Grafing near Munich

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the city of Grafing near Munich
Grafing near Munich
Map of Germany, position of the city of Grafing near Munich highlighted

Coordinates: 48 ° 3 '  N , 11 ° 58'  E

Basic data
State : Bavaria
Administrative region : Upper Bavaria
County : Ebersberg
Height : 522 m above sea level NHN
Area : 29.58 km 2
Residents: 13,775 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 466 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 85567
Area code : 08092
License plate : EBE
Community key : 09 1 75 122

City administration address :
Marktplatz 28
85567 Grafing
Website : www.grafing.de
First Mayor : Christian Bauer ( Christian Social Union )
Location of the city of Grafing near Munich in the Ebersberg district
Pliening Poing Vaterstetten Zorneding Oberpframmern Egmating Markt Schwaben Forstinning Anzing Anzinger Forst Ebersberger Forst (gemeindefreies Gebiet) Eglhartinger Forst Hohenlinden Steinhöring Frauenneuharting Emmering (Landkreis Ebersberg) Aßling Baiern (Landkreis Ebersberg) Glonn Kirchseeon Ebersberg Grafing bei München Moosach Bruck (Oberbayern) Landkreis Erding Landkreis Mühldorf am Inn Landkreis Rosenheim München München Landkreis München Landkreis Rosenheimmap
About this picture
Market square in Grafing from the west

Grafing (officially: b.München Grafing , formerly: Grafing am Gries ) is a city and the third largest municipality in the Upper Bavarian district of Ebersberg and lies in one of the economically strongest counties of Munich surrounding area.

geography

location

Grafing is located in the Munich region at the confluence of the Urtelbach and Wieshamer Bach to Attel in the Alpine foothills around 32 km south of Erding , 25 km west of Wasserburg , 28 km northwest of Rosenheim , 33 km east of the state capital Munich and only 4 km south of the district town of Ebersberg . For Munich Airport is about 43 km. Grafing has a connection to the S-Bahn , which provides a connection with downtown Munich.

Grafing, together with the city of Ebersberg, takes on the central function of a medium-sized center. In addition to the closed settlement body, the community consists of five other districts. The closest regional centers are Munich (30 km as the crow flies) and Rosenheim (25 km as the crow flies).

Neighboring communities

The following districts exist : Elkofen , Grafing near Munich, Nettelkofen , Öxing , Straussdorf .

history

Reiterbräu and town hall in 1902

Until the church is planted

The town, founded as Gisling in 960 , belonged to the Munich Rent Office and the Swabian Regional Court of the Electorate of Bavaria . For a long time, the municipality of Oexing existed immediately adjacent to Grafing and was incorporated into Grafing on August 1, 1933. The Grafingen parish church of St. Aegidius was located in the municipality of Oexing. After several votes, the merged place took over the name Grafing.

Grafing also had a market court with extensive magistrate rights. In the course of the administrative reforms in Bavaria, today's municipality was created with the municipal edict of 1818.

Grafing market

From 1923 to June 15, 1953, the official name of the community was "Markt Grafing". The city elevation took place in 1953.

Second World War

It was not until the last days of the Second World War, at the end of April 1945, that there were bombing raids on Grafingen's municipality. The strategically important train station in Grafing Bahnhof was bombed in several waves of attacks and the railway facilities were largely destroyed.

On May 1, 1945, the first Americans moved into Grafing Stadt without a fight, although in the days before there were repeated incidents between the population who wanted to flag white and scattered remnants of the SS who set up anti-tank barriers and prevent white flags at gunpoint wanted, came. In the days that followed, Elkofen and Straussdorf were also taken over by the Americans without a fight.

Confiscation of the church bells

In 1942 the Grafings church bells were fetched from the tower to melt down for the war. But on the night of March 4th, the young people Franz Lettl, Anton Lettl and Stefan Neumaier tried to take the bells away and hide them with a sledge. A few meters further, however, they had to bury the smaller bell in the snow. They took the 360 ​​kilogram big bell to the Reitberger estate, where the mother of the Lettls lived. From there the young people wanted to bring the bell to the Feldmann gravel pit the next night, but they got stuck on the slope with their sledge. They had to get help from Michael Wieser and his son Josef and from 14-year-old Josef Stürzer. They put the little bell under the hay at the Feldmanns' house. Four weeks later they were exposed. The bells were discovered by the police and those involved were arrested. At the beginning of February 1944, the bell-thieves who were under criminal law were sentenced to fines and shorter youth arrest for “unauthorized removal of confiscated church bells”. Actually, the death penalty was also threatened. Josef Feldmann, who was already at the front when the verdict was pronounced, was suspended for three weeks of youth arrest until after the final victory .

Looting of a beverage warehouse

After the discovery of a very large, walled-in store of wines and schnapps at today's Kegelkeller on May 4, 1945, there was a rapidly escalating and uncontrolled mass drinking of Grafingers, billeted slave laborers and Americans. We are talking about up to 40,000 bottles of wine.

Railway accident

On July 16, 1945, a nearby railway accident occurred in Aßling , in which an American transport train with 50 tanks collided with a stationary train carrying German prisoners of war who had just been released. 105 German prisoners of war were killed in the accident. 95 of them are resting in the military cemetery in Oberelkofen.

Incorporations

Öxing

At a meeting of the Öxingen municipal council on May 11, 1933, 6 out of 9 municipal councils voted for independence and admission to the Grafing community. With effect from August 1, 1933, the municipality of Öxing with then approx. 800 inhabitants and 155 residential buildings was incorporated into the municipality of Markt Grafing. This was preceded by efforts in the years 1877 and 1926, in which a merger was also decided by a large majority on the Öxinger and Grafinger side, but both times this did not come about due to formal errors in the resolutions.

Elkofen, Straussdorf, Nettelkofen

On May 1, 1978, in the course of the regional reform implemented by the Bavarian state government, the previously independent communities of Elkofen, Straussdorf and the main part of the dissolved community of Nettelkofen with a little less than 1000 inhabitants were incorporated.

Population development

Between 1988 and 2018 the city grew from 11,231 to 13,660 by 2,429 inhabitants or 21.6%. The city of Grafing is characterized by a stable population development and has recorded a population increase of 5.3% over the last ten years. Grafing, with a net migration of 14.4% in 2012, is a clear immigration region in the so-called Munich “bacon belt”. According to forecasts by the Bavarian State Office for Statistics, a further 6.5% increase in the number of inhabitants is expected by 2030.

Development of the population from 1980 to 2018
year Residents
1980
  
8,585
1981
  
9,056
1982
  
9,484
1983
  
10,087
1984
  
10,473
1985
  
10,494
1986
  
10,625
1987
  
10,760
1988
  
10,916
1989
  
11,066
1990
  
11,229
1991
  
11,352
1992
  
11,512
1993
  
11,610
1994
  
11,615
1995
  
11,649
1996
  
11,576
1997
  
11,548
1998
  
11,589
1999
  
11,736
2000
  
11,947
2001
  
12,022
2002
  
12,297
2003
  
12,397
2004
  
12,514
2005
  
12,524
2006
  
12,508
2007
  
12,605
2008
  
12,655
2009
  
12,742
2010
  
12,832
2011
  
12,915
2012
  
12,978
2013
  
13,137
2014
  
13,423
2015
  
13,538
2016
  
13,570
2017
  
13,790
2018
  
13,785
Source: City of Grafing b. Munich (2018: Report on the Citizens' Assembly 2018)

With an unemployment rate of 3.3%, Grafing is below the average for the administrative district of Upper Bavaria. The 3848 outbound commuters are due to the proximity to Munich. However, with 1623 commuters , Grafing takes on the role of an important place of work for the surrounding communities.

Population development

2017 2018
Recorded marriages 60 74
Births 124 132
Deaths 111 107

politics

Grafing town hall

City Councilor and Mayor

The Grafingen city council consists of 24 council members and the mayor. City council meetings take place in the meeting room on the 2nd floor of the historic town hall.

Election 2014

The city ​​council election on March 16, 2014 with a turnout of 58.8% led to the following result:

City council election 2014
Turnout: 58.8%
 %
40
30th
20th
10
0
32.0%
20.0%
19.1%
14.8%
12.0%
BfG


Party / list Share of votes Seats
CSU 32.0% 8th
SPD 14.8% 3
Green 20.0% 5
FDP 2.1% 0
Free voters 19.1% 5
Alliance for Grafing (BfG) 12.0% 3
total 100% 24

Angelika Obermayr (Alliance 90 / The Greens) became mayor. She was elected in the runoff election on March 30, 2014 with 60.3% of the valid votes and thus prevailed against Susanne Linhart (CSU), who received 39.7%.

2020 election

The city ​​council election on March 15, 2020 led to the following result with a turnout of 67.58%:

City council election 2020
Turnout: 67.58%
 %
40
30th
20th
10
0
38.16%
29.97%
12.10%
8.45%
4.30%
3.84%
3.18%


Party / list Share of votes Seats
CSU 38.16% 9
Alliance 90 / The Greens 29.97% 7th
Free voters 12.10% 3
SPD 8.45% 2
Bavaria Party 4.30% 1
FDP 3.84% 1
The left 3.18% 1
total 100% 24

Christian Bauer ( CSU ), previously the city's treasurer, became the first mayor . He was elected in the runoff election on March 29, 2020, which was carried out exclusively by postal vote, with 54.0% of the valid votes and thus prevailed against the previous mayor Angelika Obermayr ( Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen ), who won 46.0 % received.

coat of arms

Grafing coat of arms near Munich
Blazon : "In gold, a right-turning, soaring black bear."

Coat of arms history

The origin of the bear as a heraldic animal for Grafing is not documented. The late medieval market town had earlier versions of the coat of arms in the form of seals since the late 14th century. The first seal with a left-facing bear in a semicircular shield has been known since 1430. From the second seal (around 1500) the bear is shown turned to the right. The tinging has been handed down in various variants since the 16th century. The original field color was probably silver . In the 19th century, first red , then always gold, was indicated as the field color.

Say

According to legend, Emperor Ludwig der Bayer is said to have awarded Grafing this coat of arms in 1325. The Grafingers took part in the great battle near Ampfing between Emperor Ludwig and Duke Friedrich the Beautiful of Austria in 1322 with the flag on the side of the emperor and allegedly fought “like bears” in this battle.

Town twinning

FranceFrance France : Grafing has been twinning with Saint-Marcellin (Isère) since 1993 .

Economy and Infrastructure

Community finances

Trade tax revenue (net) Municipal tax receipts
2012 € 3,518,000 € 12,149,000
2013 € 3,119,500 € 13,122,000
2014 € 3,379,300 € 14,131,200

(net: trade tax income after deduction of the trade tax apportionment.)

Business-relevant data

2013 2014 2017 2018
Number of traders 1,443
Business registrations 179 152 138
Business cancellations 140 169 133
Trade tax multiplier (%) 330
Property tax rate B (%) 300
Residents 13,373 13,790 13,785
Apartments 5,577
Employees subject to social security contributions in Grafing 2,603
Workers at the place of residence 4844
Commuters 1,623
Commuters 3,848

Commercial areas in Grafing

  • Business park Schammach 1 (remaining space available through private investors)
  • Business park Schammach 2 (partially sold)
  • Haidling commercial park (commercial space available through private investors)

The Schammach industrial park is located in the southwest of the city. It consists of the original location Schammach 1 with 12.5 ha, which has existed since 1999, and the new Schammach 2 with a total size of 19 ha.

The traffic infrastructure development takes place via the district road EBE 13, which is one of the main connecting roads to the surrounding neighborhoods, and via the regional train station "Grafing Bahnhof" one kilometer away. This offers a connection to the regional train connections Munich – Rosenheim and Munich – Wasserburg as well as to the S-Bahn line S6 from Tutzing via Munich to Ebersberg. The supraregional connection also takes place via the B304 in the north of the city center, around 3.5 km away. The industrial area can be reached by bus from Glonn and Grafing.

Due to the exposed location on the busy arterial road towards Glonn, there is an optimal visual connection. As the largest company, Schönreiter Baustoffe GmbH is located in the industrial park. The company RUFF GmbH and the company Hampel + Eckstein GmbH have also been users of the business park for many years. The loose construction and the successful greening lead to a high level of acceptance of the established business location among the Grafingen population.

The Schammach 2 area has not yet been subdivided and can largely be parceled out individually using a project-related development plan. Schammach 2 will have its own driveway as well as be connected to the road network in the business park. A broadband connection of at least 25 Mbit / s is available.

traffic

Grafing has two S-Bahn stops in the network of the Munich Transport Association as well as a connection to the train routes Munich-Rosenheim-Rome, Munich-Rosenheim-Salzburg and Munich-Wasserburg. The good traffic connection with public transport is complemented by the immediate location of the municipality on the federal highway B304 , which connects Munich with Wasserburg and Salzburg. The motorway junction to the A99 in Haar can be reached in around 20 minutes by car via the federal road .

Road traffic

The city of Grafing near Munich has Münchner Strasse or Wasserburger Strasse a connection to the federal highway 304 . This provides a quick connection to Munich or Wasserburg . The 2.7 kilometer long eastern bypass was completed in autumn 2017, relieving Grafing of through traffic to Rosenheim.

The federal highway 99 is about 18 kilometers northwest. The federal motorway 8 , which leads to Freilassing on the Austrian border, is about 30 km south.

railroad

Platforms with reception building of the Grafingen train station

The Munich – Rosenheim railway runs through the Grafing Bahnhof district . The railway line was opened on October 15, 1871, at the same time Grafing station went into operation. Due to its great importance as a long-distance line to the south and south-east, the railway line to Rosenheim was expanded to two tracks as early as 1892. Two years later, on May 26, 1894, the Grafing – Glonn railway was put into operation, but this did not open up any other districts within Grafing. In 1897 the eastern suburban railway network of the city of Munich was expanded so that Grafing received better train connections to Munich. On November 6, 1899, a railway to the center of Grafing was set up on the Grafing – Wasserburg railway line. The line was extended in 1903 from Ebersberg to Wasserburg. The newly created train station in the center of the village was initially called Grafing Markt, later Grafing Stadt. In 1927, the Munich-Rosenheim route was electrified; despite the numerous express trains on the route, Grafing station was only connected to Munich and Rosenheim by simple passenger trains and a few express trains . Since the start of the Munich S-Bahn network, there has been a 20-minute cycle from Grafing Bahnhof to Munich. Grafing Stadt station is still served by regional trains on the railway line to Wasserburg only by S-Bahn trains every 20/40 minutes. In Grafing Bahnhof, there is still a fast train connection to Munich with Meridian trains. There is also a reception building in Grafing Bahnhof. There is one platform in Grafing Stadt and three platforms in Grafing Bahnhof.

Grafing Bahnhof is now served every 20 minutes by trains on the S6 S-Bahn, which runs from Tutzing via Starnberg , Munich , Vaterstetten , Zorneding , Kirchseeon , Grafing to Ebersberg (as of December 2017). The Grafing Stadt stop is only served every 20/40 minutes, as an S-Bahn stops every hour at Grafing Bahnhof. During rush hour, the frequency in Grafing Bahnhof is increased by individual journeys on the S4 S-Bahn from Geltendorf via Munich, Zorneding and Kirchseeon to Grafing Bahnhof and, in some cases, further to Ebersberg. In addition, trains of the Meridian from Kufstein to Munich stop every hour in Grafing Bahnhof . The Grafing Bahnhof and Grafing Stadt train stations are also served by the regional train line to Wasserburg.

Local public transport

The city of Grafing is part of the Munich Transport and Tariff Association (MVV). In addition to the S-Bahn and regional trains, the city is connected to the transport association with five bus routes. In the urban area and in the vicinity of the city of Grafing, there are five bus routes of the Munich Transport and Tariff Association, one of Regionalverkehr Oberbayern (RVO), a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn AG and Rosenheimer Verkehrsgesellschaft (RoVG). Three of these lines serve the city center of Grafing. The following bus routes operate in the urban area of ​​Grafing (as of January 2015):

  • 45: Grafing train station - Grafing town - Oberelkofen - Hohenthann - Maxlrain - Bad Aibling train station (- Bad Aibling vocational school) (only Monday to Saturday, individual trips; no MVV tariff)
  • 440: Grafing train station - Taglaching - Bruck - Moosach - Glonn (- Piusheim)
  • 442: Grafing Bahnhof - Grafing Stadt - Ebersberg - Kirchseeon - Eglharting - Buch (only Monday to Friday)
  • 444: Grafing Bahnhof - Grafing Stadt - Aßling - Schalldorf (only Monday to Saturday)
  • 447: Grafing Bahnhof - Grafing Stadt - Oberelkofen - Aßling (only Monday to Friday)
  • 9421: Grafing Bahnhof - Grafing Stadt - Ebersberg - Tulling - Forsting - Brandstätt - Reitmehring - Wasserburg (only Monday to Saturday, single journeys; only to Tulling with tickets of the Munich Transport and Tariff Association)

Educational institutions

schools

  • Grafing primary school
  • Georg Huber Middle School
  • Max-Mannheimer-Gymnasium Grafing
  • Johann-Comenius-School (special educational support center)
  • Boarding school "Landschulheim Elkofen" in Oberelkofen (former grammar school, secondary school since 2009)

Other educational institutions

  • Grafing Adult Education Center
  • music school
  • District education center Ebersberg
  • Evangelical educational organization

Culture and sights

Leonhardi trip

The Grafinger Leonhardifahrt has been taking place for over 300 years and on the last Sunday in October . Carriages and teams of horses from all over Upper Bavaria drive around the Leonhardikirche and the market square three times and ask for the blessing of St. Leonhard . The Grafinger Leonhardifahrt was mentioned for the first time in 1708 and is one of the oldest and largest of these pilgrimages.

Parish Church of St. Giles

Predecessor building from the 9th century (nothing preserved); Remains of the Romanesque church from the 11th / 12th centuries. Century preserved as the foundation of the tower; Gothic church from the 15th century, badly damaged in the Thirty Years War, but remains preserved; today's building from 1692 by the Grafing master mason Thomas Mayr; Extension 1902; Renovation in 1963; Refurbishment of the interior in 2009.

Leonhardikirche

Leonhardikirche

St. Leonhard auf dem Felde is the building with the oldest structure in Grafing. The small church was partially destroyed in the Thirty Years War , but the remains of the wall and frescoes from 1408 have been preserved. The church was originally built around 1300 in the Gothic style and rebuilt around 1700 after it was destroyed. In 1802 it was threatened with demolition, which was prevented by the merchant Peter Vazanini.

Parish Church of St. Giles

Market Church

For the Most Holy Trinity , built in 1672 according to plans by Gallus Mayr; 1743/84 with the support of Munich bankers Joh. Georg Nockher with stucco work by Johann Baptist Zimmermann and saints of Johann Baptist Straub equipped

Dobel Chapel

Originally built in the 1860s, a small religious building on the edge of the Grafinger Dobel, which has since been rebuilt several times after being destroyed or burned; most recently in 1985 and on May 12, 2018. It is a wooden building owned by the city of Grafing, executed according to old plans by the local carpentry Fritz, equipped with figures from donations from Grafing citizens.

Homecoming memorial

The so-called homecoming monument was erected in 1929 on the initiative of the Veterans 'and Warriors' Association on the south side of the parish church of St. Giles and consecrated on November 24th of the same year. Financed by the municipalities of Grafing, Nettelkofen and Öxing, the cubic monument (L 2.15 m; W 1.80 m; H 3.35 m with a cross later attached) was made of Treuchtlinger marble to commemorate the soldiers who had returned from the First World War. Executed by the Grafinger stonemason Hans Hafenmair, the monument with two reliefs (Resurrection Savior; Saint Giles) by the Ebersberg sculptor Max Maier bore the texts "God was with us", "Erected in 1929", "He is due the honor" and "World War I" 1914/18 ". The dedication inscription read: Dedicated in gratitude to their warriors who returned from the World War and who died in their homeland: Die Pfarrgemeinde Grafing ". In 1953, the monument that needed renovation was removed and re-erected at the community cemetery (forest cemetery). On July 5th of the same year it was by Steinmetz Hafenmair The revised monument was re-consecrated and since then, following a request from the expellees, it has been dedicated to "Our dead who remained in our homeland".

Grafing City Museum

Local history museum in the Rieperdinger-Haus (from 1871), emerged from a private collection since the 1930s. Provides insights into the art history of the Grafing area, in particular the important painter Max Josef Wagenbauer (1775–1829), a son of the city, as well as into the life, work and party world of the inhabitants from the region around Grafing in the permanent exhibition and special exhibitions .

More Attractions

sports clubs

EHC Klostersee

The most famous sports club in the city of Grafing is the EHC Klostersee . It is named after the Klostersee in the neighboring town of Ebersberg, where the first ice hockey games were played in the 1950s . The association moved to Grafing early on, but kept its name. Today is played in a half-open artificial ice stadium. The club's figurehead is the first men's team. The club has also won national titles in the fields of speed skating and short track . Short tracker Susanne Rudolph from Grafing took part in the Olympic Winter Games in 2002 and 2006.

TSV Grafing

The sports club in town with the largest number of members is TSV Grafing from 1864 . In addition to the soccer department with 2 men's, one women's and numerous junior teams, there are also numerous smaller departments within the club. The male volleyball players who play in the 2nd Bundesliga and became champions in the 2017/18 season, as well as the women's judo team, which is successful in the Bayernliga, are successful here.

Over the past few years, the handball department has also distinguished itself through sustainable and strong youth work, especially in the female area. The Grafinger handball players are regularly represented in the regional / Bavarian league. In the male area, a cooperation has been entered into with the neighboring club TSV Ebersberg in the youth work.

Personalities

sons and daughters of the town

  • Max Joseph Wagenbauer (born July 28, 1775; † May 12, 1829 in Munich), landscape and animal painter / lithographer, royal court painter and gallery inspector
  • Hans Deuschl (born July 21, 1891, † April 27, 1953 in Starnberg), medic, SS leader and medical officer
  • Josef Schuster (born December 13, 1906 in Oberölkofen; † 1996), weightlifter
  • Fritz Hintermayer (born October 28, 1911 - † May 29, 1946 (executed)), SS-Obersturmbannführer, camp doctor in the Dachau concentration camp
  • Hans Haberl (born March 5, 1924 - † December 19, 2016) high-frequency technician and radio operator; Resistance to the Nazi regime; sentenced to death on September 24, 1942 "for treasonous favoring the enemy, preparation for high treason and blackmailing", later pardoned; later owner of a radio and television business in Grafing
  • Christian Sebald (born April 17, 1961; † October 1, 2016 (mountain accident (crash)), Dolomites , Italy), judo athlete, member of the national judo squad, pioneer of judo and climbing in Grafing
  • Florian Keller (born January 30, 1976), former ice hockey player

Other personalities related to the city

  • Josef Vogl (born June 22, 1848 in Emmering, † June 22, 1886 in Baiernrain); 1870–1876 teacher in Grafing; is considered one of the fathers of the traditional costume movement in Bavaria.
  • Karl Wilhelm Fischer (1888–1970), head of the secondary school, the museum and the adult education center
  • Hans Schnetzer (born April 28, 1894 in Ludwigshafen am Rhein, † January 10, 1994 in Munich), architect and construction clerk at the Post Building School; built the post office in Grafing in 1927.
  • Leo Scheffczyk (born February 21, 1920 in Beuthen, Upper Silesia, † December 8, 2005 in Munich), Roman Catholic cardinal, German theologian and professor of dogmatics; 1947 to 1948 as chaplain in Grafing.
  • Alfred Schöpffe (born September 20, 1917 in Kassel, † December 17, 1992 in Grafing), visual artist and art teacher (graphics, painting, enamel , glass, mosaic or textile art), decorator of numerous churches (e.g. B. St. Klara, St. Elisabeth, St. Anton, St. Wolfgang and Albertinum in Munich; St. Elisabeth and St. Michael in Kassel; Cathedral in Freising ; Augustinian convent in Zwiesel, St. Pankratius in Emmering) and communal Buildings (e.g. town hall and town hall Grafing) on ​​behalf of the public
  • Adalbert Mischlewski (born November 22, 1919 in Berlin), theologian, historian, grammar school teacher, initiator of the Grafing - Saint Marcellin city ​​partnership , founder and honorary chairman of the Antoniter Forum , Society for the Care of the Heritage of the Antoniter eV, honorary citizen of the city of Grafing
  • Hermann Huber (born January 29, 1930 in Munich; † May 4, 2018 in Grafing), lawyer, diplomat, German ambassador in Prague from December 1988 to August 1992; since March 2015 honorary citizen of the city of Grafing. Huber was ambassador in Prague when thousands of GDR citizens fled to the premises of the West German representation in the Czechoslovak capital from August 1989 and initially organized their temporary accommodation on site and finally their departure to the Federal Republic of Germany, which was approved on the evening of September 30, 1989 .
  • Hellmuth Karasek (born January 4, 1934 in Brno, Czechoslovakia; † September 29, 2015 in Hamburg), journalist, book author, film and literary critic and professor of theater studies; 1959 taught for nine months at the Grafingen Goethe Institute
  • Otto Weiß (born September 15, 1934 in Ulm; † August 3, 2017 in Klagenfurt am Wörthersee), historian
  • Franz Wörle (* 1952 in Munich; † 2020 in Grafing-Straussdorf), sculptor; lived and worked in Grafing
  • Angelika Obermayr (born May 1, 1959 in Ulm), qualified biologist, Bavarian politician of the Greens and first mayor of Grafing until April 2020
  • Robert Papst (born December 10, 1960 in Ebersberg), musician, composer and record producer, founder of the band Dominoe , lives and works in Grafing
  • Martin Max (born August 7, 1968 in Tarnowskie Góry, Poland), former football player and coach
  • Oliver Oetke (born August 18, 1968 in Stuttgart), volleyball and beach volleyball player

Web links

Commons : Grafing near Munich  - 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. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing, population status of the communities in the district of Ebersberg (status: December 31, 2014) Archive link ( Memento of the original from July 17, 2017 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. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.lra-ebe.de
  3. a b Wilhelm Volkert (Ed.): Handbook of the Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 454 .
  4. Thorsten Rienth: Moralischer Raub , Süddeutsche Zeitung, March 3, 2017 (print edition: March 4/5, 2017) , accessed on April 28, 2017.
  5. ^ 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. 571 and 572 .
  6. ^ Information from the city of Grafing from December 2014
  7. ^ Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing
  8. ^ Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing
  9. Mayor. Grafing City Administration, accessed on August 2, 2020 .
  10. ^ Entry on the coat of arms of Grafing near Munich  in the database of the House of Bavarian History
  11. https://www.hdbg.eu/gemeinden/web/index.php/detail?rschl=9175122
  12. ^ Hupp, Otto: The coats of arms and seals of the German cities, spots and villages, 6th issue: Oberbayern and Niederbayern, Frankfurt am Main 1912, pp. 43, 49
  13. https://www.hdbg.eu/gemeinden/web/index.php/detail?rschl=9175122
  14. ^ Information from the city of Grafing
  15. ^ Thorsten Rienth Grafing: Grafing: East bypass is being built . In: sueddeutsche.de . ISSN  0174-4917 ( sueddeutsche.de [accessed on February 23, 2016]).
  16. ^ Siegfried Bufe: Main line Munich – Salzburg . Bufe-Fachbuchverlag, Egglham 1995, ISBN 3-922138-57-8 .
  17. ^ Armin Franzke, Josef Mauerer: 1860-2010: 150 years of the Rosenheim - Salzburg line . PB Service, Munich 2010, ISBN 978-3-9812639-2-3 , p. 27 .
  18. ^ A b Reinhard Pospischil, Ernst Rudolph: S-Bahn Munich . Alba, Düsseldorf 1997, ISBN 3-87094-358-0 .
  19. ^ Armin Franzke, Josef Mauerer: 1860-2010: 150 years of the Rosenheim - Salzburg line . PB Service, Munich 2010, ISBN 978-3-9812639-2-3 , p. 27 f .
  20. ^ Siegfried Bufe: Main line Munich – Salzburg , Bufe-Fachbuch-Verlag, Egglham 1995, ISBN 3-922138-57-8 .
  21. Church abusers in prison. In: Ebersberger Zeitung. 12th of July 2013.
  22. ^ Thorsten Rienth: Maria in new splendor. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung from November 1, 2018
  23. Adalbert mixed Levski new honorary citizen of Grafing. In: merkur-online.de. September 1, 2013, accessed September 13, 2014 .
  24. Michael Acker: Grafing has a new honorary citizen. Merkur.de, March 1, 2015, accessed April 25, 2015 .
  25. Martin Mühlfenzl: The silent maker. Süddeutsche Zeitung, October 3, 2010, accessed on April 25, 2015 .