Dietschweiler

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Dietschweiler
Local community Nanzdietschweiler
Coordinates: 49 ° 26 ′ 20 ″  N , 7 ° 26 ′ 4 ″  E
Height : 225 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 351  (Jun 30, 2007)
Incorporation : 7th June 1969
Postal code : 66909
Area code : 06383
Dietschweiler (Rhineland-Palatinate)
Dietschweiler

Location of Dietschweiler in Rhineland-Palatinate

Dietschweiler is part of the municipality of Nanzdietschweiler in the Rhineland-Palatinate district of Kusel . Until 1969 the place was an independent municipality. However, it does not have legal status as a local district.

location

Dietschweiler is located in the southwestern part of the local community on the orographic left bank of the Glan . The district is 364.91 hectares. The Ochsenbach and the Lützelbach, both of which flow into the Glan, flow through the village. Part of the right Glanseite also belongs to Dietschweiler, such as the Kreuz suburb including the Dietschweiler mill . In addition, the Lützelbacherhof also belongs to the place.

history

Dietschweiler was first mentioned in a document in 1437 as Diezwiler ; In 1477 the place was called Dyzweiler . The settlement area in both places extended on both sides of the Glans. The Hornbach Monastery got that part to the left of the Glans, the right side remained in the possession of the Holy Roman Empire . The latter eventually developed into Nanzdiezweiler. Dietschweiler later came into the possession of the Von der Leyen family .

From 1798 to 1814, when the Palatinate was part of the French Republic (until 1804) and then part of the Napoleonic Empire , Dietschweiler was incorporated into the canton of Waldmohr in the Saardepartement . In 1816 the place changed to the Kingdom of Bavaria and belonged to the Landkommissariat Homburg in the Rhine district .

In 1928 the place had 329 inhabitants, of which 189 were Protestant and 140 were Catholic and who lived in 52 residential buildings.

In the course of the Rhineland-Palatinate administrative reform, Dietschweiler was merged with the neighboring towns of Nanzweiler and Nanzdiezweiler to form the new local community of Nanzdietschweiler.

Population development

In 1824 there were 269 people in Dietschweiler. In 1928 the number rose to 329. At the time of incorporation into the newly created local community Nanzdietschweiler in 1969, the place had 351 inhabitants. In the following period the population stagnated; in 2007 there were also 351 people living on site.

Infrastructure

Dietschweiler has a primary school that is responsible for the entire municipality of Nanzdietschweiler and comprises four classes. There used to be a post office on site. With the local Protestant church and a cross house in Hauptstrasse 50, there are also two cultural monuments in the village .

traffic

Street

Entrance building of the Dietschweiler train station

State road 358 , which runs from Glan-Münchweiler to Bruchmühlbach, runs through Dietschweiler . District road 10 coming from Börsborn also ends in Dietschweiler ,

rail

Dietschweiler was connected to the railway network in 1904 with the opening of the Glantalbahn . The station in question was initially called Dietschweiler-Nanzweiler before it was renamed Dietschweiler in 1912 . Mainly by the permanent separation of the Saarland after the Second World War, lost the section Homburg - Glan-Münchweiler on which lay the station, important. Passenger traffic was stopped in 1981; since the freight traffic between Schönenberg-Kübelberg and Glan-Münchweiler had already been discontinued, it was henceforth without regular traffic. Most recently, Dietschweiler was one of two remaining entertainers. The tracks were dismantled at the end of the 1980s. In 2002, the Glan-Blies-Weg , which was completed in 2006 in full, was opened on the route .

Web links

Commons : Dietschweiler  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d daten.digitale-sammlungen.de: List of localities for the Free State of Bavaria . Retrieved March 22, 2013 .
  2. ^ A b regionalgeschichte.net: Palatinate> Cities & Villages> Nanzdietschweiler . Retrieved March 22, 2013 .
  3. a b Official municipality directory (= State Statistical Office of Rhineland-Palatinate [Hrsg.]: Statistical volumes . Volume 407 ). Bad Ems February 2016, p. 173 (PDF; 2.8 MB).
  4. gov.genealogy.net: Dietschweiler . Retrieved March 22, 2013 .