Oggersheim

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Oggersheim
Coat of arms of the former city of Oggersheim
Coordinates: 49 ° 29 ′ 27 ″  N , 8 ° 22 ′ 29 ″  E
Area : 11.38 km²
Residents : 23,346  (2011)
Population density : 2,051 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : April 1, 1938
Postal code : 67071
map
Location of Oggersheim (light red) within the city of Ludwigshafen am Rhein

With a good 23,000 inhabitants, Oggersheim is the largest district and at the same time one of the ten districts of the city of Ludwigshafen am Rhein in Rhineland-Palatinate . Until 1938 it was an independent municipality. Oggersheim gained national fame as the residence of long-time Federal Chancellor Helmut Kohl .

location

geography

Oggersheim is located in the west of the city of Ludwigshafen am Rhein in the Upper Rhine Plain . In the far east of Oggersheim the Kreuzgraben runs in a south-north direction .

climate

Precipitation diagram 1961–1990

The annual precipitation is 537 mm. The precipitation is relatively low, it is in the lower tenth of the values ​​recorded in Germany. Lower values ​​are only registered at 8 percent of the German Weather Service's measuring stations . The driest month is January, the most precipitation falls in August. In August there is 2.1 times more rainfall than in January. The rainfall varies moderately. Lower seasonal fluctuations are recorded at 65 percent of the measuring stations.

history

Early history

Compared to the other districts of Ludwigshafen, Oggersheim has the most important early history. Already around the birth of Christ there was a Roman villa in the area of ​​today's district, near which a Roman highway from Italy via Strasbourg ( Argentoratum ), Speyer (Noviomagus) and Worms ( Borbetomagus ) to Mainz ( Mogontiacum ) and further via Xanten ( Vetera ) to led to the North Sea ( Roman Rhine Valley Road ).

Middle Ages and Early Modern Times

Oggersheim already existed in the 60s of the 8th century. In 769, a donation of arable land to the Lorsch Monastery was documented in the Lorsch Codex . The Alsatian monastery in Weißenburg held the manorial power until 911 . Oggersheim later went to the Counts of Leiningen as a fief from the Salians . Already in the time of Leiningen, Oggersheim had city rights in 1289. Oggersheim was fortified with a city wall that had two and, at the beginning of the 18th century, three city gates. The Counts of Leiningen sold their fiefdoms around Oggersheim in 1323 to the Count Palatine . In 1346, a pastor is first mentioned in Oggersheim. The medieval church was dedicated to St. Kilian .

Oggersheim developed into the official seat of an Electoral Palatinate "Oberschultheißerei" , a kind of district.

Around June 10, 1525, the Palatinate Peasants' War with the "United Neustadter Haufen" formed in Winzingen near Neustadt reached the town of Oggersheim, which has around 500 inhabitants, as the first place on their train. After the city was occupied and presumably joined the uprising, the heap moved further north-west across cities like Lambsheim and Freinsheim and the castles and palaces Dirmstein, Neu- and Altleiningen.

Oggersheim around 1650, still called Ogersheim

During the Thirty Years' War , the Spanish general Ambrosio Spinola occupied the Lower Palatinate on the left bank of the Rhine in the summer of 1620; in the spring of 1621 he returned to Brussels and gave Don Córdoba the supreme command there. Córdoba besieged Frankenthal in 1621, but had to break off the siege on October 25th when Ernst von Mansfeld moved from the Upper Palatinate. In the course of these conflicts, the imperial army also threatened Oggersheim, which was spared from destruction thanks to the heroic efforts of Hans Warsch .

In 1689 Oggersheim was devastated in the Palatinate War of Succession .

Oggersheim around 1700

Newer urban development

Until the end of the 18th century, Oggersheim belonged to the Electoral Palatinate . From 1798 to 1814, when the Palatinate was part of the French Republic (until 1804) and then part of the Napoleonic Empire , the place was incorporated into the canton of Mutterstadt and had its own Mairie . In 1815 the place had 1,400 inhabitants. In the same year it was added to Austria . Just one year later, the place, like the entire Palatinate, changed to the Kingdom of Bavaria. From 1818 to 1862 he was a member of the Landkommissariat Speyer ; from this the district office of Speyer emerged. From 1886 Oggersheim was part of the newly created district office of Ludwigshafen .

Today's town hall, built in classicist style, was built in 1839/1840 on the market square next to the former reformed church as a replacement for the old town hall, which stood in the way of traffic development at the junction of the roads from Mannheim to Frankenthal and Speyer. In the 1980s, however, the appearance of the building was affected by a terrace attached to its north side in the course of traffic calming.

Heinrich Driver (SPD) served as the first full-time mayor of Oggersheim from 1920 to 1933, until he was forced to take leave and retired by the National Socialists. During the Nazi era, the built-up area was considerably expanded by building the Notwende settlement as a BASF factory settlement (1934–1937). On April 1, 1938, the previously independent Oggersheim was incorporated into the city of Ludwigshafen am Rhein, the last mayor was Erich Lauterbach (NSDAP). Philipp Eiselstein (NSDAP) was the mayor of the new Ludwigshafen district until 1945.

After the Second World War , Ernst Lorenz (SPD; Chairman of the Works Council at BASF ) was head of the Ludwigshafen branch office from 1945 to 1956 and then Friedrich Bassemir (1892–1969) from 1956 to 1969 mayor in Oggersheim. Before the Nazis came to power, Bassemir was mayor of Bad Dürkheim-Hardenburg from 1920 to 1933; in March 1933 he was imprisoned.

In the 1960s, the residential areas of Oggersheim-West and Neue Heimat on the Langewanne were built . At the beginning of the 1990s, the town center was included as a redevelopment area and the traffic routing in the center at the town hall was changed in favor of local public transport , as well as bicycle and pedestrian traffic. Also in the 1990s, the emergency turnaround was increased considerably by the new development area in Melm.

coat of arms

Coat of arms of Oggersheim
Blazon : "A silver bar in blue, covered with a red-armored and tongued golden lion, holding a silver mark in the form of the capital letter A in its paws."

Religions

According to official statistics, 23.4% of members of Protestant and Roman Catholic Churches, members of other denominations and religions and non-denominational members are Protestant; Roman Catholic to 29.2% and other denominations and religions and non-religionists to 47.4%.

Protestant church

In 1556, the Reformed Confession was introduced in the Electoral Palatinate with the Alzey religious decree . The Reformed Church did not build their own church until 1759, while the Lutherans built their church in 1779 almost at the same time as the Catholic pilgrimage church. With the church union of the two Protestant denominations of the Palatinate in 1818, the previously reformed church was used jointly and the Lutheran church building was demolished in 1820. After the Protestant St. Mark's Church was built in 1898, the formerly reformed church building was sold in 1900 and also demolished in 1934.

At the end of the 1960s the evangelical community center Comeniuskirche was set up, at the end of the 1980s the Jakobuskirche was established during the emergency. Today Oggersheim has three parishes belonging to the church district Ludwigshafen.

Catholic Church

In 1707 the Catholics kept Kilian's Church through the division of the Palatinate Church , which until then had been used as a simultaneous church for almost ten years . It was demolished in 1804. Between 1773 and 1777 the pilgrimage church Maria Himmelfahrt was built , the parish of which today comprises around 4,200 parishioners. The parish of the pilgrimage church also includes a monastery of the Franciscan Minorites .

In the course of the town's expansion in the 1960s, the new parishes were formed by the Catholic Church of Christ König and in 1973/74 the Catholic Church of the Holy Family , which is part of the parish of Maria Himmelfahrt, followed.

New Apostolic Church

In the 1930s the congregation met at the address Schillerstraße 7. The church of the New Apostolic congregation Ludwigshafen – Oggersheim is located at Schillerstraße 69 and dates from 1960.

Muslims

For the Oggersheim Muslims , mainly immigrants from Muslim countries such as Turkey , Morocco and their descendants, there are two mosques , the Kocatepe Camii on Wormser Straße and Dar'ul Erkam (Rheinhorststraße) in the emergency turning point.

politics

Local advisory board

The political body for the local district is the Oggersheim local advisory board and the local mayor . The local council has 15 members. He can be heard on all important questions relating to the local district.

For the composition of the local council, see the results of the local elections in Ludwigshafen am Rhein .

Mayor

The head of Oggersheim is Sylvia Weiler (SPD). In a runoff election on June 16, 2019, she prevailed with 61.36% of the vote. This election became necessary after none of the original five applicants had achieved the necessary majority in the local elections on May 26, 2019 . Weiler is the successor to Barbara Baur (SPD), who was no longer a candidate.

education

With the castle school, a new schoolhouse was built on the site of Kilian's Church in 1822; a second building, the Maxschule, added additional rooms in 1856, and an additional floor was added in 1883. In 1900 the first building, the Luitpold School , and ten years later the Schillerschule, the second building of today's Schillerschule, was built on the former site of the Lutheran church. In 1965 the local elementary school was given the name Karl Kreuter during the emergency, and the Langgewannschule in the Langgewann district began operating at the end of 1969. The secondary school " Adolph Diesterweg " is located in the western part of Oggersheim.

In the late 1970s and early 1980s the center for the physically handicapped and the integrated comprehensive school " Ernst Bloch " were established in Oggersheim-West and the day care centers in the emergency.

Culture, sights, tourism

The Oggersheim Castle

Model of the former castle

From 1720, Count Palatine Joseph Karl von Pfalz-Sulzbach , Hereditary Prince of Sulzbach (1694–1729) had a pleasure palace built in Oggersheim. A baroque Loreto chapel was also built in 1729 as part of the palace. After the death of Joseph Karl in 1729, the palace was not used for 22 years, until 1751 Count Palatine Friedrich Michael von Pfalz-Birkenfeld made Oggersheim his summer residence, had the building rebuilt and completed according to plans by Nicolas de Pigage by 1757 and a large baroque garden in France Style that, according to the fashion of the time, also received various pavilions, garden houses and bath houses as well as a large orangery.

In 1767 the Mannheim elector Karl Theodor bought the complex and in 1768 gave it to his increasingly estranged wife Elisabeth Auguste , who lived there with an entourage of over 100 people until 1793, initially only in the summer half of the year, later all year round. She made the Oggersheimer Schloss a meeting place for science and art and gave many celebrations that were accompanied by theater and music performances. When the elector succeeded the Bavarian throne in 1778 and moved his residence to Munich, Elisabeth stayed in Oggersheim, which benefited economically for a while from the princely court.

In 1793 the French revolutionary troops reached the Palatinate and in early 1794 also Oggersheim. The old Electress had already fled to Weinheim , where she died in the summer of 1794, the soldiers who heated the rooms with open fires lived in Oggersheim Castle, and the whole complex burned down through limitless carelessness. The few remaining building remains were also destroyed shortly afterwards. Today only the cellar of the cavalier wing remains, which is covered with a single-storey successor building with a hipped roof from the 19th century. In the 20th century this building was used for apartments until the Catholic parish Maria Himmelfahrt set up the Adolph Kolping parish center there in 1980.

Pilgrimage church

Pilgrimage Church of the Assumption of Mary

The palace and pilgrimage church of the Assumption of Mary is the most important building in Oggersheim. From 1774 Elisabeth Auguste had the Loreto Chapel built over with the current pilgrimage church according to plans by Peter Anton von Verschaffelt . This church was the only part of the palace complex to survive the fire triggered by French troops in 1794. It is considered the most important monument of the pre-industrial age in the city of Ludwigshafen.

Public facilities

BG accident clinic

The professional association accident clinic in Oggersheim is internationally known as a special clinic for burn victims. The clinic played a leading role in coping with the large number of seriously and seriously burned victims of the Ramstein air conference in 1988. Prominent patients were u. a. Niki Lauda after his serious Formula 1 accident and Heinz-Harald Frentzen after his slight Formula 1 accident in 2005.

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

With the opening of the Mainz – Ludwigshafen line in 1853, Oggersheim was connected to the railroad . The first tram started at Oggersheim from Luitpoldplatz in Ludwigshafen in 1912, and the following year the Rhein-Haardtbahn to Bad Dürkheim was opened. The route was moved from Frankenthaler Straße in March 1983.

The federal motorway 650 runs along the southern edge of the settlement area . In the course of traffic planning in the Vorderpfalz / Ludwigshafen area, the B 9 from Frankenthal was expanded to four lanes in the mid to late 1960s. The intersection of the two streets is the Oggersheimer Kreuz located southwest of the development .

economy

The private brewery Gebr. Mayer oHG is a brewery in the Ludwigshafen district of Oggersheim. It was founded in 1846 and is considered the oldest brewery in the Palatinate and at the same time the longest-running company in Ludwigshafen. The brewery has been family-owned since it was founded.

A brewery founded in the middle of the 18th century is considered to be the forerunner of the driver brewery . It has been run by the driver family since the beginning of 1900. In 1825 a small salmiac factory ("Saumhof") was established, which developed into an iron foundry and machine factory for Schütze AG in the early 1870s. It was taken over by the Kölsch-Fölzer-Werke in 1922 and sold to the Eisenwerke Kaiserslautern in 1964 . The building was demolished in 1977. To the south of it on the edge of the Maudacher Bruch, a waterworks of the Technischen Werke Ludwigshafen was put into operation in 1970. Another local brewery was the Ganß brewery .

In 1855 the construction of the mechanical cotton spinning and weaving mill ( Ludwigshafener Sametfabrik ) began, and in 1856 the corner stone was laid by the former King Ludwig I of Bavaria . In the course of industrialization and the associated exploitation of the working class, the first major assembly of the Palatinate Social Democrats ( General German Workers' Association ) came together during a strike in the velvet factory in Oggersheim in 1871 under the leadership of Josef Queva (1849–1929) first local association of the ADAV of the Palatinate.

In 1852 König & Herf built a vinegar and vinegar yeast factory and a distillery. They then ran a malt house around 1916, and the mill celebrated its 100th anniversary in 1952.

In 1937 the Gulde company (measurement and control technology), founded in 1890, moved from Ludwigshafen to Oggersheim (operation until 2007).

At the end of the 1990s, the first specialist store opened in the Oggersheim industrial park west of the B 9 (ecological service park Ludwigshafen Oggersheim Westlich B 9). In 2007, the name was changed to the Oggersheim shopping center and extensive construction measures for traffic control and noise protection were carried out.

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the place

Other persons connected with Oggersheim

Schiller House
Helmut Kohl
  • Adolf von der Pfalz (1300–1327), titular Count Palatine, lived here in 1326 and made Oggersheim a town
  • Hans Warsch was a shepherd who lived in Oggersheim in the 17th century. He was best known for a story that happened during the siege of Oggersheim during the Thirty Years War.
  • Elisabeth Auguste von Pfalz-Sulzbach (1721–1794), Electress of the Palatinate and Bavaria. Resided in Oggersheim Castle
  • Heinrich Theodor von Hallberg (1725–1792), imperial count and diplomat from the Electorate of the Palatinate and Bavaria, came into possession of the local family estates in 1788
  • Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805) spent seven weeks in Oggersheim (in today's Schillerhaus ) on his escape in September 1782 , where he a. a. Cabal and love wrote. Plagued by money worries, he hoped in vain for an advance from the Mannheim theater for The Fiesco Conspiracy in Genoa . He was supported by his friend, the musician Andreas Streicher , who gave him his cash that he wanted to use for his own musical education.
  • Andreas Streicher (1761–1833), musician and piano maker. Accompanied Friedrich Schiller during his stay in Oggersheim
  • Nicolas de Massias (1764–1848), French diplomat, philosopher and man of letters, as a former envoy to the Baden court, retired to private life in 1804, bought land in Oggersheim and built the representative building of today's private brewery Gebr. Mayer
  • Friedrich Hölderlin (1770–1843) visited Oggersheim and Frankenthal in June 1788, coming from Mannheim
  • Philipp Jakob Siebenpfeiffer (1789–1845), lived in Oggersheim in 1831 and published the Western Messenger , which was banned a little later .
  • Karl Ludwig Bernays (1815–1876), revolutionary journalist, spent his childhood and first school days in Oggersheim and lived with his family on an estate (today Hauswirtschaft Brauerei Gebrüder Mayer)
  • Josef Queva (1849–1929), labor leader, organizer of the strike of 1871 in the velvet factory
  • Karl Anton Kreuter (1876–1965), teacher and local history researcher, a school and a street in Oggersheim are named after him.
  • Karl Ritter (1916–1994), politician (SPD), was temporarily rector of the Adolf Diesterweg School in Oggersheim
  • Helmut Kohl (1930–2017), Federal Chancellor, had lived in Oggersheim since 1971 and received state guests there from 1982 such as Margaret Thatcher , George HW Bush , Boris Jelzin and Bill Clinton
  • Hans-Otto Scholl (* 1933), politician (FDP), lived in Oggersheim before his arrest
  • Hans Beckmann (* 1959), politician (SPD), was a teacher at the Integrated Comprehensive School Ernst Bloch from 1988
  • Hasan Özdemir (* 1963) is a German-speaking poet and narrator from Oggersheim
  • Silke Rottenberg (* 1972), German national soccer player (1993-2008) also lived in Oggersheim during her time as national goalkeeper
  • Daniela Katzenberger (* 1986), reality TV participant, restaurateur, model and singer, spent her childhood in Oggersheim

Web links

Commons : Oggersheim  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

literature

bibliography

  • Jürgen Nürnberger: City Bibliography Ludwigshafen am Rhein. Nürnberger, Ludwigshafen am Rhein, vol. 1. to 1990 (1993) - 4. 2001/05 (2009), ISSN  0941-7141 . (Contains the section "Oggersheim" in the individual volumes . )

Newspapers

  • Stefan Mörz: From the West Messenger to the Rhine Palatinate. The history of the press in the Ludwigshafen area from the beginning to the present. City archive, Ludwigshafen, 1994. ISBN 3-924667-23-3 . (Especially pp. 53–56, 137–138.)
  • Oggersheimer Anzeiger. Local advertising paper and organ for the interests of the city of Oggersheim. Official journal of the mayor's office in Oggersheim. 1912–1975, 26. (From 1950, 18 udT: Oggersheimer Zeitung. ) ZDB -ID 1276275-1 ; ZDB ID 1309712-x .
  • From days gone by. Supplement to the Oggersheimer Anzeiger. 1927-1934. ZDB ID 2195202-4 .

Local history

  • Ogersheim or Oggersheim . In: Johann Heinrich Zedler: Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts, which bißhero were invented and improved through human understanding and wit ... Vol. 25. - Halle: Zedler 1749, Sp. 950. Online.
  • Martin Josef Mörschell: History of Oggersheim and the newly founded Minorite monastery there. Self-published, Oggersheim 1844. Online
  • Karl Kreuter: History of the city of Oggersheim. Self-published, Oggersheim 1910. (Along with) additions 1923 and 1948.
  • Karl Kreuter (ed.): The Oggersheimer goods and other things from local history. Reprint of the supplement “From Past Days” to the “Oggersheimer Anzeiger” from November 1930 to June 1934. Riebsam, Oggersheim, 1934. (The articles are written by Karl Kreuter.)
  • Karl Kreuter: Brief local history of Oggersheim. Self-published, Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim 1939. (2nd [edit.] Edition. Riebsam, Ludwigshafen a. Rh. 1955.)
  • Theodor Karst: The Oberschultheißerei Oggersheim. Territorial policy and administration in the area of ​​the city and district of Ludwigshafen. Publishing house of the Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Pfälzische Familien- und Wappenkunde eV, Ludwigshafen a. Rh. 1968.
  • Karl Kreuter: From the chronicle of Oggersheim. 4th ext. Ed. By Siegfried Fauck. City Archives, Ludwigshafen 1983. (1st edition 1963.)
  • From Oggersheim's recent history. Local history working group, Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim 1986.
  • Considerations and additions to the history of Oggersheim. Local history working group, Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim 1987.
  • From Oggersheim's past. Local history working group, Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim 1991.
  • Josef Queva: The first local association in the Palatinate - remembrance of the establishment of the General German Workers' Association in Oggersheim , in: Die Pfälzische Sozialdemokratie, ed. by Manfred Geis and Gerhard Nestler, Edenkoben 1999.
  • Stefan Mörz , Klaus Jürgen Becker (Hrsg.): History of the city of Ludwigshafen am Rhein. 2 volumes and register volume. Stadtarchiv, Ludwigshafen 2003–05, ISBN 978-3-924667-35-1 .

Illustrated books

  • Oggersheim in old views. Text contributions by Heinrich Laubenstein u. Reinhard Hauns. 2nd ext. Aufl. Heimatkundlicher Arbeitskreis, Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim 1980.
  • Oggersheim yesterday and today. Old and new views of a traditional district. With contributions by Käthe Koller (among others). Local history working group, Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim, 1992.

population

  • Oskar Poller: Oggersheimer Bürgerbuch. The inhabitants of Oggersheim. 1584-1814. Working Group Palatinate-Rhenish Family Studies, Ludwigshafen / Rhine 1991.

Churches

  • Karl Kreuter: Festschrift for the 150th anniversary of the parish and pilgrimage church in Oggersheim. Catholic rectory, Oggersheim 1925.
  • 200 years of the parish and pilgrimage church Maria Himmelfahrt, Ludwigshafen – Oggersheim. 3rd amend. Edition. Parish councilor Maria Himmelfahrt, Ludwigshafen – Oggersheim 1977.
  • Jürgen Kaiser: Ludwigshafen – Oggersheim, pilgrimage church of the Assumption. 2. edit again Edition. Schnell and Steiner, Regensburg 2002.
  • Martin Josef Mörschell: History of Oggersheim and the newly founded Minorite monastery there. Self-published, Oggersheim 1844. Online
  • Ursula Gutzer: The Oggersheim monastery crib . 2nd edition. Local history working group, Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim 1986.
  • Christ King Oggersheim. Parish office of Christ König, Ludwigshafen – Oggersheim 1976.
  • 100 years Markuskirche Lu-Oggersheim. Ed. Prot. Kirchengemeinde. Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim 1998.

lock

  • Karl Kreuter: Electress Elisabeth Auguste of Palatinate Bavaria (1727–1794). A contribution to the local history of the 700th anniversary of the Palatinate attack on the House of Wittelsbach. Riebsam, Oggersheim 1914.
  • Karl Lochner: Oggersheim Palace and Garden 1720–1794. 2nd edition. Palatinate Society for the Advancement of Science, Speyer 1980.
  • Holger Koch: The Oggersheim Castle. Origin and history. Occupation with a historical monument in the vicinity. In: From Oggersheim's past. Local history study group (ed.), Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim 1991, pp. 21–44.
  • Stefan Mörz: The last Electress. Elisabeth Augusta von der Pfalz, the wife of Karl Theodor. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1997. ISBN 3-17-015006-5 . (Therein pp. 102–174: Oggersheim .)

Schiller

  • Oggersheim. In Albert Becker : Schiller and the Palatinate. Program of the K. Humanist High School Ludwigshafen a. Rhine 1906/07. Waldkirch, Ludwigshafen am Rhein, 1907, pp. 5-24. ( Contributions to the local history of the Palatinate. 1.) (Online)
  • Richard W. Gassen (catalog): Friedrich Schiller in Oggersheim 1782–1982. An exhibition of the Stadtmuseum Ludwigshafen am Rhein in the Schillerhaus, Ludwigshafen-Oggersheim ..., October 9, 1982 to December 23, 1982. Stadtmuseum, Ludwigshafen 1982.
  • Peter Ruf: Friedrich Schiller in Oggersheim. In: SchillerZeit in Mannheim. [On the SchillerZeit exhibition in Mannheim, Reiss-Engelhorn-Museen Mannheim D 5, September 17, 2005 to January 29, 2006.] Edited by Alfred Wieczorek and Liselotte Homering. Reiss-Engelhorn-Museen, Mannheim 2005, pp. 65–71. ISBN 3-8053-3554-7 , ISBN 3-8053-3555-5 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Die Rheinpfalz, Marktplatz LU, March 9, 2011.
  2. Minst, Karl Josef [trans.]: Lorscher Codex (Volume 3), Certificate 1196, March 4, 769 - Reg. 382. In: Heidelberger historical stocks - digital. Heidelberg University Library, p. 151 , accessed on March 2, 2016 .
  3. ^ Franz Maier: Imperial City of Oggersheim? New insights into the founding of the city . In: Palatinate Society for the Promotion of Science (Hrsg.): Wissenschaftsgesellschaft Pfalz - 90 years Palatine Society for the Promotion of Science, publications of the Palatinate Society for the Promotion of Science . tape 116 . Regional culture publishing house, Ubstadt-Weiher 2015, ISBN 978-3-89735-903-1 , p. 303-316 .
  4. Oggersheim district pass 2017 at http://www.ludwigshafen.de/fileadmin/Websites/Stadt_Ludwigshafen/Nachhaltig/Stadtentwicklung/Stadtteilpaesse/PDF/2017/31StadtteilpassOggersheim.pdf
  5. Homepage of the Minorite Monastery in Oggersheim
  6. ^ New Apostolic Church Ludwigshafen – Oggersheim.
  7. http://www.moscheesuche.de/moschee/stadt/Ludwigshafen_am_Rhein/5007
  8. ^ City of Ludwigshafen am Rhein: Main statute for the city of Ludwigshafen am Rhein. § 2, main statute of July 22nd, 1974, last amended by statute of May 15th, 2019. Retrieved October 10, 2019 .
  9. ^ The Regional Returning Officer RLP: direct elections 2019. Ludwigshafen, see fifth row of results. Retrieved October 10, 2019 .
  10. Schiller lived from October 13, 1782 to November 30, 1782 in the Oggersheimer Gasthaus “Zum Viehhof”, today's “Schillerhaus”.