Göggingen (Krauchenwies)

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Göggingen
community Krauchenwies
Former municipality coat of arms of Göggingen
Coordinates: 48 ° 0 '17 "  N , 9 ° 11' 54"  E
Height : 591 m
Area : 12.37 km²
Residents : 897  (Dec. 31, 2010)
Population density : 73 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : September 1, 1974
Postal code : 72505
Area code : 07576

The village of Göggingen is a suburb of the municipality of Krauchenwies in the district of Sigmaringen ( Baden-Württemberg ) and with 897 inhabitants (as of December 31, 2010) its largest incorporation.

geography

Geographical location

Göggingen is located about five kilometers west of Krauchenwies in the agricultural region of the Ablachtal, a flat, hilly landscape formed by the Ice Age glaciers and crossed by large areas of forest. This area rises to the foothills of the Alps and Lake Constance to the Danube plateau. The Ablach is fed by the Talbach (Dorfbach) near Göggingen . The Lautenbach forms the boundary to Ringgenbach .

geology

The gravel deposits from the Ice Age glaciers make an important contribution to the local economy. The Valet and Ott Group, for example, uses dry mining at the Göggingen plant to mine gravel along the Göggingen connecting road in the direction of Rengetsweiler . In 2006 it received the permit for an expansion of the gravel mining area on the adjacent areas. For this purpose, expendable field paths were deedicated, which will be filled up again after the gravel mining has ended. Furthermore, the Krauchenwieser company Lutz also had a gravel pit in Göggingen an der Lehr in the past.

Expansion of the area

The total area of ​​the Göggingen district is 1237 hectares (as of December 31, 2010).

history

Prehistory and early history

From the Late Iron Age there is a Viereckschanze in the forest between Göggingen and Krauchenwies. West of the road from Goeggingen by Laiz when Gaenssler are dug grave mound . In Roman times a Roman road (connection Strasbourg-Ulm) led from the old town of Meßkirch past Göggingen to Krauchenwies, where a path to Pfullendorf and Sigmaringendorf left.

middle Ages

Göggingen belonged to the Gau Goldinshuntare in the Alemannic period . The name "Göggingen" probably comes from Gagano or Gaggo (i.e. opponent [in battle]), the leader of an Alemannic clan around 350 AD. From this origin of the name Gaginge, Gaggingen, Geggingen (until the 18th century) and finally Göggingen developed. The ending " -ingen " is of Alemannic origin, although today's spelling is no longer historically based. Göggingen probably belongs to the Alemannic Folcholtsbaar , whose neighbor was the Bertoldsbaar , or was located in the border area between the two bears of the early medieval Alamannia .

The founding of Göggingen can be dated around the year 500 and took place in the Mengening area, the Danube area of ​​the Juthung tribe, the Alemanni Swabians. This original settlement can be found in the slowly rising area between Talbach and Ablach at the foot of the Birkenstock. Ten to twelve such original settler families are likely to have settled here. According to Bayer, the original founding time dates back to the years 350–450.

Politically, the Alemanni were ruled by tribal dukes, who enlarged their districts and bays through war. The Franks smashed the last Alemannic structures in 749 with the capture and disempowerment of the last Alemannic leader Lantfried II.

Göggingen was first mentioned in a document in 760.

In the course of Christianization , church centers emerged in the region. Under the reign of Charlemagne , King of the Franconian Empire between 768 and 814, Göggingen was given to the Reichenau Monastery and became its village . A Reichenau estate administration was set up in Göggingen. Field names such as Auenrain are evidence of this. The Reichau farms of Igelswies , Krauchenwies, Leitishofen , Menningen and Rast were co-administered from Göggingen .

In the Carolingian era around 800, free farmers were the administrators of the Göggingen Villication. From these servants of the monastery, the lower village nobility (knights, junkers) developed, who determined the fate of Göggingen. The noble island monastery itself had by a privilege of Emperor Charles III. from 887 in Göggingen the count's rights and therefore also the higher jurisdiction .

For a long time, Göggingen consisted of small groups of farmsteads on the banks of the Ablach. This changed between the 9th and 13th centuries when Göggingen was owned by the Reichenau monastery. The seat of the administrators of Reichenau was the Klenhof and among others also the eagle. A Villicus von Geggingen was first mentioned by name in 1202 in connection with a Berthold von Geggingen . In the 13th century Göggingen came into the lower jurisdiction of the Meier von Geggingen.

After the nobles of Geggingen , the knights of Hohenfels came into possession of the village. Little by little they sold parts of their property. Then it came to the Lords of Heudorf-Waldberg . A chronicler reports of the widow von Heudorf , who went to Geggingen an der Ablach, "only the reason that she could dress deliciously for a tournament, gave up the money, as if it were released from the registered village, made a beautiful blue velvet skirt" .

On the Monday before Martini (November 4th) 1454, the knight Caspar von Heudorf, seated at Boll, sold his village of Göggingen with all justice, cases, compulsory and ban for 500 Rhenish guilders to Junker Werner von Zimmer , Baron of Messkirch .

Modern times

Göggingen remained in the rule of Messkirch until Wilhelm von Zimmer's death , when the Cimbrian male tribe died out in 1594.

The rulership of Messkirch then passed to the Lords of Helfenstein through purchase for 400,000 guilders. Georg von Helfenstein had Apollonia, a sister of Wilhelm von Zimmer, as his wife. So Göggingen became a helping stone, but only for a short time. After Georg von Helfenstein died in 1600 and Froben von Helfenstein in 1627, Froben's son-in-law, Wratislaus II von Fürstenberg , inherited the rule of Messkirch. From this time on until the time of Napoleon Bonaparte , Geggingen remained part of the County of Messkirch under the rule of Fürstenberg.

During the Thirty Years War (1618 to 1648) 31 Göggingen residents died and 31 houses were burned down. During the War of the Spanish Succession (1701 to 1714) and the Napoleonic Wars (1792 to 1815), the region was again a transit area for Bavarian, French and imperial troops who exploited and pillaged Göggingen.

On June 14, 1723 border adjustments between the towns of Sigmaringen and Meßkirch and the villages of Göggingen and Laiz in the forest called Gänssler are carried out.

As a result of the mediatization in 1806, the Fürstenberg family was disempowered by Napoléon, the Principality of Fürstenberg dissolved and Baden was incorporated under Margrave Karl Friedrich. As elector by Napoléon's mercy, he went to war against the German Emperor Franz II and was rewarded with the territories of imperial princes. At that time, Göggingen was the easternmost part of the Princely-Fürstenberg Oberamt Messkirch, which became the Messkirch district with the transition to Baden .

A major transformation in the farming system of the homeland took place under Grand Duke Leopold in the years 1830 to 1852. After the executive order of the law for the replacement of the tithe burdens and the possibility of converting the rural feudal farms, fields and forests into free property, the Göggingers gradually did Farmers made use of it and, with the financial help of the Baden state, replaced their fiefs and tithe obligations. So they became free farmers on their own land. That was a big and important event, because at that time around 20 different monasteries and secular lords owned land in the community of Göggingen.

From 1918 everything belonged to the Republic of Baden . The district of Meßkirch came to an end in 1936, when the National Socialist rulers united the district office of Meßkirch and the district office of Stockach to form the district of Stockach . Before that, the district office of Meßkirch belonged to the Konstanz district.

In the First World War , 33 Göggingers died, five went missing. The community created a memorial to the "heroes" in the cemetery in the form of a chapel open on three sides. The monument was inaugurated on All Saints' Day in 1920. During the Second World War , in the course of the heavy air raid on Munich city center on July 16, 1944, 18 aerial bombs were dropped by bombers of the 8th US Air Force in the Göggingen “ Schlossbühl ” district. Since the area was undeveloped, no one was injured. On April 22, 1945, a Sunday when the church was just out, bombs were dropped along the railway line. A short time later, French troops coming from Messkirch reached the place. Occasional German soldiers still offered resistance. Five German soldiers were killed at the ice cellar or at the station keeper's house in the “Buchholz” area, and a sixth was seriously wounded. The six soldiers were buried in an emergency at the Gögginger Friedhof at the behest of the mayor at the time, Hermann Kempf - the communal soldiers' grave still exists there today after being reburied in October / November 1986. A total of 23 citizens of Göggingen were killed in World War II, 17 are still missing. Fallen soldiers from Göggingen are at the memorials in Kropywnyzkyj and Rossoschka (both Ukraine ), Korpowo and Luga (both Russia ), Monte Cassino ( Italy ), Andilly ( France ), Lommel ( Belgium ) and in Germany in Seelow ( Brandenburg ) and Greiz ( Thuringia ) buried. On November 22nd, 1961, the memorial, redesigned under the clergy, Gustav Kempf, was inaugurated. In his address he distanced himself from the old wording and spoke of "victims" when it came to the fallen.

From 1952 Göggingen belonged to Baden-Württemberg. The Stockach district only existed for 37 years and was dissolved in 1973 as part of the administrative reform of the state of Baden-Württemberg. Göggingen, as a municipality of the former district of Meßkirch, came to the district of Sigmaringen. On September 1, 1974, Göggingen was incorporated into the Krauchenwies community.

The water and soil association Ablachverband was founded in 1955 by Göggingen, Menningen and Ringgenbach with the main purpose of straightening the river bed of the Ablach between Menningen and Göggingen in order to avoid flood damage. Following the straightening of the pool at that time, land consolidation took place. One of the tasks of the association was also to control an undisturbed water flow in the Ablach in the districts of Menningen, Ringgenbach and Göggingen. The main focus was on the fast-growing willow trees on the banks of the stream or the trees standing across from storms and embankments caused by floods. Its dissolution took place in 2007.

In 1969, Federal Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger landed in his helicopter near Göggingen. Then he walked calmly through the village to talk to the people.

Village core renovation (2005–2008)

After the sale of the Gögginger Adlerbrauerei in April 2001 to the Ott family from Bad Schussenried, the Adlerbrauerei Göggingen Vertriebs GmbH was founded and a new logistics center was built in the Altlachen industrial park. The former production, warehouse and office space were thus wastelands in the center of Göggingen.

In a first phase, demolition work was to be carried out in the center of Göggingen after the sale of the fallow 6500 square meter brewery area. The demolition of the Adler brewery, which was announced on July 1, 2006, should actually be completed by July 31, 2006, but then came to a standstill due to the tense financial situation. In a second phase, the 300 year old parish barn was demolished. This was followed by the ice cellar of the Gögginger brewery and the community-owned building (Molke) on Kirchberg in Göggingen. In a third phase, the center of the village was redesigned with green spaces, a bus turning panel, church forecourt, fountain and parking lots.

For the inauguration of the new Adlerplatz on June 8, 2008, the Environment Minister of the State of Baden-Württemberg Tanja Gönner , Member of Parliament Ernst Behringer and District Administrator Dirk Gaerte appeared . The church consecration took place on Corpus Christi . The project costs for land acquisition, demolition and design totaled 1.2 million euros. Around 600,000 euros in grants have been released from the rural development program and the compensation stick.

Others

Many families have lived in Göggingen for a long time. In Göggingen, a family name can often be traced back for decades or even centuries. The following family names, all of which still exist in Göggingen today, are among the oldest Göggingen families:

Walz 1446, Veser 1500, Burth 1505, Kempf 1508, Vochatzer and Vochazer 1552, Häusler 16th century, Strobel 16th century, Amann 1676, Fießinger 1720, Krom 1727, Ott 1753, Dufner 1800, Schweikart 1811, Lutz 1814, Muffler 1815, Schafhäutle 1825, Blender 1833, Waibel 1833, Schober 1846, Müller 1851, Lösch 1854.

The number behind the name is the year of the first proof in Göggingen.

Population development

Estimated residents:

  • Alemannic clan settlement: no more than twelve families
  • The centuries of the early Middle Ages: 200 to 250 inhabitants
  • Around 1400: 500 inhabitants

First safe population figures:

  • 1767: 547 inhabitants (446 adults and 101 children)
  • 1791: 444 adults
  • 1813: 625 inhabitants (522 adults)
  • 1826: 624 inhabitants
  • 1833: 679/658 inhabitants
  • 1836: 673 inhabitants
  • 1843: 662 inhabitants

The population development of Göggingen from 1870 to 2008:

date Residents
1870 731
1875 698
1890 678
1895 672
1900 618
1905 632
1910 603 (male 286, female 317)
1915 613
1925 637
1933 669
1939 628
1950 702
1956 701
1961 746
1964 807
1967 782
1970 749
2004 929
2008 893

Religions

The population of Göggingen is Roman Catholic. The Catholic parish of St. Nikolaus belongs to the dean's office of Sigmaringen-Meßkirch in the Archdiocese of Freiburg via the pastoral care unit Krauchenwies-Rulfingen . Today there are also some Protestant Christians in Göggingen, most of whom settled in Göggingen through immigration.

politics

Local council

Gögginger Town Hall

The village of Göggingen has its own local council , which consists of nine voluntary local councils including a local mayor as chairman. The seat of the local administration is the Göggingen town hall . The local council has existed since 1974 and is directly elected by the people. The electoral term lasts five years. The local council has been composed as follows since the local elections on June 7, 2009:

Mayor

  • 1999-2014: Martin Binder (CDU)
  • since 2014: Manfred Fischer

coat of arms

The formerly independent municipality of Göggingen carried the coats of arms of the two families of ministers combined in a split shield as the local coat of arms as a souvenir of the former ministerials of the village. The Überlingen branch of the Knights of Geggingen led a red rafter in a silver coat of arms. A natural peacock's tail rose as a crest. The Pfullendorfer branch had a silver, capped chalice in a red field, which is also a crest ornament.

Culture and sights

societies

  • The fruit and horticultural association Göggingen e. V. (OGV) goes back in its origins to an association founded in 1909. The OGV maintains a year-round show garden at the sea grass scrubber with flowers, shrubs, bushes and organic vegetables and fruit.
  • The Göggingen Choral Society was founded in 1860 as a male choir. It was not until 1970 that it became a mixed choir.
  • Musikverein: The Musikverein Göggingen has its origins around 1850, the first evidence dates from 1859, the actual association was founded in 1929 and is closely linked to Klemes Vogel, who was the brother of the painter Lorenz Vogel.
  • Rural youth: The tasks of the rural youth Göggingen include the organization of youth work in the village as well as helping with traditional events during the year.
  • The military and warrior comradeship is one of the traditional associations in Göggingen. It has been documented since 1872, making it the oldest association in the village. With the beginning of the Second World War in 1939, club life came to a standstill. It was not re-established until October 1958, today, according to the association's statutes, only those who were soldiers in the German armed forces or who served in the armed forces can become members.

Buildings

Gasthof Adler

Gasthaus Adler and St. Nicholas Church
Coat of arms stone from the lintel of the old Göggingen rectory with the coat of arms of Abbess Maria Salome von Bernhausen zu Wald 1668
Memorial cross of the former cemetery next to the St. Nicholas Church

The history of the “Adler” inn goes back well before 1399. It was the only public house with the right to accommodate guests, serve wine and serve food. The Counts of Zimmer had given Franz Scherer the eagle as an inheritance. The inn was destroyed in the Thirty Years War. Verifiably, the “good Cimbrian beer” was brewed here as early as 1656. Around 1890, the beer brewer Josef Anton Straub from the Allgäu came to Göggingen, rebuilt the inn and built a brewery.

St. Nicholas Church

Göggingen's Church has a long history. The Reichenau Monastery certainly provided religious support at a very early stage. The founding time of the parish can be dated around 1100. Göggingen is already listed as an independent parish in the tax register of 1275. In Göggingen, the Wald monastery bought the big and small tenth in the 15th century. According to the registrum subsidii charitativi of the Diocese of Constance in 1463 and that of 1508, the Göggingen Kloster Wald church was incorporated. In the 16th century, at the time of the Counts of Zimmer , Göggingen belongs to the parish of the Meßkirch deanery in the class of the Ecclesiae mediocres (the middle class). In the course of time, some of the branch villages were given their own churches with parish rights, including Göggingen.

The first chapel was in the lower village. An old burial place in the garden of the Käpplerhof, which was once laid out around the chapel, which has now disappeared, is the oldest evidence of pastoral care in Göggingen. The first church was built on today's church square around 1200. The current baroque church building dates back to 1805 and 1806 after the secularization , the lower part of the tower still dates from the earlier one, namely from 1696. The image of Christ on the high altar , which depicts Christ without a crown of thorns and dates from 1750, is also interesting and valuable .

The green area on the east side of the church was used as a cemetery until 1836 and closed in 1874. In 1836 the cemetery, which is still in use today, was built for the parish of Göggingen.

A coat of arms stone with the year 1668 and the initials MSVBAZW - Maria Salome von Bernhausen Abbess of Forest - a reference to the Wald monastery as long-time owner of the tithe lordship in Göggingen was placed above the lintel of the former rectory . The old lintel was placed in the wall at the entrance of the new rectory, which was built in 1894/95 right next to the parish church of St. Nicholas. Today the Catholic public library is located in the rectory.

During the administrative reform in Baden-Württemberg after 1973, Göggingen became part of the Sigmaringen dean's office.

From Pentecost 2007 to June 2008 the interior of the church, the roof and the facade were renovated.

chapel

On the road leading to Bittelschieß at the eastern exit of the village there is a chapel built in October 1965 by the Muffler family. A vow was attached to the building. The Pieta, carved in sandstone, depicting the Mother of Sorrows was made by the Offenburg art workshop. Master painter Anton Muffler had made the necessary land available to the community in an exchange process.

Schlossbühl

The Schloßbühl is probably the location of an abandoned medieval castle or a prehistoric or early historical complex. This could be of Alemannic , Roman or Celtic origin.

Parish barn

The Göggingen parish barn, which was demolished in the course of redesigning the town center, looked back on almost 300 years of history. The barn existed in almost unchanged form from 1708 to 2007, on the half-timbered gable was the year 1708. Historically, the barn was valuable for the village because it gave testimony to the economic power of the well-equipped parish plots , as the district archivist Edwin Weber emphasized was critical of the demolition. The Pfarrpfründe had a cultivation area of ​​around 20 Jauchert in 1725 . The tithe income and other peasant taxes to which the pastor was entitled were stored in it.

In 1721, local pastor Franz Christoph Impatience could not accommodate his harvest because the barn was too small. He turned to the Wald monastery , which was responsible as patronage and tithe rule, and asked to take over the construction costs. The monastery refused and the case was brought to court in Constance. The bishop decided that forest would have to bear the costs. The prince von Fürstenberg administered the Gögginger church fund as territorial and local ruler in Messkirch and got involved. The monastery was also directed against him in order to pass the construction costs on. Finally, in 1722, the episcopal court decided that the Wald monastery had to pay for the construction. The parish, however, should pay a contribution to the maintenance of the barn every year.

The barn served the Adler brewery as a warehouse for a long time. The original color scheme, as the restorer Ernst Lorch described in 1993 in an examination of the plaster and color of the exterior facade commissioned by the Archbishop's Building Authority in Constance, had strength. The infills were brightly painted in 1708, the framework was painted red and decorated with a black line. The State Monuments Office classified it as a cultural monument because it was something very special for the village of Göggingen, and recognized for its function, for its wooden construction and its half-timbered gable. The year 1708 was written on the half-timbered gable. The demolition of this historic building shows that the administration, which has approved the demolition of the barn as part of a simple notification procedure, does not have the power to protect cultural assets.

Others

  • The Gögginger elementary school has the sower on the gable , a sgraffito by Paul Dietrich, professor of the recognized Bodensee-Kunstschule Konstanz (BKK).
  • In the cemetery there is a memorial to commemorate those who died in both world wars.
  • Various field and atonement crosses

Natural monuments

The " Sommerlinde natural monument " next to the church has been marked since 1993. The natural monument is protected until December 31, 2023.

Regular events

  • High point of the foolish activity between 11.11. and Ash Wednesday is the traditional village carnival with school exemption, parade and citizens' ball. The music association with its carnival department Spagethiet Pots and the Schloßbühl witches of the Narrenverein Göggingen (NVG) are involved in the action. During this time the neck name Schäke can also be found. It is not clear where the expression comes from, with which the Menninger and Gögginger refer to each other. That is simply a derogatory expression for something inferior, some speculate. “Schäken” (derived from the French jacket) is actually used to refer to worn coats and jackets, as they are said to have been worn by the poorer Menningers in the past - in contrast to the better-dressed, richer Göggingern. Schäken, another version, also means looking obliquely, condescendingly. So you looked down at each other with disdain. The Schäken from Göggingen used to go to the market through Menningen to Meßkirch and the Menninger “g'schäket” a bit condescendingly.
  • The custom of the spark fire has been held in Göggingen since 1995 on Spark Sunday . The spark fire is set up on the spark weekend by the Catholic rural youth Göggingen from collected Christmas trees and straw around the fir with a firecracker witch (spark witch). The sparks were located in Auerrain, Buchholz and Oberried.
  • The Göggingen Beer Festival , which traditionally takes place around May 1st, is a tented event alternating between the Göggingen Music Association and the Göggingen Sports Club. Its origins lie in the hall of the "Gögginger Adlerbrauerei". Later the beer festival moved to a meadow next to the Göggingen town hall, then to a meadow next to the sports field, in order to take place since 2006 on a festival area specially created for this event outside the village center.
  • The No Stress Festival is an open-air music event organized by the No Stress community annually at Pentecost with a musical mix of hip-hop, funk, rock, punk, folk, ska, reggae and alternative. The No Stress Community was founded in 1996 with the aim of celebrating a party without making a profit. Since the anniversary year 2007, the No Stress Festival has been celebrated as a two-day festival with a new festival site and an attached campsite on the “Rehbühl”. Until 2007 it was an evening event under the name of No Stress Party , held below the "Talbühl". Since then, well-known artists such as the Sugar Hill Gang , Dilated Peoples , Ohrbooten , Sebastian Sturm , Toni L , The Beatnuts , Mono & Nikitaman , Jamaram , Prinz Pi and Texta have performed in the forest clearing. A best trick skate contest has been held for several years.
Motocross area in Göggingen
  • The motocross organized on the motocross site in Göggingen was a motorsport attraction in the area for years. In the meantime it has been replaced by the Supermoto in Sigmaringen . The event, which was organized every two years by the rally racing team RRT Scheer, included races for the German Moto Cross Championship and the German Moto Cross Cup. The 1,500 meter long selective terrain circuit with jumping hills, steep ascents and descents and steep wall curves was one of eight annual event locations throughout the Federal Republic of Germany. The traditional event took place a total of 29 times. After a five-year break from racing, the 1st youth motocross took place on April 24th and 25th . Around 250 motocross riders started in the various classes and competed in the Baden-Württemberg championship, the Baden-Württemberg Cup and the regional "Gai Cup". For this purpose, the route was partially shortened to 700 meters. Whether there will be another youth motocross race in 2011 is still open.
  • Another regular event is the annual Gögginger garden show of the fruit and horticultural association. Among the eleven fruit and horticultural associations in the Sigmaringen district, the Göggingen fruit and horticultural association is the only district association to hold an event every year.
  • The summer festival of the military and warrior comradeship traditionally takes place on the first weekend in August at the Göggingen primary school. The pea stew is a traditional component of the festival.
  • Slaughter festival of the volunteer fire brigade Göggingen
  • When Suserfest the Horticultural Society is a restored historic cider press at the center.
  • The Gögginger Village Christmas is a pre-Christmas event organized by the Göggingen sports club. It has been taking place on Adlerplatz below the church since 2007; previously the event was celebrated in the school yard of the Göggingen elementary school.
  • Since 2006, No Stress Records has organized the No Stress Poetry Slam in Göggingen on the last Saturday of the year before New Year's Eve . In the past, Monika Koncz (2006), Karsten Hohage (2007), Michael Jakob (2008), Robin Mesarosch (2009), Iris Schwarz (2010) and Jan Hendrik Heyne (2011), those of Tobias Hoffmann (2006), Jan Siegert (2007), Lasse Samström (2008), Andy Strauss (2009), Michael Jakob (2010) and Tobias Hoffmann (2011) moderated the event.

Economy and Infrastructure

Protest board of the citizens' initiative Göggingen on the B 311 (entrance from the direction of Krauchenwies)

traffic

Göggingen is separated from the federal highway 311 ( Ulm - Geisingen , further on the federal highway 31 to Freiburg im Breisgau ) into an upper and a lower village. In a traffic count, a traffic load of over 9,000 passenger cars per day was determined. The number of trucks was not recorded at that time, but increased with the introduction of the truck toll in Germany , so that in 2007 the citizens' initiative “Interest group bypass road B 311 - Göggingen” was formed with the aim of achieving a bypass solution.

In the years around 1870, the Radolfzell-Mengen railway line was built along the Stockacher Aach and Ablach rivers. The line called Hegau-Ablachtal-Bahn was opened on September 6, 1873, Göggingen had a train station with a reception building and warehouse. Today, both passenger and freight rail traffic is shut down on the route north of Stockach .

Established businesses

Göggingen is characterized by small and medium-sized businesses.

The largest employer with 65 employees is Optigrün International AG , a Europe-wide company for roof and facade greening, which was awarded the State Prize for Young Companies in 2010 .

There is also the company VEMA Werkzeug- und Formenbau GmbH and VEMA Technische Kunststoffteile GmbH with 55 employees. The industrial company celebrated its 25th anniversary in November 2007.

The oldest family business still in existence in Göggingen is the Lösch bakery, which was first mentioned in a document in 1853. For generations the bakery was operated as a sideline to agriculture. Until 1954 the bread was sold in "parlor sales". This changed with the addition of a separate sales area for bread and baked goods, which also resulted in an increased customer and delivery service in the vicinity of Göggingen. Karl-Ulrich Lösch is a trained master baker and confectioner and has also gained experience in large bakeries.

education

In addition to the St. Elisabeth Catholic kindergarten, there is a primary school for children from Göggingen and the neighboring village of Ablach. The building was renovated in the summer of 2007.

Personalities

Honorary citizen

  • Gustav Kempf (pseudonym: Wolfgang Goldin; * January 8, 1890; † May 25, 1972), clergyman, professor and editor of the Konradsblatt received honorary citizenship on July 19, 1964 on the occasion of his golden jubilee as a priest, according to a resolution of the municipal council of January 22, 1964 .
  • Anton Kern (* 1903; † November 13, 1978), mayor from 1946 to 1969.
  • Anton Straub (born June 7, 1891 - † December 2, 1973), master brewer, owner of the Adlerbrauerei Göggingen and Adlerwirt.

Sons and daughters of the place

  • Johann Baptist Wehrle (born May 27, 1791 in Göggingen; † 1857 in the USA), master bricklayer and architect, later city architect of Konstanz. In 1831/1832 he built Bodman Castle in Bodman . In 1849 he emigrated to the USA.
  • Lorenz Vogel (born August 10, 1846 in Göggingen, † November 8, 1902 in Munich), German painter.

literature

  • Herbert Fießinger: Gögginger parish chronicles . Krauchenwies-Göggingen, 2002
  • Herbert Fießinger: The Gögginger Warrior Association . Krauchenwies-Göggingen, December 2002
  • Herbert Fießinger: Gögginger Chronicle. Volume I: Until 1945 . Krauchenwies-Göggingen, June 2004
  • Herbert Fießinger: Gögginger Chronicle. Volume II: 1945 to 1980 . Krauchenwies-Göggingen, June 2005
  • Herbert Fießinger: Gögginger Chronicle. Volume III: 1981 to 2007 . Krauchenwies-Göggingen, June 2007
  • Herbert Fießinger: Gögginger Heimat 2009 . Krauchenwies-Göggingen, April 2009
  • Herbert Fießinger: The river and place name Ablach . Krauchenwies-Göggingen, September 2009
  • Krauchenwies community: Göggingen . In: Ders .: Krauchenwies. Ablach. Bittelschießen. Ettisweiler. Göggingen. Hausen. Krauchenwies ... the community . Self-published by the municipality of Krauchenwies. P. 12f. Krauchenwies 2003
  • Gustav Kempf: The Gögginger village book . Community of Göggingen. Göggingen 1971

Web links

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

Remarks

  1. District area 12,368,420 m².
  2. June Frenk Hahn Rudolf (born September 10, 1915 Rostock), Neumann Rudolf (* November 20, 1899 in Vienna), Neumann Bruno (born September 23, 1898 in Gr. Stur paint, Kr. Lötzen), Mainz, Christian (born 18 1921 in Efferen / Cologne), Suchanowski Adolf (* 10 August 1901 in Erndtebrück), Schiffka Heinrich (* 1912?).

Individual evidence

  1. a b Information from Waltraud Weizenegger, antechamber mayor of the Krauchenwies community, from January 11, 2011.
  2. a b c d e f g h i Göggingen was founded in the years 350-450 AD. Rector Bayer, Meßkirch, spoke about the history of the village . In: Herbert Fießinger: Gögginger Chronik. Volume II: 1945 to 1980 . Göggingen. June 2005. pp. 128f.
  3. ^ Karl Theodor Zingeler , Wilhelm Friedrich Laur : The architectural and art monuments in the Hohenzollern'schen lands . Paul Neff Verlag, Stuttgart 1896, Google digitized version (PDF). P. 249.
  4. Bonn Yearbooks. Yearbooks of the Society of Friends of Antiquity in the Rhineland . ed. from the Association of Friends of Antiquity in the Rhineland, Rhine Province (Germany) Commission for the preservation of monuments. 1881, p. 53.
  5. After Gustav Kempf p. 128.
  6. According to Gustav Kempf p. 9 and the Krauchenwies community p. 12.
  7. According to Gustav Kempf p. 9.
  8. According to Gustav Kempf p. 11.
  9. According to Gustav Kempf p. 9f.
  10. Cf. Gustav Kempf.
  11. Cf. Gustav Kempf.
  12. ^ Wilhelm Abel: The desolations of the late Middle Ages . G. Fischer. 1976, p. 154, ISBN 3-437-50185-2 .
  13. Franz Joseph Mone: Journal for the history of the Upper Rhine . Regional Archives in Karlsruhe, Grand Ducal General Regional Archives in Karlsruhe, Baden Historical Commission, Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg, Baden General Regional Archives. 1889 p. 57.
  14. a b c Source: Monuments at the Göggingen cemetery.
  15. Inauguration of the memorial created by the community in the cemetery . In: Herbert Fießinger: Der Gögginger Kriegerverein , Krauchenwies-Göggingen, Christmas 2002, p. 66.
  16. Source: Engraving by Mr. Rebstein on recovered bomb fragments (in private ownership).
  17. Arno Möhl: Citizens remember the "coup" . In: Schwäbische Zeitung from April 21, 2015
  18. Max Breithaupt: The entry of the French troops in Göggingen at the end of the Second World War - Sunday, April 22, 1945 and some subsequent events . Freiburg, June 1965, in: Gustav Kempf: Das Gögginger Dorfbuch . Community of Göggingen. Göggingen 1971, pp. 378-381.
  19. See Göggingen war graves list .
  20. See documents from the Göggingen Military and Warrior Comradeship. V.
  21. Göggingen Military and Warrior Comradeship . In: Scroll. Bulletin of the Krauchenwies community with the districts Ablach, Bittelschieß, Ettisweiler, Göggingen and Hausen. 52nd year / No. 10 of March 11, 2011.
  22. ^ Commemoration and consecration of the monument on November 22, 1961 . In: Herbert Fießinger: Der Gögginger Kriegerverein , Krauchenwies-Göggingen, Christmas 2002, p. 94.
  23. Cf. address by Geistliche Rat Gustav Kempf from November 22, 1961, copy of the manuscript in the documents of the Göggingen military and warrior comradeship. V.
  24. ^ 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. 549 .
  25. Demolition starts tomorrow . In: Südkurier of June 30, 2006.
  26. Excavator in action . In: Südkurier from August 31, 2006.
  27. Abortion in arrears . In: Südkurier of November 17, 2006.
  28. The demolition continues . In: Südkurier from January 18, 2007.
  29. Arno Mohl (Ch): town center. Göggingen celebrates the new Adlerplatz . In: Schwäbische Zeitung from June 9, 2008.
  30. Falko Hahn (fah): Inauguration party at Adlerplatz in Göggingen - the project cost 1.2 million euros. Hundreds of people celebrate the new village center . In: Südkurier of June 10, 2008.
  31. Cf. Alfred Th. Heim: Names defining localities . In: Südkurier from June 1, 2005.
  32. According to Gustav Kempf p. 6.
  33. ^ Pastor Schleicher in the visitation protocol.
  34. ^ Geographical, statistical, topographic lexicon of Swabia.
  35. ^ Histographic topographical statistical lexicon of Baden (Kolb).
  36. Vogt Josef Walz in the report to the Rentamt Meßkirch.
  37. Correct number of the census of the community.
  38. ^ Wrong number according to Heunisch in the book Baden.
  39. Heunisch.
  40. District master builder Öhl.
  41. Censuses.
  42. Karl Mägerle (km): Review of the anniversary year. Gardeners from Göggingen are a good group . In: Schwäbische Zeitung from March 20, 2009.
  43. ^ Karl Mägerle (km): Chopping and plucking for beauty . In: Südkurier from June 24, 2010.
  44. Arno Mohl (Ch): 150 years Gesangsverein Goeggingen. The anniversary concert will take place on January 23rd. Sing together. Gögginger singer friends celebrate a milestone anniversary. "In joy and sorrow - ready for the song" . In: Südkurier from January 22, 2010.
  45. See Göggingen . In: Maren Kuhn-Rehfus : The Cistercian Monastery of Wald (= Germania Sacra , New Part 30, The Dioceses of the Ecclesiastical Province of Mainz. The Diocese of Constance, Volume 3 ). Walter de Gruyter, Berlin & New York 1992. ISBN 3-11-013449-7 . P. 428.
  46. Quite my home . In: Südkurier of May 21, 2011.
  47. ^ The construction of the chapel in the zoo on October 7, 1965.
  48. ^ Vera Romeu (from right): Place design. Prospective buyer wants to save parish barn from demolition . In: Schwäbische Zeitung from May 23, 2007.
  49. Vera Romeu (from right): The village square is large and empty . In: Arno Möhl (mö), Vera Romeu (from right): Pro & Contra. Center is well done. The village square is big and empty . In: Schwäbische Zeitung from June 4, 2007.
  50. Martin Binder: Göggingen recalls war fates . In: Südkurier of November 18, 2008.
  51. Wü 65/33 T 1, no. 27, state archive Sigmaringen.
  52. Alfred Th. Heim: From water princes, Schilpen and Hornasen . In: Südkurier of June 13, 2003.
  53. No stress at the festival . In: Südkurier of May 22, 2010.
  54. Stan Muller: DMoto Cross overshadowed by accidents . In: Südkurier from April 28, 2010.
  55. The offspring let the tires speak for themselves . In: Südkurier of April 9, 2010.
  56. Markus Waibel: “We have to digest that first” . In: Südkurier from April 28, 2010.
  57. ^ In: Südkurier of June 30, 2007.
  58. ^ Werner Sieber: bypass road. More and more citizens are joining the protest resolution . In: Schwäbische Zeitung from December 3, 2007.
  59. ^ Werner Sieber: Traffic. Gögginger fight for a bypass . In: Schwäbische Zeitung from November 15, 2007.
  60. After bypassing for Göggingen. Demand of the citizens' initiative . In: Südkurier from November 15, 2007.
  61. http://www.schwaebische.de/region/sigmaringen-tuttlingen/sigmaringen/rund-um-sigmaringen_artikel,-Pfiffig-Dachgruen-spart-Gebuehren-_arid,5067588.html
  62. http://www.landespreis-bw.de/lpbw/inhalt/nav/preistraeger/preistraeger2010/uebersicht.xml?dyn=true&ceid=110544&ansicht=wp&jahr=2010
  63. ^ In: Südkurier of November 10, 2007.
  64. ^ In: Südkurier of October 13, 2007.
  65. "This rare award is made in grateful appreciation of the great merits of the jubilee for the spiritual and cultural promotion of his home village, in particular for his design of the municipal coat of arms, for his artistic renovation and decoration of the village church associated with personal donations, for his significant contribution to the creation a worthy war memorial and a shapely village fountain, for his pious maintenance of village customs, and all in all his true love of homeland, which is expressed at every opportunity. ” Quote from Gustav Kempf becomes an honorary citizen of Göggingen on July 22, 1964.