Book (Swabia)
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 48 ° 13 ' N , 10 ° 11' E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Bavaria | |
Administrative region : | Swabia | |
County : | New Ulm | |
Management Community : | book | |
Height : | 540 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 39.86 km 2 | |
Residents: | 4024 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density : | 101 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 89290 | |
Primaries : | 07343, 08282 | |
License plate : | NU, ILL | |
Community key : | 09 7 75 118 | |
Market structure: | 15 parts of the community | |
Market administration address : |
Friedhofweg 2 89290 Buch |
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Website : | ||
First Mayor : | Markus Wöhrle ( CSU ) | |
Location of the Buch market in the Neu-Ulm district | ||
Buch is a market in the Swabian district of Neu-Ulm and the seat of the Buch administrative association .
geography
Geographical location
The market is located in the Donau-Iller region in Central Swabia in the Roth valley , around 23 kilometers southeast of Ulm and 26 kilometers north of Memmingen . The Roth flows through the western municipality. In the east the Biber flows , in this area still called Biberbach . The west is largely unforested, south of the town of Buch and in the east there are some smaller forests, in the southeast lies the Oberroggenburger Wald.
Community structure
There are 15 officially named parts of the municipality (the type of place is given in brackets ):
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The wastelands Hetzenmühle, Lehenmühle, Riedmühle, Siede and Untermühle are not officially named districts.
Neighboring communities
Neighboring communities in the north are Weißenhorn and Roggenburg , in the east the community-free areas of Ober- and Unterroggenburger Wald and Kettershausen ( district of Unterallgäu ). To the south lies Unterroth , to the west Illertissen .
history
Early history
Buch is likely to be a high medieval clearing settlement , the place name suggesting a settlement near the beeches . Initially belonging to the lords of Biberegg-Roggenburg , after their extinction around 1160, the place went to the lords of Neuffen , who expanded Buch into an important seat of their new dominion in Weißenhorn . After Berthold II's marriage with Juta von Marstetten, the Neuffen received the title of Count of Marstetten . When the last Neuffen died in 1342, the county of Marstetten, with its main town Weißenhorn, fell to the Bavarian Wittelsbachers by inheritance . They did not administer the rule themselves, but initially pledged it to the Counts of Werdenberg , who owned considerable property south of Lake Constance . In 1356 it was passed on to Duke Albrecht II of Austria , and finally to the Lords of Ellerbach . After the Treaty of Schärding in 1369, Bavaria was able to win back the pledged dominion of Weißenhorn, but immediately sold it again to the Werdenbergers and the Lords of Rechberg . In 1473 the pledge was finally dissolved, so that Louis IX. of Bavaria-Landshut administered the rule directly. During this time, the right to hold market days on a regular basis was also granted. During the immediate rule of the Wittelsbachers, the Kirchberg County and the Pfaffenhofen County were purchased , which significantly increased the territory. After mediation in the Landshut War of Succession in 1504/05, the German King Maximilian I confiscated the now so-called Kirchberg-Weißenhorn rule for the empire and sold it to his banker Jakob Fugger in 1507 . The place Buch remained the seat of a bailiff, but sovereignly the area belonged to Upper Austria with the capital Innsbruck . Like Weißenhorn and Babenhausen, Buch became the center of the weaving trade . In 1612 a Garnsiede on the Roth was also mentioned.
19th and 20th centuries
After the incorporation into the Bavarian state in 1805, the Fuggers only retained the right to maintain a patrimonial court in Weißenhorn , which existed until 1848 and was replaced by a royal Bavarian court in the following four years . In 1852, Buch became part of the Illertissen jurisdiction , and after centuries of reference to Weißenhorn, the place gradually oriented itself towards the up-and-coming market and later district town. These district courts were the indirect forerunners of the districts. After that, Buch belonged to the district of Illertissen .
Incorporations
On May 1, 1978, as part of the municipal reform, the previously independent municipalities of Christertshofen, Gannertshofen, Nordholz, Obenhausen, Rennertshofen and Ritzisried were incorporated with their respective districts. On October 1, 2014, the area of the Kettershausen clay pit (a former US base) was reclassified from the municipality-free area of Oberroggenburger Wald to Buch.
Population development
Between 1988 and 2019 the market grew from 3,189 to 4,024 by 835 inhabitants or by 26.2%.
politics
Municipal council
The market council has 16 members, plus the mayor. The past local elections resulted in the following composition of the council:
CSU | Free citizens | UWG | total | |
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2002 | 9 | 7th | - | 16 seats |
2008 | 7th | 7th | 2 | 16 seats |
2014 | 6th | 7th | 3 | 16 seats |
2020 | 6th | 6th | 4th | 16 seats |
mayor
Markus Wöhrle, nominated by the CSU and free voters, has been mayor since May 1, 2020. He was elected with 60.4% of the vote and is the successor to Roland Biesenberger (CSU / FW), who headed the community from May 2008 to April 2020.
coat of arms
The blazon reads: split by blue and silver; on the green ground in front a silver tower, behind a green beech.
A white and blue flag with the municipality 's coat of arms is used as the unofficial municipal flag .
Culture and sights
- Church of St. Valentin : Until 1781 the old parish church stood on the site of today's (old) cemetery. New building in 1780 at the current location. Early classical with frescoes by Konrad Huber
- Cemetery chapel , neo-baroque building
- Untere Straße , a typical Fugger weaver settlement
- Old brewery
- 19th century Gasthaus Lamm . A new town center with a village hall was built around the building for event purposes.
- Fountain from the second half of the 19th century (cast iron)
- Burgstall east of the village above the old cemetery, very distinctly separated from the eastern outer bailey by a moat. The time of origin is unclear. The castle was probably the seat of servants of the Counts of Neuffen. In 1667 it was demolished for the construction of the Capuchin monastery in Weißenhorn. In the ditch between the outer and main castle there is a Marian grotto
Economy and Infrastructure
traffic
The A 7 motorway (junction 124 Illertissen ) runs 4 km west of Buch . In the district of Obenhausen, the state roads 2018 Illertissen– Krumbach and 2020 Weißenhorn– Babenhausen intersect . There are bus connections with Illertissen, Weißenhorn, Babenhausen and Krumbach. The nearest train station is in Illertissen, seven kilometers away. The nearest airport, Memmingen , is 30 km south of Buch. The nearest major airports are Munich Airport and Stuttgart Airport .
media
The Illertisser Zeitung, a local edition of the Augsburger Allgemeine, is published as a daily newspaper.
education
There is a primary and secondary school in Buch. Secondary schools are located in Illertissen and Weißenhorn.
Sports
The TSV 1889 book was a multiple German tug-of-war champion from 1974 to 1979 .
Others
In Waldreichenbach and on the Bucher Schlossberg, knight tournaments with a medieval market were held every year at Whitsun and in summer .
literature
- Heinrich Habel: District Illertissen . Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich 1967.
Web links
- Market book
- The history of Buch and the surrounding area (Sarah Hadry)
- Book (Swabia): Official statistics of the LfStat
Individual evidence
- ↑ "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 ).
- ^ Members of the community assembly. Verwaltungsgemeinschaft Buch, accessed on May 31, 2020 .
- ^ Municipality of Buch in the local database of the Bayerische Landesbibliothek Online . Bavarian State Library, accessed on August 22, 2019.
- ↑ Sarah Hadry: On the history of Buchs and surroundings
- ^ Joseph Bürzle: The economic and legal situation in the county of Marstetten . In the journal of the Historisches Verein für Schwaben , 1950.
- ^ 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. 790 .
- ^ Official Journal Swabia
- ^ Composition of the municipal council of the market in Buch
- ↑ Markt Buch website: Composition of the 2020 municipal council
- ↑ Entry on the coat of arms of Buch (Swabia) in the database of the House of Bavarian History
- ↑ Entry to book on the website kommunalflaggen.eu