Denzlingen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the community of Denzlingen
Denzlingen
Map of Germany, position of the municipality of Denzlingen highlighted

Coordinates: 48 ° 4 '  N , 7 ° 53'  E

Basic data
State : Baden-Württemberg
Administrative region : Freiburg
County : Emmendingen
Height : 234 m above sea level NHN
Area : 16.95 km 2
Residents: 13,544 (Dec. 31, 2018)
Population density : 799 inhabitants per km 2
Postcodes : 79211, 79312Template: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / zip code contains text
Area code : 07666
License plate : EM
Community key : 08 3 16 009
Address of the
municipal administration:
Hauptstrasse 110
79211 Denzlingen
Website : www.denzlingen.de
Mayor : Markus Hollemann ( ÖDP )
Location of the community of Denzlingen 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

Denzlingen is a municipality about ten kilometers north of Freiburg im Breisgau in the district of Emmendingen in the southwest of the state of Baden-Württemberg .

geography

location

Aerial photo of Denzlingen (2003)

The community of Denzlingen, which only consists of the village with this name, is located in the Breisgau , a southeastern part of the Upper Rhine Plain , at the foot of the Middle Black Forest . In the north of the district the Elz flows , the Glotter runs through the town itself .

Other flowing waters in the municipality are the Lossele in the east, the Schwan (also Schwanen ) in the north and the Taubenbach (formerly Daubenbach ) in the south.

From the east-southeast the Glottertal flows out of the Black Forest into the flat valley plain, which opens at a wide angle to the west to the small massif of the Kaiserstuhl , which interrupts the Rhine plain before the Rhine. In the north-east you reach the Elz Valley. On the way north you will soon reach the westernmost foothills of the Black Forest and over the Tennenbacher Tal to Freiamt .

The plain provides a view of the Kaiserstuhl and, when the view is clear, of the Vosges, about 50 km away, on the French side of the Upper Rhine Plain .

In the north of the municipality is the Mauracher Berg , a geologically interesting elevation in the Glotter and Elz plains. Other elevations on the Denzlinger district are the Einollen and the Flissert .

The municipalities of Mauracherhof and Unterdenzlingen, which were dissolved in Denzlingen, were located in the municipality. The village of Thiermondingen was located immediately to the west of today's boundary .

Neighboring communities

The following communities border Denzlingen (clockwise from the west): Vörstetten , Emmendingen , Sexau and Waldkirch in the district of Emmendingen ; Glottertal , Heuweiler and Gundelfingen in the Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald district .

View of Denzlingen from the east (2014)

climate

Denzlingen - Freiburg station (237 m)
Climate diagram
J F. M. A. M. J J A. S. O N D.
 
 
66
 
6th
-1
 
 
47
 
8th
-1
 
 
44
 
13
1
 
 
84
 
17th
4th
 
 
111
 
20th
8th
 
 
83
 
25th
13
 
 
58
 
27
14th
 
 
72
 
27
13
 
 
51
 
22nd
9
 
 
54
 
16
5
 
 
59
 
11
3
 
 
45
 
8th
0
Temperature in ° Cprecipitation in mm
Source: [1]
Average monthly temperatures and precipitation for Denzlingen - Station Freiburg (237 m)
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Max. Temperature ( ° C ) 6.3 8.1 12.6 16.9 20.3 25th 26.7 26.6 22.1 16.2 10.6 8.0 O 16.7
Min. Temperature (° C) -0.8 -0.7 1.3 3.8 8.2 12.8 13.8 13.3 9.4 5.4 2.8 0.3 O 5.8
Temperature (° C) 3.0 3.7 7.1 10.8 14.7 19.3 20.9 20.3 15.8 10.9 6.6 4.4 O 11.5
Precipitation ( mm ) 66 47 44 84 111 83 58 72 51 54 59 45 Σ 774
Rainy days ( d ) 17th 13 14th 14th 14th 12 12 12 12 12 12 15th Σ 159
T
e
m
p
e
r
a
t
u
r
6.3
-0.8
8.1
-0.7
12.6
1.3
16.9
3.8
20.3
8.2
25th
12.8
26.7
13.8
26.6
13.3
22.1
9.4
16.2
5.4
10.6
2.8
8.0
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
66
47
44
84
111
83
58
72
51
54
59
45
  Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Source: [2]

history

The nickname Langen-Denzlingen at the Denzlinger train station
The Glotter in Denzlingen (2008)
Old Denzlingen Town Hall
Kohlerhof in Denzlingen

Until the 19th century

Denzlingen was already settled in Roman times, like the remains of a villa rustica from the 2nd / 3rd centuries. Century AD at the foot of the Mauracher Berg. As the ending " -ingen " already suggests, Denzlingen is a settlement founded by the Alemanni . It was named after the tribal prince Denzilo , who settled here in the 5th century. The first written mention of the place comes from the year 984. The medieval Denzlingen consisted of two separate settlements. Niederdorf and Oberdorf, both located on the Glotter , stretched along an old path from Riegel am Kaiserstuhl to the Glottertal ( Herrenweg ). In the course of time they grew together to form an elongated street village that was nicknamed Langendenzlingen .

A local nobility is documented above all for the 12th century - for example, “a free man from Denzlingen, Ludewicus” is mentioned in the Rotulus Sanpetrinus for 1112 (shortened to: Ludwig von Denzlingen) - but this did not leave any traces in the townscape.

In 984 the monastery of Einsiedeln , 1147 the monastery St. Ulrich , 1178 the monastery Waldkirch and 1185 the monastery St. Trudpert owned in Denzlingen . From 1305 Denzlingen belonged to the margraviate of Baden-Hachberg , which was acquired by margrave Bernhard I in 1415 . It went on in the margraviate of Baden and later in the margraviate of Baden-Durlach . The church set in Denzlingen owned from 1348 the German Order Coming from Freiburg .

The Mauracherhof and Steckenhof (today Stöckenhof) areas, however, developed differently. Mauracherhof was first mentioned as Muron as early as 962, when Otto I gave the property of Count Guntram to the Breisgau diocese of Constance , which sold it to the Constance Cathedral Chapter in 1302 . Via Waldkirch Abbey (1466) and other owners, Mauracherhof finally came to the Sonntag family in 1714 and finally to the Denzlingen community in 1970. Steckenhof first belonged to the Teuffel von Birkensee and then the Roeder von Diersburg .

In the early modern period was the Einbollen iron ore mining operation, as numerous pinging show. Iron smelting took place on the southeastern slope of the Mauracher Berg as early as Roman times .

The street village was almost completely destroyed in the Thirty Years War . The battle between the imperial and Swedish troops near Denzlingen is described in the adventurous Simplicissimus by Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen .

In 1826 the town center with a new town hall was located opposite today's Gasthaus Krone . Denzlingen has grown considerably since the 19th century, especially after it was connected to the Baden railway network in 1845 ( Mannheim – Basel line ). From 1847 to 1857 many Denzlingers fled to America because of the revolutionary events of 1848 . The beginning of industrialization in the middle of the 19th century changed the image of Denzlingen from a village with a predominantly agricultural structure to an industrial location. The first major industrial operation was a cigar factory in 1867, which gave many people work until the 1960s. At times there were up to seven cigar factories in Denzlingen. New structures developed in the village, including a building association that created living space on Rosenstrasse, a health insurance company and other social institutions. Many citizens worked as a sideline in agriculture.

In the years 1869 and 1870, the south-western slope of the einollens at the valley outlet on the right above the Glotter was cleared and then used as a vineyard from 1873. The vines, visible from afar, were built in 1872 on the Einstollen-Sporn. The railway line in the direction of Waldkirch ( Elztalbahn ) was completed in 1875 and extended by twelve kilometers to Elzach in 1901 .

20th and 21st centuries

On January 31, 1911, the new Denzlinger water supply was completed with a spring well on the Einstollen and a well room on the Brestenberg. In 1911, the entrepreneur Otto Möllinger bought the former wool weaving mill in what is now the Rocca area. He built a new cigar factory and put an electric turbine into operation at the same location, which supplied Denzlingen with electricity.

During the First World War , Denzlingen, which then had a population of around 1900, lost over 70 soldiers. During the time of National Socialism in Denzlingen, which was dominated by Protestants, as in other communities of this type, there was an above-average share of the votes for the NSDAP ( Reichstag election in March 1933 : 59.6%) and a large number of party members (22 members in 1932, 239 members in the Year 1943, including the Protestant pastor). Two citizens of Denzlingen were murdered in the gas chamber of the Bernburg killing center and a Polish forced laborer was shot by a security guard in Denzlingen. In their memory, three stumbling blocks were laid in Denzlingen in 2018 . The Second World War killed over 180 soldiers from Denzlingen. In 1950 there were around 3,000 residents in Denzlingen. Rapid population growth began in the 1960s and the infrastructure was expanded. Together with the neighboring communities of Buchholz , Reute , Vörstetten and Wasser , the community founded the Mauracher Berg water association in 1959, which Glottertal , Föhrental and Heuweiler joined in 1961 and Waldkirch and Kollnau in 1971 . In 1972 and 1974, Denzlingen merged with the neighboring communities of Vörstetten and Reute to form the Denzlingen-Vörstetten-Reute community administration association.

In the east of the community, new residential areas, an education center and numerous new sports facilities were built in the 1970s and 1980s. In the 1990s, the industrial park was expanded to the west, and several well-known companies settled there.

From 1994 to 2004 the town center was renovated and redesigned. In 1996 the municipality built a new town hall as the seat of the municipal administration in Denzlingen-Vörstetten-Reute. At the same time, the old town hall, built in 1909, was completely renovated in 1998. It houses the council chamber of the municipal council and a wedding room. The old Kohlerhof farm in the center of the village was relocated . A shopping center with a promenade was built in its place. The culture and community center near the city park was inaugurated in 2003 and set new architectural and cultural accents. Well-known artists are regular guests here. In 2004 a new cultural center with media library and cultural café opened on the former Rocca factory site in the town center . New squares were created along Glotter and Rosenstrasse, a new fountain in front of the town hall and an island house near the Rocca area.

On October 29, 2009, the municipal council decided to found its own municipal utilities on January 1, 2010 (Energieversorgung Denzlingen GmbH). Martin Ziegler, treasurer from Denzlingen, is the managing director of the municipal works.

The Denzlinger Sportbad, built in 1974, was extensively renovated between 2008 and 2010 and opened on May 21, 2010. From May 2010 the community of Denzlingen built a new rescue center on Vörstetter Strasse for the local volunteer fire brigade and the German Red Cross . The total costs amounted to 3.2 million euros; it was ready for use in mid-December 2011. The roof of the new building has been equipped with a photovoltaic system, which is financed by a community energy company set up specifically for this purpose.

The first "electric charging stations" in southern Baden have been in operation in Denzlingen since July 2010. Battery-operated electric scooters can be supplied with electricity at the town hall, Denzlinger train station and the sports and family pool. In the test phase, a total of 10 electric scooters were purchased that can be used by Denzlingen citizens and community workers.

In the vicinity of the Altdenzlinger Heimethues, a new fairground was created in the course of the construction of multi-family houses in the summer of 2011, which is open to the Glotterbach and connects the Heimathues and a nearby half-timbered house as an ensemble. At the municipal council meeting on October 17, 2011 it was decided to name the new place “Festplatz am Heimethues”. In addition, a charitable community foundation was established in 2011 by the Denzlingen municipal council, which financially supports projects of various kinds on site.

In the summer of 2012, the provisional student canteen in the Denzlingen Education Center was extensively expanded and the adjoining school auditorium was fundamentally redesigned, and a new two-field sports hall was opened in January 2013 on Jahnstrasse.

View of the Georgskirche (2004)

Religions

As a former town in Baden-Durlach , Denzlingen was predominantly Protestant for a long time , but due to the large influx of people, Denzlingen is currently mostly Catholic . In 1888 the first Catholic church was consecrated after the Reformation . Today the Catholic congregation meets in the St. Jakobus Church, which was newly built in 1975–1976 .

Denomination statistics

According to the 2011 census , 31.0% of the population in 2011 were Protestant , the majority of 39.0% were Roman Catholic and 30.0% were non-denominational , belonged to another religious community or did not provide any information. The number of Protestants and Catholics has fallen since then and with around 36%, the people who do not belong to a legally or corporately constituted religious community are a majority of the population. On June 30, 2018, 35.3% of the population were Roman Catholic, 27.5% Protestant and 37.2% were non-denominational, belonged to another religious community or did not provide any information.

Population development

year Residents
1834 1,207
1899 1,613
1910 1,865
1939 2,488
1950 2,937
1960 4,099
1961 4,039
1970 6,458
1980 10.129
1990 11,567
1995 12.303
year Residents
2000 12,791
2005 13,419
2006 13,457
2007 13,517
2008 13,557
2009 13,520
2010 13,576
2010 13,712
2014 13,406
2015 13,498
Population development in Denzlingen from 1834 to 2015

December 31st

population

statistical data
gender Residents
male 6,492
Female 6,990
with German citizenship 12,331
- of which male 5,917
- of which female 6,414
with a different nationality 1,151
- of which male 575
- of which female 576
Age groups of residents
Age Population in percent
under 15 years 14.4 0 %
15-18 years 3.28%
18-25 years 7.38%
25–40 years 17.75%
40–65 years 37.05%
older than 65 years 20.14%
Employment figures
Employees at the place of work 2,510
Employees at the place of residence 4,712
Commuters 1,820
Commuters 4.022
of which female 6,414
Unemployed on December 31, 2009 267

politics

Municipal council

The election to the municipal council on May 26, 2019 led to the following result:

City council election 2019
Turnout: 62.7%
 %
30th
20th
10
0
26.6%
19.0%
13.1%
12.9%
12.6%
7.2%
4.3%
4.3%
Gains and losses
compared to 2014
 % p
   6th
   4th
   2
   0
  -2
  -4
  -6
+5.5  % p
-5.6  % p
-1.2  % p
-4.5  % p
-2.9  % p
+ 0.1  % p
+ 4.3  % p
+ 4.3  % p
Template: election chart / maintenance / notes
Remarks:
e 2014: BL / FDP 15.5%
1
3
6th
1
1
3
3
4th
6th 4th 
A total of 22 seats

Results of the municipal council elections since 2004

Parties and constituencies %
2019
Seats
2019
%
2014
Seats
2014
%
2009
Seats
2009
%
2004
Seats
2004
GREEN Alliance 90 / The Greens 26.6 6th 21.1 5 16.8 4th 17.0 4th
CDU Christian Democratic Union of Germany 19.0 4th 24.6 5 25.3 6th 29.0 6th
FW Free voters Denzlingen 13.1 3 14.3 3 12.0 2 12.9 3
SPD Social Democratic Party of Germany 12.9 3 17.4 4th 19.7 4th 22.2 5
BL Citizen List 12.6 3 - - - - - -
UB / ÖDP Independent Citizens / Ecological Democratic Party 7.2 1 7.1 2 - - - -
The party Party for work, the rule of law, animal welfare, elite support and grassroots initiative 4.3 1 - - - - - -
FDP Free Democratic Party 4.3 1 - - - - - -
BL / FDP Citizens List / Free Democratic Party - - 15.5 3 16.4 4th 18.9 4th
Per stork Citizens' campaign Pro Storch - - - - 9.8 2 - -
total 100 22nd 100 22nd 100 22nd 100 22nd
voter turnout 62.7% 50.2% 52.6% 53.4%

Youth Council

Town hall Denzlingen

In 1997 a youth council was formed in Denzlingen. After a community youth council had formed a year earlier , the first youth council election took place on May 5th and 6th, 1997. The youth council pursues the goal of making young people's wishes more heard and making Denzlingen more “youth-friendly”. He can make suggestions to the political council or make recommendations for upcoming decisions. The political council is required to always involve the youth council in the deliberations on decisions that affect children and young people. The youth council has a budget of 1,300 euros after consultation with the mayor.

The youth council is elected every two years. All young people between the ages of 14 and 20 who have their primary residence in Denzlingen are entitled to vote (postal voting is possible). The youth council has 10 seats, which are distributed as follows:

  • Erasmus high school (3)
  • Realschule am Mauracher Berg (2)
  • Alemannic Secondary School (1)
  • Free list (students who live in Denzlingen but do not attend a Denzlingen school, 4)

mayor

The mayor's office in Denzlingen was introduced with the Baden municipal code of 1831.

Lothar Fischer was mayor from 1996 to 2009. He died unexpectedly on April 13, 2009, whereupon Deputy Mayor Otto Frey (CDU) took over the business. Markus Hollemann was elected mayor on July 19, 2009 and took office on September 1, 2009. He was re-elected on May 21, 2017.

All mayors of the community of Denzlingen:

Name of the incumbent Term of office
Johann Georg Wagner 1832-1836
Christian Rappold 1836-1842
Johann Christian Strübin 1843-1861
Johann Georg Heller 1861-1866
Johann Georg Nübling 1866-1883
Ludwig Wolfsperger 1883-1895
Christian Rappold 1895-1913
Karl Friedrich Rappold 1913-1927
Rudolf Kasper 1927-1931
Karl Leimenstoll (SPD) 1931-1935
Wilhelm Meier (NSDAP) 1935-1945
Arthur Haller (independent) 1945-1954
Albert Höfflin Member of the Bundestag (CDU) 1954-1972
Wolfram Dennig (SPD, FDP) 1972-1996
Lothar Fischer (independent) 1996-2009
Markus Hollemann (ÖDP) since 2009

Administrative community

In 1972 the municipality merged with the neighboring municipality of Vörstetten to form a municipal administration association; In 1974 the community of Reute also joined. The seat of the association is in Denzlingen. The aim is to deal with administrative matters together. So the association is z. B. Providers of schools in the participating municipalities.

coat of arms

Blazon : "In a split shield in front in gold a red sloping bar, behind in blue a silver ploughshare."

The oldest seal of the Denzlingen court can be found on a document from 1458. Like a seal procured in the 16th century and one in the second half of the 18th century, it shows the coat of arms that is still valid today. Like other margravial towns, Denzlingen has the stately coat of arms in the front half of the shield. The ploughshare is documented as a Denzlinger village symbol in the ban border descriptions of the 18th century. In the 19th century, seals were made showing the Baden coat of arms , often in the upper field by the ploughshare. The thus defaced coat of arms was corrected in 1900 in line with the older coat of arms drawings and the coat of arms colors of the rear half of the shield were determined.

flag

The municipality's flag was approved by the district on May 2, 1984. It has red and yellow stripes.

Town twinning

Denzlingen maintains city partnerships with four European cities:

  • The partnership with the small French town of Saint-Cyr-sur-Mer on the Côte d'Azur in Provence ( France ), 835 kilometers away, has existed since 1974, and came into being under the sign of the Élysée Treaty .
  • The partnership with the town of North Hykeham in the central English town of Lincolnshire ( Great Britain ), 1100 kilometers from Denzlingen, has existed since 1988.
  • Another partnership connects Denzlingen with Città della Pieve in central Italian Umbria on the border with Tuscany . The partnership with the city, 860 kilometers away, has existed since 1993.
  • On June 19, 2011 the town twinning with the Polish city of Konstancin-Jeziorna was concluded. The merger represents the first city partnership with a city in the east, whereby connections to the Polish neighbors were initially established on the school level between the Denzlingen Erasmus high school and a partner school in Warsaw.

In order to underline the importance and particularity of the city partnerships, three new roundabouts were created in 1999 , the middle islands of which correspond in style and vegetation to one of the twin cities. The roundabouts are located near the train station ( Città della Pieve ), at the entrance to the Heidach residential area in Denzlingen ( Saint-Cyr-sur-Mer ) and in the Denzlingen industrial area near the fishing works ( North Hykeham ).

Economy and Infrastructure

Traditionally, Denzlingen was characterized by agriculture with viticulture and the cultivation of fruit and vegetables .

As a sub-center in the city triangle of Freiburg, Emmendingen , Waldkirch , the municipality has been able to set up a number of companies in several industrial areas in recent years ( Schölly Fiberoptic , Fischerwerke , etc.). A number of factors benefited the community on this path: Around 30,000 people live in the immediate catchment area , the university city of Freiburg is about ten kilometers away.

At the Fischer Group's plant in Denzlingen, 160 employees (as of 2020) develop and produce chemical fastening systems for the construction industry.

Many residents work in the nearby larger cities such as Freiburg and Emmendingen.

The community of Denzlingen belongs to the district of the district court of Emmendingen .

traffic

Station building by Friedrich Eisenlohr

Denzlingen is on federal highways 294 ( Bretten - Freiburg im Breisgau ) and 3 ( Buxtehude - Weil am Rhein ). The federal autobahn 5 runs a few kilometers past the place. The next interchanges are Freiburg-Nord (exit 61) and Teningen (exit 60).

The community is connected to the rail network with over 120 train connections every day. The Rheintalbahn Offenburg - Basel has a stop in Denzlingen, the Denzlingen station . The Elztalbahn (to Elzach ), on which the SWEG runs, is also connected to the Rheintalbahn there. The community belongs to the regional transport association Freiburg . The closest stop for IC and ICE trains is Freiburg im Breisgau .

The nearest airports are Freiburg Airport (10 km), Lahr Airport (46 km), and the international airports EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg (75 km), Strasbourg (75 km), Karlsruhe / Baden-Baden (100 km) , Zurich-Kloten (115 km) and Stuttgart (155 km).

media

In Denzlingen, the Badische Zeitung is offered as a regional daily newspaper , whose distribution area extends from Offenburg in the north to the Upper Rhine in the south and into the Black Forest. It appears Monday through Saturday, except on public holidays. On Sunday the advertising paper Der Sonntag in Freiburg comes from the same publishing house . The weekly newspaper Von Haus zu Haus , founded in 1966, appears weekly on Thursdays and is distributed free of charge to all households. It is the official gazette for the municipality of Denzlingen and contains official notices and information from the municipality.

education

Denzlingen Education Center in October 2008

Of the seven kindergartens in the community, three each are run by the Protestant and Catholic parishes, while a forest and nature kindergarten is privately owned.

All types of schools are represented locally in Denzlingen.

  • The primary school in Denzlingen is located on Grüner Weg and has a branch in Hauptstraße.
  • The Otto Raupp School is a special school for children with learning difficulties.

In the Denzlingen education center are

  • the Alemannenschule, a Werkrealschule
  • the secondary school on Mauracher Berg
  • the Erasmus high school

For the 2019/20 school year, the Realschule am Mauracher Berg and the Alemannen-Werkrealschule were combined to form the “Verbundschule am Denzlinger Bildungszentrum”, which has been called the “ Ruth-Cohn School” since 2020 .

Distribution of pupils in schools in Denzlingen in the school year 2014/15
type of school absolute number of students percentage
primary school 476 25.20%
Werkrealschule 137 07.25%
secondary school 655 34.67%
high school 583 30.86%
special school 038 02.01%
total 1889 100%

Two after-school care centers in the extension to the Grüner Weg schoolhouse and in the Hauptstraße schoolhouse, both sponsored by the AWO , offer homework supervision and afternoon care for the students. Since 2004, a school cafeteria in the auditorium of the education center has also been supplying students and teachers during lunch breaks. A school social worker has been responsible for the social needs of students and teachers since January 2008.

Citizens Energy Cooperative Denzlingen

In the course of the mayoral election in 2009, some applicants expressed the idea of ​​wanting to found a citizens' energy cooperative. When the community built a new rescue center near the Denzlinger Bahn in 2010, the number of votes increased to install a photovoltaic system on the roof of the new building and to take up the idea from the election campaign again. Since the state guaranteed a subsidy for such systems until June 30, 2011, citizens of Denzling founded a citizens' energy cooperative in order to realize the financing. Cooperative shares worth 100 euros could be subscribed, whereby at least three shares had to be subscribed. Immediately after the first information evening, a sum of over 175,000 euros had already been subscribed by May 12. As of June 3, this sum had increased to over 600,000 euros, so that construction of the plant could begin. Since more shares than required were subscribed, further projects such as photovoltaic and wind power plants are to be implemented on site from the excess sum of money.

Culture and sights

Culture & community center (view from the north)
Denzlinger Rocca (Mediathek Kultur Café, view from the south)
Glotterrad with fish ladder at the Rocca
Denzlinger Heimathues

The cultural life of the community got two new centers in 2003 and 2004: the culture & community center and the Rocca area.

The Kultur- & Bürgerhaus emerged from a Europe-wide competition and was funded by the German Federal Environment Foundation (DBU) as an innovative, exemplary project . In 2003, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung called it a “masterpiece of contemporary architecture”. The building is elongated, the roof slightly curved and the facade structured horizontally. It is surrounded by an artificial lake and houses a restaurant in the south-western part. In the large hall with stage and gallery, the small hall and the foyer with gallery, events are held as part of the cultural program of local associations and external organizers. Every two years, most recently in October 2017, the working group of cultural associations in Denzlingen e. V. held a culture week in the culture and community center, during which the Denzlinger culture prize is awarded. The concert cycle, which has been organized by the Denzlinger Kulturkreis for 23 years, offers five chamber concerts a year. In September 2010 the international, so-called “ Between the Beats ” jazz festival took place for the first time on the grounds of the Kultur- & Bürgerhaus .

The Rocca area in the town center from 1894 was initially a wool weaving mill, from 1911 to 1960 a cigar factory and then until 1999 the Rocca KG production facility for chemical building products. In 1996 the municipality of Denzlingen bought the area in order to use it for cultural activities as part of a town center redevelopment. In the same year the association " roccafé " was founded, which contributed to the planning and development of the center. From 2002 to 2004 the factory buildings were renovated, a new staircase tower was built and the surrounding area was redesigned. At the point where the first electricity was generated in Denzlingen, renewable energy is now being generated again with the “Glotterrad” and used for the Rocca area. The former superintendent House, the so-called " island home ", are now a World Shop and the Denzlinger Malkreis. Since 2004 the Rocca area has housed the Denzlinger media library , the so-called "Kulturcafé" and an event hall with a small stage, in which the roccafé club and other associations offer a cabaret program with music, theater, cinema, lectures, etc. Around 17,000 media (books, magazines, audio books, music on CD and cassette, learning software, games, etc.) are available for loan in the media library. The media library has set itself the task of promoting reading and promoting media skills among children and young people. A development association supports the work with readings by authors, book flea markets and other events.

In the gallery in the old town hall there are regular art exhibitions of the Denzlinger Kulturkreis. In the new town hall, in the roccafé and in the media library, works by local artists can be seen again and again.

In the Alt-Denzlinger Heimethues ("Heimathaus"), a farm complex with a house, barn, stable and cellar, the local history association has set up a museum that shows the living and working conditions of past times.

Recreational facilities

Denzlingen sports and family pool

Sports and family pool

The Denzlingen sports pool was built in 1973/74 and, after 33 years of continuous operation, was fundamentally renovated from October 2008 to May 2010 and redesigned as a sports and family pool. On May 21, 2010 the pool was reopened under the name “MACH 'BLAU”. The pool is located on the Mauracher Berg. The new pool includes four outdoor pools, a sports and swimming pool, a diving pool with a 10-meter diving tower, a non-swimmer pool with a slide and a children's pool, three indoor pools, a swimming pool, a non-swimmer pool and a children's pool, and a combined year-round pool with a Indoor and an outdoor area. New sunbathing areas, sanitary facilities and an enlarged toddler area were created in the outdoor pool. In the course of the renovation work, the sauna area was also expanded. The cost of the renovation amounted to 10 million euros.

Offers for children and young people

The Denzlingen youth club was created as a contact point for children and young people. It is located on Hindenburgstrasse and is maintained by the Denzlingen youth welfare service. Several pedagogical specialists are employed full-time and carry out group offers, free time, hut weekends and adventure-based educational activities. During the summer vacation, the youth care department offers two-week vacation care for children and young people.

The self-managed youth center (Aktion Jugendzentrum Denzlingen e.V.) is located under the gym in Mühlengasse. It is open regularly during the week and there are also concerts and activities for young people. The week-long “cool tour” with concerts, film evenings and panel discussions takes place every autumn.

Since November 2010 there has been a covered meeting point for young people at the corner of Elzstrasse and Glottertalstrasse, which was set up in voluntary work by employees of the Denzlingen building yard and committed young people.

music

With over 300 members, the Concordia Choirs are one of the largest associations in Denzlingen. The association's oldest choir is the male choir , which was founded in 1845. In 1977 a mixed choir was founded and in 1998 the Denzlinger Pop and Jazz Choir. The Musikverein Denzlingen was founded in 1864 and consists of a main orchestra with 55 active club members. The Denzlinger Kulturkreis organizes a chamber music cycle with five concerts every year in the Kultur- und Bürgerhaus (23rd cycle in 2014/15).

Buildings

Stapfelehus with apex
Gaus House (left half of the picture)
Michaelskirche (stork tower)

The Stapfelehus is Denzlingen's oldest house and the only one that survived the Thirty Years War. The year 1597 and the symbol of the baker's guild are on an arched stone .

The Gaus-Haus , a half-timbered house , was built in 1728 and was once part of a large estate called the Adelhof .

In the former Romanesque Michaelskirche in the center of the lower village, first mentioned in 1275 , frescoes and paintings by the Denzlingen painter Theodor Zeller , who died in 1986, are exhibited. From 1457 the church was mentioned as a chapel, in 1608 it was used as a fruit store and in 1713 it was used as a warehouse by French troops. The church was destroyed in the Thirty Years War. Parts of the destroyed church were auctioned off to citizens or used as material for the construction of the Georgskirche. It was not until 1757 that the margrave ordered the restoration. However, the nave was not rebuilt as planned, but torn down, the tower and walls were preserved. In 1813 the community bought the tower and used it as a storage room for the fire brigade . In 1908 the tower was referred to as the "Stork Tower" for the first time. Today there is a nest intended for storks on it. In 1978 Theodor Zeller painted the former sacristy of the stork tower. Storks have been settling on the tower again since 1983 and since 1995 they have been observed on a monitor at Altdenzlinger Heimethues using a video camera. In 2002 the Heimatverein installed a sundial on the south side.

The St. Severin church ruin is located on Mauracher Berg and is dated 1497. Historical documents mention “eclesia in Muron or Gloter”, the church in Maurach and a parish in Glotter . The patronage was first mentioned in 1488 with “S. Severini im Murach ”mentioned. A red sandstone plate with a representation of St. Severin was found a few years ago within the church ruins. It is located in the Catholic St. James Church.

Protestant churches

Georgskirche Denzlingen

The oldest surviving parts of St. George's Church , first mentioned in 1302 and evangelical since 1556, date from the 14th century. The lower floor of the tower has Gothic windows from the 14th century and is decorated with murals from the 15th century, which were exposed again in 1961. The tower was built in its current size and appearance in 1547. Instead of a closed roof, it is decorated with an open spire with a spiral staircase that is visible from the outside . Seen from the inside, the struts of the parapet form the beginning of the Ave Maria (AVE MARIA GRACIA PLENA DOMINUS TECUM), the year of construction in Roman numerals (MDXLVII) and Hachberg's coat of arms . The building of the tower was commissioned by Margrave Ernst I of Baden (1515–1553). The spiral staircase is considered to be the oldest in the world on a church tower and is of great art historical importance. It is a staircase shape that was only recently known in Europe by Francesco di Giorgio Martini (1439–1501) and Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519); their handwritten notes had not yet been published at the time the stairs were built. Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528) dealt in the Underweysung of Measurement… with spiral constructions that were published in 1525, about ten years before the Denzlinger tower was built. It can be concluded that the builder was familiar with Dürer's work. In 1635 and 1691 the church tower was badly damaged in fires. In 1756 the church interior was expanded to its present size, and in 1861 extensive sandstone work was carried out on the building. From 1959 to 1961 the church tower and bells were renovated and the interior of the church was rebuilt. In 2002 the tower was re-plastered and the tower and church repainted. In 2006 a stork's nest was installed on the church roof.

Catholic churches

View of the St. Joseph's Church
St. James Church
New Apostolic Church

In 1888 on the foundations of Waldkircher Zehntscheuer one the St. Joseph consecrated makeshift church erected. It fulfilled its function as the Catholic church in Denzlingen until 1913, after which a small Catholic children's school was opened in the building , in which around 35 children were regularly cared for. Today the St. Josefs Kindergarten is housed there.

Today's St. Joseph's Church was built in 1912 and 1913 after the growing population made it necessary to build a new church. It originally stood as the St. Boniface Church in Emmendingen since 1863 and was to give way to a larger church there. It was demolished in 1912 stone by stone, transported by ox cart to Denzlingen and there, with a tower instead of roof skylights and a semicircular apse built up again. In 1913 the church was consecrated by the Freiburg auxiliary bishop. The current rectory was also built in the period 1912–1913.

In addition to the building blocks, benches and the pulpit were taken over from the Catholic Church in Emmendingen. The organ comes from Schonach . On the ceiling of St. Joseph's Church there is a ceiling painting depicting the Twelve Apostles . Two painted church windows show Saint Severin and Saint Boniface .

The Archdiocese of Freiburg was considering demolishing St. Joseph's Church in order to make room for a new building. Some citizens of Denzlingen campaigned successfully for the preservation of the church. The St. Joseph Guardianship was formed, which has since taken care of the maintenance and care of the church and the surrounding area. In 2000 the Glotterbrücke in front of the church and the entrance area were renewed. In 2008, some benches on the left side of the interior were removed to make space for a new baptismal font.

In 2006 the St. Josef Foundation was set up to collect donations for the maintenance of the church. Today, in addition to regular evening and Saturday services, the church also hosts funeral services, weddings and baptisms.

With the new construction of the Catholic St. Jakobus Church from 1975–1976 in the Stuttgarter Straße / Berliner Straße area, Catholic life in the community shifted. The architect was Heinz Baron from Freiburg, the interior design took many years and was in the hands of the Denzlingen painter Theodor Zeller and the Breisach sculptor Helmut Lutz , who also created a St. James sculpture on the outside wall of the church.

New Apostolic Churches

In 2006 a New Apostolic Church was consecrated in Denzlingen. In her function, she followed a church that had been in Zähringer Strasse since 1960.

Parks

The Denzlingen City Park is located between the Denzlingen Education Center and part of the Denzlingen development area. With the construction of the Denzlinger Kultur- und Bürgerhaus, the city park was expanded in a southerly direction and since then it has extended to the Glottertalstrasse. There are various sculptures in the park .

Panoramic picture of Denzlingen city park

Fountain

Europe fountain

Europe fountain near the St. Jakobus Church

The Denzlingen Europe Fountain near the St. Jakobus Church was inaugurated in 2008. It had already been provisionally set up as mash ore on Walpurgis Night 2005 in the center of Denzlingen in front of the Otto Raupp primary school . The fountain was very popular with the population of Denzlingen. As a sign of the town twinning with Città della Pieve , North Hykeham and Saint-Cyr-sur-Mer , it was christened the European Fountain .

Bag carrier fountain

Bag carrier fountain

The bag carrier fountain is located on the main road just before leaving the village in the direction of Glottertal. There used to be an oil and mustard mill at this point. In 1974, the Breisach sculptor Helmut Lutz designed the fountain system from the grinding trough and the grinding stone of the former mill . The fountain is popularly called Sackträgerbrunnen, in memory of the hard work of the miller, formerly also called an oiler.

Town hall fountain

With the new construction of the town hall, a new fountain was created on the town hall square. From a spring basin in front of the old town hall, water flows from the Glotterbach over several steps into an arched stream. In the past, the fountain was redesigned several times by Denzling associations on Walpurgis Night as mash ore.

1000 year celebration fountain

"1000 year celebration" fountain

In 1984 the 1000 year celebration took place with a big party in the school yard of the education center. Several associations in Denzlingen set up a historic village in the middle of the schoolyard. To commemorate this, the participating associations donated a fountain in a green area in front of the Raiffeisen cooperative.

Sports

The most successful athlete from Denzlingen is the cyclist Christian Meyer , who won a gold medal at the 1992 Summer Olympics . Mark Pinger from Denzlingen won a bronze medal in swimming at the same Olympic Games. Former professional cyclist Mike Kluge , u. a. World champion cyclocross professionals 1992, also lives in Denzlingen. Before moving from SC Freiburg to FC Bayern Munich in mid-2008, soccer world and European champion Melanie Behringer worked in a local printing company.

Sports facilities

Denzlingen has several sports facilities, including four sports halls. The school sports hall at the education center on Stuttgarter Straße is Denzlingen's largest sports hall with three small fields and a weight room. Other sports halls are the Jahnhalle west of the education center (one small field), the ball sports hall north of the education center (two fields) and a gym with an attached hard court on Mühlengasse. There is also an athletics stadium and a beach volleyball facility near the education center. The Einollenstadion football stadium of FC Denzlingen is located east of the village and has a large playing field, two smaller playing fields and an artificial turf field. The Denzlingen sports pool with a ten-meter outdoor jump facility is located north of the city park at the foot of the Mauracher mountain.

sports clubs

The local FC Denzlingen was founded in 1928. The first men's team plays in the Association League South Baden and was South Baden Cup winner in 1998 and South Baden champion in 1999 and 2009. The first women's team won the South Baden championship in 2010 and 2011. The club's venue is the single-ball stadium in Denzlingen. FC Denzlingen has been organizing an indoor soccer tournament called Denzlinger Nacht since 1988 in January .

The Turnverein Denzlingen (TV Denzlingen) was founded in 1904 and with 1,600 members is the largest sports club in the area. Numerous sports are offered in seven departments, including handball (together with SV Waldkirch as SG Waldkirch / Denzlingen), judo, athletics, skiing, table tennis, gymnastics and volleyball. An athletics stadium and a beach volleyball facility at the education center are regularly used for club events.

The Denzlingen swimming team was created in 1999 from the old swimming department of TV Denzlingen. The offer of the club covers the entire grassroots as well as competitive sport.

The RSV Breisgauperle Denzlingen cycling club, which existed from 1952 to 2016, was active in several sectors, including cycling, artistic cycling and mountain biking. In 2005 the club hosted the indoor cycling world championships in Freiburg .

The Denzlingen tennis club (TC Denzlingen) was founded in 1956 and has more than 300 members. Several clay courts on Jahnstrasse near the city park serve as a playground.

The billiards club PS Denzlingen , which played as BSC Freiburg-Kaiserstuhl from 2004 to 2006 in the 2nd Bundesliga and won the German Team Cup in 2011 , has been based in Denzlingen since 2015.

Events

Denzlingen's oldest fool's guild : the Welschkorn ghosts, founded in 1972

Others

  • The traditional costume in Denzlingen is the Markgräfler costume .
  • The Gasthaus Rebstock-Stube , which is located in the former council chamber opposite the Storchenturm, once received a Michelin star .

Personalities

Honorary citizen

  • 1900: Johann Michael Manger, main teacher
  • 1911: Friedrich Heckmann, main teacher

Theophil Rehm (1896–1970), the former NSDAP district leader of Emmendingen, who was granted honorary citizenship in 1933, was revoked in 2010 because of “unworthy behavior”; no particular activity in Denzlingen could be established.

Winner of the Denzlinger Culture Prize

  • 2003: Michael Leuschner for "his outstanding achievements as a pianist" and "his cultural commitment in the community of Denzlingen, in particular through the chamber music cycles he initiated and organized"
  • 2005: Dieter Ohmberger for "his outstanding achievements as a historian and local writer" and "his cultural commitment to the community of Denzlingen"
  • 2007: Marianne Rappold for "her ambitious achievements as a director and actress" and "her cultural commitment to founding and leading the YMCA theater group in Denzlingen for 20 years"
  • 2009: Petronella Rußer-Grüning for "her involvement in various choirs in the community of Denzlingen and her musical series at the primary school, with which she has brought many children to top performances"
  • 2011: Werner Schwan for "his decades of commitment to the Denzlinger Literaturkreis"
  • 2013: Marianne Maul for "her extraordinary commitment in the field of fine arts and many years of work in the working group 'fine arts'"
  • 2015: Harald Aigeldinger for "his [...] committed work for the music association and the culture in the community"
  • 2017: Sebastian Anders, who "has enriched cultural life in Denzlingen for years, as a musician as well as behind the stage, in the control room as responsible for the lighting and sound technology and as a composer and arranger of many works"
  • 2019: Monika Holubarsch for "the more than 30 years of commitment of the initiator and director of the ecumenical children and youth choir"

Other personalities

  • Kurt Abels (1928–2014), Dr. phil., Professor of German Language and Literature at the Freiburg University of Education, lived in Denzlingen.
  • Norbert Baha (* 1952), PhD historian, textbook author ( Historia: history book for high schools ) and non-fiction author ( wineries in Baden ), lives in Denzlingen.
  • Harald Becker (* 1953), entrepreneur and racing car driver (including DTM ), grew up in Denzlingen.
  • Christian Billich (* 1987), ice hockey player, lived in Denzlingen.
  • Steven Billich (* 1993), former ice hockey player, lived in Denzlingen.
  • Karl Büchner (1910–1981), Dr. phil., 1943–1976 Professor of Classical Philology in Freiburg, died in Denzlingen.
  • Wolfram Burgard (* 1961) Dr. rer. nat., Professor of Autonomous Intelligent Systems at the Institute for Computer Science at the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg , winner of the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize 2009, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Joseph Maria Benedikt Clauss (1868–1949), Catholic clergyman, was parish curate in Denzlingen from 1919 to 1925.
  • Matthias Deutschmann (* 1958), cabaret artist and chess player, spent his youth in Denzlingen.
  • Dietrich Elchlepp (* 1938), politician, has lived in Denzlingen since 1972.
  • Johannes Fecht (1636–1716), Protestant theologian, was pastor in Denzlingen from 1666 to 1667.
  • Andreas Fervers (* 1957), composer, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Dieter Geuenich (* 1943), Dr. phil., professor of medieval history in Freiburg (1982–1987) and Duisburg (1989–2008), was chairman of the Denzlingen working group for cultural associations until 2015 and has lived in Denzlingen since 1973.
  • Hans Peter Haller (1929–2006), composer, died in Denzlingen.
  • Clara Halouska (* 2000), actress, grew up in Denzlingen.
  • Maximilian Heidenreich (* 1967), former soccer player, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Albert Höfflin (* 1925), Mayor of Denzlingen from 1954 to 1972 and member of the Baden-Württemberg state parliament from 1965 to 1971, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Carola Horstmann (* 1948), German author who writes mainly in her Alemannic dialect, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Tabea Hug (* 2002), actress, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Hanno Hurth (* 1963), local politician, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Mike Kluge (* 1962), cyclist and cyclocross world champion in 1992, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Hanka Kupfernagel (* 1974), German champion, European champion and world champion in cycling, lived in Denzlingen.
  • Peter Liesenfeld (* 1966), cook, worked in the Rebstock room .
  • Fritz Maass (1910–2005), theologian, lived in Denzlingen
  • Till Mansmann (* 1968), politician, went to school in Denzlingen.
  • Gregor Marstaller (* 1984), actor, was born in Denzlingen.
  • Christian Meisel (* 1987), athlete, several medals at German championships.
  • Hans Meisel (* 1961), former soccer player, FC Bayern Munich and SC Freiburg.
  • Christian Meyer (* 1969), cyclist and Olympic champion, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Anton Petri (1928–2005), teacher, choir director, conductor and book author, lived temporarily in Denzlingen.
  • Otto Heinrich Raupp (1867–1945), theologian and village school teacher, was pastor of the Georgskirche in Denzlingen from 1919 to 1938.
  • Jörg Rehn (1918–2002), surgeon and university professor, died in Denzlingen.
  • Albrecht Rosenstengel (1912–1995), composer, died in Denzlingen.
  • Andreas Scheuerpflug (* 1967), beach volleyball player, grew up in Denzlingen.
  • Dirk Schindelbeck (* 1952), author, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Ortwin-Wolfgang Schmidt (* 1944), former Romanian national handball player and handball trainer, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Christian Schumann (* 1983), conductor, grew up in Denzlingen.
  • Wolf-Dieter Sick (1925–2013), geographer and professor, died in Denzlingen.
  • Johann Philipp Sonntag (1778–1845), paper manufacturer and politician, was born in Denzlingen.
  • Alexandra Stegmann (* 1983), former soccer player, went to school in Denzlingen.
  • Ferenc Vozar (1945–1999), ice hockey player, died in Denzlingen.
  • Patrick Vozar (* 1974), former ice hockey player, lives in Denzlingen.
  • Meinolf Wewel (* 1931), publisher, has lived in Denzlingen since 1979.
  • Kurt Wiemers (1920–2006), Dr. med., professor of anesthesiology in Freiburg, died in Denzlingen.
  • Theodor Zeller (1900–1986), painter and artist, lived in Denzlingen from 1929.

literature

  • Dieter Geuenich , Dieter Ohmberger: Denzlingen - Volume 1 - From the beginnings to the Thirty Years War (962 / 984–1648) , 2013, Medienhaus Denzlingen.
  • Dieter Geuenich, Dieter Ohmberger: Denzlingen - Volume 2 - From the Thirty Years War to the end of the Second World War (1648–1948) , 2010, Medienhaus Denzlingen.

Web links

Commons : Denzlingen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg - Population by nationality and gender on December 31, 2018 (CSV file) ( help on this ).
  2. a b Landscape plan of the municipal administration association Denzlingen - Vörstetten - Reute ( Memento from January 3, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), denzlingen-online.de, April 12, 2006, accessed on January 28, 2012 (PDF; 1.4 MB).
  3. Map of the Denzlingen district in 1813 , inserted in Denzlingen - past, present, future , issue 6/7, year 1978.
  4. ^ The state of Baden-Württemberg. Official description by district and municipality. Volume IV: Administrative district Freiburg Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1978, ISBN 3-17-007174-2 , pp. 205-206.
  5. a b The "Roman" Mauracher Hof. spurensuchen-denzlingen.de, accessed on July 26, 2019 .
  6. a b c d history ( memento from April 25, 2018 in the Internet Archive ), denzlingen-online.de, accessed on July 29, 2019.
  7. Julius Kindler von Knobloch : Upper Baden gender book , Volume 1, Heidelberg 1898, p. 213 ( digitized version of the Heidelberg University Library ).
  8. ^ A b Franz Xaver Kraus : The art monuments of the Grand Duchy of Baden , Volume 6, Tübingen 1904, p. 127 ( digitized version of the Heidelberg University Library ).
  9. 900 eventful years , glottertal.de, 2012, PDF: 3.31 MB.
  10. a b Denzlingen - old community ~ part of town. leo-bw.de, accessed on July 26, 2019 .
  11. Mauracherhof - up. leo-bw.de, accessed on July 26, 2019 .
  12. ^ A b Johann Wilhelm Schmidt: Geographical statistical, topographical description of the Electorate of Baden. First part, contains the Baden margraviate , Karlsruhe 1804, p. 352 ( digitized from Google Books )
  13. Camill Macklot: Universal-Lexikon vom Großherzogthum Baden , Karlsruhe 1844, p. 765 ( digitized from Google Books )
  14. Camill Macklot: Universal-Lexikon vom Großherzogthum Baden , Karlsruhe 1844, p. 1037 ( digitized at Google Books )
  15. Mining around the Einsteins. spurensuchen-denzlingen.de, accessed on July 26, 2019 .
  16. Denzlingen had an ore gallery in the Middle Ages - it was probably not productive , Badische Zeitung, July 23, 2019, accessed on July 26, 2019.
  17. History - From the cigar factory to the modern media library with a culture café ( Memento from January 4, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), denzlingen-online.de, accessed on June 27, 2017.
  18. Dieter Geuenich, Dieter Ohmberger: Denzlingen - Volume 2 - From the Thirty Years' War to the end of the Second World War (1648–1948) , 2010, Medienhaus Denzlingen, pp. 102–106.
  19. Dieter Geuenich, Dieter Ohmberger: Denzlingen - Volume 2 - From the Thirty Years War to the end of the Second World War (1648–1948) , 2010, Medienhaus Denzlingen, pp. 122–124.
  20. 50 years of the Mauracher Berg water supply association ( memento from January 3, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), denzlingen-online.de, accessed on July 29, 2019.
  21. Municipal works begin on January 1 ( memento from April 13, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, accessed on December 20, 2010.
  22. Energieversorgung Denzlingen ( Memento from April 25, 2018 in the Internet Archive ), denzlingen-online.de, accessed on July 31, 2015.
  23. Sports and family pool is in operation ( Memento from March 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, accessed on December 20, 2010.
  24. ^ First "engraving" for the rescue center ( memento from November 29, 2015 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, accessed on December 20, 2010.
  25. ^ A common house for the rescuers ( Memento from March 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, January 23, 2012, accessed on July 31, 2015.
  26. ^ Rescue Center Denzlingen ( Memento from July 30, 2015 in the Internet Archive ), feuerwehr-denzlingen.info, accessed on July 31, 2015.
  27. Denzlingen Rescue Center ( Memento from January 4, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), denzlingen-online.de, accessed on July 29, 2019.
  28. a b Citizens should collect energy themselves ( memento from March 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, accessed on June 8, 2011.
  29. ^ Denzlingen: Natural energy for electric scooters ( Memento from February 26, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, accessed on December 20, 2010.
  30. Municipal council: “Festplatz am Heimethues”, Denzling municipal council has found a new name ( Memento from August 14, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, accessed on October 21, 2011.
  31. ^ Denzlingen: Funding of Projects ( Memento of August 14, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, accessed on November 27, 2011.
  32. School canteen goes into operation in 2012 ( Memento from April 16, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, accessed on November 10, 2014.
  33. Even more space for ball sports ( Memento from July 30, 2015 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, December 29, 2012, accessed on July 31, 2015.
  34. ^ Religion , 2011 census
  35. a b c d Information brochure of the community of Denzlingen 2018–2020 (PDF), denzlingen.de → Download area → Denzlingen information brochure .
  36. Numbers, data and facts from the community of Denzlingen as of June 30, 2018 , denzlingen.de, accessed on February 6, 2020.
  37. a b Our place ( memento from April 25, 2018 in the Internet Archive ), denzlingen-online.de, accessed on July 29, 2019.
  38. Local elections 2019 in Denzlingen: Result ( memento from June 2, 2019 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, May 27, 2019, accessed on June 2, 2019.
  39. a b Final results of the municipal elections in 2009 with comparative data from 2004: Denzlingen municipality (Emmendingen district) ( Memento from August 30, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )
  40. a b Local elections in Denzlingen ( memento from April 11, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, June 8, 2009.
  41. Municipal council for young people is being streamlined ( Memento from May 19, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, March 9, 2017, accessed on May 23, 2017.
  42. JGR Wahl 2017 ( memento from August 30, 2018 in the Internet Archive ), jgr-denzlingen.de, accessed on May 23, 2017.
  43. ^ Youth facilities ( Memento from April 25, 2018 in the Internet Archive ), denzlingen-online.de, accessed on July 29, 2019.
  44. Dieter Geuenich, Dieter Ohmberger: Denzlingen - Volume 2 - From the Thirty Years' War to the end of the Second World War (1648–1948) , 2010, Medienhaus Denzlingen, pp. 138/139.
  45. Hollemann is the new mayor of Denzlingen ( memento from March 3, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, accessed on December 20, 2010.
  46. Markus Hollemann remains Mayor of Denzlingen ( Memento from May 23, 2017 in the Internet Archive ), Badische Zeitung, May 21, 2017, accessed on May 23, 2017.
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