Heimweiler

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the local community Heimweiler
Heimweiler
Map of Germany, position of the community Heimweiler highlighted

Coordinates: 49 ° 45 '  N , 7 ° 30'  E

Basic data
State : Rhineland-Palatinate
County : Bad Kreuznach
Association municipality : Kirner Land
Height : 259 m above sea level NHN
Area : 9.07 km 2
Residents: 390 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 43 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 55606
Area code : 06757
License plate : KH
Community key : 07 1 33 041
Community structure: 2 districts
Association administration address: Bahnhofstrasse 31
55606 Kirn
Website : www.heimweiler.eu
Local Mayor : Andreas Setz
Location of the local community Heimweiler in the Bad Kreuznach district
Bad Kreuznach Kirn Biebelsheim Pfaffen-Schwabenheim Pleitersheim Volxheim Hackenheim Frei-Laubersheim Neu-Bamberg Fürfeld Tiefenthal (Rheinhessen) Traisen (Nahe) Norheim Altenbamberg Hochstätten Feilbingert Hallgarten (Pfalz) Niederhausen (Nahe) Oberhausen an der Nahe Duchroth Bad Sobernheim Auen (Hunsrück) Bärweiler Daubach (Hunsrück) Ippenschied Kirschroth Langenthal (Hunsrück) Lauschied Martinstein Meddersheim Merxheim (Nahe) Bad Sobernheim Monzingen Nußbaum Odernheim am Glan Rehbach (bei Sobernheim) Seesbach Staudernheim Weiler bei Monzingen Winterburg Bretzenheim Dorsheim Guldental Langenlonsheim Laubenheim Rümmelsheim Windesheim Daxweiler Dörrebach Eckenroth Roth (bei Stromberg) Schöneberg (Hunsrück) Schweppenhausen Seibersbach Stromberg (Hunsrück) Waldlaubersheim Warmsroth Kirn Bärenbach (bei Idar-Oberstein) Becherbach bei Kirn Brauweiler (Rheinland-Pfalz) Bruschied Hahnenbach Heimweiler Heinzenberg (bei Kirn) Hennweiler Hochstetten-Dhaun Horbach (bei Simmertal) Kellenbach Königsau Limbach (bei Kirn) Meckenbach (bei Kirn) Oberhausen bei Kirn Otzweiler Schneppenbach Schwarzerden Simmertal Weitersborn Abtweiler Becherbach (Pfalz) Breitenheim Callbach Desloch Hundsbach Jeckenbach Lettweiler Löllbach Meisenheim Raumbach Rehborn Reiffelbach Schmittweiler Schweinschied Allenfeld Argenschwang Bockenau Boos (Nahe) Braunweiler Burgsponheim Dalberg (bei Bad Kreuznach) Gebroth Gutenberg (bei Bad Kreuznach) Hargesheim Hergenfeld Hüffelsheim Mandel (Gemeinde) Münchwald Oberstreit Roxheim Rüdesheim (Nahe) Schloßböckelheim Sankt Katharinen (bei Bad Kreuznach) Sommerloch (bei Bad Kreuznach) Spabrücken Spall Sponheim Waldböckelheim Wallhausen (bei Bad Kreuznach) Weinsheim (bei Bad Kreuznach) Winterbach (Soonwald) Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis Landkreis Birkenfeld Landkreis Mainz-Bingen Hessen Landkreis Alzey-Worms Landkreis Kusel Donnersbergkreismap
About this picture
View of the district of Krebsweiler
The old school in the district of Krebsweiler

Heimweiler is a municipality in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate . It belongs to the Kirner Land association.

geography

Geographical location

Heimweiler is located on the edge of the North Palatinate Bergland along the state road 182 Kirn - Meisenheim and on the district road 71, which connects the two districts of Krebsweiler and Heimberg. The district has an extension of 9.07 km² , the mean height of the location is 259  m above sea level. NHN .

Community structure

The community Heimweiler consists of the districts Heimberg and Krebsweiler. The Forsthaus Krebsweiler, Obere Horbachsmühle and Untere Horbachsmühle residential areas also belong to Krebsweiler.

history

The local community Heimweiler was created on June 7, 1969 through the merger of the two communities Heimberg and Krebsweiler.

Finds from an early Roman cremation grave near Krebsweiler and prehistoric burial mounds in the Heimberg district indicate an early settlement of the districts of both villages. As with most places in the district, Heimberg and Krebsweiler were also founded during the period of "development of the younger settlement area" (7th to 12th centuries). The place names are interpreted differently. In Heimberg, the defining word “Heim” corresponds to the name forms “Heym”, “Heien”, “Hen”, “Hahn”, “Haan” etc. and goes back to the ahd . "Hagan" (= "hagen") in the meaning of forest (Hag = forest). Since in the Franconian settlement development the place names were closely related to personal or family names, the interpretation "Berg (clearing mountain / castle) of Hano (Hein, Hagen, Henn, Heinrich etc.)" seems possible for Heimberg. In Krebsweiler, too, the defining word “cancer” (documented in 1375 “Krebeswilre”) seems to go back to a person or surname and could be interpreted as “Hofgut des Krebes” (Grebe, Greber, Krebs etc.). In the Hessian area, the "Grebe" was the village mayor or mayor. In the region, the old name " Heimberger " or "Heymbürge" had the same meaning.

Both villages appear in a document in 1375 as "Krebeswilre" and "Heymberch". Both villages belonged to the Amt Naumburg (seat of Burg Naumburg near Bärenbach ) in the front county of Sponheim until the end of the 18th century . Both settlements formed a special “in-court” in the “Becherbach court”. This medieval judicial and administrative district, which was identical to the parish of Becherbach , was probably under the administration of the Raugräf in the high Middle Ages , which passed to the Counts of Sponheim-Kreuznach from the 14th century . After their extinction, Amt Naumburg came under the administration of the Electoral Palatinate of Baden until the office fell entirely to the Margraves of Baden in 1776 .

In the late Middle Ages, the Lords of Heinzenberg had legal shares in the medieval “Ingericht” of Krebsweiler and Heimberg , which Tilmann von Heinzenberg sold in 1375 to the wild count Otto von Kyrburg. Economically, the residents of Heimberg and Krebsweiler tended to Kirn , where the so-called “Zollhafer” was still paid to the Lords of Steinkallenfels in 1579 for the supply of the local market .

According to a description by the Naumburg Office from 1785, there were 30 houses in Krebsweiler, in which a total of 32 families lived. The houses are "small and bad, although the place is wealthy," it says in the official description. Krebsweiler was the main wine village in Amt Naumburg, where up to 40 loads of wine (approx. 400 hl) were harvested annually. The most beautiful house is said to have been the "Barth'sche Haus". Heimberg only had 16 one-story houses with as many families. Most of the population of the two villages was Protestant Reformed.

In 1794 the Left Bank of the Rhine was occupied during the First Coalition War , and in 1798 the area was reorganized by the French directorate based on the French model. The communities Heimberg and Krebsweiler were assigned to the Mairie Hundsbach in the canton of Meisenheim , which belonged to the arrondissement of Birkenfeld in the Saardépartement .

The two villages remained there until the end of French rule (1814) and, as a result of the resolutions made at the Congress of Vienna, were first part of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1815 and then to the Landgraviate of Hesse-Homburg in 1816 . Under their administration, the two communities belonged to the "Oberschultheißerei Becherbach" in the upper office of Meisenheim . The Oberamt Meisenheim came in 1866 in Prussia , the 1869 from the chief official of the county Meisenheim in Koblenz in the Rhine province was formed. At the Becherbach office, which became part of the Kreuznach district in 1932 , both communities remained until 1940. After this office was dissolved, Heimberg and Krebsweiler came to the Kirn-Land office , where they remained as independent local communities until 1968. After it merged to form the Heimweiler community, it became part of the Kirn-Land community .

Population development

The development of the population of Heimweiler, the values ​​from 1871 to 1987 are based on censuses:

year Residents
1815 403
1835 ~ 400
1871 404
1905 438
1939 366
1950 382
1961 399
year Residents
1970 422
1987 433
1997 423
2005 450
2011 423
2017 396

politics

Municipal council

The council in Heimweiler consists of eight council members, who in the local elections on May 26, 2019 in a majority vote were elected, and the honorary mayor as chairman.

mayor

The local mayor is Andreas Setz. In the local elections on May 26, 2019, he was confirmed in his office with a share of the vote of 85.90%.

coat of arms

Heimweiler coat of arms
Blazon : "A silver water fountain over a silver base over a blue and gold shield base in black."
Reasons for the coat of arms: The field made reference to the former affiliation to the front county of Sponheim . The water fountain and base symbolize the abundance of water in the community. The community of Heimweiler supplies several communities in the neighborhood with water from its source area.

The communities of Krebsweiler and Heimberg had their own coats of arms until they were dissolved on June 7, 1969. The council of the newly formed community Heimweiler decided on August 15, 1969 to continue the previous coat of arms of the community Krebsweiler. The draft submitted by the graphic artist Brust, Kirnsulzbach, was accepted by the municipal council on April 11, 1966 and approved by the Ministry of the Interior in Mainz on July 1, 1966. The Ministry of the community of Heimweiler issued the approval for the continuation of the coat of arms on October 3, 1969.

religion

The Protestant church with the bell tower that was inaugurated in 1996

The majority of the local population is Protestant. The Protestant parish , whose new church was inaugurated in 1967, belongs to the Protestant rectory of Becherbach. In 1996, a bell tower was also built because the church did not previously have its own bell. The Catholic residents belong to the Catholic parish of Becherbach and are looked after from Kirn .

Club life

The associations in the community include the MGV Krebsweiler-Heimberg, founded in 1876, which was awarded the title “master choir” in the late 1980s, and the youth club founded in 1976. In addition, the sports club TuS Heimweiler was founded in 1921, which today offers gymnastics , athletics , table tennis and hiking in four departments .

Economy and Infrastructure

Bundesstraße 41 runs to the west . In Kirn there is a train station on the Bingen – Saarbrücken line .

See also

Web links

Commons : Heimweiler  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. State Statistical Office of Rhineland-Palatinate - population status 2019, districts, communities, association communities ( help on this ).
  2. State Statistical Office Rhineland-Palatinate (ed.): Official directory of the municipalities and parts of the municipality. Status: January 2018 [ Version 2020 is available. ] . S. 14 (PDF; 2.2 MB).
  3. Official municipality directory 2006 ( Memento from December 22, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) (= State Statistical Office Rhineland-Palatinate [Hrsg.]: Statistical volumes . Volume 393 ). Bad Ems March 2006, p. 179 (PDF; 2.6 MB). Info: An up-to-date directory ( 2016 ) is available, but in the section "Territorial changes - Territorial administrative reform" it does not give any population figures.  
  4. a b Statistical Maps, Verbandsgemeinde Kirn-Land, 2009
  5. State Statistical Office Rhineland-Palatinate - regional data
  6. ^ The Regional Returning Officer RLP: City Council Election 2019 Heimweiler. Retrieved September 23, 2019 .
  7. The Regional Returning Officer RLP: direct elections 2019. see Kirn-Land, Verbandsgemeinde, fifth row of results. Retrieved September 23, 2019 .