Herbolzheim

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the city of Herbolzheim
Herbolzheim
Map of Germany, position of the city of Herbolzheim highlighted

Coordinates: 48 ° 13 '  N , 7 ° 47'  E

Basic data
State : Baden-Württemberg
Administrative region : Freiburg
County : Emmendingen
Height : 177 m above sea level NHN
Area : 35.47 km 2
Residents: 11,065 (Dec. 31, 2018)
Population density : 312 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 79336
Area code : 07643
License plate : EM
Community key : 08 3 16 017
City structure: 5 districts

City administration address :
Hauptstrasse 26
79336 Herbolzheim
Website : www.herbolzheim.de
Mayor : Thomas Gedemer
Location of the city of Herbolzheim in the district of Emmendingen
Frankreich Ortenaukreis Landkreis Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald Landkreis Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald Freiburg im Breisgau Schwarzwald-Baar-Kreis Bahlingen am Kaiserstuhl Biederbach Biederbach Biederbach Denzlingen Elzach Emmendingen Endingen am Kaiserstuhl Forchheim (Kaiserstuhl) Freiamt (Schwarzwald) Gutach im Breisgau Herbolzheim Kenzingen Malterdingen Malterdingen Reute (Breisgau) Rheinhausen (Breisgau) Riegel am Kaiserstuhl Sasbach am Kaiserstuhl Sexau Simonswald Teningen Vörstetten Waldkirch Weisweil Winden im Elztal Wyhl am Kaiserstuhlmap
About this picture

Herbolzheim ( alem. Härwelze ) is a town in the southwest of Baden-Württemberg in the district of Emmendingen , about 30 kilometers north of Freiburg im Breisgau .

geography

Aerial view of Herbolzheim

Geographical location

Herbolzheim is located in Breisgau on the western edge of the Middle Black Forest between Freiburg and Offenburg . About 70% of the area extends in the Upper Rhine Plain with a lowest point of 165  m above sea level. NN , the remaining 30% in the loess-covered foothills of the Black Forest with the highest point of the Kahlenberg at 309.1  m above sea level. NN .

The most important surface water is the Bleichbach (also called Bleiche ). It flows through the entire Herbolzheim district from east to west, through the Bleichheim district, between Tutschfelden and Wagenstadt, and past the built-up area of ​​Herbolzheim to the south, to flow into the Elz at the western border of the district .

Neighboring communities

Herbolzheim borders in the south on the city of Kenzingen and from there, clockwise, on the communities Rheinhausen , Rust , Ringsheim , the city Ettenheim and the community Schuttertal .

City structure

The city of Herbolzheim includes the districts of Bleichheim, Broggingen, Herbolzheim, Tutschfelden and Wagenstadt. The spatial boundaries of the districts are identical to the formerly independent communities of the same name. With the exception of the Herbolzheim district, the official designation is the prefixed name of the city, followed by the designation “district” and the name of the district. The districts of Bleichheim, Broggingen, Tutschfelden and Wagenstadt also form localities within the meaning of the Baden-Württemberg municipal code, each with its own local council and mayor as its chairman.

climate

Herbolzheim near Emmendingen (Mundingen)
Climate diagram
J F. M. A. M. J J A. S. O N D.
 
 
63
 
6th
-1
 
 
44
 
8th
0
 
 
43
 
13
1
 
 
69
 
17th
4th
 
 
119
 
21st
8th
 
 
93
 
25th
13
 
 
47
 
28
14th
 
 
73
 
26th
13
 
 
52
 
23
9
 
 
47
 
16
6th
 
 
55
 
11
2
 
 
44
 
8th
0
Temperature in ° Cprecipitation in mm
Source: [1]
Average monthly temperatures and precipitation for Herbolzheim near Emmendingen (Mundingen)
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Max. Temperature ( ° C ) 6.2 8.1 12.8 17.0 20.7 25.4 27.5 26.4 22.6 16.3 10.7 7.9 O 16.8
Min. Temperature (° C) -1.1 -0.4 1.3 3.7 8.4 12.9 13.8 13.0 9.2 5.6 2.1 0.3 O 5.8
Temperature (° C) 3.4 4.8 6.9 10.5 14.7 19.2 21.1 20.0 15.5 10.7 6.4 4.1 O 11.5
Precipitation ( mm ) 63 44 43 69 119 93 47 73 52 47 55 44 Σ 749
Hours of sunshine ( h / d ) 2.7 3.5 4.0 5.8 6.5 8.4 7.8 7.2 5.7 3.8 2.4 2.0 O 5
Rainy days ( d ) 17th 13 14th 13 15th 14th 12 13 11 12 13 14th Σ 161
T
e
m
p
e
r
a
t
u
r
6.2
-1.1
8.1
-0.4
12.8
1.3
17.0
3.7
20.7
8.4
25.4
12.9
27.5
13.8
26.4
13.0
22.6
9.2
16.3
5.6
10.7
2.1
7.9
0.3
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
N
i
e
d
e
r
s
c
h
l
a
g
63
44
43
69
119
93
47
73
52
47
55
44
  Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Source: [2]

history

Common and separate fates

For a long time, people throughout today's urban area with its five districts shared similar fates. This applies to the first settlement in the Neolithic in the 6th to 3rd millennium BC. People of the Michelsberg culture lived in the northern Gewann Ehrleshalde as well as in the southwest in Bleichheim and Tutschfelden. In the late La Tène period from the 2nd to the 1st century BC Celtic Raurics sat here . Roman traces can be found west of the city near the junction of the A5 motorway , such as the remains of stone and wooden buildings from the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD, but also around Bleichheim and Tutschfelden. Similar fate overtook the people of the entire region in the 17th century in the Thirty Years and Dutch War and the wars of the 20th century.

Life-defining differences resulted in the formation of denominations after the Reformation . The old communities of Herbolzheim and Bleichheim belonged to Upper Austria and remained Catholic . Broggingen and Tutschfelden came to the margraviate of Baden-Durlach in 1535 and became Evangelical Lutheran . Wagenstadt was a condominium of Baden and Nassau gentlemen, and the denominations changed until the village came to the Catholic margraviate of Baden-Baden in 1629 . The rise of the Grand Duchy of Baden after the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss 1803 was experienced differently . For the places already in Baden it meant continuity, for the previously Habsburg towns it meant “a new era”: “ Karlsruhe instead of Vienna - that only seemed like a good exchange for a few. The political, cultural and religious life of the population was shaped by ideas that had their roots in Austria, while there was little relationship with the Protestant capital of Baden. "

Medieval and modern times according to communities of origin

Herbolzheim

In the Middle Ages , two settlement centers were formed, both at the intersection of the north-south main road with west-east roads: a north near the town hall and a south near the parish church of St. Alexius .

The place name, ending in " -heim ", indicates the Franconian conquest . It appears for the first time around 1108 as "Heribothsheim", namely in the Rotulus Sanpetrinus , an inventory of the monastery of St. Peter , where Diepoldus de Heribothsheim , servant of Duke Berthold III. von Zähringen , a donation testified. At that time Herbolzheim belonged to the domain of the Counts of Nimburg . In 1200 the Nimburgers sold their property to the Bishop of Strasbourg . Herbolzheim remained with the diocese of Strasbourg until it fell to the archbishopric of Freiburg in 1821 . The Herbolzheim service aristocracy, like Diepold, probably owned a castle on the Hüttenbühl , a knoll 500 m northeast of the town hall, which was lost in the 13th century . In the 13th century, the Ettenheimmünster monastery with a courtyard on Rusterstrasse and the Tennenbach monastery with a courtyard on Schmiedstrasse in Herbolzheim owned, later Schuttern monastery was added with a courtyard on Duttensteinstrasse. The parish church of St. Alexius and the Margaret Chapel by the town hall are first mentioned in the Tennenbacher Güterbuch around 1320 . In the 13th and 14th centuries, the Üsenberg bailiffs were the bishops of Strasbourg. They resided on the Kirnburg (Kürnberg) 500 m above the district of Bleichheim and had a manor house in the village to the west of St. Alexius, the Wilginshof . After the Üsenbergs died out in the middle of the 14th century, the margraves of Baden-Hachberg and the Habsburgs tried to rule. Herbolzheim came to Habsburg in 1415 and since then has formed the Upper Austrian Office of Kürnberg with the towns of Bombach , Oberhausen and Niederhausen .

Hans Bär's ornate coat of arms

Archduke Ferdinand of Austria , who later became Emperor Ferdinand II, promoted the commercial “stain” and gave it market rights in 1589 , “while then [the Herbolzheimers] and their ancestors have so far opposed us and our praiseworthy house of Austria, all good-hearted, loyal obedience and Submission shown and proven, also doing such things and being no less obedient to do so, and also like and should do well. " In 1593 Ferdinand gave the right to levy road tolls .

In 1606, the imperial councilor Johannes Pistorius the Younger gave the “market town” a new, improved coat of arms in the name of his master, Emperor Rudolf II . The "Herbolzheimer Wappenbrief", kept in the city archive, is written on parchment, 46 cm high and 68 cm wide. In the middle of the closely written text is the coat of arms, surrounded by scrollwork and allegories of the four seasons, with this setting only the size of a postcard (13 cm high and 8.5 cm wide). The small picture was painted by the famous Pistorius Hans Bär . The new coat of arms shows, in the language of Pistorius:

"A shield in the middle of the devalued shield, the right side of which is separated into two different theyll, in which upper theyll appears the laudable house of Austria's coat of arms with red and white colors, in the underneath theyll can be seen in a blue field with a white eagle swept over itself fligell, on the left side a half black eagle appears in a yellow field, with red tongues outstretched under the neck of Eysen-colored ploughshare. "

The "Hauß Österreichß coat of arms with red and white colors" (the Austrian shield ), the "Adlers fligell" (the coat of arms of the Üsenberger) and the "Pflugeysen" (the ploughshare ) come from the old village coat of arms. Added to this, however, is “half a black eagle with red tongues outstretched”, the half black imperial eagle . The Emmendingen classical philologist Hans-Jürgen Günther has shown in his analysis of the letter of arms that Hans Bär's “gem” allows for even more extensive interpretations .

Herbolzheim temporarily outstripped its neighbors Ettenheim and Emmendingen in terms of economic prosperity. Then came the catastrophe of the Thirty Years War. While the number of inhabitants around the middle of the 16th century was around 800, it is said to have been 50 at the end of the war in 1648 and not again until 480 again in 1692. However, some half-timbered buildings such as the Del Fabro house from 1463 in Obere Brunnenstrasse and the Fey house from 1580 in Steckenstrasse survived the destruction. In 1680 the Wilginshof was transferred to the Upper Austrian Chamberlain Georg Ignaz Schmid von Brandenstein. At around the same time, the Maria Sand Chapel was built on the bank of the Bleichbach on the site of an older chapel. A new boom came around the middle of the 18th century. The guilds - linen weavers, shoemakers, wagons, blacksmiths, butchers, bakers - were reorganized. Baroque town houses were built with magnificent portals, such as the former Gasthaus Krone from 1750, Hauptstrasse 41. From 1752 to 1754 the Catholic parish church of St. Alexius was rebuilt on the site of the older church, and from 1767 to 1769 a two-storey town hall was built on older foundations. It also housed the school rooms until a large schoolhouse was built on the northwest corner of the church square in 1790. Increased in 1887, it is now a Catholic parish hall.

In 1805 Herbolzheim came to the Grand Duchy of Baden with the Breisgau in front of Austria. With a ministerial decree of January 27, 1810, it was elevated to the status of town “with consideration for [its] sizable population, industry and activity”. The ceremony took place on the upper floor of the crown . In 1814 it is reported: “Herbolzheim, formerly a market town, but elevated to a town since January 27, 1810, has 1746 souls… The place is beautiful, has lots of good houses and a very beautiful church, as well as a beautiful town hall. … There are tradesmen and craftsmen here: 37 weavers, 23 shoemakers, 11 carpenters, 9 tailors, 8 [coopers], 8 farriers, 8 butchers, 6 masons, 4 carpenters, 4 nailers, 4 locksmiths, 4 wagons, 3 glaziers , 3 saddlers, 5 brick makers, 14 bakers… 1 piano and organ maker… and 1 iron dealer. In addition to these, there are 3 strong companies that deal with the [ hemp cloth ] and tobacco trade, and especially from the first products in the thousand quintals annually to Switzerland, France and other countries. … Every Thursday there is a weekly market. The inhabitants make a living from agriculture and viticulture. Agriculture ... is remarkable, as it testifies to the industriousness and cultural advances of the inhabitants, and offers the eye a blessed hope. Hemp is also a special source of food. "" Food source "is hemp because of the hemp oil . Linen weaving developed from hemp processing . A mechanical weaving mill was founded in 1834, and in 1854 the first of three cigar factories . Tobacco replaced hemp cultivation. In 1845 Herbolzheim was connected to the Rhine Valley railway line , in 1880 the school was extended, and in 1891 the town hall was extended and its facade was clinkered . From 1895 to 1896 (for Bleichheim, Broggingen and Tutschfelden at the same time) a central water supply with pipes was introduced in every house, and in 1900 electrical street lighting was introduced. In 1895, 2500 people lived in Herbolzheim, 500 of whom were employed in the tobacco industry and 100 in linen weaving. At the beginning of the 20th century, the textile and tobacco industry was joined by the iron industry with a machine factory and a steel building and bridge construction company. The Evangelical Church dates from 1907 and 1908.

From 1937 to 1968, Doggererz was mined on the slopes east and northeast of the city as far as the area of ​​Ringsheim . Tunnel entrances, collapse craters and the “Bergwerkstrasse” are a reminder of this. In 1935 the Herbolzheim government revoked the town charter. In 1949 it was renewed by the Baden Ministry of the Interior. The linen weaving and tobacco industries disappeared after the Second World War . Since then, the focus has been on steel construction, mechanical engineering and electrical engineering.

Bleichheim

Bleichheim

Bleichheim, named after the Bleichbach, was first mentioned in 1203 in the Rotulus Sanpetrinus , like the Kirnburg located in its area . Another castle complex , Kastenbuck Castle , is located a little below the Kirnburg and has almost completely disappeared . Bleichheim came from the Üsenbergers via the margraviate of Baden-Hachberg in 1369 to Upper Austria . In 1682, Emperor Leopold I enfeoffed the governor of the Austrian provinces Johann Friedrich Freiherr von Kageneck (1633–1705) with the village. The manor house with the year 1728 above the main portal comes from the Kageneckers, also known as Kagenecksches Schloss , together with a manor mill and a tithe barn from 1584 on the road to Broggingen. In 1805, like Herbolzheim, Bleichheim became Baden. Between 1825 and 1826, a Hilarius church dating back to the Romanesque period was torn down in the middle of the cemetery and rebuilt elsewhere. Several mills were previously operated along the Bleibach. The Glöcklemühle or Mattenmühle was rebuilt after a fire in 1988. The local coat of arms shows the Austrian armband and next to it the ploughshare and scythe blade , the tools of the formerly purely rural residents.

Broggingen

Broggingen

In 1129 the property of the Strasbourg cathedral chapter in Broggingen ( Prochingen ) is mentioned, in 1225 a parish church. In the 13th century the village belonged to the Lords of Geroldseck . Via the margraviate of Baden-Hachberg , it came to the Baden lineage in 1415, the margraviate of Baden , and after its division into Baden-Durlach and Baden-Baden in 1535 to Margrave Ernst von Baden-Durlach . His son Charles II introduced the Reformation in 1557 . From 1771 Broggingen belonged to the reunited (Protestant) Margraviate of Baden and the Grand Duchy that emerged from it in 1806 . In 1740 the nave of the church was rebuilt while retaining the Romanesque basement of the tower, and in 1759 the parsonage. The coat of arms shows the red sloping bar on gold of the margraviate of Baden and a black village symbol.

Tutschfelden

Tutschfelden

Tutschfelden is the earliest attested of the town's origins, namely in 972 as Tuttesvelda in a document from the Einsiedeln monastery . Later, the gentlemen von Geroldseck and the Üsenberger had rights in Tutschfelden. Margrave Christoph I von Baden bought the place between 1482 and 1493 . When the margraviate of Baden was divided in 1535, Tutschfelden came to margrave Ernst von Baden-Durlach , whose son Charles II introduced the Reformation in 1557, as in Broggingen . Like Broggingen, from then on Tutschfelden remained Baden and Protestant. Ecclesiastically it was initially a branch of Broggingen or Wagenstadt and only became an independent parish in 1777. The church was built in 1806 on the site of a dilapidated early Romanesque chapel dedicated to John the Baptist . In the same year a building from 1733 was converted into a rectory. In 1972 Tutschfelden was able to celebrate its millennium as an independent community. The coat of arms, a red rose with green sepals, was created around 1900 from the old village symbol, omitting the Baden sloping beam .

Wagenstadt

Wagenstadt

Wagenstadt is first mentioned in 1277 as belonging to the Lords of Geroldseck - or in 1335 as belonging to the Üsenbergers - the parish church of St. Mauritius in 1371. In 1426 Wagenstadt came to the Counts of Moers-Saar Werden by marriage . From the seizure and purchase a condominium of Baden and Nassau lords resulted in 1522 , until the village came completely to the margraviate of Baden-Baden in 1629 at the urging of Emperor Ferdinand II . The consequence of this dynastic was an unusual confessional complexity. In 1669, equal rights for Catholics and Protestants and shared use of the church were agreed. In 1741 the church was rebuilt integrating Gothic parts, and the rectory from 1771 to 1784. The simultaneous use of the church ended with the construction of a Protestant church with a community center in 1972. The coat of arms symbolizes the place name with half a wagon wheel and the former main occupation of the residents with scythe leaves , plow irons and vines .

Incorporations

After population surveys and local council resolutions, the municipality of Wagenstadt was incorporated on January 1, 1972. This was followed by Bleichheim on January 1, 1974, and Broggingen and Tutschfelden on January 1, 1975.

politics

Administrative association

Herbolzheim belongs to the municipal administration association Kenzingen-Herbolzheim, which includes the cities of Kenzingen and Herbolzheim as well as the municipalities of Rheinhausen and Weisweil .

Municipal council

Until the local elections in 1999, the false choice of suburbs was in effect; the districts also formed residential districts within the meaning of the Baden-Württemberg municipal code.

The local election on May 26, 2019 , with a turnout of 58.5% (+ 8.6), led to the following result (with profit and loss compared to the 2014 local election):

Party / list Share of votes W / l% p Seats G / V
CDU 27.4% - 5.1 6th - 1
SPD 20.8% - 5.5 5 - 1
Green 22.5% + 5.4 5 + 1
FDP 06.9% + 6.9 1 + 1
FWG 22.4% - 1.7 5 ± 0

mayor

  • Hermann Jäger (1949–1969)
  • Klaus Hoffmann (1969–1985)
  • Hans-Peter Jülg (1985–1996)

On September 1st, 1996 Ernst Schilling took up the office of mayor. He was elected on July 21, 1996 and was last re-elected in 2012.

On October 8, 2017, Thomas Gedemer was elected to succeed Ernst Schilling in the second ballot with 56.1 percent of the vote. He took office on December 1, 2017.

Town twinning

  • The city of Herbolzheim has had a partnership with the city of Sisteron in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department in southern France since 1975 .
  • Since 2000 there has been a friendship between Oliva near Valencia in Spain and Herbolzheim.
  • On April 13, 2004, the friendship certificate between the city of Kremnica and Herbolzheim was signed in Kremnica , Slovakia.
  • On May 28, 2007, a friendship certificate was signed between the municipality of Morawica and Herbolzheim in Morawica, Poland, near Kielce.
  • In August 2017, the mayors Christof Bartsch ( Brilon ) and Ernst Schilling (Herbolzheim) signed the partnership document to connect the two communities, which had already been on friendly terms in previous years.
  • In addition, the city of Herbolzheim has maintained friendly relations with the towns of the same name Herbolzheim an der Jagst and Herbolzheim in Middle Franconia for many years .

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

Herbolzheim is well connected to the supraregional road network, including to Switzerland and France , through the federal motorway 5 ( Alsfeld - Weil am Rhein ) .

Herbolzheim station is on the Basel - Offenburg section of the Rhine Valley Railway . Regional Express trains to Offenburg and Basel stop there every hour . The station is also served by regional trains. The next ICE stops are in Freiburg (south) and Offenburg (north).

Established businesses

  • The company Wuppermann Intralogistik (sister company of Wuppermann Systemtechnik) as a provider of in-house logistics solutions
  • Thoma WISS as a body manufacturer for special vehicles and fire fighting vehicles
  • Reifen-Markt.com GmbH operates a tire warehouse with over 100,000 car tires in Herbolzheim
  • The rim manufacturer BBS from Schiltach operates a plant in Herbolzheim.
  • At the end of 2018, Mack Rides relocated part of the rail and vehicle production from Waldkirch to Herbolzheim.
  • Other large local companies are: DHL , Greschbach Stahl, TNT Express , Claas Landtechnik , DB Schenker , PRODINGER Verpackung

education

Herbolzheim offers four primary schools, a secondary school and a secondary school as well as a school for the disabled.

Culture and sights

Weinbrennerkirche in Tutschfelden
St. Hilarius, Bleichheim

Buildings

  • The oldest architectural monument in the city is the Margaret Chapel. A Romanesque building was Gothic extended and completed in 1521 after the dendrochronological dating of the still existing roof structure. In the 17th century the chapel was repainted and the roof turret was given an onion dome . The chapel later fell into disrepair, and in 1811 it was profaned and used as a police station, fire station and detention cell. It was restored between 1955 and 1993 and is now a museum.
  • The Catholic parish church of St. Alexius was built from 1752 to 1754 according to plans by Franz Rudhard (1708–1765) in the Baroque style and has a well-preserved Baroque interior, including works by Johann Pfunner and Johann Michael Winterhalder .
  • A few minutes southwest of the city is the pilgrimage church of Maria Sand , the oldest surviving parts of which date from the second half of the 17th century and which was expanded in 1747. Josef Mariano Kitschker (1879–1929) painted the ceiling fresco in the nave in 1921 - “an outstanding artistic achievement of the Neo-Baroque ”.
  • The Protestant church of Tutschfelden from 1806 was probably built according to a design revised by Friedrich Weinbrenner .
  • The Catholic Church of St. Hilarius in Bleichheim was built by Christoph Arnold in the Weinbrenner style from 1825 in place of a demolished choir tower church.

Parks

The city garden is located on Rheinhausenstrasse.

Personalities

sons and daughters of the town

Personalities associated with the city

  • Johannes Pistorius the Younger (1546–1608), doctor, lawyer, historian and theologian, awarded Herbolzheim his present coat of arms in 1606 in his capacity as Imperial Count Palatine Herbolzheim
  • Hans Bär († 1611), artistic designer of the Herbolzheim coat of arms
  • Nora Schütz Minorovics (* 1934), visual artist, has lived in Herbolzheim-Broggingen since 1989
  • Andreas Urs Sommer (* 1972), philosopher, lives in Herbolzheim-Broggingen

literature

  • The state of Baden-Württemberg. Official description by district and municipality. Volume VI: Freiburg region Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1982, ISBN 3-17-007174-2 . Pp. 242-245.
  • Historical association for central Baden (ed.): Baroque landscape: Ettenheim… Herbolzheim - Bleichheim - Broggingen - Tutschfelden - Wagenstadt. Ettenheim 1981. Herbolzheim texts by Friedrich Hinn.
  • Friedrich Hinn: Timeline of history and other contributions in: City of Herbolzheim (Hrsg.): 400 years of Herbolzheim market rights. 1989.
  • Hans-Jürgen Günther: Joh. Pistorius, Hanns Bär and the Herbolzheimer coat of arms. Trade and Industry Association Herbolzheim 1991.
  • Josef F. Göhri: Herbolzheim im Breisgau. Portrait of a city. Geiger-Verlag, Horb am Neckar 1990. ISBN 3-89264-483-7 .
  • Bertram Jenisch with the assistance of Manuela Clesle: Herbolzheim (= Archaeological City Register Baden-Württemberg Volume 28). Regional Council Stuttgart, State Office for Monument Preservation 2005.
  • Albert Köbele , Karl Friedrich Kirner, Margarete Kirner, Karl Werner Klüber, Klaus Schemies and Rolf Eilers: Family register of the city of Herbolzheim im Breisgau, Emmendingen district in Baden, 1596-1966 . Grafenhausen: Köbele 1967 (= Badische Ortssippenbücher 17)
  • Erich Reinbold: Ortssippenbuch Broggingen . 2nd Edition. Lahr: Interest group Badischer Ortssippenbücher 2000 (= Badische Ortssippenbücher 46), processed period 1649–1999
  • Erich Reinbold, Gerhard Natalis and Klaus Siefert: Ortssippenbuch Tutschfelden, Emmendingen district in Baden . Lahr: Interest group Badischer Ortssippenbücher 1988 (= Badische Ortssippenbücher 57), processed period 1652–1988
  • Erich Reinbold: Ortssippenbuch Wagenstadt, district Emmendingen in Baden . Lahr: Interest group Badischer Ortssippenbücher 1994 (= Badische Ortssippenbücher 74), processed period 1650–1990

Web links

Commons : Herbolzheim  - collection of images, videos and audio files
Wikivoyage: Herbolzheim  - travel guide

Individual evidence

  1. State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg - Population by nationality and gender on December 31, 2018 (CSV file) ( help on this ).
  2. main statute. Retrieved December 13, 2018 .
  3. ^ Alfred Graf von Kageneck: The end of the front Austrian rule in the Breisgau. Verlag Rombach, Freiburg im Breisgau 1981, ISBN 3-7930-0365-5 , p. 149.
  4. Jenisch 2005, p. 72.
  5. Jenisch 2005, p. 73.
  6. Jenisch 2005, p. 25.
  7. Hinn 1989, p. 22.
  8. a b Günther 1991.
  9. ^ Johann Baptist Kolb : Historical-statistical-topographical lexicon of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Macklot, Karlsruhe 1814, p. 63 ( digitized version of the Karlsruhe University Library ). Retrieved March 24, 2013.
  10. Hinn 1989, p. 33.
  11. Hagen Schönherr: Exciting Insights into Mining ( Memento from December 30, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung , August 29, 2009, accessed on March 22, 2013.
  12. ^ Johann Friedrich Freiherr von Kageneck at geneall.net, accessed on March 24, 2013.
  13. Alfons Staedele: From Bleichheim's past . In: Die Ortenau , 1954, p. 190 ( digitized version of the Freiburg University Library ).
  14. Hinn 1989, p. 12.
  15. a b Baroque Landscape 1981, p. 123.
  16. ^ 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, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 495 .
  17. ^ 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, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 511 .
  18. City of Herbolzheim City Council Election 2019, final result , accessed on 23 August 2019
  19. ^ "Politics gave me pleasure" ( Memento from December 2, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, October 24, 2011.
  20. ^ Mayor of Weil ( Memento from December 2, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, January 28, 2014.
  21. ↑ Mayoral election: 80.7 percent for Ernst Schilling in Herbolzheim ( memento of October 8, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, July 1, 2012.
  22. Thomas Gedemer is the new Mayor of Herbolzheim ( Memento from March 18, 2018 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, October 8, 2017, accessed on October 12, 2017.
  23. "It must not stay with the forest" , Badische Zeitung, August 16, 2017.
  24. Lena Marie Jörger: In Herbolzheim roller coasters are being built for amusement parks around the world. Badische Zeitung, January 19, 2020, accessed on February 3, 2020 .
  25. ^ City of Herbolzheim im Breisgau (ed.): The Margaret Chapel in Herbolzheim. Herbolzheimer Blätter 1994.
  26. ^ A b Hermann Brommer : Catholic parish church St. Alexius Herbolzheim i. Br. 2nd edition. Schnell and Steiner publishing house, Munich and Zurich 1984.
  27. Evangelical Church Tutschfelden at badischewanderungen.de.tl
  28. Roland Hörner, Ludwig Schauer and Heinz Weiß: Evangelical Church in Tutschfelden, built in 1806, renovated in 1964 . Without a publisher, without a location, without a year.
  29. ^ "Philosophy must be a risk" ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, October 11, 2012.