Indlekofen

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Indlekofen
District town of Waldshut-Tiengen
Indlekofen coat of arms
Coordinates: 47 ° 39 ′ 36 ″  N , 8 ° 13 ′ 11 ″  E
Height : 538 m above sea level NN
Area : 4 km²
Residents : 388  (2004)
Population density : 97 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : July 1, 1971
Incorporated into: Waldshut
Postal code : 79761
Area code : 07741

Indlekofen is a district of the district town of Waldshut-Tiengen in the district of Waldshut in Baden-Württemberg .

geography

location

Indlekofen is located in the southern Black Forest on the slope south of the Haselbach , which flows into the Schlücht , at an altitude of approx. 538 m. ü. NN. The southern side of the Haselbach valley, which extends from northwest to southeast, up to the ridge that separates the valley from the Seltenbach valley, essentially forms the Indlekofen district .

Approx. 200 m northwest and above the main village is the small district of Aispel at approx. 590 m above sea level. NN. The village has the form of settlement of a street village and has a length of approximately 1.3 km, a height difference of about 60 m (from about 508 to about 568 m. Above sea level. NN) on.

Local division

The village Indlekofen the district belongs Aispel .

history

The name is presumably derived from Ingilinc-hova , meaning “Hof des Ingilinc”, but it should go back to the Celtic vocabulary for water / fall on a hill / slope, certainly not from Kofel (mountain peak), but from Kof / en that means farm / Place / hill / slope.

First known mention in 1290 under the comment "Chunrat der Maier von Iglikoven" (in ZfGO3.371) further mentions in 1383 "das gotzhus ze sant Blesin has köft die vogtye ze Rohr und ze Inglikoven". Other mentions under the names: Inglikon 1351, Inglikofen 1380, Inglikhofen 1480. Belonged to the county of Hauenstein , Einung Dogern (formerly the prince- abbey of St. Blasien , later Western Austria ), during the Thirty Years War the place, which consisted of only a few large farms, was largely burned down. From 1806 Badisch .

The family name Indlekofer, which is widespread in Switzerland and southern Germany, is derived from the village of Indlekofen. This is mentioned for the first time in the fief books of the Rheinau monastery , a H. von Inglicon, in Rechberg , and further also in a Latin document from 1430 from the Rheinau monastery, with a Nicolas Indigkofer, district judge in Klettgau , as a witness when the church rights were handed over in Erzingen and Griessen to the Rheinau monastery (until then part of the Konstanz monastery ). These fief books are in the Zurich State Archives .

Indlekofen was incorporated into the town of Waldshut on July 1, 1971. This merged on January 1, 1975 with Tiengen / Hochrhein to form the new town of Waldshut-Tiengen.

Population development

Population of Indlekofen including Aispel .

year Residents
1871 324
1900 254
1925 257
1939 250
1950 342
1961 273
1970 253

politics

Locality

Indlekofen is a place within the meaning of Baden-Württemberg municipal law. The locality thus has a very limited self-government. The organs of this self-administration are the local council and the local councilor.

Local council

The local council consists of 6 local councils.

Mayor

Since the incorporation into the large district town of Waldshut-Tiengen , the head of the local administration has been given the title of local director .

Mayor is Hanspeter Schäuble

Economy and Infrastructure

Industry and commerce

In Indlekofen there is a tool grinding shop, here mainly saw blades are sharpened; also a carpentry.

Transport links

The traffic connection to the city of Waldshut-Tiengen is provided by the district road 6551, which leads from the federal road 500 near Bannholz, community Weilheim , through the town to the district of Gurtweil and connects to the state road 157.

Buildings

The Joseph Altar by Johann Christoph Feinlein
  • Catholic church with the Josephs altar, an original statue and free column retable by Johann Christoph Feinlein originally created for St. Pankratius in Eschbach with the symmetrical Marien Altar. Substantial, partly distorting reworking and new version with brown paint by the painter Carl Bertsche (1885–1942) from Waldshut in 1941, who also created the altar leaves.
  • Parish hall

coat of arms

The coat of arms shows two green fir trees on a silver background that indicate that they belong to the Hotzenwald or the county of Hauenstein (Einung Dogern ) and on both sides the shield for the former sovereignty through front Austria .

Personalities

Individual evidence

  1. ^ 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. 505 and 524 .

Web links