Eresing

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the municipality of Eresing
Eresing
Map of Germany, position of the municipality Eresing highlighted

Coordinates: 48 ° 5 '  N , 11 ° 1'  E

Basic data
State : Bavaria
Administrative region : Upper Bavaria
County : Landsberg am Lech
Management Community : Windach
Height : 590 m above sea level NHN
Area : 14.23 km 2
Residents: 1933 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 136 inhabitants per km 2
Postcodes : 86922,
86926 (Algertshausen, Pflaumdorf) ,
86941 ( St. Ottilien )Template: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / zip code contains text
Area code : 08193
License plate : LL
Community key : 09 1 81 118
Community structure: 5 parts of the community
Address of the
municipal administration:
Kaspar-Ett-Str. 24 a
86922 Eresing
Website : www.eresing.de
Mayor : Michael Klotz ( village communities )
Location of the municipality of Eresing in the Landsberg am Lech district
Ammersee Landkreis Aichach-Friedberg Landkreis Augsburg Landkreis Ostallgäu Landkreis Weilheim-Schongau Landkreis Starnberg Landkreis Fürstenfeldbruck Windach Weil (Oberbayern) Utting am Ammersee Unterdießen Thaining Pürgen Schwifting Schondorf am Ammersee Scheuring Rott (Landkreis Landsberg am Lech) Reichling Prittriching Vilgertshofen Penzing (Bayern) Obermeitingen Landsberg am Lech Kinsau Kaufering Igling Hurlach Hofstetten (Oberbayern) Greifenberg Geltendorf Fuchstal Finning Eresing Egling an der Paar Eching am Ammersee Dießen am Ammersee Denklingen Apfeldorfmap
About this picture

Eresing is a municipality in the Upper Bavarian district of Landsberg am Lech .

geography

View of Eresing with the parish church of St. Ulrich

location

The main town is located about six kilometers northwest of the Ammersee and is surrounded by pre-alpine hill country that was formed in the Würm Ice Age.

Parish parts

The municipality has five officially named municipal parts (the type of settlement is given in brackets ):

history

Parish Church of St. Ulrich
The location of the Hofmarkschloss, which was demolished in the 18th century

Until the 19th century

Row grave finds from the 6th century indicate an earlier settlement.

The first written mention of the place was in the year 1126. At that time Eresing was under the influence of the Counts of Dießen-Andechs , who used it as a place of court.

Around 1300 a local nobility can be proven with the Eresingern, but already in 1424 the court of Eresing was in the possession of Duke Friedrich IV. Von Habsburg . In the course of the 16th century there were numerous changes of ownership before the Hofmark Eresing passed to the Lords of Füll in 1596. Further manorial owners in the local area were the monasteries of Dießen and Rottenbuch , as well as the parish, church and community of Eresing. Until 1825 the Lords of Filling held the lower jurisdiction in Eresing.

The Archabbey of Sankt Ottilien , founded in 1887, also belongs to the political community of Eresing, which was founded in 1818 .

Incorporations

On May 1, 1978, the greater part of the dissolved municipality of Beuern was incorporated.

Population development

Between 1988 and 2019 the community grew from 1401 to 1933 by 532 inhabitants or by 38.0%.

politics

Together with the municipalities of Windach and Finning , the municipality belongs to the Windach administrative community .

City council election 2020
(in %)
 %
50
40
30th
20th
10
0
40.80
36.41
14.07
8.73
DGE
UBE
DGP
WGSO
Current distribution of seats in the Eresing Municipal Council (March 15, 2020)
    
A total of 12 seats
  • DGE : 5
  • UBE : 4
  • DGP : 2
  • WGSO : 1

mayor

In the local elections on March 15, 2020, Michael Klotz (Eresing village community / Pflaumdorf village community) was elected with 62.50% of the vote. His predecessor was Josef Loy (village communities) from May 1984 to April 2020.

Municipal council

The municipal council has 12 members. Another member and chairman of the municipal council is the first mayor. In the local elections on March 15, 2020, 1,140 of the 1,498 residents entitled to vote in the municipality of Eresing exercised their right to vote, bringing the turnout to 76.10%. The mandate distribution is as follows:

  • Village community Eresing: 5 seats (40.80%)
  • UB-Eresing: 4 seats (36.41%)
  • Pflaumdorf village community: 2 seats (14.07%)
  • Voting community St. Ottilien: 1 seat (8.73%).

coat of arms

The coat of arms description reads: "Over a blunt golden tip, inside a blue Ulrich's cross, in black two diagonally crossed golden maces with silver handles."

The municipal coat of arms was approved by the State Ministry of the Interior on August 3, 1959.

Attractions

memorial

A collective grave and four individual graves with a memorial stone in the cemetery of the Benedictine monastery of St. Ottilien commemorate 46 concentration camp victims and nine forced laborers who were deported to Germany in the Second World War and all of whom were victims of the Nazi regime .

See also: List of architectural monuments in Eresing

Soil monuments

See: List of ground monuments in Eresing

traffic

Rail transport

St. Ottilien stop

In the east of the municipality of Eresing, the single-track Ammerseebahn runs from Mering via Geltendorf and Dießen to Weilheim . It is managed by Deutsche Bahn (DB) as the 985 route book . The Eresinger hamlet located on the Ammersee Railway in East St. Ottilien the breakpoint St. Ottilien . The double-track Allgäu Railway runs along the northern border of the municipality from Munich via Buchloe and Kempten to Lindau , which is run by the DB as the 970 route book. At the intersection of the Ammerseebahn and Allgäubahn, on the northern border of the municipality of Eresing, lies the Geltendorf junction station . This has been a terminus of the Munich S-Bahn since 1972 and is served by the S4 line to Ebersberg .

The Royal Bavarian State Railways began operating on the Allgäu Railway on May 1, 1873. There was no train station near Geltendorf because the place was two kilometers away from the route. On June 30, 1898, the Royal Bavarian State Railways opened the Ammerseebahn. The crossing of the Ammerseebahn and Allgäubahn in Türkenfeld was planned in the original plans . The monastery of Sankt Ottilien, however, persuaded the railway management to run the Ammerseebahn via Geltendorf and Sankt Ottilien, as it needed a rail link to get building materials.

A crossing station was built near Geltendorf and a stop in Sankt Ottilien . The station in Sankt Ottilien consisted of a bulk platform on the continuous main track and a loading track . The first station building was a corrugated iron hut . During the First World War , the station received a wooden station building with a signal box extension and hipped roof , a fortified platform and a temporary goods shed . The corrugated iron hut, which is no longer needed, was used as a pump house until the 1980s and is still preserved. In 1922 a station keeper's house was built next to the station building, which still exists today.

In 1939 the wooden building was dismantled and replaced by a brick-built, single-storey reception building with a gable roof in the local style , into which a goods hall was integrated in addition to a waiting room and service rooms. The stop had a high volume of goods, up to 40 wagonloads of coal were delivered from Castrop-Rauxel every year. In 1967 the freight traffic was stopped and the loading track dismantled, the stop became a stopping point.

At the end of 2002 the station building was closed and in 2003 the old house platform was replaced by a new, barrier-free 55 cm high platform. At present, the breakpoint is mainly frequented on weekdays by school traffic from the area.

The Geltendorf train station and the Sankt Ottilien stop have been served every hour since 2008 by the trains of the Bavarian Regiobahn (BRB) from Augsburg-Oberhausen to Schongau . During rush hour , amplifier trains run every half hour between Geltendorf and Peißenberg . The regional express trains of the Allgäubahn and the trains of the S4 line of the Munich S-Bahn also stop at Geltendorf station, which has five platform tracks .

Bus transport

Eresing is connected to the Landsberger Verkehrsgemeinschaft (LVG) without rail traffic. The LVG bus routes open up the main town of Eresing and the districts of Sankt Ottilien and Pflaumdorf .

Sons and daughters of the church

literature

Web links

Commons : Eresing  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. "Data 2" sheet, Statistical Report A1200C 202041 Population of the municipalities, districts and administrative districts 1st quarter 2020 (population based on the 2011 census) ( help ).
  2. Mayor. Congregation, accessed June 25, 2020 .
  3. Eresing municipality in the local database of the Bavarian State Library Online . Bavarian State Library, accessed on September 8, 2019.
  4. ^ Gerhard Heininger: 100 years of St. Ottilien monastery fire brigade . St. Ottilien 2007, p. 9 ( erzabtei.de [PDF; 1.8 MB ; accessed on January 24, 2014]). PDF document; 1.8 MB ( Memento of the original from March 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) 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.erzabtei.de
  5. ^ Heide Weißhaar-Kiem: Landsberg am Lech district . Ed .: Landsberg am Lech district. 1st edition. EOS Verlag St. Ottilien, 2010, ISBN 978-3-8306-7437-5 , p. 188-190 .
  6. ^ 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. 580 .
  7. Results of local elections 2020. OK.VOTE, March 15, 2020, accessed on May 22, 2020 .
  8. Results of local elections 2020. OK.VOTE, March 15, 2020, accessed on May 22, 2020 .
  9. Results of local elections 2020. OK.VOTE, March 15, 2020, accessed on May 22, 2020 .
  10. House of Bavarian History, http://www.hdbg.de/gemeinden2/bayerns-gemeinden_detail.php?gkz=9181118  ( 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.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.hdbg.de  
  11. Memorial sites for the victims of National Socialism. A documentation, volume 1. Federal Agency for Civic Education, Bonn 1995, ISBN 3-89331-208-0 , p. 130
  12. ^ Andreas Janikowski: The Ammerseebahn. Traffic development in western Upper Bavaria . Transpress, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-344-71033-8 , pp. 44-50 .
  13. Description of the train station in Geltendorf ( Memento of the original from July 2, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) 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. on Ammerseebahn.de @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.ammerseebahn.de
  14. ^ Andreas Janikowski: The Ammerseebahn. Traffic development in western Upper Bavaria . Transpress, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-344-71033-8 , pp. 51-55 .
  15. Description of the St. Ottilien train station ( Memento of the original from April 9, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) 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. on Ammerseebahn.de @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.ammerseebahn.de
  16. ^ Andreas Janikowski: The Ammerseebahn. Traffic development in western Upper Bavaria . Transpress, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-344-71033-8 , pp. 94 .