Immenstadt in the Allgäu

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

Coordinates: 47 ° 34 '  N , 10 ° 13'  E

Basic data
State : Bavaria
Administrative region : Swabia
County : Oberallgäu
Height : 729 m above sea level NHN
Area : 81.43 km 2
Residents: 14,314 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 176 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 87509
Primaries : 08323, 08320, 08325, 08379
License plate : OA
Community key : 09 7 80 124
City structure: 40 parish parts

City administration address :
Marienplatz 3–4
87509 Immenstadt im Allgäu
Website : www.stadt-immenstadt.de
Mayor : Nico Sentner ( CSU / JA for Immenstadt / the active )
Location of the city of Immenstadt im Allgäu in the Oberallgäu district
Österreich Baden-Württemberg Landkreis Lindau (Bodensee) Kempten (Allgäu) Landkreis Unterallgäu Landkreis Ostallgäu Kempter Wald (gemeindefreies Gebiet) Wildpoldsried Wiggensbach Wertach Weitnau Waltenhofen Sulzberg (Landkreis Oberallgäu) Sonthofen Rettenberg Ofterschwang Oberstdorf Oberstaufen Obermaiselstein Oy-Mittelberg Missen-Wilhams Lauben (Landkreis Oberallgäu) Immenstadt im Allgäu Bad Hindelang Haldenwang (Landkreis Oberallgäu) Fischen im Allgäu Durach Dietmannsried Burgberg im Allgäu Buchenberg Bolsterlang Blaichach Betzigau Balderschwang Altusriedmap
About this picture
City parish church in Immenstadt in the Allgäu
Aerial photograph, 1916

Immenstadt im Allgäu (officially since 1949 Immenstadt i.Allgäu ) is a town in the Swabian district of Oberallgäu . Until 1804 Immenstadt was the seat of government, capital and residence of the county of Königsegg-Rothenfels .

geography

Geographical location

The two watersheds of Immenstadt
Depiction of the elevation levels in hundred meter steps and the ice age lakes in the municipality of Immenstadt

Immenstadt is located in the Allgäu in southwestern Bavaria, halfway between Kempten in the north and Oberstdorf in the south. The city, whose center is at an altitude of 729  m , spreads out on the east bank of the Great Alpsee . The Great Alpsee with 2.4 km² of water and an adjacent nature reserve is a popular recreational destination for the surrounding population as well as for tourists.

The Konstanzer Ach flows through the city, coming from the Konstanzer Tal, crossing the Large and Small Alpsee, in a west-east direction . It flows into the Iller at the so-called Illerspitz, shortly after it has taken up the Hochrainebach flowing in from the south . Also coming from the south (headwaters at Alpe Gund, below the Stuiben at 1,500  m ), the so-called Steigbach (partly tunneled under) flows through the town center towards the north, and then flows into the Konstanzer Ach below the Kalvarienberg. The source of the Weißach , which flows into Lake Constance via the Bregenzer Ach, is located south of the Dreherberg on the southwestern border of Immenstadt . Between the source branches of the Weißach and the Steigbach there is a watershed between the outflows over the Rhine to the North Sea and those over the Iller to the Danube and on to the Black Sea . Another watershed in the Bergstätt area in the northwest divides the Kirchholzbach, Luibach and Stixnerbach, which flow westwards to the Untere Argen and thus to Lake Constance, and all other waters, such as Hölltobelbach, Mühlbach and Schrattenbach, which flow towards the Iller.

Immenstadt's local mountains
View over Immenstadt towards Mittagberg
View of Immenstadt from the Steineberg
View of Immenstadt with large and small Alpsee and Grünten

Mountains that are wholly or partly in the municipality of Immenstadt:

  • Mittagberg : Located south of Immenstadt, summit height ( 1451  m above sea level ), consists of Nagelfluh ; easternmost mountain of the Nagelfluhkette . Alps: Alpe Hochried (Sennalpe, 900 m), Mittag-Alpe (1,210 m), Alpe Schwanden (1,240 m), Alpe Oberberg (Sennalpe, 1,305 m).
  • Immenstädter Horn : Located southwest of Immenstadt, summit height 1,490 m, consists of Nagelfluh. Alps: Alpe Wildegund (1,315 m), Alpe Alp (1,320 m), Alpe Kessel (1,243 m).
  • Steineberg : Located south-west of Immenstadt, peak height 1,660 m, consists of Nagelfluh, middle peak of the route "Mittag-Steineberg-Stuiben".
  • Stuiben : Located southwest of Immenstadt, summit height 1,749 m, consists of Nagelfluh. Alps: Alpe Mittelberg (Sennalpe, 1,369 m), Alpe Gund (1,502 m), Immenstadt's highest local mountain.
  • Gschwender Horn: Located west of Immenstadt, summit height 1,450 m. Alps: Starkatsgund Alpe (1,210 m), Gschwenderberg Alpe (1,078 m)
  • Dreherberg: Located southwest of Immenstadt, summit height 1,430 m. Alps: Mittelbergalpe (1,369 m)
  • At the red head: Located southwest of Immenstadt, summit height 1,481 m. Alps: Seifenmoosalpe (1,355 m)
  • Hauchenberg: North of Immenstadt near Diepolz, summit height 1,202 m.

Immenstadt is a member of the Nagelfluhkette Nature Park project of the European Union.

Neighboring communities

Immenstadts municipal parts

In a clockwise direction, the neighboring municipalities (neighboring cities) start in the north:

City structure

Immenstadt district 7974

There are 40 officially named parts of the municipality (the type of settlement is given in brackets ):

These are assigned to the seven existing districts as follows:

  • Alt-Immenstadt (Immenstadt, formerly also the hamlets of Neumummen, Rothenfels, Schanz and the wasteland of Schanz near Bühl)
  • Akams (Akams, Adelharz, Freibrechts, Göhlenbühl, Luitharz)
  • Bühl a. Alpsee (Bühl, Alpseewies, Gschwend, Hintersee, Hochreute, Hub, Ratholz, Reuter, Rieder, Sange, See, Trieblings, Zaumberg)
  • Knottenried - Diepolz (Diepolz, Freundpolz, Knottenried, Reute)
  • Eckarts (Eckarts, Dietzen, Lachen, Thanners, Werdenstein, Zellers)
  • Rauhenzell (Rauhenzell, Egg, Oberau)
  • Stein im Allgäu (Stein, Bräunlings, Flecken, Gießen, Gnadenberg, Obereinharz, Untereinharz, soaps)
Precipitation diagram

climate

The extremely high annual precipitation is 1916 mm. It is one of the highest values ​​recorded by the German Weather Service's measuring points . Over 99% of the other measuring points show lower values. The driest month is October; it rains most in June. In the wettest month, around 1.7 times more rain falls than in the driest month. The seasonal fluctuations in precipitation are in the upper tenth. In over 94% of all places, the monthly precipitation fluctuates less.

history

Early history

A Neolithic settlement in the Immenstadt area is registered as a ground monument at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation under the number D-7-8427-0083 . The Stone Age pile dwelling settlement on the southern bank of the Alpsee has not yet been proven.

Antiquity

In Immenstadt in the nineteenth century, the Roman Vemania was wrongly suspected in a number of publications . Only finds such as the Priap ring from Rothenfels, a burial mound and a Roman golden ring near Freundpolz, a bronze fibula near Göhlenbühl, ancient foundations near Eckarts and Werdenstein and also testify to the presence of ancient peoples, such as Romans or Celts, in the Immenstadt area the sunken wooden road in nearby Goymoos.

middle Ages

Rothenfels ruins in 1816

The history of the rulership of Immenstadt by Rothenfels begins in the High Middle Ages as a fiefdom from the St. Gallen monastery to the Udalrichingers . In 1088 the rule was conquered and occupied by Welf IV . Legend has it that Welf IV hid the documents and deeds that were stolen in Augsburg in the same year. "Two chests in his Schloss zuo Rottenfels with old letters from Augspurg, from which quite a few generations came from old", Konrad Peutinger described the Rothenfels jewels in a letter to Bartholomäus V. Welser in 1537 . The historian Alfred Schröder doubts this in his 1919 book about the diocese of Augsburg. In 1091 the Guelph had to surrender the rule to the Counts of Kirchberg as a fiefdom of the St. Gallen Monastery . Around 1240 the fief went to Hartmann von Grüningen and then in 1243 it was acquired by Emperor Friedrich II . He gave Rothenfels as a fiefdom to the nobles of Starckenberg, then in 1280 by Rudolf von Habsburg to the Knights of Schellenberg , who came into possession of the fiefdom in 1316.

Nothing is known about the origins of the village. The name Imendorf was first recorded for the settlement in 1275 in the Liber decimationis . Around 1332, the Counts of Montfort acquired Rothenfels Castle and the associated Rothenfels lordship . In the following 200 years, the dominant power of the Montforti branch line Tettnang-Rothenfels was established and the nearby Imendorf was expanded into a residential town. The first mentioned trader in Imendorf from 1345 is Hansem der Smid von Ymendorf .

On July 22, 1360, the feast of St. Maria Magdalena, Emperor Charles IV granted the Count of Montfort the right to fortify Immendorf and thus the right of the city of Lindau. Associated with the town elevation was the right to a weekly market. The residents of Immendorf were henceforth free. In 1407 the young city successfully stood the test of siege by the Appenzell farmers. Around 1404 the house of Montfort Immenstadt pledged to the Memmingen citizen Heinrich Kuntzelmann, but released it again in 1410. In 1440 Count Heinrich von Montfort received the so-called right of escort on the road between Oberjoch and Lake Constance . On January 8, 1453, Emperor Friedrich III. the town of Immenstadt in the market town of Langenargen on Lake Constance . The area experienced the next revaluation after the city elevation by Emperor Friedrich III. who raised the Montfortsche lordship of Rothenfels to a county in 1471. The increased traffic volume at the end of the High Middle Ages was also taken into account here and in 1494 a road and the upper toll bridge over the Iller to Sonthofen were built.

Modern times

Immenstadt around 1523 after Bernhard Strigel

Another unsuccessful siege from the west took place for 20 weeks by the so-called "sea heaps" coming from Lindau at the beginning of the Peasants' War in 1525. According to a contract concluded in 1485, the Montfort rights in Tannheim , Tannberg , Lechtal and Walsertal were ceded to Austria in 1531 , thus reducing Immenstadt's sphere of influence to the left side of the Illerside. Immenstadt achieved economic prosperity through the salt pile and linen trade. In 1536 an "Imperial private canvas show" was awarded. Located on the great salt road from Hall in Tirol to Lake Constance , Immenstadt was the customs, stacking and transshipment point for the “white gold”. In 1546 the area became involved in the dispute over the Reformation, as troops of the Schmalkaldic League occupied Rothenfels Castle when the ruling Count Hugo von Montfort was absent in the emperor's service. In 1550, Count Hugo von Montfort built a simple city palace within the city walls on Immenstädter Marktplatz (today Marienplatz). In 1552 he was the imperial envoy to the Council of Trent .

In 1567 Ulrich von Montfort sold the county of Rothenfels and the rule of Staufen for 150,000 guilders despite a higher bid from Archduke Ferdinand to his brother-in-law, Baron Johann Jakob von Königsegg . After major changes in taxation, the Rothenfels and Staufers presented Emperor Rudolf with a memorandum with 134 different complaints against Georg von Königsegg-Rothenfels (also called Baron Jörg), who had been the sole owner of the area since 1588. In 1599 the people of Immenstadt, whom he renounced civil rights because of their behavior in the Peasant War, issued another memorandum with 153 points of complaint. There was no reaction from the emperor, the baron only said: “The Immenstadters should stop drinking, then they would have money to pay taxes”. The city lost almost 70 percent of its population through the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) and the outbreak of the plague . Baron Georg von Königsegg-Rothenfels was assassinated in 1622. The murderer was torn to pieces by four harnessed oxen and his house burned down on orders from the authorities.

In 1629 Emperor Ferdinand II raised the Königsegger to the rank of count . Immenstadt became the royal seat of the county of Königsegg-Rothenfels in 1663 .

At the end of October 1703, Bavarian-French troops attacked the imperial camp in Immenstadt in the War of the Spanish Succession . Since the reign of Franz Fidel von Königsegg in 1771, no death sentence has been pronounced in Immenstadt. From 1778, hunting and catching bears , lynxes and wolves is prohibited in Immenstadt and in the Staufen rulership . On February 25, 1784, one of the first balloons launched in Germany was released into the air on the market square in Immenstadt and flew east over the Iller.

Numerous buildings fell victim to the great fires in 1625, 1679 and 1756. However, Immenstadt underwent the most drastic redesign of its old town after the last great city fires of 1805 and 1844, in which almost half of the inner city buildings were destroyed.

19th century

After the flood disaster in 1873

From 1804 to 1805 the city belonged to Austria , with the Treaties of Brno (10th to 16th December 1805) Immenstadt finally became Bavarian. The military occupation of the city by Bavarian troops took place on December 28, 1805, the so-called civil occupation is dated March 10, 1806. In April and May 1809, the Vorarlberg and Tyrolean uprisings under Andreas Hofer against the Bavarian-Napoleonic rule spread over the Upper Allgäu. Several thousand armed farmers gathered in Immenstadt on May 16 to force an annexation to Austria. In a battle near the town of Stein, the rebels fought back their opponents advancing from the direction of Kempten. Nevertheless, the survey in the region around Immenstadt could not develop any mass effectiveness. In August 1809 the popular uprising in the Allgäu finally failed. The motive for the uprising was probably the disappointment with the Bavarian administrative measures, which had created a great potential for resentment.

A step into the new era was the opening of the Kempten-Lindau railway line in 1853. With the construction of the mechanical twine factory in 1855, industry found its way into Immenstadt. The former district court districts of Immenstadt and Sonthofen , which had previously had equal rights , were placed under the administration of the newly founded Sonthofen District Office in the Royal Highest Ordinance on the establishment of the district administrative authorities of February 24, 1862 . This was the first time that Immenstadt's political influence was reduced to the urban area. The sphere of influence of the market town of Sonthofen extended to the areas west of the Iller.

A devastating flood in the city center occurred on July 28, 1873, when, on a very hot afternoon, heavy thunderstorms with downpours and hail fell in the Steigbachtal. The flash flood destroyed 10 buildings and damaged bridges and roads in the city center. 11 people died. From May 1st to May 9th 1877 an escaped crocodile lived in the streams of Immenstadt. In 1881 the first telephone system was put into operation in Immenstadt, and from September 1, 1898 a public telephone network was available.

20th century

Flood in 1999

In 1915, one year after the First World War , Immenstadt became a garrison town . On July 15, three companies of the Bavarian Snowshoe Battalion No. 1 moved in. Immenstadt also joined the Soviet republic proclaimed in Munich and Augsburg in 1919 .

On February 22, 1945, the United States Army Air Forces flew an attack on Immenstadt to prevent rail traffic for a long time. Six people were killed in a total of two bombings within a short period of time, including the power station, an auxiliary building of the train station, the malt house of the imperial brewery and other adjacent buildings. At the end of the war in May 1945, troops of the 1st French Army moved into the city under the command of Major General Jacques-Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque . During the invasion of five members of the were Indian Legion of Wehrmacht of Moroccan colonial soldiers shot and buried later in the town cemetery. The French erected a triumphal arch in the rectory, which Charles de Gaulle personally removed during a parade . After the French troops, troops of the US army followed a little later . Immenstadt then also belonged to the American zone of occupation . From 1948 onwards, local newspapers that had since been discontinued, such as the Allgäuer Anzeigeeblatt, were printed again in Immenstadt with licenses from the occupation authorities.

The post-war period was a quiet time for Immenstadt, only the Whitsun floods in 1999 disturbed the peace. The Iller flooded around 300 years ago. This far exceeded the existing level of protection and led to major damage to residential buildings, businesses, public infrastructure and agriculture. The damage in the Immenstadt area alone amounted to around 15 million euros.

Trieblings on the Great Alpsee

Incorporations

On January 1, 1972, the previously independent communities Akams, Bühl am Alpsee, Diepolz, Eckarts, Rauhenzell and Stein in the Allgäu were incorporated.

Population development

Population development in comparison

Creating an exact population development for Immenstadt suffers from insufficient and incomplete records. The first estimates come from the year 1353 and calculated about 135 inhabitants for what was then Ymmendorff . More precise records, dating from the end of the 16th century, put the population at around 700. The Thirty Years War and the plague of 1628 took their toll on the citizens. In 1638 Immenstadt only had 254 inhabitants, a loss of almost 70 percent compared to 1620.

The city's expansion of the railway network around 1850 and the construction of the mechanical twine factory in 1855 gave the city strong growth spurts. The recruiting of workers from structurally weak areas of Germany and neighboring countries was important. Another point was reached after the end of the Second World War , when bombed-out people and refugees found a new home in Immenstadt. Above all, the settlement of the Kunert works, which are designated at their home site in Varnsdorf, in 1946 brought Immenstadt further and steady growth. In 1960 the mark of 10,000 inhabitants was exceeded for the first time.

Further population growth was achieved in 1972 through the municipal reform , and through the incorporation of six neighboring towns, 14,105 inhabitants were registered at the end of 1972. The last big leap came with the establishment of a branch of the Robert Bosch GmbH and the intensification of rental and owner-occupied housing, which is still the primary goal of the city to attract young families.

Between 1988 and 2018 the city grew from 13,132 to 14,271 by 1,139 inhabitants or 8.7%.

year 1840 1871 1900 1925 1939 1961 1970 1991 1995 2005 2010 2015
Residents 3,289 4,333 6,190 8,154 9,188 13,279 13,920 13,696 14,126 14,321 14,106 14,191

Source →

religion

Christian denominations

Catholic parishes

In 1275 the parish Imendorf was listed in the "Tithe Directory" of the Diocese of Constance . The parishes of the city and districts Akams, Diepolz, Eckarts, Knottenried and Stein were also mentioned here. The Concordat of 1817 brought about the change to the diocese of Augsburg . After the Deanery Stiefenhofen was dissolved in 1974, the parishes of Immenstadt were assigned to the newly established Deanery Sonthofen. The parishes of Akams, Bühl, Diepolz, Eckarts, Immenstadt, Knottenried, Missen, Rauhenzell and Stein belong to the Immenstadt parish association, which was formed in 1989. Since September 1998 the parishes of Stein, Akams, Eckarts, Diepolz and Knottenried have formed a parish community with Missen. Bühl, Rauhenzell and Immenstadt are together the other parish community (PG).

Monasteries

Brotherhoods

  • The Assumption Brotherhood was founded in 1606 and had 1,200 members in 1847.
  • The Rosary Brotherhood of 1663 was merged into the Assumption Brotherhood. It existed again from 1911 to around 1945.
  • The Brotherhood of the Fear of Christ , which was founded in 1697, merged with the Assumption Brotherhood in 1829.
  • The Brotherhood of St. The Mount Carmel Scapular from 1697 was looked after by the Carmelites from Ravensburg . The last record of a member is from 1955.
  • The Franciscan Community belonged to the Third Order of St. Francis and was founded in 1848.
  • The Sacred Heart Brotherhood, founded in 1891, had up to 5,000 members and existed until the early 1950s.

Evangelical Lutheran parish

On June 22, 1851, the first Protestant service was celebrated in Immenstadt. From 1864 there was a vicariate and from 1901 a parish. The foundation stone of the Church of the Redeemer was laid in 1861. A second pastorate has existed in Blaichach since 1969. The areas of Rettenberg, Vorderburg, Wertach and Jungholz in Austria are looked after by the parish of Immenstadt. The parish belongs to the Kempten deanery.

Evangelical Free Church

The Christushaus Allgäu maintains a parish hall on Mittagstrasse not far from the church square. The Sunday services are held in the nearby Salzstrasse in the former Gasthof Engel. The Christushaus Allgäu is a member of the Association of Free Church Pentecostal Congregations KdöR .

New Apostolic Congregation

The first divine service of the New Apostolic Congregation took place on November 1, 1925, in a room next to the social building in the Hofgarten . In 1951 a church was built in Liststrasse. The community belongs to the Kempten district.

Jehovah's Witnesses

As early as 1927, there were members of the Jehovah's Witness community in Immenstadt. The Kingdom Hall was completed in 1986 in Bachreute.

Islam

Prayer rooms had existed for Immenstadt Muslims since 1982. The community also ran a Koran school. In 2010 the Yunus Emre Mosque was built in the lower colony courtyard. The umbrella organization of the community is the Turkish-Islamic Union of the Institute for Religion .

Diamond Way Buddhist Foundation

In 2007, the European Center of the Diamond Way Buddhist Foundation was built north above the Alpsee in Gut Hochreute . The Diamond Way belongs to the Karma Kagyu School of Tibetan Buddhism.

Religious affiliation

Denominations 2011
Roman Catholic 55.7%
Evangelical Lutheran 14.3%
Other 30.0%

politics

City council

2014

Preliminary final result of the local elections on March 16, 2014:

Local election 2014
Party / list Be right % +/-% p Seats +/-
Christian Social Union in Bavaria (CSU) 34.34% - 0.31 8th - 1
Voting community the active (active) 23.13% + 2.12 6th + 1
YES for Immenstadt * 14.56% + 5.66 3 + 1
Alliance 90 / The Greens (Greens) 12.89% + 1.47 3 ± 0
Social Democratic Party of Germany ( SPD ) 12.35% + 0.50 3 ± 0
Free Democratic Party (FDP) 2.74% + 2.72 1 + 1

* Young alternative voter community for Immenstadt

The Free Voters represented in the city council in 2008. V. ( FW ) did not run for election in 2014.

2020
Local election 2020
Turnout: 56.16% (2014: 56.40%)
 %
40
30th
20th
10
0
31.3%
15.5%
8.4%
3.0%
14.2%
( n.k. )
11.5%
( n.k. )
10.2%
( n.k. )
5.9%
( n.k. )
YES
the active ones
Women
Allocation of seats from 2020 in the city council of Immenstadt
2
4th
1
3
3
2
1
8th
4th 8th 
A total of 24 seats
  • SPD : 2
  • Greens : 4
  • Women : 1
  • YES : 3
  • Active : 3
  • FW : 2
  • FDP : 1
  • CSU : 8

The city ​​council election of March 15, 2020 led to the result shown in the diagram opposite. The resulting distribution of seats is also shown as a diagram.

mayor

In the local elections in 2020, Nico Sentner (independent) was elected First Mayor with 79.7% of the valid votes in the first ballot. He replaced Armin Schaupp, who had been First Mayor since 2008. His competitor Vera Huschka (SPD) received 20.3% of the vote.

First Mayor of Immenstadt (from 1900)
  • Georg Burghardt (1900–1911)
  • Friedrich Kraus (1912–1914, full-time)
  • Hermann Stenger (1916–1935, full-time)
  • Matthäus Fehr (1935–1942, honorary)
  • Otto Fäßler (1945, honorary)
  • Georg Sigel (1945, honorary)
  • Albert Wehr (1945–1946, honorary)
  • Alfred Frey (1946, honorary)
  • Karl Huber (1947–1952, honorary or full-time)
  • Karl Pfau (1952–1970, full-time)
  • Hubert Rabini (1970–1978, CSU, full-time)
  • Gerd Bischoff (1978-2008, CSU, full-time)
  • Armin Schaupp (2008-2020, non-party, full-time)
  • Nico Sentner (since 2020, non-party, full-time)
before 1900 see:

Logo of the city of Immenstadt
Depiction of the coat of arms from 1841 with a beehive
Coat of arms of Immenstadt in the Allgäu
Blazon : "Split of green and silver, in front an upright, curved silver fish, behind half a rooted green linden at the crack". "

The coat of arms is documented for the first time by the seal of the citizenship of Ymmendorf (Sigillum civitatis Ymmendorff). The half lime tree shown in the back half was taken over from the Lindau city ​​coat of arms, since Immenstadt received city rights from that imperial city in 1360. The fish, shown in the front half, symbolizes the alleged abundance of fish according to local interpretation.

In the 19th century, a beehive was placed on the coat of arms in a heraldically incorrect manner to suggest the origin of the place name Immenstadt from “Immen” (bees). With popular heraldic slogans such as “Immen, Fisch and Linden will find place and place here” or “Immen, Fisch and Linden are to be found here”, attempts were made to interpret the coat of arms in a popular way. The face under the beehive in the depiction from 1841 is described as a genius symbolizing fertility , but also interpreted as the female face of the Roman-Greek goddess of bees and fertility, Mellona .

The city ​​colors of Immenstadt are green and white. The logo of the city of Immenstadt consists of the colors green (lettering "Allgäu" and stylized mountains), black (lettering "Immenstadt"), blue (lettering "Alpsee" and stylized sailors and lake) and red (stylized dots). The stylized mountains stand for the local mountains Mittagberg, Steineberg, Stuiben, the lake stands for the Großer Alpsee and the three red dots stand for the Mittag suspension railway (individual supports are illuminated at night). The logo was designed in the mid-1990s and is used by the city of Immenstadt.

Town twinning

Immenstadt im Allgäu maintains the following city ​​partnerships :

Immenstadt constituency

From 1868 to 1918 the bottom of the list of 48 Bavarian constituencies (WK284) was named Immenstadt. It included the district offices of Lindau, Kempten and Sonthofen and the former imperial cities of Lindau and Kempten.

Major political events

Culture and sights

Museums

  • Local history museum "Hofmühle" : The mill was stopped in 1898, the mill building was acquired in 1983 by the city of Immenstadt. After a thorough renovation that took place shortly afterwards, the city made the rooms in the eastern part of the house available to the Immenstadt local history association for the museum;
  • Allgäu Mountain Farming Museum : The Allgäu Mountain Farming Museum, located in the Diepolz district at 1,037 m, was completed in 2004. It lies at the foot of the Hauchenberg. The museum shows how mountain farmers work yesterday and today.
  • AlpSeeHaus: The AlpSeeHaus in the Bühl district opened in June 2012 and was built as an interactive natural history exhibition in relation to the Nagelfluhkette Nature Park.

Buildings

Listed architectural monuments

Castle ruins

Churches

Note: The following list takes into account the church buildings of the Immenstadt parish. For the entire city area, the relevant churches of the parish Stein-Missen are to be added.
  • Capuchin Church of St. Josef: The foundation stone of the Capuchin Church of St. Josef was laid in 1653.
The parish church of St. Nicholas
  • Stadtpfarrkirche St. Nikolaus: A parish church in Immenstadt probably already existed in Romanesque times, but there are no sources for this. The Gothic church fell victim to fires in 1484 and 1530, after another fire in 1704 the building was built, which was built on October 18, 1707 in honor of St. Nikolaus and Magnus was consecrated and the floor plan of the church can still be seen. The onion dome characteristic of the Immenstadt church was also erected at that time. A rebuilding and extension of the parish church in 1907/08 in neo-baroque style, which made the church the largest sacred building in the Upper Allgäu , gave the building its present-day appearance. The plans for this came from the Munich architect Hans Schurr , who had already redesigned the west facade of the Capuchin Church of St. Joseph in 1903. The large fresco in the crossing dome with scenes from the life of St. Nicholas was created by Xaver Dietrich (1911/12), further frescoes by Rudolf Lanzinger in 1957. The painting of the high altar The handover of the keys to Petrus (1877) is the work of the Immenstadt painter Ludwig Glötzle , who from 1888 also decorated the parapet of the music choir and the left aisle with pictures from the Old Testament. The thorough interior renovation of 1989/90 also included the installation of a new folk altar (design: Franz Hämmerle). The new organ , inaugurated in 2004, was built by Siegfried Schmid from Knottenried . In a side chapel, the so-called Joseph's Chapel, there is a richly furnished glass shrine with relics of St. Julius, who was venerated as one of the city's patrons after 1751 . The relics were donated to Immenstadt by the Capuchin Father Laurentius von Wolfegg in 1751 . The patronage of the parish church is celebrated on December 6th ( St. Nicholas ).
  • Monastery of the Franciscan Sisters of St. Maria Stern: In 1909/10 the motherhouse of the Congregation of the Franciscan Sisters of Maria Stern from Augsburg built the building on the south side of the Kalvarienberg. This building housed a household school and a student home. Renovation and expansion measures were carried out in 1926/27 and 1934. In 1939 the house was confiscated by the National Socialists and the nuns returned to Augsburg. In 1940 the city of Immenstadt bought the building (now with secondary school and country school home ), but sold it back to the order after the end of the war in 1946. In addition to a residential building for the nuns east of the main building (1967), a new gymnasium and multi-purpose hall was built in the 1990s.
  • Mount of Olives Chapel: Nothing has come down to us when the Mount of Olives Chapel was built in the direct vicinity of the parish church of St. Nicholas. The chapel was built by the Brotherhood of Christ's Fear of Death and was consecrated in 1760. The altar stands in front of a rocky landscape divided into grottos and niches, in which the suffering Christ is placed with the sleeping disciples. The chapel lost its original appearance in 1909 when the narrow porch attached to the south was demolished. Parts of the original painting came to light during the renovation in 1992/93, the baroque grille dates from the time it was built.
  • Kalvarienbergkapelle: The Kalvarienbergkapelle found its beginnings at the beginning of the 18th century. The former chapel initially only served as a place of worship and was a semicircular wall that was closed in 1858 by an extension made of wood. The formerly wooden statues along the steps were replaced by stone wayside shrines in 1848, and the avenue of chestnut trees next to the stairs was planted in 1877. In 1890 the chapel received a bell (donated by a citizen) in the newly built turret. Finally, in 1926, fourteen Stations of the Cross , which had contained pictures by Caspar Ludwig Weiß since 1857 , were replaced by reliefs in majolica . The patronage of the Kalvarienbergkapelle is celebrated on the feast of the Exaltation of the Cross on September 14th.
  • Gottesackerkapelle St. Georg : The chapel built by Baron Georg von Königsegg-Rothenfels was dedicated to St. George on December 15, 1619. Virgin mary and hll. Georg, Sebastian and Rochus consecrated. During the plague years 1628–1635, deceased Immenstadt residents found their final resting place in the nearby burial site. From 1805 the deceased had to be buried here exclusively. In 1802 the chapel was demolished and rebuilt from scratch. The Altarpiece Resurrection of Christ (1883) and other pictures inside the chapel were created by the Immenstadt painter Ludwig Glötzle .
  • Wooden chapel : The wooden chapel, located in the Steigbachtal and across the Oberer resp. To reach Untere Steig or Steigbachtobel was built in the 19th century. A previous building was first mentioned in 1745. He goes to one of the parents of the Blessed Mother Mary , the hll. The stone chapel dedicated to Joachim and Anna was returned. The late Gothic figures of St. Sebastian and Rochus , who are now in the parish church.
  • Maxensruh Chapel : Before his death, Count Maximilian von Königsegg-Rothenfels, who died in 1831, had a wooden chapel built on his retirement home in Maxensruh; the neo-Gothic structure was redesigned in 1855. The consecration took place in 1856 the patronage of the hll. Anthony of Padua and Hubertus . The chapel was completely renovated in 1984.
  • Maria Loreto pilgrimage chapel: The Maria Loreto pilgrimage chapel, also in Bühl am Alpsee , was built in 1666 on the foundations of the old St. Stephen church. They modeled on the Holy House of Loreto . Up to 30,000 believers flocked here annually at the end of the 17th century.
  • Parish Church of St. Stephanus: Between 1667 and 1669, builder Michael Kaufmann, who had already directed the work on the Loreto Chapel, built the Holy Sepulcher Chapel as a lower church and above it the new Stephanus Church. The consecration of the three churches was made on May 9, 1670 by Auxiliary Bishop Franz Sigmund from Constance. Finally, an important milestone in the history of the church were the years 1952/1953 with the complete modernization of St. Stephen's Church by curate Wilhelm Igel, who, as a supporter of the liturgical reform, redesigned the baroque church into a simple sacred building extended by seven meters to the west . Since 1957 the church has been the parish church of the parish of St. Stephanus.
  • Evangelical Parish Church (Erlöserkirche): The foundation stone of the Erlöserkirche was laid in 1861, the building was inaugurated in August of the following year. The church was rebuilt as early as 1883/85 and it was expanded. During the war in 1945, the church building suffered considerable war damage from bombing, which was removed again by 1946. A structural redesign in 1964/65 enlarged the church, the tower received four dials after a renovation, and a new rectory was built next to the church. In the course of the last construction project in 1991/94, a parish hall was built, and a new, south-north-oriented, almost square church space was created. In 1969 Immenstadt received a second vicar position in Blaichach due to the increasing number of parishioners . From there Rettenberg , Vorderburg, Wertach and Jungholz ( Austria ) supplies.
  • New Apostolic Church: The New Apostolic Church was built in 1951 at its current location in Liststrasse and rebuilt in 1989/90.
  • Jehovah's Witnesses: The Jehovah's Witnesses Congregation was founded in Immenstadt in 1956. In 1985 the former town saw in Bachreute was acquired, demolished and the new “Königsreichsaal” was built on this property in 1986 as a meeting place.
  • Yunus Emre Mosque : The mosque in Immenstadt's southern city was built in 2001. The umbrella organization is the DITIB .

Historic townhouses

The town hall
  • The town hall (Marienplatz 16) on the south side of Marienplatz was built in 1640; due to its bay window, it was initially a stately building. In 1753 it was acquired by the city and converted into the town hall. From 1753 to 1820 the important Immenstadt screen shows took place on the first floor, to which Emperor Charles V had given permission in 1536, while the so-called " Schrannenhalle " was on the ground floor . During a comprehensive renovation in 1866, the bay was designed in a neo-Gothic style. After this little tower collapsed during a devastating roof fire on the night of December 9th to 10th, 1912, the Kempten architect Leonhard Heydecker restored the original baroque tower . Another renovation took place from 1992 to 1995. Today, the second floor is home to the modernly designed “large conference room” where the Immenstadt city council meets regularly.
  • The old school building (Marienplatz 17) behind the town hall was the first municipal school building after 1811. But after only six months it turned out to be too small. After 1916, the Bayerische Lebensmittelstelle (Bavarian State Office for Forced Management ), temporarily the employment office and later also the premises of the residents' registration office were housed there.
  • The former count's office building (Marienplatz 3) on the east side of Marienplatz was built in 1646/48 by Hugo Graf zu Königsegg-Rothenfels. Until 1804, it was the office and residential building of the chief magistrate of the county of Rothenfels. The office building on the first floor was connected to the gallery of the parish church opposite by a wood-covered corridor. In the course of mediatization , the building fell to the Kingdom of Bavaria, which sold it in 1806 to the wealthy master brewer's widow Antonia Kirchmann. The house has been owned by the city of Immenstadt since 1908, has served as an administration building since 1929 and today houses the mayor's office, among other things. The former count's office building is a listed building.
The city palace
  • The city ​​palace (Marienplatz 12) was probably built in 1550 as an office building by Count Hugo XVI. Built by Montfort-Rothenfels (year above lintel in the entrance area) and expanded into a castle by Georg Freiherr zu Königsegg between 1595 and 1620. For this purpose, some town houses had to be dismantled and placed in front of the eastern city gate. The south wing was built at the end of the 17th century, the west wing in 1746. At the beginning of the seventies, the city palace presented itself with an inner courtyard, which was enclosed on all four sides by buildings. In 1973 the west wing was finally demolished. The former ballroom with its charming stucco work from around 1720 is particularly worth seeing. The city palace is now owned by a private investor.
  • The so-called Alte Hof (Marienplatz 13) is one of the oldest buildings in Immenstadt, it was already mentioned in the exchange of goods contract of 1360 between Heinrich Graf von Montfort and Knight Walther von Laubenberg. Until the completion of the city palace, it served as the city apartment of the ruling families, after their move to the palace the name "Alter Hof" became established. For a long time it was the only residential building in the city made of stone. A detailed description of the massive structure with four floors and several extensions is available from 1805. Accordingly, it could have twelve heated rooms, adjoining rooms and chambers, a stable for nine horses, a coach house and vaulted cellars. A paved driveway led into a spacious courtyard with a fountain.
  • The building at Bräuhausstrasse 1 was formerly the count's brewery, which was built by Franz Hugo Graf zu Königsegg-Rothenfels after the fire of the previous building in 1766 with the pub Zum Löwen. In 1807 the house was auctioned by Franz Anton Höß, in 1894 it was sold to August Kaiser and in 1908 it was finally extended to Villa Kaiser. Since the renovation in 1996/97, the building has been used as a residential and commercial building.
  • The former royal stables (Bräuhausstraße 6) was probably built in the 17th or 18th century. It is an elongated building that was previously used for the management of the castle. Later, the stables and storage rooms of the Höß brewery and the imperial brewery were housed. After extensive renovation (1996), the building now houses apartments and shops. A Königsegger coat of arms is embedded in the wall on the south side.
  • The former Count's brewery , which burned down in 1765 , used to stand on the site of the current Allgäu literary house . In 1774 Christian Moriz zu Königsegg-Rothenfels, a relative of the ruling Count Franz Fidelis zu Königsegg-Rothenfels, who lived temporarily in Immenstadt, built a riding school over the still existing beer cellars. With the end of the county of Königsegg-Rothenfels, the building first came under Austrian and then Bavarian state ownership. In 1807 it was acquired by Franz Anton Höß, who left it to the Immenstadt lay actors as a theater for many years. It was sold to the Kaiser family (Kaiserbräu) in 1895 and was acquired by the city of Immenstadt in 1990. In the years 2006 to 2008 the building was extensively renovated and today it houses the city library.
  • In the Bahnhofstraße you can find the former count's office (Bahnhofstraße 11), which is mentioned in the sources in 1597 and 1660. The original building burned down in 1679. A few years later the house was rebuilt directly at Lindauer Tor (demolished in 1806). It served as a customs post and housed service rooms, the manorial archive and the office administrator's apartment. In 1805 it came into Bavarian state ownership, a year later it was sold to the merchant Fidel Hagenauer. Maximilian Graf zu Königsegg-Rothenfels, a brother of the last ruling Count Franz Fidelis, also lived here until 1819.
  • The Hofjägerhaus at Bahnhofstrasse 7 was built by Count Hugo von Königsegg-Rothenfels 1646–48 as a count's office building. Around 1675 the mint was housed in the house. From 1686 residence of the hunter # Hofjäger (Hofjägerhaus), also court rifle shop. After 1804 Austria and from 1806 the Bavarian State owned the building. Until it passed into private hands in 1827, the property served as a residence for the state forest ranger.
The Hörmannhaus on Klosterplatz
  • The Hörmannhaus on Klosterplatz was built in 1757 and handed over to the Capuchins in 1905 . The building served as a bakery. The local history museum was housed there from 1957 to 1990. The house was renovated and rebuilt in 1992 and has been a listed building since then . The Hörmannhaus pottery has been located there since 1993.
  • The Villa Edelweiß (Adolph-Probst-Straße 6) is the representative Wilhelminian style villa of the entrepreneur and co-owner of the former mechanical twine factory in Immenstadt, Edmund Probst. It was built in 1882–1884 by the Augsburg architect Jean Keller . It is one of the highest quality villa buildings of the late 19th century in the Allgäu. The city acquired the villa in the late 1980s and renovated it from 1988–1992. The listed building is now the seat of the municipal music school.

Sculptures and fountains

The Marian column on Marienplatz
  • The Marian column, which represents the center of Marienplatz, was donated by Hugo Graf zu Königsegg-Rothenfels out of gratitude for the extinction of the plague, which raged from 1628 to 1635. However, the column was only erected in 1773 at the instigation of Franz Fidelis Graf zu Königsegg-Rothenfels, the grandson of the founder. The enclosure by a fountain, which was planned at that time, was postponed again and again for around 200 years due to lack of money, so that the Marian column has only risen above an octagonal fountain basin since 1988. The four bronze figures around the fountain (shepherd boy - agriculture, carpenter - handicraft, weaver - trade and stocking shaper - industry) symbolize traditional branches of business in the city, while the sculptures attached to the other four corners document the city's bond with nature (reeds and Cattail, sycamore, linden and apple tree). They were created by the Aachen artist Bonifatius Stirnberg .
  • A group of figures by Willi Tannheimer on the west facade of the Capuchin Church, depicting a Capuchin with two children, reminds us of the weekly distribution of bread and soup to the poor and needy by the Capuchins.
  • The Geißenbrunnen on Klosterplatz is a reference to the “little man's cow” and to the former Immenstädter Geißrecht . The fountain was also designed in 1996 by the Hintersteiner sculptor Willi Tannheimer .
  • The Alpzug sculpture group on Landwehrplatz, consisting of three bronze cows, is a reminder of the annual upward and downward movement of the herds of cattle through the Steigbachtal to and from the Immenstädter Hochweiden. The essemble was created by the sculptor Bonifatius Stirnberg from Aachen on behalf of the city . They were set up in April 2000.
Beer drinkers on the bench, Bräuhausplatz
  • The sculptures on the Bräuhausplatz, a detailed brewery team and the beer drinker on the bench were created in 1997 by the sculptor Andreas Teuchert from Büchenbach . They are reminiscent of the Kaiser brewery that once worked here.
  • The fountain in front of the royal stables, made of Swedish granite and bronze , was created in 1997 by the local master stonemason Herbert Baldauf.
  • One of the oldest sculptures in public space is a Capuchin brother, who doubles under the weight of a balcony at Haus 9 Klosterplatz. The figure was made by the woodcarver Xaver Rasch from Bühl in 1936.
  • A cast iron fountain in front of the Hofmühle Museum is a reminder of the water supply for the citizens until the middle of the 20th century. The basin of the fountain was restored in 1990 and placed in front of the museum with a cast column.
  • The bronze work of art Reigen on St. Nicholas Square was created by Ursula Gondermann from Oberstdorf and installed in 1992.
  • Another work by Willi Tannheimer is the Archangel Michael on the square between the monastery garden and the Raiffeisenbank.
  • The Heiligenbaum is located at the north entrance of the parish church . The bronze tree shows the patrons of the churches in the Immenstadt districts of Akams, Bühl , Diepolz , Eckarts, Rauhenzell and Stein , which gave up their independence in 1972 and joined Immenstadt. The sculpture was created 2006-2007 by Bonifatius Stirnberg from Aachen .
  • Sebastian Kulisch created the milk music sculpture near the secondary school. The sculpture was made in 1997 as part of the Euregio-Skulturenpark and bought by the city of Immenstadt in 2000.
  • The stele The Story of Creation on the Achbrücke in Missener Straße was made in stone by Heinrich Faltermeier in 1974 . It represents the first human couple.
  • The figure of St. Nepomuk in Bühl comes from the last quarter of the 18th century. The artist is unknown. It was restored in 1995, got a glass case and was posted on the Aachbrücke.
  • The Steinsele on the Illerbrücke to Rauhenzell represents the connection between two banks, with the historical background that for centuries the Iller was the border between the duchy of Augsburg and the county of Rothenfels. Therefore, the two coats of arms of the Augsburg bishop and the Königsegger are incorporated into the stone made of shell limestone . The plinth indicates the river, the group of figures itself forms a bridge. The artist was the Lindau sculptor Hermann Gierer.

Calvary

Crucifixion scene

A steep staircase leads directly from the old town on a southern slope to the Calvary Chapel, past fourteen wayside shrines. In the chapel there is a larger than life representation of the Golgotha scene. The figures, created by Michel Beisch, are wildly moved in the depicted scene in a baroque manner.

Public green spaces

  • From 1655 to 1980, the monastery garden served as a herb and vegetable garden for the Capuchin monastery of St. Joseph. In the years 1986–1988 it was redesigned into a public green space and built with an underground car park. The centrally located fountain and the duck fountain made of cast bronze were created in 1988 by the Aachen artist Bonifatius Stirnberg .
  • The court gardens are the last remnants of the former count's court garden, which Georg zu Königsegg-Rothenfels had laid out as a pleasure garden in 1590. At that time the garden presented itself as a 6000 m² large, walled complex, which could be accessed through four lattice doors. In the center there was a walkable Chinese tower around 1690, later a fountain in its place.
  • The Edelweiss Park at Villa Edelweiss, with over 4000 m², is developing into an art park and houses sculptures by Sebastian Kulisch, Hannes Tuba and Jaromir Gargulák.
  • The Auwald Park, the "Wäldle", as they used to say, between the clinic, Iller and the school center, is the largest park in the city with over ten hectares. In the middle is the artificially created 7000 m² Auwaldsee, in the western part of the park the Immenstädter Kneipp Club opened a water treading facility in 1978. A grove with historic apple, pear, plum and apricot crops was created north of the Kneipp basin.

Sports facilities

Stadium, halls

  • The groundbreaking ceremony for the Auwald Sports Center took place in August 1974, and the outdoor sports facilities were inaugurated in 1976. They include two grass pitches, a small playing field with a synthetic surface, a six-lane 400-meter course and athletics facilities. The sports center was supplemented in the late 1970s by the construction of a triple gymnasium with a gymnasium and an indoor grandstand. On the east side, a covered outdoor grandstand was built for the large lawn and the athletics facilities. Since 1990 the building has been called Julius-Kunert-Halle, named after the Immenstadt entrepreneur and sports patron Julius Kunert.
  • In 1926, a gym with a stage was opened in the Maria Stern convent school. The girls' secondary school Maria Stern has had another sports hall since 1994.
  • There are other gyms that are attached to schools.

tennis

  • The Immenstadt tennis club operates two facilities in Immenstadt. Five outdoor courts for tournament tennis on the Kleiner Alpsee with a clubhouse and the tennis facility with eight outdoor courts and a sandy floor hall on the Illerspitz. Summer ice stock and asphalt tracks are also attached to the Illerspitz.

Winter sports

  • From 1909 to 1965 the Immenstadt Ski Club operated several ski jumps on which a German championship (1912) and international competitions were held.
  • Ice skating is possible in Immenstadt, weather permitting, on the natural ice rink at the Viehmarktplatz and on the large Alpsee. In the winter of 2012/2013, a small ice rink was also offered, served and lit in the castle courtyard.

water sports

  • There is also an indoor swimming pool in the area of ​​the Auwald sports center. The bathing operation began on February 4, 1978. One year later, on May 18, 1979, the ceremonial handover of the new outdoor swimming pool Kleiner Alpsee, which had been under construction since November 1973, took place.
  • The Inselsee Allgäu, a water ski and wakeboard park, is located between Immenstadt and Blaichach .

Other plants

  • The Bärenfalle climbing forest , Bavaria's largest high ropes course , and the Alpsee Coaster, Germany's longest year-round toboggan run, are located in the Alpsee Bergwelt complex in the Ratholz district .

Regular events

Culture

Viehscheidplatz in Immenstadt in the Allgäu
  • Every year on the third Saturday in September, the Viehscheid takes place on the cattle marketplace . Around 1,000 cattle are driven down from the Alps into the valley after the summer (Alpabtrieb) and returned to their owners. It should be emphasized here that Immenstadt is the only city in the entire Federal Republic of Germany with its own regular cattle shed.
  • The "Immenstädter Sommer" is an annual series of events. Concerts, cabaret and open-air cinema attract many locals and tourists to the old town every year. Well-known artists present themselves on several stages in the center of the city.
  • Every year from December 4th to 6th, the Klausentreibe takes place on Marienplatz and Klosterplatz .
  • Fans of brass music will get their money's worth with numerous stand concerts by the town bands Immenstadt (pavilion in the courtyard gardens) and Bühl (lake stage) in the summer months.
  • In the summer months there are weekly half-hour matinees on the Siegfried Schmid organ in the parish church of St. Nikolaus under the motto “Listen, organ music”.
  • Local and emigrated artists present a small cross-section of their works at the art exhibition " Die Südliche ", which is relevant for southern Oberallgäu and which takes place every three years next to Sonthofen and Oberstdorf in Immenstadt.

Sports

Other Events

  • Fieranten markets are held three times a year in the city center (Maimarkt, Michaelimarkt (September) and Gregorimarkt (November)), at which traveling traders sell their goods.
  • On the Saturday before Ash Wednesday there is a carnival parade of the clubs in Immenstadt with costumes and decorated floats.
  • On the Sunday after Ash Wednesday, the Spark Sunday , in Immenstadt, as in other Allgäu towns, a large, widely visible “spark fire” is lit at an elevated point and with catering.
  • The city festival is held in the pedestrian zone at the end of July.
  • Also in July, the annual lake festival takes place in the Bühl district directly on the Alpsee. The highlight of the festival is a large brilliant fireworks display.
  • Numerous exhibitors present themselves at a cheese and farmers market at the end of the summer on Marienplatz.

Economy and Infrastructure

Employee and company structure

Sorted by company size

Source: Federal Employment Agency ; Charge status: March 10, 2019 (provisionally until 2021)

Distribution of jobs in the city of Immenstadt

SV employees = employees subject to social security contributions (excluding civil servants, low-wage earners and freelancers)

With headquarters in Immenstadt, 1,707 (+171) active companies and private households are registered with company numbers.

group Establishments SV employees proportion of
all companies with SV employees 468 11,333 100%
between 1 and 5 SV employees 282 639 6%
between 5 and 49 SV employees 164 2,478 22%
between 50 and 99 SV employees 13 880 8th %
between 100 and 499 SV employees 6th 1,067 9%
500 and more SV employees 3 6.276 55%

Marginal employment

In 2018 there were 2,239 marginal part-time jobs in 526 locations in Immenstadt. That is 16% of all 13,572 registered jobs (excluding civil servants). In 204 companies there were only marginally employed and in 58 companies there were both, but more low-wage earners than employees subject to social insurance contributions.

Enterprises and employees by economic activities by

The following table shows companies and their share of employment, sorted by economic sector. The last column shows the difference between 2018 and 2015 for all employees. The growth in Group K, Financial and Insurance Services, is due to a consolidation of operational data in this area. The growth of Group M, freelance, scientific and technical services, arose from the relocation of one of the company's headquarters to Immenstadt, but its jobs are spread across the Kempten and Oberallgäu area.

Main industry Establishments Businesses with Besch. SV employees Low-wage earners Share of all employees Δ 2015
all departments 1,707 672 11,333 2,239 100.0% +3,252
A. Agriculture, forestry, fishing 74 22nd 46 34 0.7% +11
C. Manufacturing 73 36 4,730 215 43.6% +419
D. power supply 3 3 25th 0 0.2% +8
E. Water supply, waste management 4th 2 30th 6th 0.3% +4
F. construction industry 84 44 224 79 2.7% +32
G trade 294 122 973 354 11.7% +115
H Transportation and storage 36 11 238 209 3.9% +153
I. Hospitality 158 71 240 298 4.7% +130
J information and communication 31 13 170 192 3.0% +54
K Financial and insurance services 274 93 136 138 2.4% +114
L. Real estate and housing 17th 3 3 6th 0.1% −173
M. Professional, scientific and technical services 123 44 2,319 108 21.4% +2,211
N Other economic services 81 35 245 118 3.2% +58
O Public administration, social security 13 10 195 40 2.0% +24
P Education and instruction 34 16 279 39 2.0% −74
Q Health and welfare 121 72 1,307 249 13.7% +67
R. Arts, entertainment and recreation 39 18th 70 68 1.2% +22
S. other services 68 43 93 82 1.5% −5
T Private households with domestic staff 273 14th 14th 4th 0.1% −4

Economy in numbers

→ Figures for 2010, unless otherwise stated

Agriculture
Number of establishments 107
Farms with more than 50 hectares 17th
Livestock 4,918 cattle, 270 sheep, 155 chickens, 104 horses
Manufacturing
Number of establishments with generally 20 or more employees 10
Gross fees 154 million euros
Construction
Number of establishments in 2011 8th
Employees at the end of June 2011 50
Total sales EUR 3 million
tourism
Accommodation establishments opened in June 2011 with nine or more guest beds 58
Guest arrivals 86.181
Guest nights 267,541

Commercial and industrial areas

  • West industrial park in Engelfeld and on Julius-Kunert-Strasse. Access via B 308 exit: Julius-Kunert-Kreisel
  • Industrial area south in the south of the city on the area of ​​the former mechanical twine factory (Hanfwerke-Viertel), in the east of the Liststraße and in the continuation the Blaichacher Straße with Neumummen. Access via B 19, B 308, OA 5, exit: Immenstadt Süd, Rauhenzell
  • Business park east on Sonthofener Strasse. Access via B 19, B 308, OA 5, exit: Immenstadt Süd, Rauhenzell
  • Commercial area north to the right of the Iller near the toll bridge in the north end of Rauhenzell. Access via B 19, B 308, OA 30, exit: Immenstadt Zentrum, Stein
  • Seifen-Ost in the north of the urban area in the districts of Seifen and Gießen with the Bosch factories and medium-sized businesses. Access via B 19, B 308, OA 5, exit: Immenstadt Nord, Heuberg
  • Seifen-West in the north of the urban area west of the district road : 'OA 5' in the district of Seifen. Access via B 19, B 308, OA 5, exit: Immenstadt Nord, Heuberg

media

  • Newspapers have been produced in Immenstadt since April 2, 1859. It started with the weekly paper for the district court Immenstadt u. Sonthofen . Today the local editorial office of the Allgäuer Anzeigeeblatt is located in Jahnstrasse . The Kreisbote is a twice-weekly newspaper with an editorial section for Immenstadt; this newspaper is distributed free of charge.
  • The editorial office of the metal trade magazine Hephaistos is in the Werdenstein district.
  • Until the latter moved to Balderschwang, Immenstadt was the administrative seat of Radio Horeb , a private Christian radio station.

Public facilities

Authorities

Art and culture institutions

  • A city library (part of the Literaturhaus), the Hofgarten-Stadthalle and various other cultural institutions are operated on site under city management.
Rainbow Youth Center
  • There has been a youth center in the city since 1970, which was initially self-administered (Aktion Freie Jugendheim) in the former shooting range on Kalvarienberg and from 1983 moved into the AOK building in Mittagstrasse as a new tenant. From 1976, it was sponsored by the Oberallgäu district youth association and has been the city of Immenstadt since 1983. Since 1979 the facility has been called "Rainbow". There is the house newspaper Bow , numerous workshop and interest groups, live music and other cultural events. The annual 68 ball, which is thematically and personally reminiscent of the founding time, is legendary .

For artists of the visual arts, the city of Immenstadt provides several rooms for work shows and solo / group exhibitions:

  • Palace hall in the palace on Marienplatz (second floor, former city library)
  • Schrannenhalle in the town hall on Marienplatz ( foyer )
  • Local history museum Hofmühle an der Ach (the entire building for large exhibitions, otherwise in the attic)
  • alpsee gallery in the Bühl am Alpsee district (private provider)
  • Art exhibition in the foyer and stairwell of the GZI - Immenstadt Health Center

Theater, cabaret and concerts take place in the Hofgarten, the City Palace, the Hofmühle, the Rainbow and in summer also in the monastery garden.

Companies with municipal participation

  • Allgäuer Überlandwerk GmbH, Kempten (AÜW)
  • Social and economic agency of the district of Oberallgäu Wohnungsbau GmbH, Sonthofen (SWW)
  • Telezentrum Allgäu GmbH & Co.KG, Rettenberg
  • Sozialbau Kempten Wohnungsbau GmbH
  • Oberallgäu Tourismus-Service GmbH (OATS)
  • Midday suspension railway
  • Alpsee Bergwelt GmbH & Co. KG

Foundations

  • Julius and Gertraud Kunert Foundation: Established in 1976 by Julius Kunert to promote sports clubs and associations. In 1990 there was an expansion to the Gertraud and Julius and Gertraud Kunert Foundation to promote sport, school and vocational training.
  • Kaiser Sigwart Foundation: Established in 1990 by Gertrud Sigwart to promote cultural and sporting issues, direct non-profit and charitable social measures and to support and promote environmental and nature conservation.
  • Otto Luitpold Spies Social Foundation: Established in 1995 by Otto Luitpold Spies to promote charitable and benevolent social measures, to help the blind and to protect animals.
  • Dr.-Rudolf-Vogel-Stiftung: Established in 2006 by the city of Immenstadt, the city's archives are operated from the funds of the foundation.
  • Gräflich-Königsegg'sche Orphanage Foundation: Established in 1716 by Count Albert Eusebius von Königsegg-Rothenfels, financing of the day-care center.
  • Gräflich-Rothenfels'sche Spitalstiftung: established more than 500 years ago, on March 17, 1495, by the Brixen canon Konrad Wenger, a cousin of the former Immenstadt municipal administrator, by the hospital's foundation. The hospital was to serve as a pilgrims' house and old people's home. The current retirement and nursing home on Kemptener Straße is an essential part of the oldest Immenstadt foundation.
  • Ilona Reinig Foundation: established in 2007.

Funded projects by the European Union

  • Renaturation of the Gschwender Horn ski area: Due to the lack of snow in winters, the city decided between 1994 and 1998 to renaturate the former ski area. Follow-up examinations in the years 2003–2004 showed that the intended project goals could be achieved.
  • Allgäu Bergbauernmuseum Diepolz : The museum as well as the time travel project and the reconstruction of two mountain huts on the museum grounds were subsidized.
  • Construction and operation of a biomass heating plant: By operating a wood chip furnace, an indoor swimming pool, a school and sports center, a kindergarten, a primary school, a hospital and three apartment blocks are supplied with heat. Small wood from the urban forest and the private rural forest can be used under economically reasonable conditions.
  • Initiative Alpsee 2000: Project for the holistic and sustainable development of the Alpsee region in their areas of life, u. a. in the field of tourism, agriculture, nature and landscape conservation.

Club life

  • In addition to the town band Immenstadt, there are five village music bands in the districts of Akams, Bühl, Diepolz, Eckarts and Stein.
  • There are numerous rifle clubs (SV) in the city: Royal, privileged rifle club Immenstadt 1593, Schützenverein Rauhenzell e. V, SV Akams, SV Bühl a. Alpsee, SV Diepolz Bergstätte, SV Eckarts 1924 e. V., SY Stein D'Laubenberger, SV Zaumberg 1909 e. V. and SV Seifen 1904.
  • The largest sports club in the city in terms of membership is the Turnverein 1860 Immenstadt e. V. with its 15 subdivisions.
  • Due to the proximity of the Großer Alpsee and the Iller, Immenstadt is the seat of numerous water sports clubs.
  • The oldest football club is the Immenstadt 07 e. V. (Abbreviation: FCI), which was founded on May 18, 1907. Football is also played by Spielvereinigung 77 Immenstadt e. V. (founded on June 13, 1977) and at the football club Türk Gücü Immenstadt / Allgäu e. V. (founded on May 15, 1980).
  • Immenstädter tennis clubs: 'ESV Immenstadt (Tennisclub Bühl am Alpsee) (founded 1976), Tennisclub Grün-Weiss Immenstadt e. V. and TC Immenstadt e. V.
  • other associations: Klausen and Bärbele Verein Immenstadt e. V. (Customs Association 2004), D 'Stoinebergler Immenstadt Trachtenverein (founded in 1905), Allgäu-Immenstadt section of the German Alpine Club (founded in 1874), Chess Club Immenstadt 09 (founded in 1909), Ski Club Immenstadt 1908 e. V., Kneipp Association Immenstadt e. V. (founded 1927), KLICK-Kleinkunstverein Immenstadt e. V., paraglider pilot Immenstadt-Sonthofen e. V. and Drachenflugverein Mittag Team e. V.

education

A schoolmaster was mentioned in Immenstadt in a document from 1568. As a school town, the municipality offers the following school and educational facilities:

  • Allgäuer Alpwirtschafts Akademie
  • Königsegg primary school
  • Elementary school stone
  • Immenstadt Middle School
  • Girls secondary school Maria Stern
  • State secondary school for boys
  • Gymnasium Immenstadt (linguistic and scientific-technological high school)
  • Vocational school with advanced vocational school
  • Vocational school for housekeeping and hospitality professions
  • Agricultural and alpine economy school
  • Merkur private business school
  • Technical school for elderly care
  • Music School Oberallgäu Süd e. V.

graveyards

Königsegg epitaph on the cemetery chapel in the main cemetery

Urban

  • Main cemetery, Adolf-Probst-Straße 12
  • Stein cemetery, Kirchbichl 5
  • Eckarts Cemetery, Am Anger 5

Ecclesiastical

  • Akams Cemetery, Akams 16
  • Diepolz Cemetery, Diepolz 22
  • Eckarts Cemetery, Am Anger 3
  • Knottenried Cemetery, Knottenried 15
  • Rauhenzell cemetery, Schlossplatz 8
  • Stein cemetery, Kirchbichl 5

traffic

Footpaths

Traffic-calmed area and pedestrian zones

In the city center, there is a seven-hectare traffic-calmed area with two pedestrian zones from Marienplatz to Klosterplatz and around Bräuhausplatz.

Long-distance hiking trails
  • The Jakobsweg Tirol Allgäu leads through Immenstadt from Inntal to Zell, where it connects to the Bavarian-Swabian Jakobusweg and the
  • Wasserläufer-Himmelsstürmer-Route from halch to Oberstaufen

Bike paths

Immenstadt is a stage destination of the routes of the Bodensee-Königssee cycle path and the Iller cycle path . The traffic training area is located between the Konstanzer Ach and Hochrainebach in Straße Im Silen .

Road traffic

Federal and state roads
Overview of the streets in Immenstadt

Immenstadt can be reached by the following national and regional roads:

  • In north-south direction the four-lane expressway Bundesstraße 19 coming from Kempten and leading to Oberstdorf with the exits:
    • Martinszell exit in the direction of Niedersonthofen to the Immenstadt districts of Diepolz and Knottenried
    • Exit Heuberg towards Immenstadt-Nord west to Werdenstein and Eckarts and south to Akams, Seifen and the Bosch works
    • Exit Immenstadt Stein towards Immenstadt-Zentrum to Stein, Kalvarienberg, Zollbrücke, Immenstadt Clinic / Health Center, Old Town, Hofgarten, Bühl
    • Exit Immenstadt Rauhenzell in the direction of Immenstadt-Süd to Rauhenzell, Neumummen, Südstadt, Auwald Stadium / School Center and out of town to Rettenberg, Burgberg, Blaichach and Gunzesried
  • In a west-east direction, the federal highway 308 coming from Lindenberg touches Ratholz, Großer Alpsee, Bühl, Alpsee-Outlet, Engelfeld, main cemetery, clinic, toll bridge to the B 19
  • The state road 2006 coming from Sibratshofen and Missen leads past Knottenried, Zaumberg, Rothenfels / Hub, outdoor pool Kleiner Alpsee to the entrance board at the height of the Schwarzen Gundes. From there it goes as a municipal road (Missener-, Staufner- and Sonthofener Straße) along the Viehmarktplatz and the train station and bypassing the center to the south via the Auwald stadium / school center to the Roßkopfkreisel. Here the path leads as the county road OA 5 in the direction of Rauhenzell and past it to the B 19 and from there again as a state road over the Birkenallee to Rettenberg. From the Goimoos junction it joins the 2007 state road from Sonthofen to Wertach .
Bus transport
Overview of public transport in Immenstadt
  • City bus: Six city bus routes operate in Immenstadt. Lines 31 (Welzereute), 32 (Südstadt), 33 (Schwarzer Gund) and 34 (Immenstadt Clinic) are operated by Jörg "Der Immenstädter" and lines 35 (Bräunlings) and 36 (Rauhenzell) are operated by Regionalverkehr Allgäu ( RVA) operated.
  • Regional traffic: The urban area is also served by the RBA lines 39 (Oberstaufen), 41 (Sonthofen) and 64 (Kempten) and the RVA lines 40 (Lindau / Oberstdorf), 81 (Oberjoch), 82 (Seltmanns), 83 (Niedersonthofen) ) and 84 (Wolfis). The ring line 51 (ZOB, stone, Bräunlings, Werdenstein, Gopprechts, Akams) is operated by the company Jörg.
  • Long-distance traffic: There is a Flixbus stop in Jahnstraße , which is currently only served from Friday to Sunday.
  • Bus stations: to the west of the DB train station is the central bus station with stops for all 15 city and regional bus lines, to the south of the Immenstadt clinic is the school bus station, which is served by five lines. The students of the Königseggschule, Mittelschule, Knabenrealschule and the grammar school do not need to cross a street to reach the school bus station.
  • Bus stops: There are 61 bus stops in the inner city and 56 outside.

Rail transport

Railway station and Hotel Bayerischer Hof, 1904

The local train station is the transport hub for southern Oberallgäu. Here the railway to Oberstdorf branches off from the Allgäu Railway . This gives you connections to Lindau , Oberstdorf , Ulm , Augsburg , Munich and Nuremberg .

The alex runs every two hours from Oberstdorf or Lindau to Munich (until December 8, 2007: Allgäu-Express ), which is made up of Eurorunner locomotives or Ex- ÖBB 2043 and modernized compartment and dining cars . In long-distance traffic, Immenstadt is served daily by two pairs of IC trains: IC 2084/2085 'Nebelhorn' Hamburg – Oberstdorf and IC 2012/2013 'Allgäu' ((Leipzig–) Magdeburg–) Hanover – Dortmund – Oberstdorf.

Trains coming from Kempten with the destination Oberstdorf must change direction in Immenstadt.

Railway stations and stops

The train stations and stops in Seifen (Schwab.), Bühl am Alpsee and Ratholz were closed until 1983. In 1973, 24 to 26 trains stopped in these parts of Immenstadt on weekdays. On the northern outskirts of the city near Werdensteiner Moos, a branch track to a peat magazine with a loading station was drawn in the 19th century. In the Immenstadt train station, the track systems have been reduced from twelve to five parallel tracks over the past fifty years . Only one of the 22 buffer blocks has remained. In 1985 the Immenstadt staff of the Deutsche Bundesbahn still had 20 employees, including four gatekeepers and two point attendants. Today, Deutsche Bahn is no longer a notable employer here.

Immenstadt railway station track plan
Unrealized railway projects

Around 1853 a transalpine railway through Immenstadt - the Schrofenpass -Bahn - was to be built as an alternative to the then planned railway line over the Lukmanierpass . “A railway was supposed to be built from Immenstadt via Oberstdorf into Lechthal to the Arlberg and then into Finstermünz and into Vintschgau . This would be the most suitable and easiest transition point in the entire Alpine chain ... “Both variants were abandoned in favor of the Gotthard Railway .

In 1865 it was decided to issue shares for a horse-drawn tram between Immenstadt and Sonthofen. This project was not implemented either. Instead, the steam railway was opened on this route in 1873.

In the Bodensee-S-Bahn project, which was created in 2004, the Immenstadt station forms the north-eastern end of the B10 S-Bahn line: St. Gallen- Immenstadt.

Immenstadt as the namesake for two locomotives, a train and a model railroad layout

1851 was the year of construction of the “Immenstadt”, a class B II locomotive from the manufacturer JAMaffei (Munich), retired in 1881. “The Immenstadt” runs all the trains of a branch, which are called mixed passenger and freight trains. ”In 1882 Another locomotive was built, this time of the type D VI , also from Maffei and the name "Immenstadt" with the factory number 1298. The branch line tender locomotive was decommissioned by the Deutsche Reichsbahn DRG on June 10, 1938 with the road number 98.7512. A tilting technology local railcar ( 612 074-5 ) of the Allgäu-Franken-Express is adorned with the coat of arms and the name of the city of Immenstadt. The system kit 61900 from Noch also bears the name “Immenstadt”.

Train accidents in the urban area

Three train accidents are known in Immenstadt. On July 16, 1854, a passenger train derailed at the Alpsee. One stoker died, the engine driver and another stoker were critically injured, and passengers were not harmed. On July 1, 1975, an auxiliary locomotive was again traveling at excessive speed on the Alpsee and crashed into the stopped train, which it was supposed to be helping. There were 28 injured. On February 18, 1999, wagons of the Intercity Oberstdorf-Dortmund jumped off the tracks near the hospital. An oncoming train could not brake in time. Two women died and 34 other people were injured.

Mountain railways

  • Mittag suspension railway: Südstadt valley station 750 m, middle station 1060 m (change), Mittaggipfel mountain station 1420 m. The construction of the railway was completed in 1949; longest double chairlift in Germany (2,220 m).
  • Alpsee Bergwelt chairlift: Ratholz valley station 760 m, Bärenfallenalpe mountain station 1090 m.

air traffic

Clinic heliport

February 25, 1784 can be named as the beginning of aviation in Immenstadt. A sphere of air with a diameter of twelve feet and decorated with a Königsegg coat of arms, filled with “combustible, diluted air”, took off from the market square and flew over the Iller.

  • On April 7, 1966, a Fouga Magister jet trainer of the Luftwaffe ( aircraft registration number AA + 263 ) crashed into the Alpsee near Immenstadt. The two pilots did not survive the crash.

Water traffic

  • The canal from the Rhine via the Alpsee and Immenstadt to the Danube, called for in the magazine: “Deutsches Museum” from 1778 and in the book: “A waterway from Munich to Tyrol and to Lake Constance” by Nicola von Portia from 1807, was never realized .
  • The Santa Maria Loreto , a Lädine type of passenger sailor , operates on the Alpsee in the summer months .

Personalities

literature

  • Sebastian Geiger: Physical-medical topography of K. Baier. District Court District Immenstadt in the Upper Danube District . Kempten 1819.
  • Adalbert Waibel: The imperial county of Königsegg-Rothenfels and the rule of Staufen… . Kempten 1851.
  • Benno Rauchegger : The flood breakthrough in Immenstadt . Immenstadt 1873.
  • F. Pentner: Guide through Immenstadt and the surrounding area . Immenstadt 1889.
  • Ludwig Graehl: Guide through Immenstadt and the surrounding area . Immenstadt 1932.
  • Erich Günther: Guide through Immenstadt (Allgäu) Bühl am Alpsee and the surrounding area . Oberjoch 1949.
  • Hans Birling: Everyday life ensnared - 100 years of Hanfwerke Füssen - Immenstadt AG . Darmstadt 1957.
  • City of Immenstadt i. Allgäu (Hrsg.): Home book of the city Immenstadt i. Allgäu 1360-1960 . Immenstadt 1960.
  • Max Flad: Art Guide Immenstadt. Edited by City of Immenstadt i. Allgäu, Kempten 1986. ISBN 3-88019-012-7 .
  • Ernst Tyroller: Immenstadt at a glance . Aerial photographs of Immenstadt and Blaichach, Neomedia Reken, 1991.
  • Rudolf Vogel (Ed.): Immenstadt im Allgäu . Landscape, history, society, economy, cultural and religious life over the centuries. Immenstadt im Allgäu 1996. ISBN 3-920269-00-4 .
  • Klaus Fischer, Manfred Miller: Immenstadt in the Allgäu . Stadt-Bild-Verlag, Leipzig 1998. ISBN 3-931554-79-1 .
  • City of Immenstadt i. Allgäu and Büro Janner (ed.): Immenstädter AltstadtSpaziergang . Immenstadt 2001.
  • Siegbert Eckel: Immenstadt is changing. A journey through time to houses, alleys and squares in the "Städtle" . Immenstadt im Allgäu 2007, ISBN 978-3-920269-36-8 .
  • Siegbert Eckel: Immenstadt miniatures. Stories and stories from the small town . Immenstadt 2009.
  • Werner Matthäus Schnell: Churches and chapels of the parish Immenstadt . Lindenberg 2009, ISBN 978-3-89870-534-9 .
  • Helmut Ott: 200 years of postal history in Immenstadt . Edition Allgäu, Immenstadt 2010, ISBN 978-3-931951-43-6 .
  • Alois Schmid : Immenstadt and its citizens: a city history for the 650th anniversary. Ursus Verlag, Bad Hindelang 2010, ISBN 978-3-941414-09-9 .
  • Gerd Bischoff: The Century Wedding in Immenstadt , Schöler-Verlag, Immenstadt 2017
  • Ulrike Bauermeister-Bock: Martha A story from the life of a worker at the mechanical twine factory, Immenstadt 1857–1880 , Edition Allgäu, Immenstadt 2020

Web links

Commons : Immenstadt im Allgäu  - collection of images, videos and audio files
Wikivoyage: Immenstadt  - travel guide

Individual evidence

  1. "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 ).
  2. Municipality of Immenstadt in the local database of the Bavarian State Library Online . Bavarian State Library, accessed on August 15, 2019.
  3. ^ Moriz Wagner: About the occurrence of pile dwellings in Bavaria . F. Straub, Munich 1867, p. 17 .
  4. : German-Latin comparative dictionary . Hahn'sche Verlags-Buchhandlung, Leipzig 1835, p. 138 .
  5. Monuments of the Upper Danube District . Karl Rösel'sche Buchdruckerey, Augsburg 1830, p. 37, 60 .
  6. ^ Alfred Schröder: The fate of the oldest archive holdings of the Augsburg Church, in: Archives for the history of the Hochstift Augsburg, vol. 6 . Augsburg 1929.
  7. Monumenta Boica . Munich 1815, p. 137 .
  8. ↑ Reference library of the Bavarian citizen: Or collection ..., Volume 6 . Karl Kollman'sche Buchhandlung, Augsburg 1862, p. 275-286 .
  9. Wolfgang Benz: Southern Germany in the Weimar Republic: Ein Beitr. German domestic policy 1918 ... Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1970, p. 146 .
  10. ^ Report of the Augsburger Allgemeine
  11. ↑ End of the war in Swabia and Upper Bavaria
  12. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 571 .
  13. Data and information about Immenstadt
  14. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing, Municipal Statistics 2011 Immenstadt (PDF; 1272 kB)
  15. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing, Municipal Statistics 2011 Sonthofen (PDF; 1272 kB)
  16. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing, Municipal Statistics 2011 Oberstdorf (PDF; 1272 kB)
  17. 2011 census
  18. City Council Immenstadt
  19. ^ City of Immenstadt i.Allgäu: election of the city council 2020, overall result
  20. Offices & Persons. Municipality of Immenstadt im Allgäu, accessed on August 24, 2020 .
  21. ^ A b Friedrich Kramer: Topographisch-Historisches Handbuch for the government district of Swabia and Neuburg , self-published by the author, Augsburg 1841, p. 107.
  22. ^ Klemens Stadler: Deutsche Wappen - Federal Republic of Germany , Volume 4: The municipal coats of arms of the Free State of Bavaria, Part I A – L , Bremen 1965, p. 79.
  23. ^ Entry on the coat of arms of Immenstadt im Allgäu  in the database of the House of Bavarian History
  24. ^ Report in the Allgäuer Gazette from January 8, 2010: 'A seal from the year of the city survey'
  25. ^ Database of town twinning
  26. ^ Message for the press in the library of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung
  27. The AlpSeeHaus
  28. see Deanery Sonthofen In: Web Diocese Augsburg
  29. according to the stone information board on the front of the house
  30. Snow escape - Fratzungs und Wildheurecht In: austria-forum.org
  31. ^ The sculptor Heinrich Faltermeier
  32. Archangel full of temperament , on kultur-oa.de
  33. Ski jumping hill archive
  34. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing, Municipal Statistics 2011 (PDF; 1272 kB)
  35. The alpseeGalerie in Bühl am Alpsee
  36. art exhibitions in GZI in Immenstadt
  37. Renaturation of the Gschwender Horn ski area - a balance sheet by Thomas Dietmann, Ernst Polzer and Lutz Spandau , accessed on February 5, 2020
  38. Time travel project in the mountain farming museum
  39. Construction and operation of a biomass heating plant , on cipra.org, accessed on February 5, 2020
  40. Four million flow into the Alpsee 2000 , on all-in.de, accessed on February 5, 2020
  41. The People's Messenger for the Citizen and Farmer . 1853, p. 579 .
  42. Neue Münchener Zeitung - annual volume . 1856, p. 50 .
  43. People's and Schützenzeitung: Politisches Volksblatt . 1865, p. 117 .
  44. Der Civilingenieur: Journal for Engineering, Volume 13 . Arthur Felix, Leipzig 1867, p. 292 ff .
  45. Würzburger Anzeiger . 1855.
  46. Two dead in a train accident. Der Tagesspiegel , February 18, 1999, accessed on February 3, 2016 .
  47. https://www.bodensee.eu/de/was-erleben/uebersichtkarte/ Mittag-schwebebahn- immenstadt_poi540
  48. https://www.allgaeu.de/a-alpsee-bergwelt
  49. Deutsche Luftfahrt, Volume 9 . Verlag für Deutsches Flugwesen, Berlin 1905, p. 306 .
  50. ^ Accident report Fouga Magister AA + 263 , Aviation Safety Network WikiBase , accessed on July 3, 2020.