Diedelsheim

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Diedelsheim
City of Bretten
Coat of arms of the former municipality of Diedelsheim
Coordinates: 49 ° 2 ′ 29 ″  N , 8 ° 40 ′ 46 ″  E
Height : 179 m
Area : 7.07 km²
Residents : 3678  (Apr 30, 2018)
Population density : 520 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : 1st January 1975
Postal code : 75015
Area code : 07252

Diedelsheim has been part of the large district town of Bretten in Baden-Württemberg since 1975 with around 3678 inhabitants and is located at an altitude of 160  m above sea level. NN .

history

Remains of a villa rustica excavated in 2004/2005 , a Roman manor, bear witness to an ancient settlement .

Diedelsheim was first mentioned in a document in 767. In the Lorsch Codex , the village appeared under the name "Teutinsheim" and later "Ditinesheim", which included donations from various owners in the Diedelsheim district to the Lorsch monastery.

In the 14th century, three fiefs were mentioned in the fief book of the Speyer von Diedelsheim monastery. The counts Katzenellenbogen, the lords of Sternenfels and the Kechler von Schwandorf were the tenors of the village of Diedelsheim at that time. The Kechler von Schwandorf were able to keep the rights that had existed for four centuries until the 18th century. In 1749 Franz Maximilian Kechler von Schwandorf sold the fiefs and owners of the village to the Palatinate.

Like all other communities in the Electoral Palatinate on the right bank of the Rhine, Diedelsheim also came to the Grand Duchy of Baden in 1803 through the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss . Until 1936, Diedelsheim was assigned to the Bretten district office and when it was dissolved it came to the Karlsruhe district . On January 1, 1975, the place was incorporated into the city of Bretten. In Diedelsheim there is a local council with mayor and a local administration. However, the town hall in Bretten is superordinate.

In 2017, Diedelsheim, like the city of Bretten, celebrated its 1250th birthday. For this purpose, a ceremony was organized in the school sports hall and then a festival mile in which the local clubs participated.

Economy and Infrastructure

education

  • Protestant kindergarten "Noah's Ark"
  • Catholic kindergarten (including day care center) "St.Stephanus"
  • Private day care center “FAM e. V. "
  • Primary school ("Schwandorfgrundschule", formerly with secondary school - was spun off)
  • Special school ("Pestalozzi School")
  • Evangelical village church
  • Catholic Church

economy

Various retail stores, craft businesses, bank branches, restaurants, shopping center on the Diedelsheimer Höhe.

traffic

Transport links via the former S9 light rail line, now RB17c (level crossing with stop). Trains run in the direction of Bruchsal and Stuttgart .

Bus route 146 via Bretten to the Ruit district. From there via Bretten and Rinklingen back to Diedelsheim.

Direct road connection to federal highways 35 , 293 and 294 .

Special structures

Evangelical Church seen from the old cemetery

Town hall, church, the former moated castle, Haus Renschler (oldest half-timbered house in Alte Poststrasse)

leisure

Three children's playgrounds, skater area, soccer field, playground, tennis courts, gymnasium and swimming pool, barbecue area with hut, clubs, football / baseball field made of artificial turf

Others

In the south of the village, a large area of ​​an old stoneware factory lay fallow for a long time , which is now being rebuilt. There are condominiums and a mixed area under the name "Steinzeugpark".

literature

  • Helmut Kumlin: Ortssippenbuch Diedelsheim, district of Bretten, Baden (= Badische Ortssippenbuch . 63). Interest group Badischer Ortssippenbücher, Lahr-Dinglingen 1995 (processed period 1599–1995).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Bretten in numbers. In: bretten.de, accessed on November 17, 2019.
  2. Heidemarie Leins: Interesting exhibitions in Diedelsheim's town center and festival mile on June 24-25, 2017. In: kraichgau-news.de, June 13, 2017, accessed on November 15, 2019 (with a photo of the entrance to villa rustica in Diedelsheim).
  3. ^ 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. 482 .
  4. ^ Christian Schweizer: Ceremony for the 1250th anniversary: ​​"I'm not afraid of Diedelsheim". In: kraichgau-news.de, June 25, 2017, accessed on November 15, 2019.
  5. ↑ The timetable change on June 9th brings significant changes to the Karlsruhe - Pforzheim - Stuttgart and Bruchsal - Bretten - Mühlacker - Stuttgart routes. In: kvv.de. Karlsruher Verkehrsverbund , May 29, 2019, accessed on August 29, 2019.