Gutenstetten

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the community of Gutenstetten
Gutenstetten
Map of Germany, position of the municipality of Gutenstetten highlighted

Coordinates: 49 ° 37 '  N , 10 ° 37'  E

Basic data
State : Bavaria
Administrative region : Middle Franconia
County : Neustadt an der Aisch-Bad Windsheim
Management Community : Diespeck
Height : 287 m above sea level NHN
Area : 21.37 km 2
Residents: 1278 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 60 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 91468
Area code : 09161
License plate : NEA, SEF, UFF
Community key : 09 5 75 128
Community structure: 7 parts of the community
Address of the
municipal administration:
Schulstrasse 11
91468 Gutenstetten
Website : www.gutenstetten.de
Mayor : Gerhard Eichner ( CSU )
Location of the community of Gutenstetten in the district of Neustadt an der Aisch-Bad Windsheim
Landkreis Kitzingen Landkreis Würzburg Landkreis Fürth Landkreis Ansbach Landkreis Erlangen-Höchstadt Landkreis Bamberg Gerhardshofen Bad Windsheim Baudenbach Burgbernheim Burghaslach Dachsbach Diespeck Dietersheim Emskirchen Ergersheim (Mittelfranken) Gallmersgarten Gollhofen Gutenstetten Hagenbüchach Hemmersheim Illesheim Ippesheim Ipsheim Langenfeld (Mittelfranken) Marktbergel Markt Erlbach Markt Nordheim Markt Taschendorf Münchsteinach Neuhof an der Zenn Neustadt an der Aisch Oberickelsheim Obernzenn Osing (Freimarkung) Simmershofen Sugenheim Trautskirchen Uehlfeld Uffenheim Weigenheim Wilhelmsdorf (Mittelfranken) Scheinfeld Oberscheinfeldmap
About this picture
Gutenstetten from the south

Gutenstetten is a municipality and a village in the Neustadt an der Aisch-Bad Windsheim district in Middle Franconia .

geography

location

The community is located in the southern foothills of the Steigerwald .
The rivers Steinach , Ehebach , Engelsbach and Aisch flow through the municipality .

Neighboring communities

Neighboring communities are (starting from the north clockwise): Uehlfeld , Dachsbach , Gerhardshofen , Diespeck and Münchsteinach .

Community structure

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

history

middle Ages

The name ending -stete moves Gutenstetten into the ranks of place names on -stadt, for which a great age can be assumed, with some probability even before the Franconian conquest from 530. Place names on -stadt / -stedt are often found in Thuringia, but hardly in Rhine Franconia. The location at the intersection of Aischtalstraße with a north-south connection from Burgwindheim and the original church patronage of St. Martin also speak for the old age of the place .

The Codex Eberhardi contains a copy of a document from the 9th century in which the place was mentioned as "Tutenstete" together with Lonnerstadt , Wachenroth and other places in the Aisch and Ebrachgrund. The basic word is "stetsi" ( ahd. Place, place), the defining word of the personal name "Tuoto" or "Tuto" (from thiud people). In 1539 this “Hofstätte des Tuto” was called “Guttenstetten” for the first time, because the personal name was no longer common and the adjective “gut” was thus adapted. The above-mentioned places are located in the regio sclavorum , i.e. in the Slavic country . The neighboring village of Pahres does indeed have a Slavic place name, but this is the extreme western edge of the area where Slavs settled in the 8th to 10th centuries . Especially the Counts of Schweinfurt, whose penultimate representative was the Margrave Ezzilo (Heinrich von Schweinfurt) , carried out regional development with Slavic settlers (in 995 the Fulda Monastery received a gift from Gutenstetten's property from Ezzilo).

The influence of the Fulda monastery on Gutenstetten waned in the 11th century and was completely lost at the beginning of the 12th century with the establishment of its own state monasteries such as the Münchsteinach monastery in 1102. Since the 11th century, the Würzburg bishop (beginning with the granting of ownership of royal rights and Königsland in Rangau and Steigerwald under Otto III. and Heinrich II. ) exercised rulership rights in the place. In 1056 , Bishop Adalbero von Würzburg , who ruled from 1045 to 1090, bequeathed the parish "Taotinsteten" (undoubtedly Gutenstetten) inherited from his father Arno II von Wels-Lambach (died 1055) to his home monastery in Lambach in Upper Austria . The rights to Gutenstetten probably bequeathed the abbot of the distant Lambach monastery to the abbot of Münchsteinach at an early stage.

The church in Gutenstetten, whose oldest chapel had a Franconian patronage of St. Martin , was subordinate to the Münchsteinach St. Nikolaus Monastery, founded nearby, at the presentation of the pastor in the 12th century, whose patron saint was placed on the Gutenstetten altar. The Birkenfeld nunnery, founded in 1275, received feudal sovereignty and, towards the end of the 15th century, the right to present the parish in Gutenstetten.

In 1234 the place moved closer to an imperial village when a market sign ( signum forense , usually a cross with sword and glove) was erected with royal permission under the direction of Wilhelm von Wimpfen (an imperial servant from Nuremberg) . At the instigation of neighboring princes (above all the Würzburg Bishop Hermann I ), King Heinrich VII had to move back in only a few months later (on November 21, 1234). In 1272 or 1280 Gutenstetten came to the Hohenzollern burgraves of Nuremberg , but was administered, as before, from Dachsbach (under Oettingian rule ). In 1324 Gutenstetten was granted market rights. In the 15th century, rule over Gutenstetten passed from the burgraves to the margraves , who issued an Aischfegebrief in 1436, in which the duty to maintain the Aisch bed, but also the fishing rights from the coal mill in Neustadt to the Gutenstettener bridges can be exercised.

In Oberwinterbach and Schornweisach the parish of Gutenstetten had chapel courtyards that were subject to feudal rights. In 1336, Bishop Johann von Würzburg had the church's cemetery fortified. Between 1350 and 1361 Gutenstetten was then assigned to the Neustadt caste office.

In the city ​​war of 1387-1389, Gutenstetten suffered badly from looting and arson in 1388 and in 1460/61 the place was again plagued by raids. In 1500, in Gutenstetten's oldest bourgeois house, built in 1290, an office building with a prison was built. The house (number 9) had to be demolished in 1905.

The St. Martin's Church was moved to its current location in 1484 by order of the Würzburg prince-bishop so that the churchyard could be better defended and space could be created for a larger church building. At the instigation of Wilhelmus von Abenberg (1452–1495), the abbot of the Münchsteinach monastery, the construction of the new church was tackled, for which he went to Rome to solicit an indulgence and in 1493 sought funding from the Bishop of Bamberg. The shell was built in 1499 under the Abbot Eucharius. The church was consecrated in 1500. After Eucharis asked for help with the interior decoration in 1510, the altar created by Joh. Jehen was erected in 1511.

The area of ​​the parish Gutenstetten in the 14th to 16th centuries (in addition to the districts already mentioned and still belonging to this day) also included Mittelsteinach (Münchsteinach) with the Weihermühle , Obersteinbach , "Pirkleshof (with the later Neubirkach)", Baudenbach (from 1438 independent parish) and Unterlaimbach (from 1468 independent parish), probably also Diespeck and Stübach .

Modern times

As was the case for Neustadt, Gutenstetten was also issued a sieving order for the first time in 1524 (the office man or Kastner of Neustadt exercised the function of the upper sieve ).

For the Aischgrund, Gutenstetten was the starting point and center of the peasant movement of 1525, which also included many residents of Hagenbüchach, Emskirchen, Markt Erlbach and other communities in the region. In April 1525 the peasant uprising was formed in Gutenstetten to plunder the neighboring Münchsteinach monastery . The buildings of the monastery were set on fire, the abbot Christoph von Hirschaid was captured and taken to Bibart . From Gutenstetten made also fire and raids against castles and other monasteries in the region (Dachsbach, High Kottenheim , Ullstadt , Sugenheim , Speckfeld , Monastery Riedfeld , Monastery Birkenfeld ). In May 1525, the crowd of 3,000 men, reinforced from Forchheim, besieged the capital Neustadt. This was to take bitter revenge, because in the same month, on May 26th, the margravial horsemen laid the village of Gutenstetten (as well as the villages of Diespeck and Stübach) to rubble and ashes; a Peter Hofmann was beheaded.

Due to the principalities of Ansbach and Kulmbach , Gutenstetten belonged to the margravial Unterland and from 1500 to the Franconian Empire , the Reformation came in 1528 and was finally introduced in Gutenstetten in 1542. The first Protestant clergyman in Gutenstetten who carried out the Reformation was called Leonhard (or Linhard) Wagner († 1558). A devastating flood that occurred in Aischgrund in 1551 also caused severe damage in Gutenstetten. In the church, which was flooded “half a man's height”, there is the stone-carved inscription “MDLI WAR EIN GVS BIS HI HER” (another flood is documented for 1585). In the Second Margrave War (1552 to 1554) Gutenstetten was badly hit, it came under the rule of the Nuremberg margraves (the land was returned to Margrave Georg Friedrich in 1557 ) and the Gutenstetten regional chapter and thus the (as early as 1314 in Gutenstetten under the dean Bernher [= Werner] existing) seat of the dean or dean was moved to Neustadt in 1564. In 1573 the church received a large bell that was cast in 1777. In 1573 Gutenstetten suffered from a plague, as did in 1627.

When Bavarian troops invaded during the Thirty Years' War in 1632, the village was badly plundered, houses were burned down and residents were murdered. Major looting also took place in 1634 and 1645. The households had dropped from 151 before the war to 8 after the war, in 1634 there was no household anymore and in 1645 there were only four buildings left. The reconstruction after the end of the war was not least thanks to the numerous evangelical expellees from Austria and immigrants from Switzerland, who found a new home in Gutenstetten and the surrounding area. In 1651 Gutenstetten again had 51 stoves and in 1651 a sifting letter was issued. The pastor Schmuzer was transferred to Gutenstetten in 1651 and also had to look after Münchsteinach and Schornweisach and their subsidiaries. The mother, a née Boßeck von Mühle, of the pastor Veit vom Berg, who was born in Baudenbach and is very well known in the region, comes from Gutenstetten. He also worked here for 17 years. In 1667 Gutenstetten received a new village order, which among other things regulated fines for violations of public order and the free election of the village master. A house built by a Jew who had moved in with margravial permission was prevented by residents of Gutenstetten before the house was finished. On December 10, 1700, the Margrave Gutenstetten, together with Schornweisach, Münchsteinach ( monastery office ) and Baudenbach, pledged to the Würzburg prince-bishop (the reserved3 redemption was made in 1732 with 280,000 guilders).

Like Neustadt before, Gutenstetten also became a main base of Pietism from 1697 to 1709 and, in particular from 1720 to 1744, in contrast to Neustadt from 1703, also of separatism , whose Guttenstetten congregation was also joined by parishioners from the Pahres, Reinhardshofen and Stübach branches.

From around 1770 onwards, Gutenstetten's economic situation improved. The earlier viticulture mentioned in the village regulations was abandoned and replaced by hop growing. Every parishioner had to plant a fruit tree on the common wasteland and after 1772 potatoes were grown on a larger scale. The financial means made it possible to build a stone bridge over the Aisch. As a sign of community spirit, the community linden tree was planted in 1780.

At the end of the 18th century there were 43 properties in Gutenstetten. The high court was exercised by the Brandenburg-Bayreuth city ​​bailiff Neustadt an der Aisch . The village and township government had the steward Münchsteinach held. The Principality of Bayreuth was the landlord of all properties ( monastery office Birkenfeld : 2 Widemgüter ; monastery office Münchsteinach: 1 inn, 1 mill, 2 courtyards, 2 Huben , 4 Halbhuben, 4 estates, 24 Sölden , 2 Häckersgüter).

During the administrative division in 1797, Gutenstetten came to the Neustädter Kreisamt (the seat of the chapter synod and the deanery had to be given there as early as 1564) and to the Dachsbach justice office. Napoleonic troops marched into the region in 1806 and Gutenstetten was heavily burdened by the requisite boarding and billeting for officers as well as other war services until 1814 (about 6000 Russians were billeted in 1814). Through the Paris Treaty of 1810 under Napoleon , Gutenstetten fell to France as part of the Prussian principality of Bayreuth in the Peace of Tilsit in 1807 and was ceded to Bavaria in 1810.

As part of the municipal edict , the Gutenstetten tax district was formed in 1811 , to which Eckenhof , Haag , Kleinsteinach , Pahres , Rappoldshofen , Reinhardshofen and Ziegenhof belonged. In 1813 the rural community Gutenstetten was formed, to which Haag and Kleinsteinach belonged. It was subordinate to the regional court Neustadt an der Aisch in administration and jurisdiction and in the financial administration to the Rentamt Neustadt an der Aisch (renamed in 1920 to Finanzamt Neustadt an der Aisch ). From 1862 Gutenstetten was administered by the Neustadt an der Aisch district office ( renamed Neustadt an der Aisch district in 1938 ). The jurisdiction remained with the district court Neustadt an der Aisch until 1879, from 1880 district court Neustadt an der Aisch . The municipality had an area of ​​9.048 km².

A post bus to Burghaslach ran from 1895, in 1897 a post office was built in Gutenstetten, which was converted into a post office in 1900 (on November 8, 1927 a Kraftpost Neustadt-Gutenstetten-Burghaslach was opened). With the establishment of the Aischtalbahn , the first train of which ran on July 11, 1904, a new era began. In 1976 passenger traffic on this route was stopped again.

A new cemetery was created in 1911. Gutenstetten has been electrified since 1912. A memorial for those who fell in World War I was set up with the support of Kleinsteinach in 1923 and was later expanded for those in World War II.

Incorporations

On July 1, 1971, the previously independent communities Bergtheim and Rockenbach were incorporated. On January 1, 1972, parts of the dissolved community of Reinhardshofen followed. Pahres joined on July 1, 1972.

Population development

The non-increasing number of inhabitants between 1860 and 1900 can be explained by emigrating to America and moving to the city. In the period from 1988 to 2018, the population rose from 1,087 to 1,267 by 180 residents or 16.6%.

Community of Gutenstetten

year 1818 1840 1852 1861 1867 1871 1875 1880 1885 1890 1895 1900 1905 1910 1919 1925 1933 1939 1946 1950 1961 1970 1987 2007 2012 2016
Residents 472 548 543 559 558 523 516 548 551 542 547 530 556 545 535 499 431 438 669 633 514 498 1070 1394 1282 1281
Houses 90 86 94 94 94 100 101 100 291 421
source

Part of the municipality Gutenstetten

year 001818 001840 001861 001871 001885 001900 001925 001950 001961 001970 001987
Residents 339 394 402 374 398 376 382 522 386 386 410
Houses 67 62 69 69 75 76 77 107
source

religion

Most of the community's residents are Protestant. The St. John's Church in Gutenstetten and the Kilian's Church in Reinhardshofen belong to the Evangelical Lutheran parish of Gutenstetten.

politics

The community is a member of the Diespeck administrative community .

Municipal council

The municipal council has 12 members.

(Status: local elections on March 15, 2020)

Distribution of seats in the municipal council
   
A total of 12 seats

mayor

  • Gerhard Eichner, CSU, since 2014
  • Helmut Reiss, Independent Citizens, 2002 to 2014
  • Robert Maderer, CSU, 1985 to 2002
  • Lorenz Schneider, CSU, 1972 to 1985

Town twinning

Since 1987, a partnership with the French region of Nouvelle-Aquitaine located in Saint-Hilaire-les-Places . The partnership activities are primarily coordinated by the Friends of St. Hilaire les Places association . There are also German-French football tournaments that the local sports club partially co-organizes.

badges and flags

The community has had a coat of arms since 1982.

Gutenstetten coat of arms
Blazon : "Divided by black and silver with a red heart shield , inside a silver church tower, above five three to two silver fir trees , below three blue wavy bars ."

Black, white, and blue municipal flag

Justification of the coat of arms: The three blue wavy bars represent the three watercourses Aisch, Ehe and Steinach in the municipality. The colors silver and blue are the Bavarian national colors. The trees represent the part of the community that lies in the Steigerwald. They also symbolize the five formerly independent communities. The colors black and silver are the colors of the Margraves of Ansbach-Bayreuth and are reminiscent of their former rule. The steeple represents the church of Gutenstetten and expresses the affiliation of the other places to this parish. The colors red and silver are the colors of Franconia.

Village renewal

A village renewal procedure was approved in July 2009 for the districts of Gutenstetten, Reinhardshofen and Pahres. The first projects in the districts of Pahres, Reinhardshofen and Gutenstetten have already been completed or are currently ongoing.

Culture and sights

Buildings

  • St. John's Church in Gutenstetten with an important winged altar from 1511
  • Martinskapelle in the Gutenstetten cemetery
  • Half-timbered rectory from the 17th century in Gutenstetten
  • Museum for Celtic finds in Gutenstetten (opened in May 2008)
  • Church of St. Kilian in Reinhardshofen
  • Country castle in Rockenbach from 1743 (serves as a training center for the Association of Christian Scouts and Boy Scouts of Bavaria)
Country castle Rockenbach around 1970

Architectural monuments

tourism

  • With the Weiherwanderweg, the Aischtalradweg and the so-called Allianzweg, Gutenstetten offers cross-community hiking and cycling routes .
  • Four circular hiking trails with different distances are signposted within the municipality.
  • With two breweries, the community of Gutenstetten is a central location on Aischgründer Bierstrasse.
  • A youth meeting place for Christian scouts is located in the Rockenbach Castle.
  • The place is on the Steigerwald-Höhenstraße.

music

The men's choir in Gutenstetten, a mixed choir, a women's choir in Rockenbach and Bergtheim, a trombone choir and a church choir conduct musical activities.

Sports

The sports club Gutenstetten eV was founded in 1949. In 2012 the soccer department merged with that of the neighboring club SVS Münchsteinach to form SpVgg Steinachgrund. Two years later, the cooperation between the two clubs was ended again. SVG and SpVgg were merged in 2017. Since then, the club has been called SV Gutenstetten-Steinachgrund.

There is a rifle club in each of the districts of Bergtheim and Kleinsteinach.

Regular events

  • On the first weekend in July, the Reinhardshofen district celebrates its parish fair .
  • On the second weekend in July, but never before July 10th as a parish fair, the main town of Gutenstetten celebrates a parish fair.
  • On the first weekend in August, the district of Pahres celebrates its parish fair.
  • On the second weekend in August, the Kleinsteinach district celebrates its parish fair.
  • On the first weekend in September, the Bergtheim district celebrates its parish fair

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

Gutenstetten is in the tariff area of ​​the Greater Nuremberg Transport Association . Since the Aisch Valley Railway was discontinued , Gutenstetten has been connected to the Neustadt an der Aisch train station on the Nuremberg – Würzburg railway line with an OVF bus line. Since April 2008, trips have been made on this line in the summer months as part of the “Aischgründer Bierexpress” leisure line.

Gutenstetten is on state road 2259 , which leads to federal road 470 or past Kleinsteinach to Münchsteinach . Municipal roads lead to Reinhardshofen to the NEA 12 district road and to Haag .

Commercial space

The Haag solar park went into operation in 2009 . There, 5,500,000 kilowatt hours of electricity are generated annually.

Companies

  • Roland Meinl Musical Instruments produces drums and percussion instruments, has been based in Gutenstetten since 2003 and is a distributor for Germany, Austria, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary and Slovakia of Ibanez guitars and other musical instruments
  • The Windsheimer brewery has existed since 1767.
  • The Hofmann private brewery has been located in the Pahres district since 1663.

Voluntary fire brigades

In 1876 a volunteer fire brigade was founded in Gutenstetten . In the community of Gutenstetten there are the volunteer fire departments Bergtheim, Gutenstetten, Reinhardshofen and Rockenbach. The Pahres volunteer fire brigade disbanded in 1996, Kleinsteinach in 2016.

Sons and daughters of the church

  • Andreas Deininger (1852–1934), mayor, mill owner, farmer, Member of the Bay. Parliament from 1893–1911
  • Johann Joachim Schlegel (1821–1880), master brewer, founder of Schlegel Brewery AG (from the Bergtheim district)
  • Gabi Schmidt (* 1968), member of the state parliament (from the Kleinsteinach district)

literature

Web links

Commons : Gutenstetten  - 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. ^ Community of Gutenstetten in the local database of the Bavarian State Library Online . Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, accessed on September 20, 2019.
  3. The first documentary mention of Gutenstetten is occasionally a deed of donation from 772 to the Fulda monastery , in which a village is named "Tuntenstetin". According to the context of the text, however, it was clearly a place in the Thuringian Altgau west of Sömmerda . For the alleged first mention of Gutenstetten in 772, see Wolfgang Epple ( memento from June 4, 2014 in the Internet Archive ).
  4. Max Döllner (1950), p. 139 (there also “Dodo” - from dod = father, godfather - is considered as a defining word ).
  5. W.-A. v. Reitzenstein, p. 91.
  6. Max Döllner (1950), pp. 93 and 139.
  7. Max Döllner (1950), p. 140 f.
  8. Max Döllner (1950), p. 141.
  9. ^ Wilhelm Funk: German legal monuments with special consideration of Franconia. Palm & Enke, Erlangen 1938 (= Das Steinkreuz. Volume 6, 1938, Issue 1/2), especially p. 131 (on Gutenstetten).
  10. Max Döllner (1950), p. 140.
  11. ^ Helmut Reiss: Historical outline of Gutenstetten . March 2, 2000.
  12. Max Döllner (1950), p. 140.
  13. Max Döllner (1950), pp. 140-144.
  14. Max Döllner (1950), pp. 144 and 149.
  15. Max Döllner (1950), pp. 140-144.
  16. Max Döllner (1950), p. 142.
  17. Max Döllner (1950), pp. 144 and 146.
  18. ^ Max Döllner: History of the development of the city of Neustadt an der Aisch until 1933. 1950, pp. 61–64 and 144 f.
  19. Max Döllner (1950), pp. 99, 142 f., 145, 191 and 212.
  20. Max Döllner (1950), pp. 146 and 243, note 42.
  21. Eberhard Krauss: Exulanten im Evang.-Luth. Deanery Neustadt an der Aisch. Nuremberg 2012 (= sources and research on Franconian family history. Volume 27), passim. ISBN 978-3-929865-32-5
  22. ^ Boy Scout Diespeck: Our namesake .
  23. Max Döllner (1950), pp. 146 and 355.
  24. Max Döllner (1950), p. 146 f., 351, note 8, and p. 355.
  25. Max Döllner (1950), p. 147.
  26. ^ HH Hofmann, p. 98.
  27. Max Döllner (1950), p. 147.
  28. ^ Address and statistical manual for the Rezatkreis in the Kingdom of Baiern . Buchdruckerei Chancellery, Ansbach 1820, p. 59 ( digitized version ). HH Hofmann p. 221.
  29. ^ HH Hofmann, p. 186.
  30. a b c Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official city directory for Bavaria, territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census . Issue 260 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1964, DNB  453660959 , Section II, Sp. 805 ( digitized version ).
  31. Max Döllner (1950), p. 149.
  32. Max Döllner (1950), p. 149.
  33. Max Döllner (1950), p. 150.
  34. www.gutenstetten.de: Community of Gutenstetten: War memorials .
  35. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 536 .
  36. Max Döllner (1950), p. 150.
  37. a b Only inhabited houses are given. In 1818 these were designated as fireplaces , in 1840 as houses , and from 1871 to 2016 as residential buildings.
  38. a b Alphabetical index of all the localities contained in the Rezatkreise according to its constitution by the newest organization: with indication of a. the tax districts, b. Judicial Districts, c. Rent offices in which they are located, then several other statistical notes . Ansbach 1818, p. 34 ( digitized version ). For the community of Gutenstetten plus the residents and buildings of Haag (p. 34) and Kleinsteinach (p. 49).
  39. ^ A b Eduard Vetter (Ed.): Statistical handbook and address book of Middle Franconia in the Kingdom of Bavaria . Self-published, Ansbach 1846, p. 198-199 ( digitized version ). According to the historical municipality register , the municipality had 552 inhabitants.
  40. a b c d e f g h i j k l Bavarian State Statistical Office (Hrsg.): Historical municipality directory: The population of the municipalities of Bavaria from 1840 to 1952 (=  contributions to Statistics Bavaria . Issue 192). Munich 1954, DNB  451478568 , p. 179 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb00066439-3 ( digitized ).
  41. a b Joseph Heyberger, Chr. Schmitt, v. Wachter: Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical local dictionary . In: K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Bavaria. Regional and folklore of the Kingdom of Bavaria . tape 5 . Literary and artistic establishment of the JG Cotta'schen Buchhandlung, Munich 1867, Sp. 1056 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb10374496-4 ( digitized version ).
  42. a b Kgl. Statistical Bureau (ed.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria. According to districts, administrative districts, court districts and municipalities, including parish, school and post office affiliation ... with an alphabetical general register containing the population according to the results of the census of December 1, 1875 . Adolf Ackermann, Munich 1877, 2nd section (population figures from 1871, cattle figures from 1873), Sp. 1221 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb00052489-4 ( digitized ).
  43. a b K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Localities directory of the Kingdom of Bavaria. According to government districts, administrative districts, ... then with an alphabetical register of locations, including the property and the responsible administrative district for each location. LIV. Issue of the contributions to the statistics of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Munich 1888, Section III, Sp. 1156 ( digitized version ).
  44. a b K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Directory of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria, with alphabetical register of places . LXV. Issue of the contributions to the statistics of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Munich 1904, Section II, Sp. 1228 ( digitized version ).
  45. a b Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Localities directory for the Free State of Bavaria according to the census of June 16, 1925 and the territorial status of January 1, 1928 . Issue 109 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1928, Section II, Sp. 1266 ( digitized version ).
  46. a b Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official place directory for Bavaria - edited on the basis of the census of September 13, 1950 . Issue 169 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1952, DNB  453660975 , Section II, Sp. 1097 ( digitized version ).
  47. a b Bavarian State Statistical Office (Hrsg.): Official local directory for Bavaria . Issue 335 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1973, DNB  740801384 , p. 175 ( digitized version ).
  48. a b Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing (Ed.): Official local directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 25, 1987 . Issue 450 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich November 1991, DNB  94240937X , p. 339 ( digitized version ).
  49. a b c Gutenstetten: Official statistics of the LfStat
  50. Municipal Council. Community of Gutenstetten, accessed on August 9, 2020 .
  51. ^ Entry on the coat of arms of Gutenstetten  in the database of the House of Bavarian History
  52. Gutenstetten. In: Kommunalflaggen.eu. Retrieved May 24, 2020 .
  53. ^ SV Gutenstetten-Steinachgrund - History website of SV Gutenstetten-Steinachgrund. Retrieved October 20, 2018.
  54. Information from the VGN on the "Aischgründer Bierexpress" ( Memento from May 14, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
  55. Official commissioning of the Haag solar park in Gutenstetten (PDF file; 106 kB) gehrlicher.com, accessed on August 8, 2012.
  56. Archived copy ( memento of the original from January 16, 2014 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 / brauerei-windsheimer.de
  57. Max Döllner (1950), p. 149.