Großhaslau

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Großhaslau ( village )
locality
cadastral community Großhaslau
administrative district
Großhaslau (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Zwettl  (ZT), Lower Austria
Pole. local community Zwettl-Lower Austria
Coordinates 48 ° 38 '53 "  N , 15 ° 9' 41"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 38 '53 "  N , 15 ° 9' 41"  Ef1
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Residents of the village 150 (January 1, 2020)
Area  d. KG 7.05 km²
Post Code 3910f1
prefix + 43/2823f1
Mayor Leopold Reitterer
(as of September 15, 2019)f1
Statistical identification
Locality code 07037
Cadastral parish number 24319
Counting district / district Grosshaslau (32530 104)
image
Stop of the former local railway in Großhaslau (2010).
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; NÖGIS
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150

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Großhaslau is a village in Lower Austria and, together with the neighboring hamlet of Teichhäuser to the northwest, forms a cadastral municipality of the municipality of Zwettl-Lower Austria . According to the 2001 census, the cadastral community had 167 inhabitants on an area of ​​7.05 km².

geography

Großhaslau is located about six kilometers north of the city center of Zwettl on Zwettler Straße B 36. The place is connected to the Austrian intercity bus network by post buses ; There is also a stop for the Schwarzenau – Zwettl – Martinsberg local railway , whose passenger service was discontinued in December 2010.

In February 2008, the construction of a five-kilometer, two-lane bypass road east of Großhaslau began, which is intended to reduce through traffic in the local area by 80 to 85%. The bypass road was opened to traffic on November 10, 2010.

The municipality borders in the north on the cadastral community Großglobnitz , east on Germanns , in the southeast on Gerotten , south on Zwettl Stift , in the southwest on Gradnitz , west on Unterrabenthan and in the northwest on Ritzmannshof and Walterschlag (community Schweiggers) .

history

Großhaslau was first mentioned in a document in 1157 with the name Haselowe . The name means something like " Au that is overgrown with hazel bushes ".

When the feudal social system was abolished in the Austrian Empire after the revolution of 1848/49 , independent communities were formed everywhere. Although a draft for the Waldviertel stipulated that Großhaslau should belong to the local community Zwettl, due to resistance from the population it was finally allowed that the place constituted itself as an independent community in 1850 .

In 1968, Stift Zwettl, Rudmanns and Gerotten merged to form the Stift Zwettl community. In 1970 Großhaslau was added to the newly formed local community, which in 1970/71 voluntarily formed the newly formed community of Zwettl together with Friedersbach, Gradnitz, Großglobnitz, Jagenbach, Jahrings, Marbach am Walde, Oberstrahlbach, Rieggers, Rosenau Dorf, Rosenau Schloss, Unterrabenthan and Zwettl -Lower Austria united.

Personalities

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Mayor - All. In: zwettl.gv.at. Retrieved September 15, 2019 .
  2. Census of May 15, 2001: inhabitants by locality. (PDF; 16 kB) In: Statistics Austria. Federal Statistical Office Austria, p. 1 , accessed on August 10, 2009 .
  3. ^ Austrian Academy of Sciences (ed.): The cities of Lower Austria . Publishing house of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, 1982, ISBN 978-3-7001-0463-6 , p. 388 .
  4. Groundbreaking ceremony for the Großhaslau bypass. City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on August 10, 2009 .
  5. LH Pröll opened the Großhaslau bypass. OTS, accessed December 16, 2010 .
  6. ^ Cadastral communities, initial mention and interpretation of names. City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on August 10, 2009 . Cf. Elisabeth Schuster: The Etymology of Lower Austrian Place Names . Ed .: Association for regional studies of Lower Austria. Vienna (1989, 1990, 1994).
  7. 1850, congregations are formed. City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on August 10, 2009 .
  8. ^ Parish consolidation . City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on August 10, 2009 .