Veringenstadt

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the city of Veringenstadt
Veringenstadt
Map of Germany, position of the city of Veringenstadt highlighted

Coordinates: 48 ° 11 '  N , 9 ° 13'  E

Basic data
State : Baden-Württemberg
Administrative region : Tübingen
County : Sigmaringen
Height : 631 m above sea level NHN
Area : 31.25 km 2
Residents: 2168 (December 31, 2018)
Population density : 69 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 72519
Area code : 07577
License plate : SIG
Community key : 08 4 37 114
City structure: 3 districts

City administration address :
Im Städtle 116
72519 Veringenstadt
Website : www.veringenstadt.de
Mayor : Armin Christ
Location of the city of Veringenstadt in the district of Sigmaringen
Alb-Donau-Kreis Bodenseekreis Landkreis Biberach Landkreis Konstanz Landkreis Ravensburg Landkreis Reutlingen Landkreis Tuttlingen Zollernalbkreis Bad Saulgau Beuron Bingen (Landkreis Sigmaringen) Gammertingen Herbertingen Herdwangen-Schönach Hettingen Hohentengen (Oberschwaben) Illmensee Inzigkofen Krauchenwies Leibertingen Mengen Mengen Meßkirch Neufra Ostrach Pfullendorf Sauldorf Scheer Schwenningen (Heuberg) Sigmaringen Sigmaringendorf Sigmaringendorf Stetten am kalten Markt Veringenstadt Wald (Hohenzollern)map
About this picture

Veringenstadt is a town in the Sigmaringen district in Baden-Württemberg .

geography

Veringenstadt lies in the valley of the Lauchert , a tributary of the Danube , between Gammertingen and Sigmaringen . The community area is 3125 hectares.

geology

The municipality of Veringenstadt is geologically located on the so-called Lauchertgraben slump . To the east of Veringendorf you can see a petrified sponge reef that was formed 140 million years ago.

City structure

The community consists of the core town of Veringenstadt and the districts of Hermentingen and Veringendorf.

coat of arms district Residents
(as of January 15, 2011)
Area
ha
Veringenstadt Veringenstadt (core city) 1611 1523
Hermentingen Hermentingen 147 488
Veringendorf Veringendorf 504 1052

history

View over Veringenstadt with the castle of the Counts of Veringen and the parish church of St. Nikolaus
Parish Church of St. Nikolaus in Veringenstadt
Postcard with St. Michaelskirche in Veringendorf, 1914

The area of ​​today's municipality of Veringenstadt was already settled in prehistoric times. In the caves of Veringenstadt between 1934 and 1948, during excavations by Eduard Peters, unique finds from the time of the Neanderthals were discovered around 50,000 years ago: hand axes in the Göpfelstein cave and in the Nikolaus cave, stone tools and animal bones from the Magdalenian period (18,000 to 12,000 BC) .

The Veringen settlement was first mentioned in a document around 786. It derives its name from a certain "Fara" or "Faro", so it used to be called "Faringa", around 1130 Veringin, later always Veringen.

The Counts of Veringen were one of the wealthiest and most respected dynasty families of the 11th and 12th centuries in southern Germany (see list of the possessions of the Counts of Veringen ). They were descendants of the Earl of Altshausen , Gaugrafen in Eritgau in northern Upper Swabia , built near the village Veringen (now Veringendorf ) the castle Veringen and called themselves from now on to her new residence Veringen. The town of Veringen (now Veringenstadt ) was founded around 1250 through the targeted settlement of people from the surrounding hamlets . Rudolf von Habsburg gave the place market fairness in 1285 and acquired the county in 1291. His successors pledged the county and with it Veringenstadt went back to the Veringen only a few years later. Count Heinrich von Veringen sold the pledge in 1344 and 1359 to the Württemberg relatives, who in turn pledged them in 1399 to Count Eberhard von Werdenberg , who lived in Trochtelfingen . In 1459, after a marriage between the two families, Württemberg waived all claims, whereby Count Johann von Werdenberg became the direct pledgee of Habsburg Austria . Christoph von Werdenberg died in 1534 without leaving any male descendants. Austria immediately took the pledge in order to give it to Count Karl I von Zollern as a fief in 1535 . With the Zollerische inheritance in 1576, the county of Veringen came to the Sigmaringer line. Austrian feudal sovereignty only ended with the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806.

After the Thirty Years War (1618–1648) around 1650 farming families from Tyrol were recruited for Veringenstadt and settled here. Today a quarter of the Lauchert town is still called “Tyrol”. A very strict selection was made on the basis of denomination. Around 1750 there was hardly enough to eat, and so many families emigrated to the eastern provinces of the Habsburg Empire, to the Danube basin, to Hungary and the Banat , and to Russia . Another 100 years later there was another wave of emigration. From 1827 to 1925 Veringenstadt belonged to the Oberamt Gammertingen . In 1850 it became Prussian as part of the principality of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and belonged to the province of Hohenzollernsche Lande . The famine and fear of Prussian military service in distant Koblenz drove the young men to America . In the 18th and 19th centuries, mine ore , the ferrous weathering products of the Jura limestone, were mined using shafts and tunnels .

Since 1927 the community has belonged to the district of Sigmaringen , since 1945 to Württemberg-Hohenzollern , which was incorporated into Baden-Württemberg in 1952. After the Second World War , the population of Veringenstadt almost doubled in the 1950s under the then Mayor Stefan Fink due to the inclusion of displaced persons. No other municipality in Baden-Württemberg accepted more repatriates, refugees and displaced persons from the eastern regions. From 1956 guest workers from Italy came to Veringenstadt. This development continued in the 1960s and 1970s. The social and confessional structure of the population changed due to the influx and the integration of the displaced, so that Veringenstadt's population structure, cultural and club life was shaped in a special way by the "refugees".

On February 1, 1972, Hermentingen was incorporated. Veringendorf was incorporated on January 1, 1975.

politics

The oldest town hall in Hohenzollern, built around 1415

Municipal council

The local elections on May 26, 2019 resulted in the election of 14 voluntary councilors, with a turnout of 64.15% (2014: 59.0%), of which 13 belong to the Free List and one to the Independent List (2014: seven each). Five councilors are women (2014: two). An additional member is the mayor, who chairs it.

mayor

On December 19, 2010, Armin Christ was confirmed in his office as Mayor of Veringenstadt with a turnout of 42.34 percent. On March 14, 2011, Christ was committed to a second term. He was elected again in the 2018 mayoral election with 81.26% of the valid votes and a turnout of 55.3%. He was first elected on December 22, 2002 and replaced Herbert Krapf on March 17, 2003, who held this position for 24 years until his retirement.

  • 1945–1966: Stefan Fink (CDU)
  • 1966–1978: Harald Müller
  • 1978–2002: Herbert Krapf (CDU)
  • since 2003: Armin Christ (CDU)

Mayor since the city was founded around 1250: List of mayors of Veringenstadt

Mayor

To district heads are Veringendorf Michael Witte and Hermentingen Peter Knaus ordered.

coat of arms

Veringenstadt coat of arms
Blazon : "In gold under a red deer pole, a red lion."

As early as 1320, the lion and the stag pole were used as city arms. The coat of arms was officially approved in 1947.

Justification for the coat of arms: The lion comes from the Habsburg coat of arms, the stag's rod is derived from the coat of arms and seal of the Counts of Veringen.

Town twinning

Veringenstadt has had a partnership with the city of Zwettl an der Rodl in Austria since 2012 .

Culture and sights

Interior of the St. Nicholas Church
St. Michaels Church in Veringendorf
Interior view of St. Michaels Church
Historic old town on the sliding slope of the Lauchert river arch . Front: completely renovated, current half-timbered town hall
Pilgrimage Church Maria Deutstetten in Veringenstadt

Veringenstadt is located on the Hohenzollernstrasse , on the “Hohenzollern Jakobsweg” and is part of the “Im Tal der Lauchert” holiday region.

Museums

  • The Veringenstadt local history museum is located on the upper floor of the 1415 town hall (the oldest town hall in Hohenzollern ). The main points of the exhibition are prehistoric finds from the Early and Paleolithic Age, the " witch shirt " of Bader-Ann , who was the last victim of the witch hunt in Veringenstadt and was executed on June 8, 1680, as well as exhibits from the Alemanni , the Middle Ages, the guilds up to Everyday objects of the 19th century.
  • Strübhaus - House of Painting , built around 1500: Former home and workshop of the Strüb family of painters, “ Masters of Veringen ”. The building on Kirchberg is now a museum of medieval painting.
  • A private residential museum has been created in the former mill, which has existed here for centuries. The first written record of a mill in Veringenstadt dates from around 1250. The mill was banned, which means that the citizens of the mill were assigned to have their grain milled. During the Thirty Years' War, the Herrschaftsmühle became a town mill and, in Veringenstadt in particular, became a hospital mill, then in 1841 a private mill. The first private miller's family from Veringenstadt was called Endris. When Maria Endris married a blacksmith, the mill was given this name. Up until the beginning of the last century, grain was ground in the lower part of the historic building and people lived upstairs. In 1901 the apartment next to the mill was built and the mill itself, for which four floors were now available, could be modernized. Until 1924 the waterworks also supplied the electricity for Veringenstadt. At the end of the 1960s, the mill was stopped here and in 1968 Müller Schmid sold the most striking symbol of the Veringenstadt mill, the mill wheel. Since no buyer could be found for the mill, it was extensively renovated. The remaining machines, bags, sieves, measuring vessels, photos and documents now form the basis for the small mill museum that Jutta Schmid-Glöckler set up here with her family.

Buildings

Veringenstadt is characterized by a medieval core with the half-timbered houses of former farmsteads and handicraft businesses, Veringen Castle and sacred buildings:

  • The parish church of St. Nicholas dates back to several previous buildings up to the year 1316. The lower tower shaft with a Romanesque entrance portal and baptismal font is evidence of the beginnings . The nave, the choir and the upper part of the bell tower were built in 1862–1871. Significant Gothic and Baroque carvings can be seen in the church: the Strüb family of artists , Niklaus Weckmann , Jörg Syrlin the Elder. J. The choir windows are the work of the famous Ulm glass painter Wilhelm Geyer . ( Church leader St. Nicholas )
  • The pilgrimage church of Maria Deutstetten is also a cemetery chapel. The church was consecrated in 1753. At the same place there was a church before. The original parish of Deutstetten can be traced back to 1241. The Pietà dates from 1417/1429, the furnishings from the 18th century. On the forecourt of the pilgrimage chapel there are several memorials to the victims of wars: War memorials in Veringenstadt
  • The town hall of Veringenstadt was built around 1415 and is still the seat of the city administration today. It is therefore the oldest town hall in Hohenzollern with continuous municipal use. The building was rebuilt and plastered in the 19th century. There used to be an open market hall on the ground floor. The grain hall was on the upper floor. The renovation and uncovering of the Alemannic half-timbering were completed at the Veringen Festival in 1977. All floors are criss-crossed by late-Gothic wooden pillars, which were made visible when the building was completely renovated in 2000. In front of the town hall is the town hall fountain, it is dedicated to Jakob Strüb.
  • The freely accessible Veringen castle ruins were probably founded by Count Marquard von Veringen around the year 1100/30 on the so-called "Schlossberg", a rock spur behind the parish church. It was owned by the Counts of Veringen , the House of Württemberg and the Princes of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen . Parts of the outer and inner tower are still preserved. The castle has small cuboid and humpback cuboid masonry. Video with aerial photos of Veringen Castle
  • Next to the castle ruins is the Peterskapelle from the 10th or 11th century with frescoes from 1515 by Peter Strüb the Younger from Veringenstadt, also known as the Master of Sigmaringen . The crucifix dates from the 15th century.
  • Neanderthal sculpture on the lower Lauchert Bridge. Created in 1965 by Eduard Raach-Döttinger from Eningen-Achalm from a massive limestone block. A plastic reconstruction by Adolf Rieth , Tübingen, served as a template .
  • The St. Gallus church in the Hermentingen district dates from the 14th century. It was rebuilt in the 17th century. The wall frescoes date to the 15th century. The rural altar with cartilage carvings is by the carpenter and altar builder Baltus Widmann from Hettingen.
  • The church of St. Michael in the Veringendorf district is the oldest church in Hohenzollern. Its choir and the Romanesque twin towers originally date from around 1000. Originally it was a three-aisled Romanesque basilica with a choir and towers. The frescoes in the choir were created around 1320. The church was enlarged in 1400, the nave dates from 1732.
  • Next to the church is the historic rectory of Veringendorf, an elaborate building from 1739, in which Franz Xaver Dieringer, among others, lived as a pastor.
  • The little plague tower in Veringendorf is a reminder of a terrible time.
  • Electricity works ( Gebr. Haux 1902) in Veringendorf
  • The Hermentingen waterworks converts the water from the Gallus spring, the largest karst spring in Hohenzollern, into drinking water.
  • Parental home of Cardinal Karl Lehmann
  • A bronze sculpture created in 1989 by the artist Monika Geiselhart commemorates the greeting and reception of expellees in Veringenstadt with the coats of arms of their countries of origin.
  • The historic station building in Veringle village originated from the construction time of the railway line (around 1910) of the Hohenzollerische Landesbahn and was demolished at the beginning of 2011 despite being a listed building.
  • There is a small monument around 1.9 kilometers west of Veringendorf, in the community forest , Section 26 Rosswang .

Natural monuments

In Veringenstadt there are a total of 15 objects protected as natural monuments: List of natural monuments in Veringenstadt

View from the Nikolaushöhle to the Göpfelsteinhöhle and Veringenstadt
Waterfall pouring during a flood
Hiking trail to Veringenstadt
  • Of the 34 caves, the following are particularly worth mentioning: Göpfelstein Cave , Nikolaus Cave , Hagentor Cave , Mühlberg Cave , Anna Chapel Cave . Numerous finds in these caves, dating from 100,000 to 60,000 BC. BC, document life at that time. They served the Neanderthals in the Lauchert valley as living space and winter quarters. In 2004 a cave information center was set up in the Mühlberg cave, which contains extensive information about the caves in Veringenstadt.
  • The Gieß waterfall in Veringendorf was the largest waterfall in the Swabian Alb in terms of the amount of water and the height of the tufa barrels. Since the construction of an electricity station in the 1920s, a significant part of the water has been withdrawn from the waterfall.
  • The Gallus spring at the end of Hermentingen is the largest spring in Hohenzollern. The exit point is at the intersection of geological fault systems ( Lauchertgraben and Hohenzollerngraben ). It has an underground catchment area of ​​45 square kilometers and emerges in the glacial valley deposits. The State Institute for Environmental Protection has installed a measuring device for determining the raw water quality in the former bakery located directly next to the current spring catchment. This spring supplies almost 50,000 people with drinking water.
  • The “Lebendige Lauchert” educational trail with lots of information about the river Lauchert and its flora and fauna runs right in the old town .
  • Southeast of Veringenstadt lies the local history trail in the forest. His stations show the mining of floor ore in ore pits, a sponge reef and an old settlement site.
  • The Büttnau landscape protection area is located southwest of Veringenstadt.
  • From the nature observation tower near Hermentingen there is a good view of the Buchwiesen biotope .

Say

The legend of the soldier with the split head : the Wuotis army in Veringen in 1550.

Legend of the Göpfelstein , which goes to the Lauchert on Good Friday.

societies

In Veringenstadt there are a total of more than 30 clubs, with the TSV currently the largest with 450 members (as of January 15, 2011).

Regular events

According to old tradition, after the first Sunday after Ash Wednesday, Fasnet ends and Lent begins. The herb witches from Veringenstadt take this every year as an opportunity to drive out winter with a bonfire . For this purpose, collected Christmas trees are piled up in a tower near the lime kiln and set on fire.

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

The Lauchert valley communities of Veringenstadt and Veringendorf were opened up for national traffic through the construction of the Kleinengstingen – Sigmaringen railway line . Since the valley is narrow and the ascent is steep, the Göpfelstein ( 48 ° 11 '  N , 9 ° 13'  E ) was tunneled near Veringenstadt. The 91 meter long railway tunnel was built by Italian specialists. The first train passed the Veringen tunnel at Christmas 1907, and the line was opened in 1908.

The Federal Highway 32 originally led by the Veringenstädter center. The idea of ​​a tunnel had been around since 1965 to relieve the city. Between 1975 and 1980 a car tunnel was built parallel to the railway tunnel. Today around 5,000 vehicles pass through the Schlossberg tunnel every day , which is also where the traffic from the B 313 is taken up. In 2011 there were extensive renovation measures, the tunnel was checked for statics and equipped with modern safety devices.

The Public transport is by the Verkehrsverbund Neckar-Alb-Donau guaranteed (NALDO). The community is located in honeycomb 442.

Veringenstadt is on the Swabian Alb Cycle Path , a long-distance cycle path that leads from Lake Constance to Nördlingen across the entire Swabian Alb.

Established businesses

The SchwörerHaus KG operates in Veringenstadt a factory making fort massif houses, ceilings, concrete components, chimneys and VARIAX prestressed concrete hollow ceilings.

education

There is a primary school in the core town of Veringenstadt. From the 2010/11 school year to the 2017/18 school year, the core location also had a branch of the Werkrealschule Gammertingen. The school house of the Alb-Lauchert-Schule in Veringenstadt was built in 1953. In Veringenstadt there is a day care center with all-day care and in Veringendorf there is a kindergarten that also accepts children under three years of age.

Personalities

Honorary citizen

  • Rudolf von Sydow (1805–1872), Real Privy Councilor and District President of the Hohenzollern Lands . In 1895 he received the honorary citizenship of Veringenstadt.
  • CF Holder , entrepreneur from Metzingen , owned a holiday home in Veringenstadt and was always very generous towards the city and the gymnastics club.
  • Adolf Rösch (1869–1962), theologian and doctor of law, studied in Freiburg and Eichstätt, was appointed vicar general in the diocese of Freiburg in 1932, previously a member of the state parliament. He received honorary citizenship on January 2, 1933. Biography, list of publications and list of literature on the person
  • Ildefons Deigendesch (1880–1953), born in Veringenstadt, Father, missionary of the Abbey of St. Andrè in Belgium, was appointed Vicar General of Rio Branco Brazil in 1932 . He received honorary citizenship on January 2, 1933.
  • Stefan Fink (1908–2000), mayor from 1945 to 1966 and entrepreneur. Bearer of the Federal Cross of Merit on ribbon.
  • Herbert Krapf (* 1941), former mayor
  • Erwin Zillenbiller (* 1925), honorary professor at the University of Stuttgart in the Faculty of Architecture and Urban Planning with a doctorate, author and director of the Strübhaus , holder of the Federal Cross of Merit and the Merit Medal of the State of Baden-Württemberg. He received honorary citizenship in 1977.

sons and daughters of the town

  • Count Heinrich II. Von Veringen , Bishop of Strasbourg in the eventful years 1202 to 1223. He rebuilt a church in the Gothic style for the first time in the then empire.
  • Countess Anna von Veringen , abbess in the Wald monastery around 1300
  • Countess Mechthilde von Veringen , abbess in the Heiligkreuztal monastery from 1318 to 1336
  • Simon Grynaeus (1493–1541), citizen son from Veringendorf, German reformer and humanist, professor of Greek and Latin in Heidelberg, later of theology in Basel (rector of the University of Basel). He was close friends with Melanchthon and Erasmus von Rotterdam. He supported Duke Ulrich in introducing the Reformation in Württemberg.
  • Johann Donfrid (1585–1650), cantor, collector and publisher of sacred music.
  • Egid Hochstein (1720–1769) painter and sculptor. After his apprenticeship years he founded a workshop in Veringenstadt in 1754
  • Nikolaus Allgaier (1800–1880) lithographer. He founded the "Nikolaus Allgaier Lithographic Institute" in Veringenstadt. The lithographer Alfred Dobler (1799–1879), also from Veringenstadt, teamed up with Nikolaus Allgaier.
  • Franz Saurer (1806–1882), entrepreneur, born in Veringendorf
  • Bruno Ewald Reiser (born October 8, 1910 in Veringenstadt), journalist and book author. He worked mainly as a journalist for the Südkurier in Hechingen. Among other things, he wrote "Chronicle of the City of Hechingen" Volume 1 (1980) and "I often think of Hohenzollern. Memories of a journalist" (1983).
  • Rudi Reitinger (* 1936), grew up in Veringenstadt and was active in youth work. In 1994 he signed up for a disaster relief operation in El Salvador and stayed there as a development worker. For his commitment as a development worker in the reconstruction of San Salvador, he was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit on ribbon by Federal President Roman Herzog in December 1995 . The award was presented by the German Ambassador to El Salvador Dr. To water. In 2005 he received the Staufer Medal of the State of Baden-Württemberg for outstanding work for the common good.

Personalities with connections to the city

Sgraffito " Hermann the Lame " at the Veringenstadt parish hall, created in 1952 by the Sigmaringen painter Günther Dietrich.
  • Ulrich von Augsburg (890–973), saint, was closely associated with Emperor Otto I and ensured victory in the Battle of Lechfeld in 955. His nephew was Hermannus Contractus' great-grandfather
  • Hermann the Lame ( Hermannus Contractus ) (1013–1054), Count of Altshausen-Veringen , monk in the Reichenau monastery , is considered the “miracle of Reichenau”. As a polymath , he devoted himself to theology, world history, mathematics, astronomy and music. His father was Count Wolfrad von Altshausen-Veringen . As early as 1643 in Matthäus Merians : Topographia Sueviae, the connection between the city and Hermann the Lame can be proven. Topographia Sueviae: Veringen
  • Anna Kramerin (1619–1680; called " Bader-Ann "), was executed as "the witch of Veringen"
  • Joseph Sprißler (1795–1879), grew up in Inneringen and studied theology. Already in the seminary in Meersburg he was enthusiastic about unity, law and freedom, as well as church reforms. From 1821 to 1834 he was the first independent pastor in Veringenstadt, which previously belonged to the Veringendorf community. In 1848 he was a member of the Paulskirche in Frankfurt. Because of his political activities, he eventually lost his priesthood.
  • Franz Xaver Dieringer (1811–1876), Catholic theologian
  • Thomas Geiselhart (1811-1891), from 1844 was the third parish priest in Veringenstadt, helper in the great fire in 1848 and the flood in 1849, in Sigmaringen he founded several social associations and became the "orphan father of Hohenzollern"
  • Sebastian Locher (1825–1889) was an important teacher and local researcher in the area of ​​the Hohenzollern Lands . He laid the foundations for research into the Counts of Veringen .
  • Eduard Peters (1869–1948), senior postmaster, prehistoric
  • Otto Kohler (1909–1984), Catholic clergyman. During the Nazi dictatorship he took in a Jewish refugee and hid it from the Nazis, for which he was imprisoned in the Dachau concentration camp. Otto Kohler was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit 1st Class in 1982 as a distinction for his courageous attitude during the Nazi dictatorship.
  • Karl Lehmann (1936–2018), Cardinal and Bishop of Mainz , from 1987 to 2008 chairman of the German Bishops' Conference , grew up in Veringenstadt and was active in youth work and in his youth he headed the parish library. In 1964 he celebrated his post-prime in Veringenstadt, the primary altar with photos is exhibited in the mountain school.

literature

  • Walther Genzmer (Ed.): The art monuments of Hohenzollern . tape 2 ; Sigmaringen district. W. Speemann, Stuttgart 1948.
  • Franz Gluitz: Village and City of Veringen. An art history tour . 2nd, revised edition. o. O. 1985.
  • Erwin Zillenbiller : City of Veringen . Sebastian Acker, Gammertingen 1964.

Web links

Commons : Veringenstadt  - collection of images, videos and audio files
Wikivoyage: Veringenstadt  - travel guide

Remarks

  1. According to another statement in 1503.

Individual evidence

  1. State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg - Population by nationality and gender on December 31, 2018 (CSV file) ( help on this ).
  2. a b c d e Ignaz Stösser (is): Numbers and facts. In: Ders .: We in Veringen. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. from January 15, 2011.
  3. a b c From Neanderthals and Bohner ore pits. In: Wanderbar ... the most beautiful routes. Experience the Sigmaringen district. District Office Sigmaringen , Druckerei Schönebeck, Meßkirch 2004, pp. 5–7.
  4. Finds are in the local history museum Veringenstadt, the Hohenzollerisches Landesmuseum Hechingen
  5. Thomas Fink: Materials on the history of the city of Veringen. 2016.
  6. Sebastian Locher: Regesten on the history of the counts of Veringen. Sigmaringen 1872
  7. Interactive map of the possessions
  8. a b c d e f Ignaz Stösser (is): City Festival Veringenstadt. History game documents the coming and going. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. dated June 24, 2010.
  9. a b c d e f Gabriele Loges (gl): City festival. Between yesterday and today: Veringer celebrate and play. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. dated July 5, 2010.
  10. Sabine Rösch (sr): Annual theme. In principle, all people are migrants. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. from October 4, 2010.
  11. lecture. Rößler describes arrival. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. dated November 3, 2010.
  12. ^ 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. 533 and 550 .
  13. City Council 2019 Veringenstadt - final result , accessed on October 10, 2019
  14. Ignaz Stösser (is): Trust: 40 percent choose Armin Christ. The incumbent is confirmed in the mayoral election in Veringenstadt. In: Schwäbische Zeitung from December 20, 2010.
  15. Kurt Roller (rol): Mayor of Veringenstadt takes his oath of office. Armin Christ committed for another eight years - dialogue between the generations should be encouraged. In. Swabian newspaper. dated March 18, 2011.
  16. Veringenstadt website - Veringendorf local council
  17. Veringenstadt website - Hermentingen local council
  18. Baden-Württemberg State Archives
  19. Ignaz Stösser (is): Nostalgia and modernity combine to form a whole. Lecture in the mill museum. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. dated July 11, 2008.
  20. See painted building history at the town hall of Veringenstadt
  21. Ignaz Stösser (is): The oldest town hall in Hohenzollern. In: Ders .: We in Veringen. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. from January 15, 2011.
  22. ^ Karlheinz Fahlbusch (kf): Probably the oldest church in Hohenzollern in the Lauchert valley . In: Südkurier. dated June 26, 2003.
  23. ^ Franz Gluitz: Village and City of Veringen , 2nd edition. 1985, p. 12f.
  24. Bruno Kadauke: mural of Gothic in southeastern Baden-Württemberg. Reutlingen 1991, p. 56.
  25. ^ Franz Gluitz: Village and City of Veringen. 2nd Edition. 1985, p. 13.
  26. ^ Franz Gluitz: Village and City of Veringen. An art history tour. 2nd, revised edition, o. O. 1985, p. 21f.
  27. Mona Fahlbusch, Karlheinz Fahlbusch: On two wheels through home (5). In: Südkurier. dated August 25, 2011.
  28. Clemens Kieser: First electricity from the socket. The power station in Veringendorf (Veringenstadt, Lkrs. Sigmaringen). In: Preservation of monuments in Baden-Württemberg. 34th year 2005, issue 3, p. 169 f. (PDF) ( Memento of the original from July 14, 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 / www.denkmalpflege-bw.de
  29. District Office Sigmaringen. Visit to the waterworks in Hermentingen. In: Scroll. Bulletin of the Krauchenwies community with the districts Ablach, Bittelschieß, Ettisweiler, Göggingen and Hausen. Number 23. 51st year. dated June 11, 2010.
  30. Migration and integration in the Sigmaringen district. Cultural focus 2010 . ed. from the district of Sigmaringen and Kulturforum district Sigmaringen eV, p. 21.
  31. ↑ Veringle village station building disappears without a trace In: Schwäbische Zeitung. from January 25, 2011.
  32. ^ Veringendorf in the private location database Suehnekreuz.de
  33. ^ Vera Romeu: Event. Cave Day brings home history closer . In: Schwäbische Zeitung of March 14, 2009
  34. On the Way of St. James from Gammertingen to Pfullendorf. In: Wanderbar ... the most beautiful routes. Experience the Sigmaringen district. District Office Sigmaringen, Druckerei Schönebeck, Meßkirch 2004, pp. 52–59.
  35. Wolfgang Stumpp: Herbal witches burn off sparks. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. from March 16, 2011.
  36. Ignaz Stösser: Closed: Federal government renovates Veringer tunnel. B32 traffic rolls through the center of Veringer - Inneringen and Bingen also affected. In: Schwäbische Zeitung from June 18, 2011.
  37. ^ Kurt Roller (rol): Leisure time. Veringen indulges in the steam train frenzy. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. dated May 21, 2010.
  38. Veringenstadt City Archives: File A 1.6.53
  39. ^ Lauchert newspaper February 2, 1937.
  40. ^ Minutes of the gymnastics club Veringenstadt from January 31, 1937.
  41. ^ Lauchert newspaper. June 21, 1932.
  42. a b c d e f g h i Kurt Roller (rol): Local history. Veringer Strübhaus is enriched with a new portrait wall. In: Schwäbische Zeitung. dated November 8, 2008.
  43. ^ Lauchert newspaper January 3, 1933.
  44. Hohenzollern homeland. Hrsg.Hohenzollerischer Geschichtsverein eV Edition 1971 - The sculptor Egid Hochstein. 21 (1971) pp. 90-92. [1]
  45. Hohenzollern homeland. Ed. Hohenzollerischer Geschichtsverein e. V. 35. Vol. No. 3 September 1985. pp. 33-38. Nikolaus Allgaier and his lithographic institute in Veringenstadt. [2]