Dietzenbach

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

Coordinates: 50 ° 1 ′  N , 8 ° 47 ′  E

Basic data
State : Hesse
Administrative region : Darmstadt
County : Offenbach
Height : 135 m above sea level NHN
Area : 21.67 km 2
Residents: 34,298 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 1583 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 63128
Area code : 06074
License plate : OF
Community key : 06 4 38 001

City administration address :
Europaplatz 1
63128 Dietzenbach
Website : www.dietzenbach.de
Mayor : Jürgen Rogg ( independent )
Location of the city of Dietzenbach in the Offenbach district
Neu-Isenburg Dreieich Langen (Hessen) Egelsbach Rödermark Dietzenbach Heusenstamm Mühlheim am Main Rodgau Obertshausen Hainburg Seligenstadt Mainhausen Darmstadt Landkreis Darmstadt-Dieburg Landkreis Darmstadt-Dieburg Bayern Main-Kinzig-Kreis Offenbach am Main Kreis Groß-Gerau Frankfurt am Mainmap
About this picture
Aerial photo 2008
The city of Dietzenbach seen from the Wingertsberg
The observation tower on the Wingertsberg
Half-timbered house in the old town

Dietzenbach is the district town of the Offenbach district in Hesse .

First mentioned in a document in 1215, a major structural change began in the 1960s. The construction of large housing estates and the influx of immigrants let the population grow, but also led to social problems . Dietzenbach received city rights in 1970.

geography

location

Dietzenbach is located in the middle of the Rhine-Main area . With twelve kilometers to Frankfurt am Main , ten kilometers to Offenbach am Main , 30 kilometers to Aschaffenburg , 20 kilometers to Darmstadt and around 50 kilometers to Wiesbaden , the district town of Offenbach is right in the middle of RheinMain , as the city's slogan is. Dietzenbach is located on the Bieber at an altitude of 150  m above sea level. NN . The city borders the city of Heusenstamm in the north, the city of Rodgau in the east, the city of Rödermark in the south and the city of Dreieich in the west .

City structure

According to the Hessian community dictionary, Dietzenbach consists of the two districts Dietzenbach and Steinberg .

Steinberg district

In the Steinberg district there are parts of the north industrial area , day care centers 3, 5 and 11 , the Siedlerstraße senior center , as well as the Astrid Lindgren School (elementary school), Regenbogenschule ( elementary school ), Helen-Keller-Schule ( special needs school ) and Heinrich Mann -Schule ( comprehensive school based on the type of school with upper secondary school level ). There is also a sports area on Limesstrasse . In the center is the Steinberg shopping center . Almost 12,000 people live in Steinberg.

City quarters

New city center

Between Steinberg and the old town center, a new building area has emerged in the past few years, in the center of which the city administration and Dietzenbach's community center are located. The most striking point until 2006 was a shopping center with a large supermarket, gas station and parking lot, which was increasingly viewed by the citizens as an "eyesore" due to its unappealing 1970s architecture and structural neglect on the part of the operators.

Sales negotiations delayed the new development again and again. At the end of 2005, the contracts between the city and the Dutch Ten Brinke Group were finally signed.

After the old supermarket closed in mid-2005, the building complex was completely demolished in autumn 2006 to make way for a new shopping center. The foundation stone was laid on December 4, 2006; the center opened on November 29, 2007 and was named Rathaus-Center .

The Ten Brinke Group, investor in the 37.5 million euro project, has erected a 230 meter long and 101 meter wide building. There is a grocery store on 8,000 square meters and an electronics store on a further 4,000 square meters. The rest of the approximately 21,000 square meters of space is shared by various retail stores and various restaurants.

Witch mountain

The Hexenberg settlement is named after the highest point in the Offenbach district. The development consists of relatively low single and multi-family houses as well as a few smaller shops in the middle of the district.

Wingertsberg

The Wingertsberg is not an independent district, but a residential area on the slope opposite the old town. At the highest elevation next to a sports field, a restaurant with panoramic terrace, as well as Built To find Hessentag observation tower , which offers a view to Frankfurt.

Old town

In the 1960s and 1970s there were strong tendencies in Dietzenbach to rigorously redesign the old town center in the course of area renovation. A lot of the old building fabric fell victim to this, before a new development era was initiated in February 1979 with the adoption of the urban development master plan "Alte Ortsmitte Dietzenbach". Many half-timbered houses in the historic town center were saved from demolition and subsequently renovated. Dietzenbach can therefore boast a number of buildings that are officially protected as cultural monuments to this day. Part of the Dietzenbach local history museum is also housed in a building classified as a cultural monument . In the old town there is also the fire brigade museum, the city library and the police station.

Spessart district

The city quarter between the old town and the new city center used to be called Starkenburgring and is known nationwide as a social hotspot .

history

Territorial Affiliation

The oldest surviving mention of the place comes from 1215. It is in a deed of donation to the Patershausen monastery . The later desolate settlements of Ippingshausen , Hartcheshofen and Richolshausen were located in today's Dietzenbacher district in the Middle Ages . Dietzenbach was part of the Rödermark . The lords and counts of Hanau initially had the right to labor , bede and taxes in the village . During the process of dissolution of the Patershausen Monastery during the Reformation and its factual takeover by the County of Hanau-Lichtenberg , Dietzenbach was incorporated into the county in 1527.

After the death of the last Hanau count, Johann Reinhard III. , 1736, Landgrave Friedrich I of Hessen-Kassel inherited the County of Hanau-Münzenberg on the basis of a contract of inheritance from 1643, due to the intestate succession , the County of Hanau-Lichtenberg fell to the son of Johann Reinhard III's only daughter, Landgrave Ludwig IX. from Hessen-Darmstadt . The affiliation of the parts of the County of Hanau located immediately south of the Main to Hanau-Lichtenberg or Hanau-Munzenberg was controversial between the two heirs. There was almost a military conflict when Hessen-Darmstadt occupied the remainder of the Babenhausen office in Dietzenbach, Schaafheim and Schlierbach , and Hessen-Kassel with the military already carefully stationed in Hanau . The dispute could only be ended with a settlement in 1771 after a long-standing legal dispute before the highest imperial courts , the so-called participation recess . Thereafter, the places Altheim , Dietzenbach, Harpertshausen , Schaafheim and Schlierbach fell to the Landgraviate of Hessen-Darmstadt, from which the Schaafheim office was formed. For the next 200 years, Dietzenbach was one of the following higher-level administrative units:

By dividing the Rödermark in 1818, the place received its community forest.

Today's town was still a rural village before the Second World War , but its income structure had already changed significantly to a workers' community. This is probably the reason why the "red Dietzenbach" was a stronghold of the communists and social democrats for a long time . However, this did not prevent the National Socialists from quickly and successfully implementing the synchronization of public life shortly after they came to power in 1933. As elsewhere, there were quick arrests of communists and reprisals against anyone who the Nazis regarded as opponents of the regime. And the National Socialist racial madness did not stop at Dietzenbach. There was only one small Jewish community in Dietzenbach, but all of its members were no longer living in Dietzenbach at the end of 1938: some had succeeded in emigrating to the USA, others hoped to find protection there rather than in a small village , moved to bigger cities. The latter turned out to be a deceptive hope, as the stumbling blocks laid in Dietzenbach for those murdered, deported, displaced or driven to suicide under National Socialism show.

A British air raid on Dietzenbach during the Second World War caused severe damage to the town on the night of September 20-21, 1941. In the post-war period , Dietzenbach was strongly influenced by immigrants. In the 1960s, a major structural change began, especially with the development of residential areas and the construction of large housing estates (high-rise buildings), which also led to a social hotspot . Dietzenbach received city ​​rights in 1970 . In the course of the regional reform in Hesse in the 1970s, Dietzenbach was one of the few towns and communities that was not changed and was able to maintain its independence.

Dietzenbach has been the administrative seat of the Offenbach district since 2002. Dietzenbach has only been officially allowed to call itself a district town since March 24, 2003. This was preceded by a dispute with the neighboring community of Rodgau, which claimed this status for itself due to its higher population.

Historical forms of names

  • Dicenbach (1210-1220)
  • Dicenbach (1270)
  • Dyetzinbach (1344)
  • Dytzenbach (1353)
  • Ditzenbach (1357)
  • Diczenbach (1437)
  • Dyetzenbach (1450)
  • Detzenbach (1535)
  • Dietzenbach (1542)

Population development

Population development in Dietzenbach from 1829 to 2016
year Residents
1829 1,239
1895 2,031
1939 3,695
1950 4,711
1961 6,303
1970 12,449
year Residents
1983 25,500
1997 33,015
2005 34,794
2009 33,224
2016 33.903
2019 34,227

Dietzenbach is one of the highest birth rates in the state (1990: ~ 380, 2006: 420 births). It has been heavily influenced by immigrants since the 1960s : almost a third of its residents come from over a hundred nations. As of June 30, 2014, the city had a share of foreigners (registered residents without German citizenship ) of 27.4 percent and thus had the fourth-highest share of all Hessian municipalities after Offenbach am Main , Kelsterbach and Raunheim .

Worth knowing

  • In 2001 Dietzenbach was the venue for the Hessentag .

politics

City Council

Local election 2016
 %
30th
20th
10
0
25.4%
21.3%
14.7%
11.7%
10.1%
6.1%
4.7%
3.3%
2.6%
Gains and losses
compared to 2011
 % p
 16
 14th
 12
 10
   8th
   6th
   4th
   2
   0
  -2
  -4
  -6
-5.1  % p
-2.0  % p
+ 14.7  % p.p.
-5.7  % p
+ 10.1  % p
+ 2.1  % p.p.
+ 0.1  % p
+ 0.5  % p
+ 2.6  % p

The local elections on March 6, 2016 produced the following results, compared to previous local elections:

Distribution of seats in the 2016 city council
         
A total of 45 seats
Parties and constituencies %
2016
Seats
2016
%
2011
Seats
2011
%
2006
Seats
2006
%
2001
Seats
2001
CDU Christian Democratic Union of Germany 25.4 11 30.5 14th 42.6 19th 30.7 14th
SPD Social Democratic Party of Germany 21.3 10 23.3 10 24.7 11 33.9 15th
AfD Alternative for Germany 14.7 7th - - - - - -
WIR-BfD WE - Citizens for Dietzenbach 11.7 5 17.4 8th - - - -
GREEN Alliance 90 / The Greens 10.1 5 - - 9.1 4th 10.1 5
FDP Free Democratic Party 6.1 3 4.0 2 5.3 2 4.6 2
LEFT The left 4.7 2 4.6 2 - - - -
DL Dietzenbacher List 2.6 1 - - 4.0 2 2.7 1
FW-UDS Free Voters - Independent Democratic Social 3.3 1 2.8 1 - - - -
GDL Green Dietzenbach list - - 17.4 8th - - - -
BfD-FWG Citizens for Dietzenbach - Free Association of Voters - - - - 10.5 5 10.1 5
REP The Republicans - - - - 2.8 1 5.3 2
ödp Ecological Democratic Party - - - - 1.0 1 2.6 1
total 100.0 45 100.0 45 100.0 45 100.0 45
Voter turnout in% 41.9 42.6 43.2 51.6

magistrate

The entire city administration with all offices is subordinate to the magistrate. He represents the community externally.

The magistrate of the district town of Dietzenbach consists of the mayor as chairman and five (four of them honorary) town councilors.

Foreigners Advisory Council

Dietzenbach has a foreigners advisory board that consists of 19 people. Different nationalities are represented in it. After the elections on November 29, 2015, Cengiz Hendek was elected chairman. Similar to the city ​​council, there is the foreigners' council meeting, which meets two weeks before the city council.

mayor

Before the Second World War, the city had the following mayors:

  • Johann Philipp Keim, 1825
  • Johann Georg Metzler, 1831
  • Anton Schäferle, 1837
  • Georg Martin Eckert III., 1843–1869
  • Martin Heberer, 1870–1883
  • Heinrich Eckert, 1884–1897
  • Johann Georg Heberer XII., 1898–1908
  • Heinrich Heberer I, 1908–1919
  • Karl Krapp, 1919–1933 (removed from office by the Nazi regime)
  • Eduard Großmann, 1933–1934 (temporarily appointed by the Nazi regime)
  • Heinrich Fickel, 1934–1945 (installed by the Nazi regime)

Since the Second World War the city has had the following mayors:

  • Heinrich Weilmünster, 1945 (installed by the American military government )
  • Karl Krapp, 1945 (installed by the American military government)
  • Martin Wolf IV. (SPD), 1945–1948 (installed by the American military government and regularly elected in 1946)
  • Christian Ebert, 1948–1958
  • Hermann Kocks, 1958–1976
  • Friedrich Keller (SPD), 1976–1988
  • Frank Kaufmann (provisional) (GREEN), 1988–1989
  • Jürgen Heyer (SPD), 1989-2001
  • Stephan Gieseler (CDU), 2001–2009
  • Dietmar Kolmer (acting) (CDU), 2009
  • Jürgen Rogg (independent), since 2009

badges and flags

Banner Dietzenbach.svg

coat of arms

DEU Dietzenbach COA.svg

Blazon : "In a red shield there is a silver diagonal bar with a blue wavy band, top left and bottom right a golden grape each with 2 green leaves on a green stem."

The coat of arms of the then Dietzenbach community in the Offenbach district was approved by the Hessian Minister of the Interior on August 31, 1957 . It was originally designed by the heraldist Georg Massoth.

The wavy bar represents the syllable “‑bach” in the city name “ talking ”. The grapes are supposed to refer to the tradition of viticulture in Dietzenbach.

flag

The flag was approved for the then Dietzenbach municipality on November 10, 1958 by the Hessian Minister of the Interior and is described as follows:

"The municipal coat of arms on the wide, yellow central panel of the blue-yellow-blue flag cloth."

Twin cities

Dietzenbach has been friends with Kunming , China , since 2011

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

railroad

Dietzenbach station

In 1898 the Offenbach-Bieber-Dietzenbach railway was inaugurated and the Dietzenbach station built. After there was no longer any passenger traffic on the route for many years, Dietzenbach has been connected to the Rhine-Main S-Bahn network with the S-Bahn line S2 Niedernhausen –Dietzenbach since the end of 2003 . This travels on this branch of the Rodgau Railway . There are three S-Bahn stops in Dietzenbach: Steinberg, Dietzenbach Mitte and Dietzenbach Bahnhof as the final stop (see photo).

Street

Dietzenbach has its own city bus network with a central bus station at the Dietzenbach Mitte S-Bahn station.

The B 459 runs through Dietzenbach, the northern end of which meets the B 46 at Neu-Isenburg , from which you can reach the Autobahn 3 and 661 via the Offenbach / Offenbacher Kreuz junction. The southern end of the B 459 meets the B 45 between Rödermark and Eppertshausen .

education

Dietzenbach has five primary schools and two secondary schools spread across the city. There are also two private schools in Dietzenbach and one adult education center.

  • Astrid Lindgren School ( primary school )
  • Rainbow School (Elementary School)
  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer School (primary school)
  • Aue school (primary school)
  • Sterntalerschule (primary school)
  • Helen Keller School ( special needs school )
  • Ernst-Reuter-Schule ( school type-related comprehensive school without upper secondary level )
  • Heinrich-Mann-Schule (school type-related comprehensive school with upper secondary school level)
  • Rudolf Steiner School (Waldorf School and Waldorf Kindergarten)
  • Montessori school (Montessori campus with children's house)

health

In addition to various general and specialist practices, there is an institute outpatient clinic and day clinic for 12 children in the Clinic for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy Riedstadt in Dietzenbach .

natural reserve

Willersinn's pit

The Willersinn'sche Grube nature reserve near Dietzenbach (NSG identification 1438013) is located in a larger forestry area northeast of Dietzenbach and borders the rain retention basin in the Steinberg district. To the west is the Dietzenbach-Ost industrial park. Other surrounding areas are located in the large landscape protection area of ​​the Offenbach district.

The Willersinn'sche Pit near Dietzenbach is a former gravel quarry. It is named after the Willersinn brothers who mined drifting sand here in the 1950s. Large areas of sand were mined commercially until 1980. The northern part was filled in and the remaining part has steeply sloping embankments. With 185 species, a study documents the greatest diversity of flora and fauna in the Dietzenbach district. The entire area is now forested and former breeding birds such as woodlark and common pipit are no longer to be found.

religion

Roman Catholic Parish Church of St. Martin
The "Bait ul-Baqi" mosque on Theodor-Heuss-Ring

Denomination statistics

The population statistics (as of January 1, 2010) show 7,188 people of Protestant and 6,014 people of Roman Catholic denomination, 21,407 people are grouped under “other denominations”, i.e. around two thirds of the population have a different religious affiliation or do not belong to any church on. Two years later (as of January 1, 2012) there were 34,788 people living in Dietzenbach, including 6,942 (19.9%) Protestants and 5,905 (17.0%) Catholics. 21,941 (63.1%) fall under “Other” As of January 1, 2017, according to statistics, there was a decrease among Protestant citizens to 5,978 (17.0%), among Catholics to 5,299 (15.0%). Other religious communities are subsumed under “Other”, that is 23,974 (68.0%) inhabitants.

Christian communities

history

Around 1270 the Lords of Eppstein had church patronage , in 1405 the Lords of Hanau . In the pre-Reformation period, the central church authority was the Archdiakonat St. Peter and Alexander in Aschaffenburg, Landkapitel Rodgau . In the middle of the 16th century, the Reformation was introduced in Dietzenbach . The Christ Church , which is used by the Evangelical Christ Congregation, dates from 1753/54.

Churches in existence today

  • Evangelical Christ Church
  • Evangelical Martin Luther Congregation Dietzenbach-Steinberg
  • Roman Catholic parish of St. Martin
  • Evangelical Jesus Congregation Dietzenbach
  • New Apostolic Church - Dietzenbach parish
  • Jehovah's Witnesses in Germany, K. d. ö. R.

Worth knowing

The Protestant Christ Churches, Ruth Churches (merged into the “Christ Congregation” since 2011) and Martin Luther congregations as well as the Roman Catholic parish of St. Martin founded the Christian Churches Working Group (ACK) in Dietzenbach on Ascension Day 2010.

Non-Christian denominations

  • Ditib Fatih Mosque e. V. (Turkish mosque)
  • Tawhid Mosque e. V. (Moroccan mosque)
  • Bait ul-Baqi (House of the Eternal, Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat Germany e.V.)

Working Group of Religions in Dietzenbach (ARD)

On Pentecost Saturday, June 11, 2011, the founding document of the Working Group of Religions in Dietzenbach (ARD) was signed during the first Dietzenbach peace hike to the starry tent in the Hessentagspark . The ARD members are: Catholic parish St. Martin Dietzenbach, Evangelical Christ Church Dietzenbach, Evangelical Martin Luther Church Dietzenbach-Steinberg, New Apostolic Church - Dietzenbach community, Dietzenbach Jesus community, DitiB Fatih Moschee e. V., Moroccan Tahwid Mosque e. V., Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat Dietzenbach.

Culture

Museums

In the middle of the old town is the Museum of Local History and History Dietzenbach , whose spectrum of informative exhibits ranges from prehistory and early history through the Roman Empire and the Middle Ages to the 19th and 20th centuries. The 800 m² exhibition area is structured according to main themes, with the development of the history of Dietzenbach being illustrated step by step. Another museum is the fire brigade museum in the old fire station, in which not only the history of the fire brigade in Dietzenbach can be experienced.

Festivals

The following festivals in Dietzenbach offer the opportunity to maintain social contacts every year:

  • The spring festival takes place on Europaplatz.
  • The festival without borders takes place in the Hessentagspark.
  • The open gardens take place all over the city.
  • The Dietzenbacher Automobilausstellung or DiAA takes place every second year on Europaplatz.
  • The wine festival takes place in the new city center on Europaplatz for ten days in July / August. Winegrowers from the region and from all over southern Germany offer wines and suitable dishes every day with musical entertainment from live bands to enjoy.
  • The Night of Lights with Museum Night and Heimatfest takes place in the old town of Dietzenbach.
  • The Trinkborn Festival takes place in the old town on the first weekend in September.
  • The curb / parish fair is based on the feast day of the apostles Simon and Jude, which is celebrated on October 28th according to the calendar. The curb is celebrated every year from Friday to Tuesday after this memorial day. If this falls on a Sunday, the notch will take place on the following weekend. The traditional curb with rides and snack bars extends on Landwehrstraße from Harmonieplatz to the Dietrich-Bonhoeffer-Schule.

Markets

But the city's markets also offer an opportunity for this.

  • The Kreativmarkt is a market for creatives and hobby artists in the Rhein-Main area.
  • The Christmas market takes place on the first weekend in Advent. The traditional Christmas market takes place every year in the old town, which is decorated for Christmas. Among other things, there is mulled wine and gingerbread, plus a colorful program with music and other demonstrations.

societies

Club life in Dietzenbach is very diverse. There are well over 100 clubs in total. Including well-known nationwide, such as SG Dietzenbach .

movie theater

Since 1988 Dietzenbach has owned a cinema ("Kino D") in the basement of the community center that is run by the district town of Dietzenbach. The cinema has been closed since 2015 for fire safety reasons. It was reopened on October 21, 2017.

Cultural monuments

Dietzenbach has a large number of cultural monuments. In the historic town center around Schäfergasse, numerous half-timbered buildings have been preserved from the mid-18th century.

Personalities

Honorary citizen

  • On Sunday, June 16, 1996, on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of the Dietzenbach – Vélizy-Villacoublay twinning event, Mayor Raymond Loisel and the long-standing chairman of the “Comité de Jumelage”, Roland Penet, were granted honorary citizenship at the official reception of the sisterhood meeting in Dietzenbach City of Vélizy awarded.
  • On January 11, 2009, the honorary citizenship rights to Dean Günter Ludwig (* 1938), Dean and Kath. Pastor (1993-2009) awarded.

sons and daughters of the town

People in connection with Dietzenbach

  • Götz Otto (* 1967), actor, grew up in Dietzenbach
  • Aziz Bouhaddouz (* 1987), soccer player, grew up in Dietzenbach
  • Valeri Gourski (1954–2006), painter and sculptor, lived in Dietzenbach from 1995 to 1999
  • Ulrike Alex (* 1956), educator and member of the Hessian state parliament, lives in Dietzenbach

literature

  • Barbara Demandt: The medieval church organization in Hesse south of the Main = Writings of the Hessian State Office for Historical Regional Studies 29, p. 101.
  • Dagmar Söder: Cultural monuments in Hessen. Offenbach district = monument topography Federal Republic of Germany. 1987, pp. 42-50,
  • Hans Georg Ruppel (edit.): Historical place directory for the area of ​​the former Grand Duchy and People's State of Hesse with evidence of district and court affiliation from 1820 to the changes in the course of the municipal territorial reform = Darmstädter Archivschriften 2. 1976, p. 73.
  • Wilhelm Müller: Hessian place name book . Volume 1: Starkenburg. 1937, pp. 129-131.
  • Georg Schäfer: Offenbach district . Part of Rudolf Adamy: Art monuments in the Grand Duchy of Hesse - Province of Starkenburg. 1885, pp. 12-14.

Web links

Commons : Dietzenbach  - collection of images, videos and audio files
Wikivoyage: Dietzenbach  - travel guide
Wiktionary: Dietzenbach  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations

Individual evidence

  1. Hessian State Statistical Office: Population status on December 31, 2019 (districts and urban districts as well as municipalities, population figures based on the 2011 census) ( help ).
  2. FAZ.net May 29, 2020: Hesse's interior minister: emergency services were "set up"
  3. ^ Museum of Local Lore and History Dietzenbach: tour of the museum . [1]
  4. ^ Uta Löwenstein: County Hanau . In: Knights, Counts and Princes - Secular Dominions in the Hessian Area approx. 900–1806 = Handbook of Hessian History 3 = Publications of the Historical Commission for Hesse 63. Marburg 2014. ISBN 978-3-942225-17-5 , p. 210 .
  5. ^ StBA: Changes in the municipalities in Germany, see 2003
  6. Frankfurter Rundschau: The little children are coming . Edition R3S, page December 20, 24, 2007
  7. Relevant population figures (as of June 30, 2014) for the election of the Foreigners' Advisory Council on November 29, 2015. (No longer available online.) Hessian State Statistical Office, archived from the original on September 13, 2015 ; accessed on August 18, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.statistik-hessen.de
  8. ^ Result of the municipal election on March 6, 2016. Hessian State Statistical Office, accessed in April 2016 .
  9. ^ Hessian State Statistical Office: Result of the municipal elections on March 27, 2011
  10. ^ Hessian State Statistical Office: Result of the municipal elections on March 26, 2006
  11. Approval of a coat of arms of the Dietzenbach community in the Offenbach district, Darmstadt district of August 31, 1957 . In: The Hessian Minister of the Interior (ed.): State Gazette for the State of Hesse. 1957 no. 37 , p. 901 , point 920 ( online at the information system of the Hessian state parliament [PDF; 5.0 MB ]).
  12. ^ Approval of a flag for the Dietzenbach community in the Offenbach district, Darmstadt district of November 10, 1958 . In: The Hessian Minister of the Interior (ed.): State Gazette for the State of Hesse. 1958 No. 47 , p. 1386 , item 1138 ( online at the information system of the Hessian state parliament [PDF; 4.8 MB ]).
  13. ^ Dietzenbach.de: City friendship knows no borders
  14. RMV: Schnellbahnplan 2008  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Retrieved December 5, 2008.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.rmv.de  
  15. cf. 85. Report of the Offenbach Association for Natural History. (PDF) Retrieved March 5, 2019 .
  16. [2]
  17. ^ District town Dietzenbach population statistics
  18. Dietzenbach City in Numbers: Fewer and fewer Christians reported
  19. Christoph Manus: Dietzenbach: The time of separation is over . In: Frankfurter Rundschau, August 19, 2010. Retrieved January 24, 2011.
  20. ^ Deanery Rodgau: Evangelical parishes in Dietzenbach . Retrieved January 22, 2011.
  21. ^ Bishopric Mainz: Parish Dietzenbach . Retrieved January 22, 2011.
  22. Jesus-Gemeinde Dietzenbach: Imprint . Retrieved January 22, 2011.
  23. New Apostolic Church Offenbach District: Parishes ( Memento of the original from May 25, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . Retrieved January 22, 2011.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.nak-offenbach.de
  24. ^ Working group of Christian churches (ACK) in Dietzenbach
  25. ^ Working together for peace , op-online.de, June 14, 2011
  26. Common denominator Friede Frankfurter Rundschau, October 2, 2011
  27. Kino D - About us. On dietzenbach.de . Retrieved July 28, 2015.
  28. ^ Frank Sommer: Dietzenbach: Municipal cinema celebrates reopening. In: fr.de. October 23, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017 .
  29. ^ Honorary citizen in Dietzenbach
  30. Short biography. Hessian state parliament.