Hanauerland

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hanauerland refers to a former domain north of Strasbourg on the French side and around Kehl in Mittelbaden on the German side on both sides of the border formed by the Rhine . In the regional everyday language context, it is now understood to mean the greater Kehl area. The area usually includes the cities of Kehl and Rheinau as well as the municipality of Willstätt , which are jointly implementing several supraregional projects, such as the Hanauerland flood protection association, because of their historical ties and because they belong to the Ortenau district . Occasionally, the municipality of Lichtenau , which has been part of the Rastatt district since the district reform, is also included, such as the service area of ​​the Sparkasse Hanauerland Kehl. Hanauerland is more rarely used as a synonym for the dissolved Kehl district , which, in addition to the previously mentioned local authorities of the Ortenau district, also included the present-day communities of Neuried , Appenweier and Renchen .

history

The area had been the territory of the Lords of Lichtenberg since 1273, based in the town of the same name in the northern Vosges .

Count Philipp I the Elder von Hanau married Anna von Lichtenberg in 1458 , one of the heirlooms of Ludwig V von Lichtenberg . After his death in 1473, Anna and Count Philipp I received half of the Lichtenberg rule in lower Alsace with the capital Buchsweiler . This resulted in the line and county of Hanau-Lichtenberg . The inheritance also included areas that are now in Baden. The other half of the rule fell initially to the Counts of Zweibrücken-Bitsch . In 1570 these also died out, and their goods, including the Lichtenberg part in Alsace , fell to Hanau-Lichtenberg. The area owes its name to this count house.

After the death of the last Count of Hanau, Johann Reinhard III. , in 1736 the county Hanau-Lichtenberg went to the Hereditary Prince Ludwig IX. von Hessen-Darmstadt , son of Charlotte Christine Magdalene Johanna von Hanau-Lichtenberg , the heir to Johann Reinhard III.

Hanauerland in Baden

With the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss , the Hanauerland fell to the Grand Duchy of Baden in 1803, as far as it was on the right bank of the Rhine . The then margrave of Baden and later Grand Duke Karl Friedrich was married to Karoline Luise , who was a daughter of Charlotte von Hanau and Ludwig VIII. Von Hessen-Darmstadt . The area was administered by two government councilors at the head of the offices of Rheinbischofsheim and Kork , to which the following communities belonged. To Rheinbischofsheim, Bodersweier, Diersheim , Altfreistett , Neufreistett , Grauelsbaum, Hausgereuth, Helmlingen , Holzhausen, Honau, Leutesheim, Lichtenau, Linx, Memprechtshofen , Muckenschopf, Scherzheim and Zierolshofen. The localities of Auenheim, Eckartsweier, Hesselhurst, Hohnhurst, Legelshurst, Neumühl, Odelshofen, Querbach, Sand and Willstätt were administered from Kork.

Due to the way they come from, the historical costumes here are partly Alsatian.

See also: the former district of Kehl

Pays de Hanau

With the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss the Hanauerland, as far as it was located left of the Rhine, fell to France. The tradition was revived in a communal union, the Communauté de communes du Pays de Hanau .

Trans-communal institutions with the territorial designation Hanauerland

The Catholic parish of Hanauerland stretches from the Rhine to the A5 motorway and includes 18 towns in the community of Willstätt, the cities of Rheinau and Kehl. The core town of Kehl and the southern parts of the town of Kehl form the Kehl pastoral care unit. There is also a pastoral care unit in Lichtenau and Rheinmünster.

The church welfare station Kehl-Hanauerland comprehensively defines its catchment area with the cities of Kehl and Rheinau and the community of Willstätt.

In addition to the three core communities, the VHS Kehl-Hanauerland also covers adult education in Appenweier.

The SG Hanauerland is the association of the youth departments of SV Neumühl, Spvgg Sundheim, SV Kork and TuS Legelshurst and pursues the goal of jointly promoting the next generation of footballers in eastern Hanauerland.

Also in the training community (TG) Hanauerland associations for youth development have come together. The association includes gymnastics clubs from the cities of Kehl and Rheinau, namely the clubs of the Kehler gymnastics club, TuS Marlen, TV Bodersweier, TV Kork, TV Auenheim, TV Rheinbischofsheim, TB Freistett and also TV in the Rastatt district Scherzheim.

The members of the Hanauerland men's choir , which incidentally also includes a women's singing group, come from all the communities in the old Kehl district as well as from Achern and the surrounding area.

The Sparkasse Hanauerland with its headquarters in the core town of Kehl has branches in the towns of Kehl, Rheinau and Lichtenau as well as Willstätt.

The Hanauermuseum is located in Kehl and focuses on the history and local customs in Kehl and the surrounding communities.

literature

  • Joseph Schaible: History of the Baden Hanauerland. In addition to a medical-statistical topography of the Grand-Ducal Baden district of Kork. Malsch and Vogel, Karlsruhe 1855 (reprint: Freiburger-Echo-Verlag, Stegen 2004, ISBN 3-86028-087-2 ). Output on google books
  • Alfred Klatte: Walks through the Hanauer Land. Description of the Kehl-Lichtenau-Bühl tram. A manual. Heinrich, Strasbourg 1892
  • Johannes Beinert: History of the Baden Hanauerland taking into account Kehl. Morstadt, Kehl 1909 (2nd edition, ibid 1990, ISBN 3-88571-217-2 ).
  • Hermann Eris Busse (Ed.): Kehl and the Hanauerland. Badische Heimat house, Freiburg (Breisgau) 1931 ( Badische Heimat 18).
  • Hubert Zilch (Ed.): Hanauerland. A forgotten piece of Hanau history. A guide to discovering Alsace. Selbstverlag, Hanau 1988 (2nd edition. CoCon-Verlag, Hanau 1994, ISBN 3-928100-80-7 ).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Gerd Birsner : Why we are all here »Hanauer« - Baden-online.de July 19, 2017 Retrieved on August 24, 2020
  2. ^ Siebert, Hans Dietrich: The territories of the Ortenau. In: Hermann Eris Busse (ed.): Offenburg and the Ortenau. Freiburg 1935