Naila
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 50 ° 20 ' N , 11 ° 42' E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Bavaria | |
Administrative region : | Upper Franconia | |
County : | court | |
Height : | 512 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 37.05 km 2 | |
Residents: | 7647 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density : | 206 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 95119 | |
Area code : | 09282 | |
License plate : | HO , MÜB , NAI, REH , SAN | |
Community key : | 09 4 75 156 | |
City structure: | 37 districts | |
City administration address : |
Marktplatz 12 95119 Naila |
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Website : | ||
Mayor : | Frank Stumpf ( FWG ) | |
Location of the town of Naila in the district of Hof | ||
Naila [ ˈnaɪ̯laː ] is a town in Upper Franconia . It is located about 18 kilometers west of the independent city of Hof in the Franconian Forest on the Bavarian Porcelain Route . Until 1972 Naila was the district town of the district of the same name , since 1993 the city has been a medium-sized center in the district of Hof .
geography
location
Naila is located in the eastern Franconian Forest on the Selbitz river . The altitude mark at Naila train station shows 501 meters above sea level. The highest point in the municipality is 710 meters above sea level at Döbrastöcken on the ascent to Döbraberg , the lowest at 488 meters on the Selbitz at the entrance to the Höllental .
Neighboring communities
The city borders the following areas in the district of Hof:
Lichtenberg | Issigau | mountain |
Bad Steben Community-free area |
Selbitz | |
Schwarzenbach am Wald | Schauenstein |
City structure
Naila consists of a total of 37 districts:
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Land use
The area of Naila - a total of 37.05 km² - is distributed over 19.22 km² of agricultural land, 1.69 km² of public traffic areas, 13.7 km² of forest areas, 0.22 km² of water, 0.1 km² of parks and green spaces and 0.065 km² km² of undeveloped industrial and commercial space.
history
The earliest traces of settlement in the area of today's Naila are ceramic shards that could be dated between 600 and 900 AD. For the first time a village was mentioned in 1343 Neulins . Iron and copper mining flourished from the middle of the 15th to the middle of the 18th century. With the beginning of industrialization, the economic focus shifted towards shoe and textile manufacturing. About 200 Nailaers died in World War II. Subsequently there was a large influx of refugees from the former German eastern regions. Despite the loss of important sales markets as a result of the division of Germany , the further economic development of Naila after the war was definitely positive.
Name development
In the past, the following variants of the city name occurred:
- Neulins, Newlins and Newlin (from 1343 to 1429)
- Neilein (from 1424)
- Neylein (from 1429)
- Neyla (from 1478)
- Naila (from 1643)
The origin of the city name is unclear. Various local researchers could not agree on an interpretation. There are therefore several attempts to interpret these variants.
If the name Naila comes from Old German , it can be explained as follows:
- Egg-shaped system (refers to the first system, which must have been egg-shaped or oval-shaped); this would be written Eila or Eilau . The N would then probably have resulted from the regional dialect.
- New small settlement : The oldest known spelling of Naila, Neulins , offers the new , while -lins , -lein or later -la expresses a reduction in size. This is also in line with today's dialect, where -la is used as a diminutive or belittling form and is the most likely interpretation.
- Neu-Waldsiedlung : Here, too, the rather likely original word Neu , which is contained in the origin of the word with relative certainty. -La is interpreted here as Loh , which was also found in other sources at the time. Loh would indicate forest , which corresponds to the geographical conditions, but it must be pointed out that the first documented mention of the second syllable was -lins and -la only appeared later.
If you take the Slavic language as a basis, the following explanation results:
- Nahly (means something like "steep")
- Na and Glina : from Glina , the Slavic word for clay and Na , roughly local or pub , so put together local on the clay
religion
Naila is the seat of the Naila deanery of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bavaria . The deanery essentially comprises the former Naila district. The Protestant parish church is on the market square. There is a recreational home of the YMCA , a regional church community and the Evangelical Cross Brotherhood . The new construction of the Methodist Church was consecrated in 1932.
In 1911 the new building of a Roman Catholic church was consecrated. The Catholic Curate Naila was raised to a parish in 1937 when the Catholic Dean's Office in Hof was founded . In 1962 the Catholic parish church of the Transfiguration of Christ was built.
There is a New Apostolic Church and a Jehovah's Witness Kingdom Hall .
Incorporations
In 1920 the previously independent community of Froschgrün was incorporated. On July 1, 1971, Culmitz was added. On May 1, 1978, Lippertsgrün, Marlesreuth and Marxgrün and part of the dissolved Reitzenstein community were incorporated.
Population development
In the period from 1988 to 2018, the population fell from 8,560 to 7,684 by 876 or 10.2%. On December 31, 1992 the city had 9,107 inhabitants.
The population figures refer to the current territorial status (the incorporated places are included).
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politics
City council
The Naila city council has 21 members including the mayor. There are four committees: Main Administration Committee, Construction and Land Committee, Finance Committee, and Audit Committee. The CSU and the voter union form a parliamentary group , as do the Free Voter Community Naila (FWG), the non-partisan voter community Naila (ÜWG) and party-free citizens . The active citizens' group of voters has no parliamentary group status.
Political party | 2020 | 2014 | 2008 |
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Free voters | 7th | 7th | 8th |
Christian-Social Union in Bavaria | 5 | 5 | 4th |
Social Democratic Party of Germany | 3 | 3 | 3 |
Naila Electoral Union | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Party-free citizens Marxgrün / Hell | 2 | 2 | 1 |
Non-partisan community of voters Naila | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Active citizens of Naila | 1 | 1 | 1 |
mayor
At the head of the city is the mayor. The city council elects two deputies from the ranks of the city council. The second mayor is currently Jörg-Steffen Höger (party-free citizens of Marxgrün / Hell); third mayor Daniel Hohberger (SPD).
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coat of arms
Blazon : Split; front quartered in black and silver; behind in red on the green ground between two green trees standing a wild man with a green wreath of leaves and a green leaf apron, who is swinging a golden club with his right hand.
Black and silver are symbols for the Hohenzollern, later Brandenburg rulers. Next to it is the wild man who historians say is a symbol of mining in the area. The coat of arms was changed only once in 1819. After joining Bavaria , the black areas were colored blue to represent the Bavarian state colors. This change was reversed at the beginning of the 20th century.
Economy and Infrastructure
economy
Naila used to be an important location for the textile industry , which is only partially preserved today. The up-and-coming businesses have been retailers and freight forwarders since reunification . Thanks to the eastward expansion of the European Union due to the central location and the good transport connections, these have consistently high growth rates and are considered to be the hope of the Naila economy. Another economic focus of the region is the brewing industry . The intensifying competition in the textile sector has led to many bankruptcies since the 1990s and was partly absorbed by the growing logistics and retail trade as well as the strong mechanical engineering and plastics industries. The large companies include the shipping company Bischoff, LIBA Maschinenfabrik, Ontec Automatisierungstechnik, TLS - Transport Logistik Systeme, Rehau AG, Marlesreuth and Schwarzenbach / Wald (plastics), Höllensprudel , Serag-Wiessner (surgical sutures) and Pazdera AG, Naila branch (light metal construction, formerly Thierron ).
traffic
Naila is located near the federal motorway 9 ( Berlin - Munich ) and can be reached via junction 32 Naila / Selbitz . The federal highway 173 runs south of Naila and connects Hof in the east with Kronach in the west.
The Hof – Bad Steben railway runs through Naila . The Naila , Oberklingensporn and Marxgrün stations are located in the urban area of Naila . Until 1945 the line in Marxgrün had a connection to Bad Lobenstein and Saalfeld in Thuringia via the Höllentalbahn and the Sormitztalbahn . The local railway Naila – Schwarzenbach am Wald , which was dismantled in 1994, ran over the striking bridge at the entrance to Naila at federal highway 173 .
education
The following schools of the structured school system are located in Naila : The Primary School Naila, the Middle School Frankenwald (formerly Hauptschule), the Musical Realschule Naila emerged from the middle school opened in 1950. A grammar school was established in Naila at the end of the 1960s . This school, which has been called Hochfranken-Gymnasium Naila since 2010, moved into a new building near Lichtenberger Straße in 1970, which has been used as a school center with an extension and after a general renovation since 2012.
The general vocational school emerged from the association vocational school that was newly founded in 1938 and was closed in 2008. The Protestant School Naila, a private elementary and middle school, has been located in the building since 2017. The State Technical and Vocational School for Clothing was founded in 1949 as the State Embroidery School. The school at Martinsberg is a private special educational support center. Children of pre-school age are looked after in four kindergartens and in the special educational-psychotherapeutic children's village Martinsberg.
Leisure, culture and sights
Local museum
Since 1986 there has been a local museum in Naila , which is housed in the Schusterhof , a former shoe factory.
Weber House Museum
Since 1994 there has been a historic weaver's house in the Marlesreuth district of Naila, where life in a weaving village is brought closer.
Markets
Mention should be made of the two large markets, the spring and autumn markets, the Rupperich market during Advent and the weekly market.
Park railway
A park railway runs in Froschgrüner Park on Sundays during the summer months .
Fountain
The wedding fountain on the market square and another bronze fountain are works by the Köditz artist Margarete Wiggen .
Egg whale
On Holy Saturday the custom of egg rolling (egg rolling) is maintained, which was very important in Naila in earlier times (the naming of several streets can be traced back to the custom). The competition takes place near the playground at Ludelbach.
Architectural monuments
Death march
In the municipal cemetery on Albin-Klöber-Strasse, a collective grave and a stone sculpture remind us that nine victims of a death march from Buchenwald concentration camp are buried there, who were slain by SS men in the spring of 1945 near the site . Five other Nazi victims are buried in the Naila cemetery (three deceased forced laborers and two unknown soldiers who were shot by the SS).
Recreational areas
There are numerous local recreation areas in the region, for example the Höllental .
hike
The Frankenweg leads through the districts of Hölle and Marxgrün and on the outskirts of Naila.
Sports
The sports offer of the local clubs includes table tennis , tennis , karate , kickboxing , soccer , handball , volleyball , Indiaca , Kung-Fu , motor sports , bowling , sports and archery, darts , athletics, long-distance running and triathlon. There are opportunities for downhill skiing and snowboarding on the drag lift in the Döbrastöcken district. There are numerous cross-country skiing trails and hiking trails in the vicinity of Naila . The stadium on the northern edge of Naila is an athletics stadium with running tracks, throwing facilities and a soccer field. The playing field is surrounded on one side by an earth wall with standing bars that offer space for around 2000 spectators. It was inaugurated in 1983 with a game of a reinforced FSV Naila against the nine-time German soccer champions 1. FC Nürnberg . The outdoor pool in Dreigrünbach-Grund, which was built in 1936, has since been rebuilt. In Naila itself there is also a mini golf course at Ludelbach and the skate park.
POLIS
The former Naila notary Axel Adrian started the Naila Demography Days in 2003. The event annually discusses problems that have arisen and will arise as a result of the declining population development in Germany. It is run by POLIS - the association for the interdisciplinary investigation of demography, the state, the economy and society. V. organized. In 2006 the 3rd Demography Days at Naila took place with speakers from science and politics.
winFORS
The association based in Naila sees itself as a competence network and exchange platform for entrepreneurs and executives in the region and has set itself the goal of imparting knowledge impulses with events and company visits as well as promoting networks and cooperation. He works closely with the Hof University of Applied Sciences , the Working Group for Economic Administration (AWV) and other institutions.
Others
Cellular Study
This study is mostly just called the Naila study in the press and was presented in 2004 in the Frankenhalle by Horst Eger, who carried out the study together with most of the practicing doctors from Naila. Her topic is the investigation of connections between electromagnetic radiation from cell phone towers and the likelihood of cancer occurring . The residents were classified based on the distance from their home to a cell phone mast and the cancer incidence was examined for the said correlation after 10 years of observation. From a statistical point of view, the probability of such a connection based on the study data is 95 or 99% (determined by the chi-square test ).
criticism
The study carried out in Naila was controversial, with the critics referring to the size of the control group, which was too small to completely rule out other confounding factors, and the proponents of the study to the high statistical significance of the values obtained, which was at least one repetition on a larger scale would suggest.
consequences
The city of Naila is currently aiming in a petition to lower the maximum values to a millionth of their current level at both state, federal and EU level. Arguments are, on the one hand, the precautionary principle of European environmental policy; on the other hand, the extremely low limit values in Switzerland and the Austrian state of Salzburg are addressed, with which a functioning network can still be operated. This can be explained by the fact that the intensity of electromagnetic radiation decreases quadratically with increasing distance from the transmitter. So if you want to cover a very large area with a single transmitter, you have an extremely high radiation exposure in the immediate vicinity of the transmitter, which is far higher than would be necessary for reception. The solution in Switzerland and Austria is accordingly to have significantly more transmission masts, which are operated with significantly lower power.
Balloon escape from the GDR
On September 16, 1979, the Strelzyk and Wetzel families from Pößneck flew over the inner-German border in a self-made hot air balloon at night. After a 28-minute flight and 22 kilometers (as the crow flies), they landed in a field near Naila. There were four adults and four children on board. The original balloon is exhibited in the Nailaer Museum.
Curiosities
In a picture newspaper article in the 1980s, Naila [ Na-ila ] was assigned to Africa , which led to amusement.
Since the great fire of 1862 and the accumulated burning of barns and buildings in the area, the Nailaer citizens have been nicknamed Naalicher Ozünder ( Nailaer igniter). Meanwhile, an Ozünderweg has also been signposted.
Personalities
- Rudolf von Andrian-Werburg (1844–1919), District President in Lower Bavaria
- Fischel Arnheim (1812–1864 in Munich), German lawyer who worked in Naila after completing his studies and later played a major role in the lifting of residence restrictions for Jews
- Walid Aziz (* 1969), freight forwarder, encourager of the nation
- Reinhard Feldrapp (* 1951), photographer and artist
- Hans-Peter Friedrich (* 1957), lawyer and CSU politician, member of the Bundestag since 1998, Federal Minister of the Interior 2011–2013
- Albin Klöber (1857–1947), councilor of commerce, honorary citizen of the city of Naila, co-founder of the Seifert & Klöber shoe factory
- Heinrich Andreas Lohe (1648–1713), painter
- Helge Ritter (* 1958), neuro-computer scientist, recipient of the Leibniz Prize
- Wilhelm Schneider (1900–1980), developer of the Agfa Color film
- Johann Christoph Weiß (1663–1725), rector of the Hof high school, Protestant theologian
- Felix Vörtler (* 1961), actor, known from Heldt and Polizeiruf 110 (Team Magdeburg)
- Hanns Peter Zwißler (* 1946), writer, was a high school teacher in the city in 1973
literature
- Johann Kaspar Bundschuh : Naila . In: Geographical Statistical-Topographical Lexicon of Franconia . tape 3 : I-Ne . Verlag der Stettinische Buchhandlung, Ulm 1801, DNB 790364301 , OCLC 833753092 , Sp. 701-711 ( digitized version ).
- Reinhard Feldrapp: Franconian Forest with its surroundings. Wir-Verlag Walter Weller, 1991, ISBN 3-924492-57-3
- Willi Feldrapp, Reinhard Feldrapp: Naila - then and now. Atelier Feldrapp, 2005
- Hans Knopf, Reinhard Feldrapp: Naila. Oberfränkische Verlagsanstalt, Hof 1986, ISBN 3-921615-71-2
- Georg Paul Hönn : Naylau . In: Lexicon Topographicum of the Franconian Craises . Johann Georg Lochner, Frankfurt and Leipzig 1747, p. 274-275 ( digitized version ).
- Johann G. Hübsch: History of the city and the district of Naila. Self-published, Helmbrechts 1863 ( digitized MDZ Munich )
- Daniel Künzel: Naila in National Socialism 1933-1939. published in the Archive for the History of Upper Franconia , Volume 93, 2013, ISSN 0066-6335
- Karl-Ludwig Lippert : District of Naila (= Bavarian art monuments . Volume 27 ). Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich 1963, DNB 453135234 , p. 47-49 .
- Sabine Raithel, Reinhard Feldrapp: Franconian Forest. Verlag Fränkischer Tag, 1997, ISBN 3-928648-30-6
- Pleikard Joseph Stumpf : Naila . In: Bavaria: a geographical-statistical-historical handbook of the kingdom; for the Bavarian people . Second part. Munich 1853, p. 615 ( digitized version ).
- Konrad Tyrakowski: The former Bailiwick of Nayla. Interpretation and commentary on an official map from around 1720. Published in the Archive for History of Upper Franconia, Volume 92, 2012, ISSN 0066-6335
Web links
- Entry on the coat of arms of Naila in the database of the House of Bavarian History
- Balloon flight - detailed description (snapshot from archive.is) ( Memento from February 11, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )
- Naila: Official statistics of the LfStat
Individual evidence
- ↑ "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 ).
- ↑ → Planning region Upper Franconia East
- ↑ http://www.bayerische-landesbibliothek-online.de/orte/ortssuche_action.html ? Anzeige=voll&modus=automat&tempus=+20100925/182442&attr=OBJ&val= 1233
- ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 530 .
- ^ 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 GmbH, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 687 and 688 .
- ↑ Wir im Frankenwald, Intercommunal Official Journal ..., May 9, 2014, p. 18 , accessed on January 14, 2016
- ^ City of Naila City Council Results. City of Naila, accessed June 5, 2020 .
- ^ City of Naila City Council. City of Naila, accessed June 5, 2020 .
- ↑ www.gymnaila.eu - Homepage of the Nailaer Gymnasium
- ↑ Memorial sites for the victims of National Socialism. A documentation, volume 1. Federal Agency for Civic Education, Bonn 1995, ISBN 3-89331-208-0 , p. 177
- ↑ See also Constanze Werner: KZ-Friedhöfe und Gedenkstätten in Bayern , Schnell and Steiner: Regensburg 2011, ISBN 978-3-7954-2483-1 , pages 215-216 with further details also on the memorial from 1947.
- ↑ Naila study as a PDF file