Luhe-Wildenau
coat of arms | Germany map | |
---|---|---|
Coordinates: 49 ° 35 ' N , 12 ° 9' E |
||
Basic data | ||
State : | Bavaria | |
Administrative region : | Upper Palatinate | |
County : | Neustadt an der Waldnaab | |
Height : | 389 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 38.65 km 2 | |
Residents: | 3397 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density : | 88 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 92706 | |
Area code : | 09607 | |
License plate : | NEW, ESB , VOH | |
Community key : | 09 3 74 133 | |
LOCODE : | DE LWI | |
Market structure: | 14 districts | |
Market administration address : |
Rathausplatz 1 92706 Luhe-Wildenau |
|
Website : | ||
Mayor : | Sebastian Hartl | |
Location of the Luhe-Wildenau market in the Neustadt an der Waldnaab district | ||
Luhe-Wildenau is a market in the Upper Palatinate district of Neustadt an der Waldnaab .
The municipality was formed in 1978 from the Markt Luhe and the municipalities of Oberwildenau and Neudorf bei Luhe.
geography
Geographical location
The community is located in the Naab Valley, surrounded by extensive forests. In the north of the municipality, the Waldnaab and the Haidenaab unite to form the Naab near Unterwildenau . The river of the same name flows into this at Luhe . The Naab Valley is open in a north-south direction, while it is bordered to the east and west by the hills of the Upper Palatinate Forest. The railway line Regensburg – Weiden (–Hof), the federal highway 93 and the former federal highway 15 run in the Naab valley .
A small hammer lock is located on the Waldnaab , in which water power used to drive machines. In Luhe, the Naabmühle is the first mill on the Naab. In the past, water power was used there for a saw and a flour mill. Today it is used to operate electricity generators
Community structure
The community of Luhe-Wildenau has 14 districts:
- Forsthof
- Gelpertsricht
- Faith pointed
- Grünau
- Luhe
- Meisthof
- Neudorf near Luhe
- Neumaierhof
- Oberwildenau
- Ödhof
- Schwanhof
- Seibertshof
- Eisenhammer Sperlhammer
- Hammerschloss Unterwildenau
history
Slavic settlement
There are already indications of settlement from the time before the 6th century BC ( tumulus near Neumaierhof). Long before the turn of the 2nd millennium, Slavic settlers infiltrated the area of the Upper Palatinate Forest from the east and advanced to the course of the Naab. A document from the year 905 ( '… cuidam homini suo nomine Immo in comitatu senioris sui prope aquam que dicitur Loua unam quam sclauus quidam nomine Gruonkin quondam obsederat…' ) reports on a property that King Ludwig gave the child to at the request of Margrave Luitpold Hube, a farm with land, gave Luhe by the water, which a Slav named Gruonkin had previously owned.
Emergence
The origin of the place Luhe should go back to the "intersection of three old streets". Along the Naab, starting from Regensburg , the Magdeburger Strasse ran northwards past Schwarzenfeld , Nabburg , Pfreimd and Wernberg , which led via central Germany to the Wismar Bay . Luhe touched this probably oldest trade route in the Upper Palatinate, which "was named by Claudius Ptolemy from Alexandria in the 2nd century AD". A second old road ran from Nuremberg via Amberg and Luhe to Eger. Another "ancient road", coming from Sulzbach, led via Luhe along the river of the same name to Michldorf , Kaimling , Waldau and from there via Georgenberg to Tachau .
Market Luhe
Luhe was collected before 1280 the market since it first in the Addendum on dieichsgüter Parkstein-Weiden raft for Urbar mentioned the Vitztumamtes Straubing as a market. However, the exact time of the market survey cannot be determined. The privilege of the market rights obtained in the middle of the 13th century was confirmed by Emperor Ludwig the Bavarian in 1331 and Archbishop Johannes VI in 1383. from Prague. This allowed the citizens of Luher to hold two annual markets and one market day every Wednesday. The freedom letter of 1331 also had the granting of own jurisdiction to the content. In 1376 a pilgrim indulgence was granted by the Prague Archbishop Johannes. The old market Luhe achieved great economic importance as an old street junction. There the medieval Magdeburger Strasse, running in north-south direction, crossed with the Alte Heerstrasse (part of the Golden Strasse) leading from Nuremberg to Prague. Another connection existed with Amberg , the center of late medieval iron ore mining. Trade and crafts benefited from the central location. Travelers, carters and draft animals had to be looked after. At that time there were already four mills, several inns, bakeries, butchers and general stores in Luhe. The post car route established towards the end of the 17th century led through Luhe on the Regensburg-Eger route. In 1863 the railroad was introduced. Pavement duty was levied until 1910 . In the 17th and 18th centuries there were all the usual craft trades. In addition to the food industry, there were weavers, blacksmiths, wagons, cooper, leather workers, shoemakers and joiners with special craft regulations. From 1420 beer was also brewed in Luhe.
In 1928 a large part of the Luhe market fell victim to a fire. The fire broke out due to a cable fire during threshing work. The entire development of the market square and many other houses were destroyed (44 properties were affected), and the fire did not stop until shortly before the parish church.
Territorial reform of the 1970s
Today's community Luhe-Wildenau was created on May 1, 1978 through the merger of the Luhe market and the communities of Neudorf bei Luhe and Oberwildenau (with Unterwildenau, which was incorporated on April 1, 1928) with the simultaneous incorporation of parts of the dissolved communities of Engleshof (Meisthof and Seibertshof ), Glaubendorf (Faithwies) and Rothenstadt (Sperlhammer), initially under the name Luhe and without the addition of market. On June 1, 1979, the community was renamed Luhe-Wildenau and on August 1, 1980 it was made a market.
Population development
Population development in Markt Luhe Wildenau:
year | 1840 | 1871 | 1900 | 1925 | 1939 | 1950 | 1961 | 1970 | 1987 | 2005 | 2010 | 2015 |
Residents | 1528 | 1626 | 1622 | 1632 | 1715 | 2308 | 2433 | 2620 | 3012 | 3471 | 3403 | 3424 |
Between 1988 and 2018 the market grew from 3,022 to 3,397 by 375 inhabitants or by 12.4% of the population.
politics
Mayor and town council
Sebastian Hartl (CSU) has been Mayor of Luhe-Wildenau since May 2020. He was elected in the local elections on March 15, 2020 with 74.4% of the votes cast.
After the 2020 local elections, the market council will consist of 16 members with the following distribution of seats:
Party / List: | CSU | SPD | CWU * | JU | FW | The citizen list | total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Seats 2014: | 6th | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 16 |
* Christian Electoral Union
coat of arms
- Blazon
- “The coat of arms of the Luhe-Wildenau market is split by gold and silver. In the front of the coat of arms there is a half, red armored black eagle at the gap. At the back is an upright red stag pole with golden hunting horns hanging from green shackles at the left-turned ends. "
The coat of arms has been used since 1980.
Culture and sights
Architectural monuments
- Parish church St. Martin in Luhe: medieval fortified church, interior fittings from Baroque and Rococo with seven altars
- Pilgrimage Church of St. Nikolaus in Luhe / Koppelberg (Baroque)
- Chapel of Our Lady of Sorrows (Luhe) (Neo-Gothic)
- Old town hall with historic market square in Luhe (with Swedish tower, pillory, granite sword relief stone)
- Old rectory in Luhe ( Frater-Muttone building, baroque)
- Hammerschlösschen and St. Lorenz Chapel in Unterwildenau (early 17th century)
- Neo-Baroque Radiant Madonna on the market square in Luhe
- St. Michael Church (Oberwildenau)
Sports
|
|
Economy and Infrastructure
Luhe used to be a transport hub and trading center. Oberwildenau was an important site for sand and gravel mining. According to official statistics, there are around 1420 (December 2015) employees at work in Luhe-Wildenau who are subject to social security contributions. The balance of inbound and outbound commuters is around 230 people. The main employers are: Höhbauer GmbH (windows and doors), Glasprofi GmbH (glass finishing), IMG GmbH (metal processing), Höllerer Dienstleistungen GmbH (telecommunications and customer service) and SIEMENS AG, Luhe plant.
Jobs
Jobs in the Luhe-Wildenau market:
year | 2006 | 2008 | 2010 | 2012 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 |
Jobs | 925 | 963 | 1013 | 1183 | 1240 | 1378 | 1417 |
traffic
In Luhe-Wildenau there are two stops on the Regensburg – Weiden railway line and it is directly on the A 93 motorway . Five kilometers to the south it crosses the A 6 at the east-west junction at the Oberpfälzer Wald interchange .
education
The following institutions exist (as of 2018):
- Two children's houses
- A primary school
- Two music schools
Personalities
Sons and Daughters of the Market
- Georg Augustin Holler (1744–1814), composer, town music master and ducal music teacher
- Erwin Pohl (1914–2013), glass designer, member of the Luher artist group Die Gabel
- Bernhard M. Baron (* 1947), cultural manager
Honorary citizen
- Albert Gewargis (* 1939), country doctor
- Michael Höhbauer (1928–2002), manufacturer, mayor
- Dean Joseph Sauer (1904–1997), pastor in Luhe
- Karl Gerber (1896–1977), country doctor
- Pastor Anton Schlosser (1886–1964), pastor from Grünau
- Hans Rauch (1885–1963), Ministerialrat, MdL
- Hans Hausmann (1876–1933), district administrator
- Pastor Josef Kellner (1870–1951), pastor in Luhe
- Michael Reichenberger (1856–1935), Kgl. Mail expedition, mayor
- Michael Siegert (1852–1932), mill owner, mayor
- Franz Nagler (1850–1929) teacher in Luhe
- BGR Joseph Mauerer (1843–1920), pastor in Luhe
Individual evidence
- ↑ "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 ).
- ↑ bayerische-landesbibliothek-online.de
- ↑ Monumenta Boica 31/1, p. 175
- ↑ Alois Köppl: From the history of the community Gleiritsch, p. 32
- ↑ a b Dieter Bernd: Vohenstrauss . In: Historical Atlas of Bavaria , part of Old Bavaria . Series I, issue 39. Komm. Für Bayerische Landesgeschichte, Munich 1977, ISBN 3-7696-9900-9 , p. 186 ( digitized version ).
- ^ Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Old Bavaria, issue 50, Nabburg, p. 8
- ↑ Wilhelm Volkert, The older Bavarian dukesurbarians (sheets for Upper German name research 7) 1966, 25 f.
- ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 538 .
- ^ 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. 653, 668 .
- ^ Database statistical data for Bavaria
- ↑ Data from the Citizens' Meeting 2016
literature
- Alois Köppl: From the history of the community Gleiritsch. Gleiritsch community 1988, 2nd edition
- Monumenta Boica 31/1
- Wilhelm Volkert, Die Older Bavarian Duke Surable (sheets for Upper German name research 7) 1966, 1 - 32
- Dieter Bernd: Vohenstrauss . In: Historical Atlas of Bavaria , part of Old Bavaria . Series I, issue 39. Komm. Für Bayerische Landesgeschichte, Munich 1977, ISBN 3-7696-9900-9 ( digitized version ).
- Elisabeth Müller-Luckner: Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Old Bavaria, issue 50, Nabburg. Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7
Web links
- Aerial views of the market
- Entry on the coat of arms of Luhe-Wildenau in the database of the House of Bavarian History