Kernels in the Remstal
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 48 ° 48 ' N , 9 ° 20' E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Baden-Württemberg | |
Administrative region : | Stuttgart | |
County : | Rems-Murr district | |
Height : | 292 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 15.05 km 2 | |
Residents: | 15,377 (Dec. 31, 2018) | |
Population density : | 1022 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 71394 | |
Area code : | 07151 | |
License plate : | WN, BK | |
Community key : | 08 1 19 093 | |
Community structure: | 2 districts | |
Address of the municipal administration: |
Stettener Straße 12 71394 Kernen in the Remstal |
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Website : | ||
Mayor : | Benedikt Paulowitsch ( SPD ) | |
Location of the municipality of Kernen in the Remstal in the Rems-Murr district | ||
Kernen im Remstal is a municipality in the Rems-Murr district in Baden-Württemberg . It belongs to the Stuttgart region (until 1992 the Middle Neckar region ) and the European metropolitan region of Stuttgart .
geography
Geographical location
Kernen is located on the southwestern edge of the Remstal , on the left the Rems . The virgin forest begins on the southern edge of the municipality .
The center of the state capital Stuttgart is about 16 km away.
Community structure
The former communities of Rommelshausen and Stetten im Remstal form the two districts of Kernen im Remstal.
In addition to the village, the district of Rommelshausen includes the Hangweide residential area and the abandoned village of Hardthof.
In addition to the village, the district of Stetten includes the Seemühle residential area and the abandoned villages of Eulenhof, Hart, Lindhalden, Sonnenberg and Waldbruderhaus.
Neighboring communities
Starting from the west, Fellbach , Waiblingen , Weinstadt , Aichwald ( Esslingen district ) and Esslingen am Neckar and Stuttgart border in a clockwise direction .
Natural monuments
There are 17 natural monuments in Kernen. Four of them in Rommelshausen and 13 in Stetten.
Division of space
According to data from the State Statistical Office , as of 2014.
history
Community merger
Kernen im Remstal was created by the regional reform in Baden-Württemberg on September 20, 1975 from the formerly independent communities of Rommelshausen and Stetten in the Remstal.
Surname
After the two localities were merged, the name of the resulting municipality was temporarily Stetten-Rommelshausen . The place name Kernen im Remstal , determined through a competition , was officially adopted on January 1, 1977 and refers to the 513 meter high local mountain of the community, the Kernen , which is, however, located in Fellbach's urban area.
The districts are officially named by prefixing the community name and followed by a hyphenated district name.
Rommelshausen
The oldest traces of settlement on the Rommelshauser district date from Roman times. In 1971, a Roman manor ( villa rustica ) was excavated by WD Forster and MA Petrol . The total yard was about 70 ares . The main building was approximately 21 × 13 meters. Based on coin finds, the age is estimated to be between 180 and 235 AD.
Between 650 and 750 AD, the first settlement was founded by the Alamanni . This is indicated by a number of Alemanni graves. Rommelshausen may have got its name from these first settlers. Possibly the settlement was named after the leader of the settlers. This could have been called Rumold . However, there is no evidence of this.
The first written mention of Rumoldeshusen comes from the year 1146. In a deed of donation, in which the monastery Oberzell the acquisition of a property by the Roman-German King Konrad III. is certified, a Wortwin de Rumoldeshusen is also mentioned as a witness. It is not known who this Wortwin de Rumoldeshusen is. Since Count Ludwig von Württemberg and the Lords of Plochingen from the area are named as other witnesses, it is reasonable to assume that he belonged to the Count's environment and had a high position there.
In addition to this name, the names Rummeltzhausen , Rumelshusen and Rommeltzhausen appear for the place. The name Rommelshausen is mentioned for the first time in 1686 in a document.
Between 1293 and 1300 Rommelshausen belonged to the domain of the Dukes of Teck . In 1300 the area of Rommelshausen was sold to the Counts of Württemberg and thus became part of Old Württemberg .
Rommelshausen was assigned to the Oberamt Cannstatt and came to the Oberamt Waiblingen in 1923, to the Waiblingen district in 1938 and, like Stetten, to the Rems-Murr district in 1973.
Stetten
Today's Stetten was already settled in the Middle Stone Age . Arrowheads and cuts from workings from this era have been found. From the Young Stone Age , clay vessels, spear and arrow heads, scrapers, knife parts, stone axes, remains of houses and fireplaces have been found.
In the fall of 1973 was Alemanni grave on Stettener Finkenweg discovered.
In 2018, the remains of an old moated castle were discovered during construction work, which probably date from the period between 1220 and 1240. The remains are older than the first documented mention of Stetten.
Stetten was first mentioned in a document in 1241. On February 2, 1241, Count Ulrich and Eberhard von Württemberg sold a farm to the Heiligenkreuztal monastery. An Eberhardus dapifer de Stetin is named as a witness, i.e. Eberhard, Truchsess von Stetten. Truchsesse were serfs of the Counts of Württemberg. You had the role of the first court marshal. When important decisions were made, the gentlemen Truchsessen von Stetten were always present as court officials of the Württemberg counts and dukes. The Lords of Stetten came from the area of the Dukes of Teck ( Wernau- Pfauhausen) and therefore included the "tecksche Wecken" (three blue diamonds on a gold background) in their coat of arms.
The village of Stetten has been sold over and over again over the centuries.
The Yburg above the valley was built around 1300 . At first it was called Eibenberg , which mutated to Yburg via Yberg . The gentlemen von Yberg lived there . The castle has not been inhabited since 1442. After the death of the last lord of the Yburg, the Yburg came to the House of Württemberg. In 1490 Ritter Truchsess von Stetten bought the Yburg from Count Eberhard von Württemberg . After the death of the last lord of Stetten, the Yburg is sold to Dietrich von Weiler , lord of Lichtenberg Castle in the Bottwartal. In 1760/61 it was demolished except for the frame walls at the behest of Duke Karl Eugen.
Stetten Castle was built in the valley between 1384 and 1387 .
According to a document from 1413, Stetten was a church branch of Beutelsbach. Therefore the dead had to be carried to the cemetery there. The path, which is still called Totenfurt today, leads past today's former television converter. The gallows stood there later, which may never have been used. It was not until 1482 that Stetten became an independent parish, raised by the Bishop of Constance. In 1488 Hans I. von Stetten donated the famous altar, which is now on display in the Württemberg State Museum in Stuttgart .
The Württemberg hereditary marshal Konrad Thumb von Neuburg bought Stetten in 1507 and received high jurisdiction over the place. His son Hans Konrad Thumb von Neuburg promoted the Reformation there around 1530 and carried it out later. The Thumb von Neuburg ruled Stetten until 1645.
1664 Stetten was given to Duke Eberhard III. sold.
Duchess Magdalena Sibylla of Hesse-Darmstadt , daughter of the Landgrave of Hesse, received the village and Stetten Castle as a bridal gift. When her husband, Duke Wilhelm Ludwig von Württemberg died in 1677, Stetten became a widow's residence. She lived in Stetten from March to October every year. She had Stetten 's St. Vitus Church renewed in 1698.
Her successor as local ruler after her death in 1712 was Wilhelmine von Graevenitz from Mecklenburg, concubine of Duke Eberhard Ludwig . Since he often came to Stetten, the castle was expanded in keeping with his status. In addition, the pastor from Stetten was appointed dean so that Wilhelmine von Grävenitz was not dependent on the dean in Waiblingen. The duke sent them out of the country in 1731.
After the Duke's death in 1733, his widow Johanna Elisabeth became the local mistress of Stetten. She died in 1757 and rule over the village fell to Duke Karl Eugen . He didn't care much for the village and it annoyed him that Stetten was his private property, but the taxes went to the imperial knighthood. They also had the right to call up soldiers.
In 1798 a tithe barn was built between Endersbacher Strasse and Rommelshauser Strasse. There, tithes were redeemed or converted into monetary levies until the middle of the 19th century . The tithe belonged to the Stuttgart monastery, the local authority and the Holy Cross monastery in Stuttgart. This was demolished in the 1960s.
In 1806 the Imperial Knights lost their independence in the course of mediatization and, after the establishment of the Kingdom of Württemberg, Stetten temporarily came to the Oberamt Esslingen, but then in 1807 to the Oberamt Cannstatt .
The history of the children's sanatorium and nursing home began in the castle in 1863 .
In 1898 the Stetten stop (today: S-Bahn stop Stetten-Beinstein) of the Remsbahn was established. A company building was built for this purpose.
During the First World War , 366 men from Stetten were drafted. 63 of them died.
In 1923 Stetten came to the Oberamt Waiblingen , which was transferred to the Waiblingen district during the Nazi era in Württemberg in 1938 .
Second World War
In the Second World War , Stetten had no military objectives. Nevertheless, it was also the target of a bombing raid in March 1944 - probably only because the Allied pilots had made a mistake or had to drop their load prematurely. The houses on Kegelplatz were hit and destroyed. However, no people were harmed.
Shortly before the US troops marched in, harmful material was burned in the bakery under the guidance of local group leader Wilhelm Hehner. On April 21, 1945, tanks of the US Army rolled in from Rommelshausen via the Hardtwiesentäle . Stetten was handed over without a fight. The US Army searched the houses for weapons and valuables. At the behest of the Americans, the signs on Adolf-Hitler-Strasse (the Nazis named Langgass after the Führer in 1933) were removed.
The Jewish couple Max and Ines Krakauer , who had been kept hidden in the rectory by the pastor's wife Hildegard Spieth during the last weeks of the war, were liberated . In 1979 she was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit . In 2004 a memorial plaque for this deed was attached to the rectory.
The headquarters of the US Army was set up opposite the “Ochsen” inn. There were curfews with the exception of 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. The Nazi local group leader Wilhelm Hehner hanged himself after his arrest in his cell in the prison in Waiblingen.
540 Stetten residents were drafted in the Second World War. 94 were killed, 53 were missing.
After the Second World War, Stetten and Rommelshausen were part of the American zone of occupation and therefore belonged to the newly founded state of Württemberg-Baden since 1945 , which became the present state of Baden-Württemberg in 1952.
Religions
After the Reformation , both villages became Protestant . The last Catholic pastor had to leave Rommelshausen in 1535. The existing Catholic churches were "reformed".
Only in the 19th century did Catholics settle again in Rommelshausen and Stetten. In 1917 there were 50 Catholics in Stetten and 120 in Rommelshausen. The Catholic churches were built in 1954 (Stetten) and 1960 (Rommelshausen).
In addition to Protestant and Catholic churches , there are two New Apostolic churches , one Evangelical Methodist church and two regional church communities .
politics
Municipal council
The municipal council in Kernen has 22 members. The local elections on May 26, 2019 led to the following final result. The municipal council consists of the elected voluntary councilors and the mayor as chairman. The mayor is entitled to vote in the municipal council.
Parties and constituencies |
% 2019 |
Seats 2019 |
% 2014 |
Seats 2014 |
||
CDU | Christian Democratic Union of Germany | 27.50 | 6th | 31.58 | 7th | |
UFW | Independent Free Voters | 23.07 | 5 | 23.93 | 5 | |
OGL | Open green list | 18.58 | 4th | 17.51 | 4th | |
SPD | Social Democratic Party of Germany | 16.13 | 4th | 20.79 | 5 | |
PFB | Non-party alliance | 14.72 | 3 | 6.18 | 1 | |
total | 100.0 | 22nd | 100.0 | 22nd | ||
voter turnout | 61.39% | 52.88% |
coat of arms
Description: Kernen's coat of arms, awarded with the flag by the Rems-Murr-Kreis district office on January 3, 1977, shows two parallel rows of rhombs on a yellow background. The rows run diagonally from bottom to top, each consist of 3 rhombuses and are blue (top row) and black.
Meaning: The coat of arms was formed from the two existing coats of arms of Rommelshausen and Stetten. The diamonds symbolize the "teckschen diamonds". Both districts belonged to the domain of the dukes of Teck for some time.
The former coat of arms of Rommelshausen has the teck diamonds in the lower part, yellow on black. The colors stand for colors of old Württemberg . In the upper part the letter R stands for Rommelshausen. The coat of arms was awarded to Rommelshausen by the Reich Governor in 1938 .
Since 1900, Stetten has had the teck diamonds in blue on a yellow background in its coat of arms. These come from the coat of arms of the Truchsessen von Stetten. The oldest known coat of arms of Stetten, from the 18th century, bears the initials ST , a star and deer antlers . Another coat of arms from the same century shows four stars and deer antlers.
Town twinning
- Saint-Pierre-d'Albigny , France (since 1972)
- Saint-Rambert-d'Albon , France
- Masvingo , Zimbabwe
- Dombóvár , Hungary (since 1991)
Economy and Infrastructure
For a long time, Rommelshausen and Stetten were shaped by agriculture and viticulture . Loess and Keuperboden are located in the vicinity of both places and are ideal for agriculture and viticulture. The importance of viticulture for Stetten was first documented in 1379:
- The Stettener Brotwasser is one of the best Riesling locations in the country. Its sandstone terraces lie directly below the ruins of the Y-Burg - where the first snow melts in the Remstal.
- The unusual location name comes from a lady-in-waiting who resided in Stetten at the end of the 17th century. She devised a ruse to hide her wine consumption from the courtly public. She simply had the jug intended for the bread water filled with wine. And every time she dipped the dry bread into the supposed water, she could - without anyone noticing - take a long sip of wine. Since the lady's servants always ran into the cellar instead of the well to refill the jug, the little ruse did not remain hidden for very long and her favorite wine was named "bread water". (Source: Hofkammer-Kellerei)
see also: Württemberg (wine-growing region) and Württemberg wine route .
As a result of industrialization , industry also moved into both districts. Rommelshausen was preferred in the development of the local industry, as it had had its own stop on the Remstal Railway since 1861 .
traffic
North of Rommelshausen, federal road 29 (next junction: Beinstein) branches off from federal road 14 (next junction: Fellbach Süd).
Kernen is connected to the Stuttgart S-Bahn network by the S-Bahn line S2 ( Schorndorf - Stuttgart - Airport - Filderstadt ) . The Rommelshausen stop is located in the municipality of Kernen (the Stetten-Beinstein stop is on the Weinstädter district).
Furthermore, Kernen is connected by five regular bus routes with Esslingen am Neckar (X20), Weinstadt (219), Waiblingen (X20, 210, 211) and Fellbach (210, 212). These are operated by the Schlienz company. There is also a night bus line (N31), which connects the community to the surrounding towns at night (on weekends and public holidays).
Established businesses
Nowadays the largest employers are Diakonie Stetten and Schetter Haustechnik GmbH. In the district of Stetten there is the highest rated Greek restaurant in Germany according to Gault Millau (2 toques, 16/20 points, 1 star in the Michelin Guide ), which is run by Joannis Malathounis .
Formerly resident companies
The former Willy Rüsch GmbH in Rommelshausen is now part of Teleflex Medical GmbH and is based in Fellbach. The Ahoj - Brausepulver the former Robert Friedel GmbH ( Frigeo ) is no longer produced in the district Rommelshausen.
Educational institutions
Kernen has a primary school (Haldenschule) and a secondary school (Rumoldrealschule) in the Rommelshausen district. There is a primary school (Karl Mauch School) in the district of Stetten. In Stetten the Diakonie Stetten runs a school for mentally handicapped children and young people. The Theodor Dierlamm School is mainly attended by the severely disabled and the Schlossschule by slightly disabled pupils.
At the age of 15 from June to October 1892, with a brief interruption, Hermann Hesse, who later won the Nobel Prize for Literature, was a very sensitive and mentally talented youngster who was forcibly taken to the mental hospital in Stetten by his parents. He worked in the garden and helped teach the mentally handicapped children.
The Volkshochschule Unteres Remstal e. V. and the music school Unteres Remstal e. V. have branches in kernels.
Culture and sights
Buildings
- The Yburg above the valley
- The Glockenkelter in Stetten
- The Bädle in the center of Stetten
- The Gasthof zum Ochsen , the former inn of the Lords of Stetten
- The Gasthaus zum Pfeffer with wall paintings in Stetten
- Stetten Castle was built in 1384, and it is now home to the Diakonie Stetten .
- The villa rustica on the Rommelshauser district
- The St. Vitus Church in Stetten
- The old town hall of Stetten
- The old rectory in the center of Rommelshausen (current police station)
- The Mauritius Church in Rommelshausen
Museums
- Museum under the Y-Burg : Local history, people from Kernen, handicrafts in the Rems Valley , Pfeffer von Stetten , Karl Mauch (Africa researcher), Joseph Mauch (polar expedition), Wasserburg Stetten, Ludwig Schlaich ( Diakonie Stetten ), Jörg Schlaich (civil engineer)
Stetten Wine Trail
Vineyard tour of around one hour; About 30 display boards provide information about interesting facts and curiosities about wine and the varieties grown here.
Remstal Garden Show 2019
From May 10 to October 20, 2019, a green project of the state of Baden-Württemberg took place in Remstal , in which Kernen also participated. This Remstal garden show 2019 is one of the "small" garden shows that alternate annually with the state garden shows.
In this context, in addition to the town center redevelopment of Stetten, the palace gardens were redesigned. Kernen took part in the “16 stations”, the garden show's architectural project, with the “Wengerter Häuschen”, which was built as a vantage point in a vineyard in the west of Stetten and is reminiscent of the little vineyard cottages that characterize the Remstal landscape. Furthermore, the "ducal marble run" was built with a length of around 800 meters. In addition, other sculptures by Karl Ulrich Nuss were set up.
Sports
The Spvgg Rommelshausen was founded in 1907 and has around 1,800 members. The athletics department is the largest, followed by football and gymnastics.
All three take part in both national and international competitions.
Personalities
Honorary Citizen of Kernens
- Günter Haußmann (* 1934 in Trossingen; † 2014), Mayor of Rommelshausen (1964 to 1975) and Stetten-Rommelshausen or Kernen (1977 to 1992); Honorary citizen since 1992
Honorary citizen of Rommelshausen
- Willy Rüsch, industrialist in the catheter industry
- Paul Käßer (1904–1997), Mayor 1937–1945 and 1948–1964
Honorary citizen of Stetten
- Karl Mauch (1837–1875), Africa explorer; toured the Transvaal , Natal and Southern Rhodesia between 1865 and 1872
Sons and daughters of the church
- Johann David Pfeffer (1769–1842), minstrel
- Gottlob August Dietelbach (1806–1870), medalist and royal court engraver
- Karl Mauch (1837–1875), Africa explorer
- Otto Pfleiderer (1839–1908), Protestant theologian
- Paul von Wunderlich (1844–1930), born in Stetten, general superintendent of Heilbronn
- Immanuel Herrmann (1870–1945), politician (SPD)
- Hermann Medinger (1900–1979), resistance fighter against National Socialism, participant in the Stuttgart cable attack
- Otto Linsenmaier (1918–2009), Württemberg viticulture expert
- Jörg Schlaich (* 1934), civil engineer and professor at the University of Stuttgart
- Klaus Schlaich (1937–2005), legal scholar
- Karl-Heinz Umbach (* 1944), physicist and researcher with a focus on clothing physiology
- Wolfgang Dietrich (* 1948), entrepreneur and project spokesman for the Stuttgart – Ulm rail project
- Rüdiger Faul (* 1948), aerodynamicist and engineer
- Dorothee Schlegel (* 1959), politician (SPD), member of the Bundestag
- Christof Landmesser (* 1959), Protestant theologian
- Bernd Bachofer , (1967 *) chef and an author with a star in the Michelin guide awarded
literature
- Frieder Gadesmann : All people want to live . In the S. ua, looking for life 7/8. Pp. 85ff, ISBN 3-425-07867-4
Web links
Footnotes
- ↑ State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg - Population by nationality and gender on December 31, 2018 (CSV file) ( help on this ).
- ^ The state of Baden-Württemberg. Official description by district and municipality. Volume III: Stuttgart District, Middle Neckar Regional Association. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1978, ISBN 3-17-004758-2 , pp. 525-526.
- ↑ Main statute of the municipality of Kernen im Remstal from July 19, 1984
- ↑ State Statistical Office, area since 1988 according to actual use for cores in the Rems Valley.
- ↑ a b Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality register 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. 464 .
- ↑ Ortlexikon Baden-Württemberg: Kernen im Remstal ( Memento of the original from April 2, 2015 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. , bsz-bw.de, accessed: March 1, 2015
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, ISBN 3-935383-92-4 , p. 8.
- ↑ Sensational find in the Klosterstrasse newspaper publisher Waiblingen, June 22, 2018
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 13.
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 18.
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 20.
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 15.
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 25.
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 29.
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 35.
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 11.
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 36.
- ↑ Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 102.
- ^ A b Erwin Bocherle: From the history of Stetten in the Remstal and its corridors. Greiner, Remshalden, 2005, p. 97.
- ↑ David Pfeffer History Workshop - Stories from the history of Stetten - The bombing raid in March 1944 in the newsletter of the municipality of Kernen from October 28, 2015 (PDF) ( Memento of the original from May 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ David Pfeffer History Workshop - Stories from the history of Stetten - The invasion of the US Army (1st part) in the newsletter of the municipality of Kernen from April 22, 2015 (PDF) ( Memento of the original from May 5, 2016 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.
- ↑ David Pfeffer History Workshop - Stories from the history of Stetten - The invasion of the US Army (2nd part) in the newsletter of the municipality of Kernen from April 29, 2015 (PDF) ( Memento of the original from May 5, 2016 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.
- ↑ David Pfeffer history workshop - Stories from the history of Stetten - The liberation of the Krakauers in the newsletter of the municipality of Kernen from May 6, 2015 (PDF) ( Memento of the original from May 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and still Not checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ ITEOS electoral information
- ↑ Ortlexikon Baden-Württemberg: Kernen im Remstal ( Memento of the original from April 2, 2015 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. , bsz-bw.de, accessed: March 1, 2015
- ↑ Klemens Stadler: Volume 8 of German arms; Federal Republic of Germany - German coat of arms; Federal Republic of Germany: The municipal coats of arms of the federal state of Baden-Württemberg Angelsachsen-Verlag, 1971, p. 98.
- ↑ Gault Millau article on Greek cuisine in Germany ( Memento from November 20, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Hans-Joachim Schechinger: That's how much Kernen spends on the Remstal garden show. Zeitungsverlag Waiblingen, May 16, 2018, accessed on July 12, 2019 .
- ↑ Architecture with 16 stations on remstal.de. Retrieved July 12, 2019.
- ↑ Isabelle Butschek: Remstal Garden Show in Kernen - The XXL marble fun is a huge success. Stuttgarter Nachrichten, July 12, 2019, accessed on July 12, 2019 .
- ↑ ZVW - An encounter with the sculptor Karl Ulrich Nuss and his work with the city and art guide Toni Herm in Kernen ( Memento from June 18, 2019 in the Internet Archive )