass at a cost of 15 million euros . In the course of this bypassing, the inner-city Beuren tunnel was created with a length of 399 meters. It was opened to traffic on February 25, 2005.
Educational institutions
Beuren has its own primary school . Secondary schools can be attended in Neuffen (Hauptschule, Realschule) and Nürtingen (Realschulen, Gymnasien). There are also three kindergartens in town.
Supply and disposal
Beuren is supplied with electricity and gas by Stadtwerke Neuffen. Gas has been around since 1907 when the new gas works in Neuffen went into operation. The connection to the electricity network took place in 1912/14. Beuren receives water from the regional water supply association , which merged with the Blau Lauter group in 1994. Beuren also operates its own springs, which are fed by the karst groundwater of the Swabian Alb. The wastewater is disposed of in the sewage treatment plant of the Neuffener Tal wastewater association in Frickenhausen .
Waste disposal
The waste management company of the Esslingen district is responsible for waste disposal. There are separate collections for organic waste , household waste and paper. As part of the Green Dot, packaging is collected in so-called yellow bags . Bulky waste can be picked up free of charge by handing in one of two vouchers a year, or it can be taken to a disposal station. Electrical and metal scrap and other recyclable materials can also be disposed of at the disposal stations. There are special collections of problematic substances for hazardous waste such as fluorescent lamps and paint.
Leisure and sports facilities
- Panorama Therme Beuren with sauna area and small swimming pool
- Lettenwael sports grounds (on the road to Linsenhofen), two TSV Beuren football fields (lawn, artificial turf), TC Beuren tennis facility
- Sports field Stelle (on the road to Erkenbrechtsweiler), a soccer field and curling alley run by the Rot-Weiss Austria association
Culture and sights
Beuren is located on the Württemberg Wine Route , which leads past numerous sights.
museum
The Beuren open-air museum is one of seven regional open-air museums in Baden-Württemberg. It opened in 1995 and is still under construction. Are presented here answered old buildings from the premises of the Central Neckar and the Swabian Alb . The museum is located northeast of Beuren in the garment of autumn meadows and shows 22 historical buildings (as of 2008). The district of Esslingen is responsible for the Beuren open-air museum.
Buildings
Beuren has been able to maintain a homogeneous appearance in the old town center to this day, which reflects the heyday of the town in the 15th and 16th centuries. At that time, Beuren was a place of pilgrimage. A pilgrimage chapel on the Engelberg was the destination of the pilgrims. On the main street and the adjacent side streets there are still a number of valuable old half-timbered buildings, some of them in stately storey construction. A total of 70 historic buildings are listed in the center of Beuren. The oldest known ridge house in Baden-Württemberg from 1411/12 is one of them.
In the middle of the historic town center is the late Gothic St. Nicholas Church , which was built in the 15th century in place of a Romanesque chapel. The large bell tower dates from 1430. The choir was completed in 1515, at the time of the beginning of the Reformation. Special sights are a "Mount of Olives" (1510) outside on the south-east wall of the tower and a somewhat older, precious gem in the church, the carved "Christ on the Palm Donkey" (around 1470). The organ was built around 1839 by the well-known organ builder Viktor Gruol and restored true to the original in 1978/79. Today's interior view of the church dates from 1904. The royal senior building officer Heinrich Dolmetsch , a well-known church builder, rebuilt and renovated the church that year. Incidentally, the gallery comes from the Cannstatter Stadtkirche, which Dolmetsch also rebuilt at the same time. The Nikolauskirche, together with the early baroque rectory (early 17th century), the parish barn (late 15th century), the parish garden and the churchyard, which is still used for burials to this day, form an ensemble that is rarely found in Württemberg.
Another of the dominant cultural monuments in Beuren is the town hall from 1556 opposite the church, which was built during Beuren's heyday. Its foundation walls arch over the "Beurener Bach". For centuries there was a healing spring under the town hall, the water was used in the bath room next to the town hall (first mentioned in 1526). At the beginning of the 20th century the healing spring dried up, the reasons for this were never explored.
Regular events
At the end of the 1950s and in the 1960s, the community organized the Beuren Children's Festival with the local associations in conjunction with the kindergarten and school in the summer with a large parade and festive events. Since 1987, the local associations have celebrated the wine festival around the historic wine press on the second weekend in September . After the completion of the redesigned town center, the festival was moved to Karlsplatz in 2007, and the tradition is now being continued there under the name Brunnenfest .
Personalities
Honorary citizen
The municipality of Beuren has granted the following people honorary citizenship:
- 1857: Johann Christian Knecht, pastor
(Resolution of the municipal council of January 3, 1857). Pastor Knecht encountered bitter hardship among the population when he took office in Beuren. By introducing whitework and lace-making, he created an income for the population. He also fought against the “beggar mentality” according to the motto: Whoever does not want to work does not receive any support.
- 1983: Willi Gras, Mayor
(Resolution of the municipal council of November 18, 1983). Mayor Gras has made a special contribution to Beuren because he made it possible to develop into a health resort through his personal commitment . In particular, the drilling of thermal water and the construction of the thermal baths as well as the awarding of the title “place with mineral spring spa” are largely thanks to his initiative.
- 2015: Erich Hartmann, Mayor
(Decision of the municipal council of October 5, 2015).
Sons and daughters of the church
- Karl Buck (1813–1898), farmer, pietist known as "Karle von Beuren"
- August Pfänder (1891–1971), mayor of Neuffen and Nürtingen
- Gottlob Espenlaub (1900–1972), born in the Balzholz district, aviator and aircraft designer
- Karl Albert Pfänder (1906–1990), wood sculptor and art turner, designer of wood products
- Wolfgang Ischinger (* 1946), lawyer and international lawyer, former diplomat
Personalities associated with Beuren
The following people lived in Beuren without being born here
- Christian Friedrich Löw (1778–1843), mayor and member of the state parliament , lived in Beuren from 1805
- Mathilde Planck (1861–1955), teacher, writer, member of the state parliament , lived in Beuren from 1919 to 1930
- Hermann Kling (1880–1957), member of the Reichstag and Landtag, lived from 1937 to 1950 as the owner of the Sonnenhof in Beuren
- Christian Gentner (* 1985), soccer player at Union Berlin , grew up in Beuren
- Carina Enoch (* 1987), soccer player at 1. FC Saarbrücken , grew up in Beuren
- Thomas Gentner (* 1988), soccer player at SGV Freiberg , grew up in Beuren
- Nadine Enoch (* 1989), soccer player at SV Jungingen, grew up in Beuren
literature
- Hans Schwenkel : Home book of the Nürtingen district. Volume 2. Würzburg 1953, pp. 126-154.
- Dietrich Braun: Nikolauskirche Beuren. 800 years of history. Neckar-Verlag, Villingen 1988, ISBN 3-7883-1904-6 .
- Dietrich Braun: Beuren - 500 years of bath history, the renaissance of an old therapeutic bath. Published by the Beuren cure and community administration in 1991.
- Willi Knapp and Erich Knapp: Ortssippenbuch Beuren-Balzholz, German Ortssippenbuch, Series A - Volume 144. Self-published, Filderstadt 1988.
- Dietrich Braun: Heimatbuch Beuren. From the primeval witnesses of our district up to 2004 and house and family stories from 1550–1982. Revised private edition, Beuren 2003.
- Sönke Lorenz and Andreas Schmauder (eds.): Beuren and Balzholz - A community at the foot of the Swabian Alb. Markstein-Verlag, Filderstadt 2004, ISBN 3-935129-20-3 .
- The Esslingen district. - Edited by the State Archives Baden-Württemberg i. V. with the district of Esslingen, Jan Thorbecke Verlag, Ostfildern 2009, ISBN 978-3-7995-0842-1 , Volume 1, Page 345
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg - Population by nationality and gender on December 31, 2018 (CSV file) ( help on this ).
- ^ Geological map of Baden-Württemberg 1: 25000, sheet 7422-Lenningen , published by the Landesvermessungsamt Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart
- ^ The state of Baden-Württemberg. Official description by district and municipality. Volume III: Stuttgart District, Middle Neckar Regional Association. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1978, ISBN 3-17-004758-2 . Pp. 215-216
- ↑ State Statistical Office, area since 1988 according to actual use for Beuren.
- ↑ Wikipedia: Nürtingen church district
- ↑ Wirttemberisches Urkundenbuch , Stuttgart, XI, No. 5190, page 181
- ↑ Ortschronik Beuren and Balzholz , page 195
- ^ Election information from the municipality of Beuren
- ^ Art, archeology and museums in the Esslingen district , Norbert Bongartz and Jörg Biel, Konrad Theiss Verlag, Stuttgart 1983, pp. 53–58.
- ^ From Vogelherd to Weissenhof - legacy and obligation, cultural monuments in Baden-Württemberg , Dieter Planck (ed.), Konrad Theiss Verlag, Stuttgart 1996, pages 156–162.
- ↑ Information board at the church, read January 5, 2018
- ↑ Compare Friedrich Baun: Der Karle von Beuren. A quiet person in the country. 4th edition. Metzingen / Württ. 1981 (Goldregen, 51).