Neufeld on the Leitha

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Borough
Neufeld on the Leitha
coat of arms Austria map
Coat of arms of Neufeld an der Leitha
Neufeld an der Leitha (Austria)
Neufeld on the Leitha
Basic data
Country: Austria
State : Burgenland
Political District : Eisenstadt area
License plate : EU
Surface: 4.24 km²
Coordinates : 47 ° 52 '  N , 16 ° 23'  E Coordinates: 47 ° 52 '4 "  N , 16 ° 22' 36"  E
Height : 230  m above sea level A.
Residents : 3,486 (January 1, 2020)
Population density : 822 inhabitants per km²
Postal code : 2491
Area code : 02624
Community code : 1 03 09
Address of the
municipal administration:
Hauptstrasse 55
2491 Neufeld an der Leitha
Website: www.neufeld-leitha.at
politics
Mayor : Michael Lampel ( SPÖ )
Municipal Council : ( 2017 )
(23 members)
18th
3
2
18th 
A total of 23 seats
Location of Neufeld an der Leitha in the Eisenstadt-Umgebung district
Breitenbrunn am Neusiedler See Donnerskirchen Großhöflein Hornstein Klingenbach Leithaprodersdorf Loretto Mörbisch am See Müllendorf Neufeld an der Leitha Oggau am Neusiedler See Oslip Purbach am Neusiedler See Sankt Margarethen im Burgenland Schützen am Gebirge Siegendorf Steinbrunn Stotzing Trausdorf an der Wulka Wimpassing an der Leitha Wulkaprodersdorf Zagersdorf Zillingtal Eisenstadt Rust BurgenlandLocation of the municipality of Neufeld an der Leitha in the Eisenstadt-Umgebung district (clickable map)
About this picture
Template: Infobox municipality in Austria / maintenance / site plan image map
Source: Municipal data from Statistics Austria

BW

Neufeld an der Leitha is a town with 3486 inhabitants (as of January 1, 2020) in Burgenland in the Eisenstadt-Umgebung district in Austria . The Hungarian place name of the city is Lajtaújfalu , the Croatian place name is Novo Selo .

geography

Geographical location

The city is located in northern Burgenland on the Leitha River near the state capital Eisenstadt . Neufeld an der Leitha is the only place in the municipality. The northeastern Neufelder See is a delightful artificial body of water that arose from a former lignite mine (1807 to 1932). In the southeast is the Bauernsee, which was also created by coal mining (1948 to 1953). The two places Ebenfurth and Neufeld have grown together and are only separated by the Leitha, which also forms the natural border between Lower Austria and Burgenland . Similarly, to exclude Steinbrunn belonging district Steinbrunn new settlement directly to the Neufeld in and for those unfamiliar to recognize only place signs.

Neighboring communities

Ebenfurth (Lower Austria) Pottendorf (Lower Austria) Chert
Neighboring communities
Zillingdorf (Lower Austria) Steinbrunn

history

There were early Bronze Age burials type Leithaprodersdorf group secured (2300-2000 BC), this discovery marked the beginning of Neufeld prehistory . A Middle Bronze Age warrior grave with rapier sword came from the period 1600 to 1300 BC . A late Bronze Age burial ground with a rare archer's grave (older urn field culture 1200 to 1050 BC) was found on the west side of the Bauernsee, this find can be classified between 1300 and 750 BC. The extension of the burial ground suggests a settlement. The beginning of the development of a Celtic cultural area east of the Leitha is shown by a warrior grave dating from the early La Tène period (450 to the birth of Christ). The Institute for Prehistory and Protohistory at the University of Vienna examined the Leitha area between Wiener Neustadt and Bruck an der Leitha from the plane with funding from the FWF and the light detection and ranging method in order to locate as yet unknown sites (individual project P18674) Results are published in a habilitation thesis . Before the birth of Christ, the area was part of the Celtic Kingdom of Noricum and belonged to the surroundings of the Celtic hill settlement Burg on the Schwarzenbacher Burgberg .

Later under the Romans, today's Neufeld was then in the province of Pannonia , a Roman side road from Ödenburg (Skarbantia) via Baden (Aquae) to Vienna (Vindobona) led over the Leitha near Neufeld-Ebenfurth. The beginning of Neufeld's history was the discovery of a coin with a picture of Empress Faustina II, dated 161 AD. Another evidence of human presence in historical times is the discovery of a coin with the image of Emperor Valentinian I , who was emperor in the west of the Roman Empire from 364 to 375.

In the early Middle Ages , empires were formed by Asian equestrian peoples such as the Avars, who ruled Pannonia in the 6th century, and that of the Hungarians , who from the late 9th century repeatedly invaded the Leitha crossings at Neudörfl and Neufeld-Ebenfurth ( Wiener Neustädter Pforte ).

Death of Frederick II in the Battle of the Leitha (15th century)

On June 15, 1246, the Battle of the Leitha probably took place at Neufelder Hotter , in which Friedrich II fell, with which the Babenbergs in the male line died out.

At Neufelder Hotter, a small village with the name Sebreth is mentioned for the first time in 1245, which was also called Seyfried, Seyfrieds, Sefred, Seibersdorf, Sifridsdorf, Seberstorff. The naming is not clear, there are two namesake Sebreth von Antau and Syffried von Haslowe . Sebreth was mentioned in a document for the last time in 1309 and belonged to a branch of the Hungarian noble family Osl . A meierhof-like villa from this period was called Ungerdorf (also Ungardorf), the first documented mention of it dates to August 28, 1290 and happened in connection with the Ebenfurther toll and aid against Hungarian attacks. Both settlements were devastated .

Francis III Count Nádasdy around 1656

The oldest mention of the Neüfeldt is yet Ried name and is found in Hornsteiner land register.

After the Hungarian Diet in Pressburg had decided the return of the Hornstein County to the Kingdom of Hungary , Franz III. Count Nádasdy expelled the baron Rudolf von Stotzingen from his mercenaries on September 26, 1647 . A Hungarian court pronounced Franz III. on June 3, 1648 the rule against a payment of 150,000  guilders , Rudolf von Stotzingen received the amount in 1650.

As early as 1647/1648 3 houses are said to have existed on Neufelder Hotter: Because there was a village between Hornstain and Ebenfurth, if aniezo in the Werkh is to be found again, 3 Heüser buildings have already been rebuilt . The Hornstein landlord, Count Franz III. Nádasdy laid out today's Neufeld settlement on a lordship (the area of the deserted town of Ungerdorf). The earliest new field consisted of a fort , a rural part and a Judenstadtl and was designed as a narrow village . The first documentary mention is March 1, 1651, in an accounting and expenditure book of the Princely Esterházy manor, this date is given as the start of a wine license for Neufeld. The settlement can be assumed earlier with certainty, because judges (~ mayor) and jury (~ community councils) are listed as existing for March 1, 1651.

1653–1655 the houses were handed over to Portuguese Jews . A determination of the rural property in Neufeld in 1656 counted 17 older and 10 younger houses or farms.

In 1666 Nádasdy joined the magnate conspiracy , which he headed from 1667. After the crackdown, he was arrested in Pottendorf Castle - he had bought the Pottendorf estate in 1665 - and beheaded with the sword on April 30, 1671 for high treason . As a result, the Hornstein lordship was confiscated for the imperial chamber property and pledged to Count Gottlieb von Windisch-Graetz , Georg Széchenyi and Michael von Althan .

Coal mining since 1807

In 1807 the mining of lignite coal began. The annual production in 1808 was 3460  cents (1 cents = 56 kg). The fresh coal contained 25% pit moisture, 16-20% ash, and 5-6% pyrites . When burned, the pebbles produce hydrogen sulfide, which was responsible for the smog in Neufeld. The high child mortality rate for this reason reached its peak in the 1920s, a quarter of children did not reach the age of 14.

The horse-drawn railway from the coal loading area (today's train station) to the Ebenfurth junction began operations on March 20, 1872. On October 28, 1879, the Ödenburg -Ebenfurth section of the ROEE was opened.

Neufeld (top left) around 1873 (recording sheet of the state survey )

Textile industry since 1889

The joint stock company of the first Hungarian jute spinning and weaving mill started production in the Neufeld plant on October 16, 1889 with around 1000 workers - Plant II was opened on February 15, 1899. After the end of the First World War , the First Austrian Jute Spinning and Weaving Mill in Vienna , the First Austrian Hemp Spinning Mill, String and Rope Factory Pöchlarn -Lieser and Duschnitz and the First Hungarian Jute Milling and Weaving Mill in Neufeld became the Hemp, Jute and Textile Industry Corporation , HITIAG for short , merged.

At the turn of the year 1903/1904 the first mining phase ended, production fell steadily and the repair costs for the water pump were too high, the mine drowned.

After the First World War a troubled time followed for German West Hungary . The proclamation of the Republic of Austria on November 12, 1918 was followed on December 6, 1918 by the proclamation of the German Republic of Heinzenland (western Hungary with the capital Oedenburg ) in Mattersburg . In Neufeld, after trying to distribute rifles, ammunition and leaflets, Lieutenant Erich Trenner of the Wiener Neustädter Stadtwehr and three men were arrested in addition to the arrest of the Neufeld gendarmes, tax guards and the station officer, and transported to Oedenburg.

On March 23, 1919, the Hungarian Communist and Social Democratic Parties merged to form the Hungarian Socialist Party , which marked the beginning of the Hungarian Soviet Republic . In addition to the propaganda, there were other noticeable consequences for the Hungarian border town of Neufeld, such as the confiscation of the lignite mining , the imposition of a complete border barrier on April 3 and the reinforcement of the occupation after a shooting of the people's readiness at the Leithabrücke in May. After the abdication of the council government on July 27th and a short social-democratic interlude, which came to an abrupt end with the occupation of Budapest by Romanian troops, the Entente forced a concentration government on August 6th, 1919 under the Christian socialist Stephan Friedrich , this was the beginning of the white Revolution .

Like the whole of Burgenland, the place belonged to Hungary (German West Hungary) until 1920/1921 . Since 1898 had due to the Magyarization of the government in Budapest of Hungarian name Laijtaújfalu be used. After the end of the First World War, after tough negotiations, German-West Hungary was awarded to Austria in the Treaties of St. Germain and Trianon in 1919. The place has belonged to the newly founded federal state of Burgenland since 1921 (see also the history of Burgenland ).

Start of coal mining in 1916

The second mining phase lasted from 1916 to 1932 and the shutdown occurred for reasons similar to the first phase. By 1934, the pits that had grown together in 1922/1923 became the Neufelder See (Lake I). The third mining phase began in 1948, with funds from the Marshall Plan, the economically viable deposit was exhausted in 1953. The Bauernsee (Lake II) was created from this pit .

In 1971/72 the jute spinning and weaving mill in Neufeld was shut down and a factory for refining textile yarn was set up with the remaining machines and a German partner. HITIAG held 50% of the successor company AUTEXA. On July 31, 1985, when AUTEXA went bankrupt, the existence of HITIAG in Neufeld ended. Parts of the former HITIAG factory halls have been used as a production site by Myrtle Mill, today's Österreichische Kuvertindustrie Ges.mbH, since 1972 ; in 1989 this production was relocated to Hirm .

Neufeld an der Leitha was named a “city municipality” in 1997 (by VO 23, market municipality 38/1987).

The city has been a Climate Alliance municipality since 2001 . The common goal of the alliance partners is to preserve the global climate.

By reenacting the sinking of the Titanic on the Neufeldersee with Mayor Lampel as Jack Dawson - originally played by Leonardo DiCaprio - the Krone Hit community duel was won and Neufeld became the coolest municipality in 2007.

Population development


Culture and sights

  • Evangelical Parish Church Neufeld an der Leitha : A neo-Gothic sacred building from 1904 with a three-bay nave , a choir with a 5/8 end and a roof turret over a high gable facade.
  • Catholic parish church Neufeld an der Leitha hl. Michael: The church was built in 1967.
  • Landmark field chapel: It was first mentioned in a document in 1760 and the field chapel is one of the oldest surviving buildings in Neufeld.
  • Clock tower monument: The clock tower of the former HITIAG was erected as a memorial after it was demolished in September 1997. The clock tower was depicted as if the entire factory had sunk and only the same one was sticking out. The memorial is intended to remind future generations of the industrial heyday of the former industrial stronghold of Neufeld.
  • 1. Burgenland Bakery Museum: The museum building has been used as a bakery from before 1899 until today. The tools on display date from the end of the 19th century to around 1955.
  • Way of the Cross : It was built by the Neufelder Ratsch'nbuam and leads from Marterl to the field chapel with a total of 15 stations. The inauguration took place on June 29, 2005. The first 14 stations are based on the traditional representation, while the last station is the one in the 20th . century arisen resurrection of Jesus Christ from the grave shows.
  • Trinity column: with the inscription: “Glory to God in the highest”; flanked by Saint Anthony (left) and Saint Francis (right); bears the inscription Built 1900 on the reverse

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

Established businesses

The J. Medinger & Sons company started here in 1886 with the production of tartaric acid and ammonia for the viticulture industry. After the Second World War, the buildings were almost completely destroyed and after the reconstruction, they specialized in the production of fluorocarbons . The company has been cooperating with the Chemie Austria shipyard since 1983 and with Waldheim Pharmazeutika GmbH from 1984 onwards .

Sanochemia Pharmazeutika AG , founded in 1990 , now has its synthesis and production site here.

In the 20th century, HITIAG (Hanf-, Jute- und Textilindustrie-Aktiengesellschaft) was located here right next to the chemical products factory and until the same was closed, production was carried out here with up to 1988 employees (highest level, in 1928). The production halls were demolished in 1996/97 and today the "clock tower monument" commemorates this industrial era.

education

  • Kindergarten : The Neufelder Kindergarten has six groups and a day nursery .
  • Elementary school : The Lollipop elementary school with the school code 103101 has eight classes. The mascot is "Mr. Lollipop ”, a green dragon with a permanent lollipop . The Neufelder primary school focuses on project orientation and teamwork . Social learning and inclusion are very important. There is the possibility of visiting a nearby day care center after class , where approx. 75 places are available.
  • Secondary school : The ICT-HS Neufeld of the town with the school code 103012 has eight classes and has been converted into a new secondary school, the focus is on IT .

Sports

  • Schachklub Neufeld-Steinbrunn - The roots of the ASKÖ Schachklub Neufeld / Steinbrunn lie in the Neufeld workers' chess club of the 1st Republic. The re-establishment took place in 1959. Participation in the championship in Lower Austria - 1st class south until 1964. The Burgenland Chess Association was founded in 1965 with significant participation from Neufeld officials. Merger with the neighboring municipality of Steinbrunn in 1987; six-time national team and four-time individual championship winner. Currently participating with three teams in the Burgenland team championship
  • Football Club ASV Neufeld - The ArbeiterSport Verein Neufeld was founded in 1923 and emerged from the socialist youth movement . The Neufeld workers' sports club was first founded in 1895. The ASV took part in the State League B (1952/53) and finished this championship in last place. In the season 1972/1973 the formative influence of the ASV on the Burgenland football ended, currently the ASV plays in the 2nd class north. Since 2015, ASV Neufeld has organized the international " Geza Gallos junior memorial tournament" for U8 and U10 teams every year .
  • Tennis Club TC Neufeld - The Tennis Club Neufeld was founded on May 25, 1959. In the past few years, the club has been the national champion for both women and men. Various events such as the “Lakes Trophy” are held every year. The men's team currently plays in the state league B.
  • Neufelder Triathlon - This has been one of the oldest Austrian triathlon sports events since 1988 and the state championships have been held several times on the shores of Lake Neufelder See in recent years.
  • Leitharadweg - The 61 km long path leads past the Neufelder See and the Bauernsee .

politics

Municipal council

Local council election
 %
80
70
60
50
40
30th
20th
10
0
73.85%
(-0.16  % p )
16.09%
(-2.69  % p )
10.06%
(+ 2.84  % p )
2012

2017


The council comprises a total of 23 members on the basis of population.

Results of the municipal council elections since 1997
Political party 2017 2012 2007 2002 1997
Sti. % M. Sti. % M. Sti. % M. Sti. % M. Sti. % M.
SPÖ 1285 73.85 18th 1210 74.01 18th 1058 67.95 17th 1284 74.05 18th 795 50.51 12
ÖVP 280 16.09 3 307 18.78 4th 304 19.52 5 339 19.55 4th not running
FPÖ 175 10.06 2 118 7.22 1 109 7.00 1 111 6.40 1 451 28.65 6th
Green not running not running 60 3.85 0 not running not running
LEFT not running not running 26th 1.67 0 not running not running
VP new not running not running not running not running 328 20.84 5
Eligible voters 2789 2774 2704 2590 2341
voter turnout 67.48% 65.61% 62.24% 72.24% 74.50%

City council

In addition to Mayor Michael Lampel (SPÖ) and Vice Mayor Johanna Auer (SPÖ), Sonja Barwitius (SPÖ), Peter Fink (ÖVP), Hans Linzbauer (SPÖ), Klaus Pleninger (SPÖ) and Kurt Strametz (SPÖ) also belong to the city council.

The local council elected Ludwig Herbert Komornik (SPÖ) as the local treasurer and David Kaufmann (SPÖ) as the environmental council.

mayor

Michael Lampel (SPÖ) is mayor of the municipality. On December 6, 2006, he succeeded Gottfried Koos (SPÖ), who had headed the municipality since 2000. In the direct election of the mayor , Lampel was confirmed in office with 79.95%. He received 6.10% more votes than his party. His two competitors Peter Fink (ÖVP) and Christian Kerper (FPÖ) did not get beyond 13.42% and 6.63% respectively.

Vice Mayor is Johanna Auer (SPÖ).

The head of the city office is Rudolf Tschirk.

Chronicle of the mayor

from to Surname Political party annotation
1923 1930 Franz Schön SDAP
1930 1934 Karl Hammer SDAP
1934 1938 Johann Bella VF Corporate state, dictatorship
1938 1938 Franz Angerer VF Corporate state, dictatorship
Michael German NSDAP Local group leader , dictatorship
1945 1946 Franz Ertl jun. KPÖ Local headquarters in Ebenfurth
1946 1950 Josef Lechner KPÖ Party agreement
1950 1972 Josef Csech SPÖ
1972 1980 Wilhelm Lajos SPÖ
1980 1987 Franz Mikulits SPÖ
1987 2000 Mario de Martin SPÖ
2000 2006 Gottfried Koos SPÖ
since 2006 Michael Lampel SPÖ

Political development

The 1st party congress of the Social Democratic Party of Burgenland took place on May 17, 1922 in Neufeld.

Mayor Franz Schön handed over his office to Karl Hammer on May 25, 1930 (after unproven allegations of corruption). The last democratic municipal council election took place on May 3, 1931, the KPÖ was able to gain at the expense of the SPÖ.

As a result of the February uprising , the Social Democratic Party and all of its sub-organizations and affiliated associations were disbanded, and all activities in the interests of social democracy were declared illegal. All elected MPs, mandataries and officials of the SDAP were dismissed and replaced by Christian social politicians or representatives of the Fatherland Front . On August 28, 1934, Josef Bella was elected mayor by appointed councilors.

Ballot from April 10, 1938

Franz Angerer, the last mayor in the corporate state , took over from Johann Bella and held office for barely a month. His term of office ended with the military occupation of Austria on March 12, 1938 by the Wehrmacht . On April 10, 1938, a referendum took place on the connection , which had already been completed , the community result shows no significant deviation from the overall result of 1692 voters out of 1707 voters - only yes votes. Like the whole of northern Burgenland, Neufeld was added to Lower Austria - the later Reichsgau Niederdonau - by Reich law on October 15, 1938 . The structure of the administration was regulated by the Ostmarkgesetz of April 14, 1939, which resulted in an allocation of the municipality of Neufeld an der Leitha to the Eisenstadt district in the Reichsgau Niederdonau according to the NSDAP structure .

After a short battle, Soviet troops occupied Neufeld on April 1, 1945 at 4:30 p.m. On April 4, 1945, the KPÖ and SPÖ formed the first municipal administration of Neufeld, which was subordinate to the Ebenfurther local command . On July 31, 1945, the ÖVP received two mandates in the provisional municipal administration in which three parties were represented. In the National Council election on November 25, the KPÖ received only 5% of the votes - in Neufeld it was 14.81% of 1263 valid votes. Josef Lechner (KPÖ) became the new mayor on July 2, 1946, succeeding Franz Ertl jun. Josef Csech (SPÖ) became vice-mayor and the municipal council was composed on the basis of a party agreement. On August 17, 1950, Josef Lechner resigned from his office, his interim successor was Josef Csech, who also remained mayor after the local council election that followed shortly thereafter. On November 26, 1950, the first free and democratic municipal council election since May 3, 1931 took place. The result in mandates was: SPÖ 13, ÖVP 3 and KPÖ 1, what is significant is that the KPÖ lost all 13 mayor posts in Burgenland in this election. On September 8, 1972, Josef Csech was adopted by the local council, he was the longest-serving mayor of Neufeld.

After the number of mandates was increased from 17 to 21, the distribution after the municipal council election on October 29, 1972 was: SPÖ 15, ÖVP 5, KPÖ 1, Wilhelm Lajos was the new mayor. In the election on October 23, 1977, the KPÖ's mandate was transferred to the ÖVP, which was the best result historically for the ÖVP. On October 25, 1979 there were attacks on the mayor from his own parliamentary group; on October 2, the SPÖ parliamentary group's motion of no confidence against Lajos, who had not complied with the resignation calls from his own ranks, was rejected in the local council (8 against , 8 for, 3 abstentions). On April 14, 1980, Mayor Wilhelm Lajos - who had meanwhile been excluded from the SPÖ - was overthrown by a motion of no confidence, with 13 votes against 8.

Franz Mikulits was elected mayor on April 24, 1980 against the votes of the ÖVP, thus ending the paralysis of the municipal council. In the subsequent municipal council election (October 24, 1982) a mandate was transferred from the ÖVP to the SPÖ, Franz Mikulits was re-elected - he announced his resignation on January 2, 1987. The municipal council elected Mario de Martin as his successor on January 26th. After the municipal council election on October 25, 1987 (SPÖ 16, ÖVP 5), Mario de Martin was elected mayor by the municipal council on November 5 with five abstentions. In the municipal council election on November 18, 1992, the mayor was determined by direct election for the first time , de Martin was able to prevail with 80.87%, in the municipal council the mandates were: SPÖ 19, ÖVP 4.

The Neufeld local group of the FPÖ was constituted on February 17, 1997. Mayor Mario de Martin was re-elected on October 5, 1997, the FPÖ managed to join the local council with six mandates (SPÖ 12, FPÖ 6, ÖVP 5). Mario de Martin resigned on February 25, 2000, Vice Mayor Gottfried Koos was entrusted with the continuation of official business, and in the direct mayor election on June 18, he was able to prevail with 62.3%. The elections on October 6th brought a clear confirmation from Mayor Koos with a share of the vote of 85.13%, the FPÖ also lost five seats and the ÖVP one, all of which went to the SPÖ, resulting in a new division: SPÖ 18, ÖVP 4 FPÖ 1. After Gottfried Koos resigned on November 15, 2006, Michael Lampel was elected the new mayor in a secret ballot with 22 votes in favor (no votes against). In the direct election in 2007 (see current composition ) he received 80.97 % of votes.

coat of arms

The coat of arms is held in the local colors blue-gold-red.

Blazon : “In the shield (seal field) on a floor the standing figure of St. Archangel Michael (church patron) in the costume of a Roman legionnaire. The saint wears a flaming sword in his right hand and a balance of soul in his left. A flower grows out of the ground to the right of the figure. "

Personalities

  • Hans Bögl (1899–1974), Austrian politician (SPÖ), Governor of Burgenland, Member of the National Council (IX. GP )
  • Franz Erntl (1902–1990), painter
  • Herbert W. König (1908–1985), Austrian physicist and electrical engineer, pioneer of microwave technology and lasers in Austria
  • Egon Kollarik (* 1957), Austrian marksman , 3 × European champion , 1 × world champion , 4 × runner-
  • Josef Kótay (1909–1980), Burgenland military bandmaster
  • Ludwig Reader (1890–1946), Austrian politician (SPÖ) and governor of Burgenland
  • Jürgen Mansberger (* 1988), Austrian soccer player
  • Franz Mikulits (* 1949), Austrian politician (SPÖ), member of the Burgenland Landtag 1983–1987
  • Franz Schön (1893–1957), Austrian politician (SDAP), member of the National Council (I. GP)
  • Fred Sinowatz (1929–2008), Austrian historian, SPÖ politician, Minister for Education and Art, 1983 to 1986 Federal Chancellor of Austria
  • Hans Wastl (1916–1986), Austrian politician (SPÖ), Deputy Governor of Burgenland, Member of the Federal Council (1949–1953), Member of the National Council (X. GP)
  • Oliver Wimmer (* 1991), Austrian musician and Starmania winner 2009

literature

  • Albert G. Absenger: 350 years of Neufeld. A chronicle-like representation of history. Municipality of Neufeld an der Leitha, Neufeld an der Leitha 2002.
  • Albert Gernot Absenger: Chronicle Neufeld III. Compression of the entire local history as a follow-up and extension of the long and short version of the chronicle-like representation published in 2002, Stadtgemeinde Neufeld an der Leitha, Neufeld an der Leitha 2007.
  • Reinhold Arthofer: Festschrift 100 Years Evangelical Church AB Neufeld an der Leitha. 1904-2004. Self-published by the Evangelical Parish of Eisenstadt, Eisenstadt 2004, ISBN 3-85374-368-4 .
  • Peter Krajasich: The Jewish population of Eisenstadt and Neufeld in 1735. In: Hanns Schmid (Hrsg.): Urgeschichte - Römerzeit - Mittelalter. Volume 2: Festschrift Alois-J. Ohrberger . Office of the Burgenland Provincial Government, Department 7, State Museum, Eisenstadt 1985, ISBN 3-85405-095-X (= Scientific papers from Burgenland . Volume 71). Pp. 241–248, PDF on ZOBODAT
  • Harald Prickler: On the early history of the Neufelder industry. Burgenland Office. State government, Dept. 7 - Culture, Wiss. and archive, main lecture Landesarchiv and Landesbibliothek, Eisenstadt 2008, ISBN 978-3-901517-59-4 , ( Burgenland Research 97).

Web links

Commons : Neufeld an der Leitha  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Lidar-aided archaeological prospecting . Institute for Prehistory and Protohistory at the University of Vienna. Retrieved September 14, 2019.
  2. General Topography of the Burgenland, III. Volume, The Mattersburg District, Eisenstadt 1981, p. 350
  3. ^ Esterházy family archive, Prot. 683, Hornsteiner Grundbuch from 1624, Folio 399.
  4. ^ Hungarian State Archives , Esterházy Family Archives , Princely Line, Rep. 11, Fasc. A No. 6, Uet, C87 / 25
  5. Princely Esterházy Archive Forchtenstein, Official Protocols, Protocol 6822
  6. Absenger Albert Gernot, Chronik Neufeld III, Neufeld 2007, p. 20.
  7. ^ Chronicle Neufeld III, Neufeld an der Leitha 2007, p. 75.
  8. Chronik Neufeld III, Neufeld an der Leitha 2007, p. 101 f.
  9. Absenger Albert Gernot, Chronik Neufeld III , Neufeld 2007, p. 223.
  10. ^ History of the ÖKI, accessed on June 1, 2012.
  11. Central Register of Associations, accessed on June 4, 2010.
  12. ↑ The website of the Neufeld-Steinbrunn chess club, accessed on June 4, 2010.
  13. Burgenland Chess Association, accessed on June 4, 2010.
  14. Central Register of Associations, accessed on June 4, 2010.
  15. Chronicle Neufeld III, Neufeld an der Leitha 2007, p. 197.
  16. Burgenland Tennis Association, accessed on January 26, 2013.
  17. a b Province of Burgenland: Election results Neufeld an der Leitha2017 (accessed on December 15, 2017)
  18. Province of Burgenland: Election results Neufeld an der Leitha2012 (accessed on December 15, 2017)
  19. Province of Burgenland: Election result Neufeld an der Leitha2007 (accessed on December 15, 2017)
  20. a b Province of Burgenland: Election results Neufeld an der Leitha2002 (accessed on December 15, 2017)
  21. Stadtgemeinde Neufeld an der Leitha: City Councils (accessed on December 15, 2017)
  22. Stadtgemeinde Neufeld an der Leitha: Municipal Councils - Employees (accessed on December 15, 2017)
  23. City of Neufeld an der Leitha: Mayor (accessed on December 15, 2017)
  24. "New Community - Bulletin of the Social Democratic Association of Local Representatives Burgenland" No. 1/2007: New Candidates (PDF document, p. 6; accessed on December 15, 2017)
  25. City of Neufeld an der Leitha: Vice Mayor (accessed December 15, 2017)
  26. Stadtgemeinde Neufeld an der Leitha: Municipal Office - Employees (accessed on December 15, 2017)
  27. Chronik Neufeld III, Neufeld an der Leitha 2007, p. 186.
  28. Chronik Neufeld III, Neufeld an der Leitha 2007, p. 215.
  29. Burgenland Provincial Government (Ed.): Allgemeine Landestopographie des Burgenlandes, 2nd volume (2nd half volume), Eisenstadt 1963, p. 771.
  30. Neufelder Rundschau issue 1, Neufeld an der Leitha April 2010, p. 19.