Heinstetten

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Heinstetten
City of Meßstetten
Former community coat of arms of Heinstetten
Coordinates: 48 ° 8 ′ 5 ″  N , 8 ° 57 ′ 48 ″  E
Height : 914 m above sea level NN
Residents : 989  (Jun. 30, 2019)
Incorporation : 1st September 1971
Postal code : 72469
Area code : 07579
Heinstetten
Heinstetten

Heinstetten is a village in the Zollernalbkreis in Baden-Württemberg and belongs to the city of Meßstetten . In September 2010 the village had 997 inhabitants, making it the second largest district of Messstetten.

geography

Heinstetten lies on the Heuberg and is 914  m above sea level. NN the highest place in the Swabian Alb . The area around Heinstetten offers hiking opportunities with an extensive network of paths and the Rammelloch barbecue area.

history

Heinstetten was first mentioned in a document in 793 when it was donated to the St. Gallen monastery . From the beginning of the 11th century until 1810, Heinstetten belonged to the domain of Werenwag Castle , which itself changed hands more often during this time. From 1810 the community was independent before it was incorporated into Meßstetten in 1971.

Prehistory and early history

The area of ​​today's Heinstetten was probably already settled in the Neolithic . At least there are finds from the area in the hollow rock in the Heuberg military training area that speak for it. The reason for this could be the location of the place on a possibly very old connection path that led from the Schmiechatal into the Danube valley . The earliest documented settlement dates from the 9th century BC. BC, when the Celts increasingly populated the Swabian Alb. Celtic burial mounds on the Heinstetter district were found in the Frankenreis and Hofen corridors .

Due to the Roman conquests in southern Germany in 15 BC Began, the Celts were subjugated by the Romans . Several finds from the nearby Alb plateau have been documented from this time. In the area of ​​the city of Meßstetten , pastor Alfred Ludwig Oetinger (from 1856 to 1868 pastor in Meßstetten and Hossingen) had extensive excavations carried out, initially on his own account, and later on the account of the State Collection of Patriotic Antiquities. The extensive finds of grave goods indicate an early settlement of Meßstetten by the Celts. The Heuneburg and a spring in Egesheim also provide rich finds. In the course of the 3rd century AD, settlement groups of the Alamanni gradually spread across the Alb. The ending -stetten indicates a foundation in the recent history of the settlement, which means that Heinstetten was more likely to have emerged after the 7th century, probably due to the rapidly growing population.

Early Middle Ages (793 to around 1100)

The first written evidence of the existence of Heinstetten can be found on a document from the year 793. The document, written in Latin script, confirms a donation from 24 localities by Count Berthold, including Hohunsteti , to the St. Gallen monastery. Such a donation to a monastery was not unusual at the time. The donors hoped for salvation or tried to evade military service by surrendering their property. Often they got the donation back for life in exchange for low interest payments. How long Heinstetten remained in the possession of the monastery can no longer be traced today. Over 200 years later, Heinstetten became the heir of King Heinrich II (the saint) .

In 1005 the king handed over 14 places (including Hoensteta ) to the newly founded St. Georg zu Stein am Rhein Abbey . Heinstetten passed from the possession of the Stein am Rhein monastery to the Hohenberg counts about 100 years later, at the beginning of the 11th century.

Heinstetten under the rule of Werenwag (around 1100 to 1810)

The Counts of Hohenberg (around 1100 to 1381)

Pilgrim von Hoßkirch had exchanged one good for another in Beuron "in loco qui dicitur Biurrein" from Hermann von Honstetten. According to the district description from 1961, the owners of Hossingen Castle are said to have originally been the noble Hossen from Heinstetten, one of whom can be identified as Albert in 1296 and 1306. Other experts see in Hosse a surname, first name or a reference to the Hossengut of the Heinstetter nobility. Dr Walter Stettner researched the documents of the von Heinstetten (Honstetten) aristocratic family and reported on the sale of the Hossengut to a Beuron canon.

East side of Werenwag Castle

The self-contained rule of Werenwag belonged to the county of Hohenberg . In addition to Heinstetten, the rule included the villages of Hartheim , Kolbingen , Renquishausen , Schwenningen and Unterdigisheim . Around 1300 Count Friedrich von Zollern owned land, serfs and half the court in the village. 1306 Count Friederich von Zollern renounces his bailiwick right of the Hossengut. Canon Berthold von Dürrwangen bought it for the Beuron Monastery . The Counts of Hohenberg got increasingly into financial difficulties in the 14th century. Some areas of the county were sold as early as 1342, including Heinstetten, which went to Burkard and Johannes von Jungingen . The village did not remain in their possession for long, but it is not known who the new rulers were who re-incorporated Heinstetten as part of Werenwag before 1392. In October 1381, Count Rudolf II von Hohenberg sold all of his property to Duke Leopold III. of Austria from the Habsburg dynasty , with which Heinstetten became Austrian.

The Junkers of Hörnlingen (1381 to 1467)

Buying the county for 66,000 gold guilders was not easy for the Habsburgs, but it was also an important building block in the struggle for power in competition with Württemberg . In order to reduce costs, the Werenwag estate was pledged to the Lords of Hörnlingen as early as 1392. For his part, Eberhard von Hörnlingen wanted to get the most out of his pledged property and tried to increase the income and compulsory performance from Werenwag. He paid little attention to the concerns of his subjects. The oppressed population resisted and so Heinstetter and Hartheimer moved together before the competent court in Innsbruck ; there they sued their master at the pledger Duke Albrecht VI. of Austria . The decisive factor in the process was the complaint about the downward direction of the Heinstetter village. Other complaints included the compulsion to use a particular mill, the deprivation of grazing rights and the frequent collection of taxes. A short time later, the pledge was withdrawn from the Lord von Hörnlingen via Werenwag and handed over to Caspar von Laubenberg .

Five generations of Laubenberg authorities (1467 to 1629)

The Laubenberg coat of arms

The rule of the Laubenbergs over Werenwag lasted for five generations between 1467 and 1629. During this time, the Heinstetter's subordinate duties to their liege lord were laid down in writing in greater detail than ever before. The foundation of the parish of Heinstetten by Hans Walter von Laubenberg on December 1, 1524 also falls during this period of rule. The pastor was also responsible for keeping male breeding animals for the farm animals kept in Heinstetten. Before the church was built, the dead were buried in Ebingen. From the path is the Siebenkreuzleg ( 48 ° 12 ′ 13.9 ″  N , 9 ° 1 ′ 12.52 ″  E ). received in original condition.

Since a Roman settlement was discovered at the Ebinger Kreuz, a Roman origin of the channels can no longer be ruled out. Albguide Helmut Meng suspected one of the around Wüst believers called reformers destroyed Stationenweg on the path of the dead of the parish communities Heinstetten and Hossingen for Ebinger cemetery. Station routes with seven stations are quite common. A branch leads in a curve to a sand pit in the direction of Heinstetten. In this branch further excavations were carried out in 2016. A double track with a gauge of 1.05 meters was found. What was being transported here in the direction of Heinstetten? Did the second track with a pulley serve as a counterweight? The local group Ebingen of the Swabian Alb Association is currently conducting scientific research.

Just one year later, Heinstetter farmers take part in the peasant war . After the suppression of this uprising, all landowners were expropriated and their previous private property was converted into lordly fiefs, for which interest had to be paid. The last ruler of this house was Friedrich von Laubenberg. He died childless on January 31, 1629, with which the fief fell back to Austria.

The Fürstenberg house (1629 to 1695)

In the course of 1629 Werenwag became a Fürstenbergian. Austria gave the fief over Werenwag to Count Egon from the Fürstenberg family . The Thirty Years' War (1618–1648), which was raging at the same time, caused heavy losses in the population of Heinstetten. The lack of food, caused by poor harvests and the feeding of soldiers, led to a higher susceptibility to diseases such as the plague . Such accumulated misfortune and suffering also supported the belief in witches in Heinstetten. In several witch trials around 1632, at least two Heinstetter women were put to death at the stake. The name of the well-known Heinstetter "Hexenboschen", a group of bushes with a large tree, came about in the 20th century and has no relation to the witch trials.

The Lords of Ulm (1702 to 1830)

During this time, Emperor Leopold I was in financial difficulties due to the high costs of the War of the Spanish Succession . When Baron Ludwig Constantin von Ulm-Erbach found out about this, he obtained a sum of 400,000 guilders for the emperor until 1702 and in return received the pledge for some areas, including Werenwag. The Werenwag rule brought the baron an income of around 5000 guilders per year. The Lords of Ulm remained in the possession of Werenwag for five generations. In the 18th century, 67 Heinstetter took part in Austria's settlement programs and emigrated to Hungary . For comparison: In 1757 the population of Heinstetten was 284. That means that almost a quarter of the population left their home.

In 1810, the Heinstetter, as one of the first communities, demanded that the rulers replace their grazing and timber rights. The requirement was met and Heinstetten achieved independence.

Württemberg and Baden

The Heinstetter Hilb

After Austria was defeated by Napoléon in the Battle of Austerlitz in 1805, it had to surrender large parts of Upper Austria to Baden and Württemberg, including the county of Hohenberg with Heinstetten, which went to King Friedrich von Württemberg . However, due to a state treaty dated October 2, 1810, part of Württemberg, including Heinstetten, fell to the Grand Duchy of Baden .

19th and 20th centuries

After a volcanic eruption , a thunderstorm with hail set in on August 9, 1816 and destroyed the entire harvest. In Heinstetten, 140 of the 220 horned cattle are slaughtered to avoid starvation. In 1817 the snow remained until May, which meant that the oats on the Heuberg had less time to ripen and froze to death. The rulers had little more than to intervene in the grain trade and carry out symbolic politics. Even today, the festival goes back to such a gesture.

The town hall of Heinstetten

After the community became independent, the population increased rapidly. So it rose from 308 inhabitants in 1814 to 550 inhabitants in 1852. There was a lack of work and food, so that an emigration to the larger cities began.

The Heinstetter school house

An upswing only began for Heinstetten at the beginning of the 20th century. In 1903 the Gottlieb Ott company from Ebingen set up a branch of their velvet tailoring in Heinstetten. In 1910 a new building followed and later a further expansion of the factory. In 1911 part of the Heinstetten district was sold to set up the Heuberg military training area . In 1909, ready-to-build plans for a camp at the military training area near Heinstetten with a rail connection via the Heubergbahn were not implemented. The Hirschhölzle near Straßberg and an area near Stetten on the cold market were also available for discussion . A new schoolhouse was built from the proceeds. The newly founded Badenwerk was awarded the contract to electrify Heinstetten, Hartheim and Schwenningen around 1921. In 1926 a post line was set up from Hartheim via Heinstetten to Meßkirch . Since 1929, a Postbus line also ensured that Heinstetters came to work in Ebingen. Additional jobs were created through the site administration of the completed military training area. During the Second World War , the Conzelmann Trikotagen company founded a branch in Heinstetten. As a result of this development, more and more Heinstetter farmers only ran agriculture as a sideline.

During the two world wars, Heinstetten was largely spared from the war. However, in were First World War 27 Fallen to complain, in World War II fell 57 Hein Stetter or remained missing. The war ended when Heinstetten was occupied by French soldiers.

After 1945 the reconstruction of the municipal administration began. Since there was a great need for building areas, the Riegelwies was developed in 1951/52 . Further building areas followed: 1961 Bies and the Hintere Wiesen , 1966 the lower part and 1976 the upper part of Hofen . In 1958, the sewerage of Heinstetten began. In 1962/63 the new, larger kindergarten was built.

1969 began with the preparations for the district and community reform, with the aim of achieving a merger with Meßstetten. In February 1971, 65 percent of the voters finally voted in favor of the incorporation, which the local council confirmed with 8: 1 votes, so that the incorporation could come into force on September 1, 1971. But this still required a boundary shift. Heinstetten had been on Baden soil since 1810, Meßstetten on Württemberg soil. Heinstetten has been a part of Meßstetten since 1971.

In 1972 the residential area Unter Palmen and the mixed area Im kleine Öschle were developed and the cemetery was expanded. In 1974 the topping-out ceremony for the new multi-purpose hall, which has a shooting range in the basement, took place.

After more than eight years of planning, land consolidation came into effect in 1990. Over the centuries, the Heinstetter district was divided more and more and, before the adjustment in 1561, consisted of very narrow parcels. After the cleanup, it was only 330.

In 1993 Heinstetten celebrated its 1200th anniversary with a big festival and over 10,000 visitors.

Culture and sights

religion

Hein Stetten's population is predominantly Roman Catholic denomination . The Catholic parish is part of the Archdiocese of Freiburg via the Sigmaringen-Meßkirch deanery . Evangelical church members belong to the Evangelical Church in Baden in Stetten am kalten Markt.

Buildings

St. Agatha
  • The Church of St. Agatha was renovated in 2010.
  • The Knobelhof in the “ founding ” area fell victim to the establishment of the military training area.

Economy and Infrastructure

Mining

In pits, peasants were mined by farmers during the poor months. the slag from historical iron smelting shows a type of small smelting furnace that has been able to smelt all ores in the area since the 13th century. Iron ore , floor ore and iron rye stone were later transported from the area of ​​what is now the Zollernalb district to the blast furnaces of the Swabian Hüttenwerke in Tuttlingen. The nearby smelter in Harras was shut down in 1832. After the construction of efficient railway lines in southern Germany, with the exception of the time of the Third Reich, only iron ore was mined in order to use limestone as an iron-containing aggregate in the blast furnace . There are reports of roe-shaped thone iron stones , of which there was "a seam of 1 - 2 shoe thickness" in the Heuberg.

Water supply

The water supply is guaranteed by the water supply association Hohenberggruppe , which is based in Meßstetten. Part of the historical water supply is still in operation today and is used to supply fire extinguishing water. The surface water of the snowmelt is collected in an artificially created shell .

Ban mill

The Unterdigisheimer Mühle had ban rights for Hartheim and Heinstetten. The Heinstetter are obliged to prepare the mill, if necessary, and their weirs by labor (Repertorium Kallenberg No. 814).

Rail transport

In the Upper Danube Nature Park , there is a dense, synchronized range of rail transport on all routes on weekends . Railcars such as the Nature Park Express, which are operated by the Hohenzollerische Landesbahn , run here on Sundays and public holidays on the Tuttlingen – Inzigkofen railway to make the local recreation area more attractive for tourism via the Hausen im Tal train station, which is eleven kilometers away. Cyclists usually choose the gravelled Werenwager Steige 48 ° 4 ′ 40 ″  N , 9 ° 1 ′ 11.95 ″  E via Werenwag Castle , Schwenningen and the hamlet of Schönfeld.

The Tübingen – Sigmaringen railway line is reached in Ebingen via Meßstetten with shuttle buses.

Say

The Grim Reaper, believed dead between Heinstetten and Meßstetten Castle

The castle Meßstetten was a befitting plant at Bschorner way on the castle hill behind the Kählesbühl on Bschorner way Heinstetten in the restricted zone. The castle stables in Hossingen, which are comparable in size and quality, are freely accessible and have been made accessible to tourists by the Swabian Alb Association with a bridge, gravel paths and CAD simulations on display boards. There was once the court of the knight Heinrich von Tierberg , nicknamed Haiterbach

The noble knight had very likely sold his property in Haiterbach and acquired his new rule in return, the center of which was very close to Heinstetten.

In 1380 a Berthold B (e) schornen von Schwenningen is mentioned in documents of the Beuron monastery. The Catholic St. Lamprecht's Church in Meßstetten, which was important at the time, is supported by Heinrich and Burkhard von Tierberg and is a collegiate church. In 1360 the lord of the castle donated a year for himself, his ancestors and descendants in the church in Meßstetten (St.Lamprecht, largely renovated after the earthquake damage in 1911), where his mother, his wife and three sisters are buried in the crypt . In 2016, graves were found and documented in the lamprechtskiche church during the installation of a warm air heating system. Research work was commissioned by the city of Meßstetten at the University of Tübingen.

Evangelical Lamprechtskirche Meßstetten - burial place of the Messstetten lords of the castle

In 1370 the rule of Meßstetten came to the Wildentierberger line .

On the way from this castle to Heinstetten there was a covered wooden bridge. Among them, during a thunderstorm on July 15, Johann Matthaeus Müller and his son sought protection with their scythes. Lightning struck the bridge. The saint-nurse, Fischer, who was called to help, initially thought the casualty was dead. Three "red welts in the shape of a snake", a burned stocking, two holes in the stocking like shot, a red meal and melted pewter were found on the cutlery. After half an hour, the initially believed dead was able to move again. Burn plasters and bloodletting were the medical treatments. After eight days he is said to have gone back to his profession.

The triple boundary stone

The legendary three-track mark, also known as the three-lane mark, is located in the military training area. The ban border had been imposed since ancient times, so that no neighbor could dare to cross it with his flock. The landmark was considered sacred by the ancients and strange customs were observed when it was set. A superstition has grown up around the stone : a splinter of the stone worn on the body should act as a protective symbol against dark forces, hail, storms, magic and disease. The meadow near the Dreibannmarke served as a storage place for traveling traders, carters and craftsmen until 1914. With finesse it was possible to find an advantage between Württemberg , Baden and Hohenzollern . After the shooting lanes went into operation, a meadow on the edge of the restricted area was allocated as a storage area up to the Porajmos . The neighboring Prussian Hohenzollern, due to its location between Württemberg and Baden, had the reputation of an Eldorado for the traveling people for centuries.

There is a legend: whoever moves the stone must go spiritually to the place of his iniquity after his death at night as a punishment .

People with a relationship to the Heinstetten

Caravan (1937)
  • Elisabeth Walter (1897–1956), teacher and writer in Heinstetten. A meadow on the Heuberg military training area served as a storage area for traveling traders and craftsmen up to the Porajmos . In a successful children's book she describes the story of the rascal Schmiedledick, a hard and hard life full of privation. Schmiedledick ultimately stays with the travelers voluntarily.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ J. Scheff: Pre and early history of the Ebinger Alb. Ebingen 1987.
  2. inventory E258 VI Bü 689 on Landesarchiv-BW.de
  3. ^ Alfred Ludwig Oetinger: digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de . In Digi UB Uni Heidelberg: digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de from 1875, Volume 2, pp. 38-52.
  4. Eduard Paulus u. a .: Description of the Oberamt Balingen . Ed .: Royal Statistical Topographical Bureau. Hossingen, S. 244 ff .
  5. R. Christlein: The Alamanni. Stuttgart 1978.
  6. ^ Document book of the St. Gallen Abbey, Volume 1, Zurich 1863 (No. 135 = Document 793 March 27).
  7. MG DHII21, the documents of the German kings and emperors. Volume 3: The documents of Heinrich II. And Arduin. 2nd Edition. No. 511, Berlin 1957.
  8. ^ Leopold Stierle: Contributions to the early history of the Augustinian canons monastery in Beuron. In: Freiburg Diocesan Archive . Volume 110, 1990, p. 45.
  9. ^ Karl Heinz Schröder: The district of Balingen . Ed .: State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg. Balingen 1961, p. 427 .
  10. Walter Stettner: From the oldest Ebingers . Local history sheets January 31, 1974. Ed .: Local history association. Balingen.
  11. Holdings Ho156 T1 Nr3 on Landesarchiv-BW.de
  12. ^ Leopold Stierle: Contributions to the early history of the Augustinian canons monastery in Beuron. In: Freiburg Diocesan Archive. Volume 110, 1990, p. 53.
  13. A. Zekorn: Heinstetten under the rule of the Junkers of Hörnlingen (1392–1467) and a trial before the Innsbruck council. In: Heinstetten in the former rule of Werenwag. Sigmaringen 1993.
  14. inventory Ho 1561 NR30 on Landesarchiv-BW.de
  15. ^ A b H. Stopper: Five generations under Laubenberg authorities (1467–1629). In: Heinstetten in the former rule of Werenwag. Sigmaringen 1993.
  16. Gottlob Hummel: The History of the City of Ebingen 1923 . Ed .: Cooperative printing company. S. 41 .
  17. : crash . In: Black Forest Messenger . June 7, 2014.
  18. ^ Walter Stettner: Ebingen - The history of a city in Württemberg . Jan Thorbecke, Sigmaringen 1986, p. 190 .
  19. baden-wuerttemberg.nabu.de
  20. : Alb Guide . In: Schwarzwälder Bote , 7 August 2012.
  21. : Castle . In: Black Forest Messenger . August 25, 2016.
  22. : puzzles . In: Black Forest Messenger . 17th May 2015.
  23. ^ H. Stopper: Werenwag becomes Fürstenbergisch (1629–1695). In: Heinstetten in the former rule of Werenwag. Sigmaringen 1993.
  24. ^ H. Stopper: The gentlemen of Ulm secure the rule of Werenwag (1702-1830). In: Heinstetten in the former rule of Werenwag. Sigmaringen 1993.
  25. ^ W. Hacker: Emigrants from the Upper Neckar to Southeastern Europe in the 18th century. (= Book series of the Southeast German Historical Commission . Volume 23). Munich 1970.
  26. Sigrid Hirbodian, Andreas Schmauder and Manfred Waßner (ed.): Community in transition . Volume 19 A city in transition The history of Messstetten in time. No. 19 . Tübingen 2019, p. 208 .
  27. H. Stopper: The political community. In: Heinstetten in the former rule of Werenwag. Sigmaringen 1993.
  28. ^ H. Mangold: Heinstetten in the 19th and 20th centuries. In: Heinstetten in the former rule of Werenwag. Sigmaringen 1993.
  29. City archive plan Heubergbahn Meßstetten with variants HR-E 787.11 / 1-05
  30. ^ Walter Stettner: Ebingen - The history of a city in Württemberg . Jan Thorbecke, Sigmaringen 1986, p. 392 .
  31. ^ 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, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 524 .
  32. St. Agatha shines in new splendor. In: Südkurier . July 30, 2010.
  33. Wilfried Groh (wgh): There is a bunker under the ruin . In: Black Forest Messenger . June 11, 2010.
  34. : Iron Industry . In: Black Forest Messenger . September 28, 2016.
  35. : Rennofen . In: Reutlinger Generalanzeiger . May 22, 2007.
  36. Martin Kemp: Medieval ironworks. Schwäbisch Gmünd.
  37. State Archive of Baden-Wuerttemberg Abt.Wirtschaftsarchiv Stuttgart Hohenheim (ed.): Archive SHW . Harras, Ludwigsthal.
  38. Memminger: Yearbook 1839 . S. 352 .
  39. Friedrich von Alberti: The mountains of the Kingdom of Würtemberg, with special reference to halurgy . JG Cotta'sche Buchhandlung 1826, Stuttgart / Tübingen, p. 124 .
  40. ^ Fritz Scheerer: Bannmühlen: In: Heimatkundliche Blätter Balingen. No. 10, February 1982, pp. 362f.
  41. ^ Inventory of Julius Kindler von Knobloch on Landesarchiv-BW.de
  42. Upper Baden gender book , p. 222. Digitized, UB Uni Heidelberg
  43. ^ Hermann Krauss: Local and Church History of Meßstetten . 75th anniversary of the church. Ed .: Organ Fund Pastor Peter Gall. Meßstetten, S. 17 .
  44. ^ Upper Baden gender book , p. 223. Digitized version, University Library of Heidelberg
  45. FAS . Documents of the Beuron Monastery. No. 8315 . Beuron Monastery.
  46. Inventory A602 NR6736 = WR6736 on Landesarchiv-BW.de
  47. ^ Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg , holdings A 602: Württembergische Regesten, Weltl. and clerical offices, Balingen GV (as of 2012)
  48. Weltl. and spiritual offices . In: Landesarchiv (Hrsg.): Württembergische Regesta from holdings: A602 / 1301–1500 . Meßstetten (Balingen GV order signature: A 602 No. 6747 = WR 6747).
  49. Holdings A 602 on Landesarchiv-BW.de
  50. : Lamprechtskirche . In: Black Forest Messenger . October 28, 2016.
  51. : book . In: Black Bote .
  52. ^ Hermann Krauss: Local and Church History of Meßstetten . 75th anniversary of the church. Ed .: Organ Fund Pastor Peter Gall. Meßstetten, S. 39 .
  53. An Oskar Schindler from Steinhofen. In: Black Forest Messenger . October 12, 2017. Retrieved October 15, 2017 .
  54. Gottlob Hummel: The History of the City of Ebingen 1923 . Ed .: Cooperative printing company. S. 24 .
  55. : Schmiedledick . In: Badische Zeitung . October 16, 2010.

literature

  • Heinstetten in the former Werenwag estate. 1200 years of Heinstetten 793–1993. Jan Thorbecke Verlag, Sigmaringen 1993, OCLC 163340410 .

Web links

Commons : Heinstetten  - Collection of images, videos and audio files