Dießen am Ammersee

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Coat of arms of the market in Dießen am Ammersee
Dießen am Ammersee
Map of Germany, position of the market in Dießen am Ammersee highlighted

Coordinates: 47 ° 57 '  N , 11 ° 6'  E

Basic data
State : Bavaria
Administrative region : Upper Bavaria
County : Landsberg am Lech
Height : 544 m above sea level NHN
Area : 82.65 km 2
Residents: 10,526 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 127 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 86911
Primaries : 08807, 08806, 08194, 08196Template: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / area code contains text
License plate : LL
Community key : 09 1 81 114
Market structure: 25 parts of the community

Market administration address :
Marktplatz 1
86911 Dießen am Ammersee
Website : www.diessen.de
First Mayor : Sandra Perzul (Citizen of Dießen)
Location of the market in Dießen am Ammersee in the Landsberg am Lech district
Ammersee Landkreis Aichach-Friedberg Landkreis Augsburg Landkreis Ostallgäu Landkreis Weilheim-Schongau Landkreis Starnberg Landkreis Fürstenfeldbruck Windach Weil (Oberbayern) Utting am Ammersee Unterdießen Thaining Pürgen Schwifting Schondorf am Ammersee Scheuring Rott (Landkreis Landsberg am Lech) Reichling Prittriching Vilgertshofen Penzing (Bayern) Obermeitingen Landsberg am Lech Kinsau Kaufering Igling Hurlach Hofstetten (Oberbayern) Greifenberg Geltendorf Fuchstal Finning Eresing Egling an der Paar Eching am Ammersee Dießen am Ammersee Denklingen Apfeldorfmap
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Template: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / market

Dießen am Ammersee is a market in the Upper Bavarian district of Landsberg am Lech on the southwestern bank of the Ammersee . To distinguish it from other places with the same name, the place was previously called Bayerdießen .

geography

location

The community is located in the Bavarian Alpine foothills , about 40 kilometers southwest of Munich.

The place stretches from the Ammersee up the high bank to the former Augustinian monastery . The village of St. Georgen borders there to the west. A few kilometers further in the hilly hinterland are the former communities and today's districts of Dettenschwang, Dettenhofen and Obermühlhausen. In the immediate vicinity of the Ammersee, however, there are the villages and hamlets of the former municipality of Rieden, including Riederau , Bierdorf and St. Alban . The lowest point of the community is at 533 m above sea level on the Ammersee, the highest at 719 m at Schellschwang in the Bayerdießen forest .

Community structure

There are 25 parish parts in seven districts .

Marienmünster in Dießen

Neighboring communities

From the north, the community borders in a clockwise direction on the community of Utting am Ammersee and the community-free area Ammersee in the district of Landsberg am Lech, then on the communities of Pähl , Raisting and Wessobrunn in the district of Weilheim-Schongau , then on the communities of Rott , Reichling , Vilgertshofen , Thaining , Hofstetten and Finning , again all in the Landsberg am Lech district.

The distance information describes the straight line to the center of the neighboring town and is rounded to whole kilometers.

Landsberg am Lech
20 km
Utting
8 km
Herrsching
8 km
Germaringen
34 km
Neighboring communities Andechs
7 km
Wessobrunn
10 km
Raisting
5 km
Pähl
7 km

history

As early as the 3rd century, the important Roman road Via Raetia led from Augsburg over the Brenner Pass to Northern Italy through the forerunner of Dießen.

A first monastery was probably built as early as 815 by Rathard in the St. Georgen district, but this information is very legendary. The market was probably laid out in the 11th century by Count Arnold von Dießen east of the old Roman road and the estate from the Carolingian era located in the area of ​​today's monastery.

Dießen was first mentioned in a document in 1039 as Diezen , the place name comes from the Old High German name for a waterfall. The eponymous waterfall is located on today's Tiefenbach, south of the monastery. In 1050 a count Razo de Diezen is mentioned. Between the 11th and the middle of the 12th century, the Counts of Dießen (later the Andechs and Wolfratshausen lines) had their ancestral castle south of today's town, the Sconenburg. Between 1121 and 1127 they founded the Augustinian canons' monastery in Dießen as a house monastery , as people increasingly resided in the newly built castles of Andechs and Wolfratshausen . In 1157, the count's family left the town of Diessen to the monastery, but as governors they remained in close contact with the monastery and town. This was called “civitas” (city) in 1231, but soon lost its rights to the monastery.

When the Counts of Andechs died out in 1248, the Wittelsbach family took over the bailiwick of the monastery. Despite the significant loss of importance for Dießen, the place appears as Marckth Diezzen as early as 1151.

In the course of the war between Ludwig the Bavarian and Frederick the Fair , Dießen was burned down by Duke Leopold's troops in 1318 and 1320 . The chronicle of the monastery lords reflects the degree of destruction. For seven years it was not possible for the peasants and subjects who had to pay taxes to pay their taxes. After the victorious battles at Ampfing and Mühldorf , Ludwig raised the place to a ban market .

Up until secularization, there were two strictly separate legal areas in the area of ​​today's municipality, the ducal and electoral ban market in Dießen and the monastery Hofmark in Dießen-St. George. The ban border of the market ran along the Ferammergraben, St. Martin in Häders, the old Roman road, along the ban line to Romenthal.

The market in Dießen was subordinate to a ducal, later electoral market judge , who was also a maritime judge and, from 1599, a forest judge . This market judge's office even held the blood judiciary . The former gallows was located south of the church of St. Johann until about 1600 and from about 1600 a black poplar on the road to Weilheim served as a place of execution; the last execution took place in 1720. The lower jurisdiction had held a magistrate made up of citizens in the market since 1326 . The monastery judge was appointed by the respective provost of the monastery and had full jurisdiction, with the exception of the ban on blood.

List of market and monastery judges from 1584 to 1803:

Market judge
Surname Term of office
Wolfgang Nikolaus Liegsalz 1584-1604
Marquart von Welzhoffer 1604-1619
Heinrich Count Fugger 1619-1630
Nikolaus Engelbert 1630-1640
Christof von Arzet 1640-1644
Bartholomäus Fordermair 1644-1668
Bernhard Barth von Harmating and Pafenbach 1668-1681
Konrad Zöpf 1681-1686
Wolfgang Westner 1686-1697
Ferdinand Franz von Helmberg in Moosdorf 1697-1737
Franz Peter Lorenz von Prielmayr 1737-1747
Johann Karl von Delling 1747-1755
Sebastian Josef von Gaißler 1755-1765
Johann Ignatius von Kray 1765-1770
Franz Xaver Frey 1770-1803
Monastery judge
Surname Term of office
Wolff Pfendtner -1604
Nikolaus Schmidt 1604-1617
Sigmund Höbel 1617-1630
Nikolaus Walch 1630-1637
David Knoller 1637-1649
Johann Erath 1649-1662
Johann Georg Bartholomäus Höhrmann 1663-1694
Josef Karl 1694-1716
Adam Rantan 1716
Josef Hirsch 1716-1733
Johann Josef Staudigl 1733-1747
Johann Benedikt Millpöck 1747-1782
Alois Ignaz Bayrhamer 1782-1797
Heinrich Ignaz Sartori 1797-1803
Engraving of the market and monastery in Dießen, JM Söckler 1755

The district judge was still the captain of the so-called Fahndl , a military unit formed from the citizens of the market. Every tenth citizen between the ages of 23 and 32 was dug up and had to take part in drill and targeting exercises every Sunday. Before and during the Thirty Years War, the market had to provide 15 mercenaries and 7 riflemen, then 20 men, and finally 15 men in 1695.

In 1650 these were divided into five manors . The Dießen Monastery with 80 farmsteads mainly in the upper market, the Bannmarkt Dießen with 70 farmsteads mostly in the fishing industry, the Landsberg caste office and thus the Bavarian Duke with 20 farmsteads mainly in Prinz-Ludwig-Straße, the Andechs Monastery with 10 properties in the Mühlgasse and finally the Church of St. Georgen with 5 properties.

After the defeat in the Battle of Rain , Swedish troops also invaded Dießen in 1632. While part of the population was able to flee to the island of Erlaich and the extensive forests around Dießen, there were still numerous murders of the population. Within only five years, the plague caused over 600 deaths in the small market.

During the War of the Spanish Succession , Dießen was again plundered by Austrian troops in 1703, and the population fled again to the island of Erlaich . As early as 1704 there were further raids by hussars, among other things Romenthal was burned down. In the years 1743 and 1744 there was another occupation by Austrian troops.

Since most of the lands around Dießen, such as St. Georgen, Wengen, Bischofsried, Engenried, Lachen, St. Alban, Bierdorf, Riederau and Rieden belonged to the monastery, a strong tradition of handicrafts developed in the market . There has been evidence of pottery production since the Middle Ages ; in the late Middle Ages, the market had paper mills , tanneries and dye works , as well as ball, weapon and hammer smiths. Several tin foundries and glaziers were established in the 18th century . A few breweries also sprang up in the market and the Dießen fishermen even supplied the court in Munich .

The monastery church, the Marienmünster, was rebuilt between 1732 and 1739 by the baroque master builder Johann Michael Fischer . The monastery was dissolved in 1803 in the course of secularization and then parts of the monastery complex were demolished. The surviving buildings of the monastery acquired after the First World War , the Sisters of Mercy .

Although the relationship between the market and Dießen monastery was marked by many disputes, the abolition of the monastery in 1803 had mainly negative consequences for the place. Unemployment spread, breweries and craft businesses had to be given up, and the abolition of the two local courts also led to a loss of political importance.

In 1818, with the municipal edict in Bavaria, the original political municipality was established. Between 1862 and 1879, Dießen was briefly the seat of a regional court that comprised 18 communities.

With the introduction of steam shipping in 1877 and the opening of the railway line in 1898, lively tourism developed in Diessen.

A hospital was also built for the first time in 1888, and the first power station went into operation in the Klostermühle as early as 1896 . The establishment of the lake and spa facilities in 1909 was primarily necessary to cope with the growing tourism, as was the lido built in 1931 and the seaside resort with its Kneipp facilities in 1962.

Towards the end of the 19th century, Dießen became a magnet for artists and a center for the arts and crafts movement. In 1934 the Diessener Art Association (ADK) was founded.

From the 1920s and 1930s there were numerous new settlements in all directions around the old town center. The first SOS Children's Village in Germany was also built in 1964 in the southwest of the market.

Incorporations

On April 1, 1939, the previously independent municipality of Sankt Georgen was incorporated . On January 1, 1972, Dettenhofen, Dettenschwang and Obermühlhausen were added. Rieden am Ammersee followed on May 1, 1978.

Population development

The population of Dießen am Ammersee increased from 1987 to 2017 by 2,158 people or by 26 percent.

1840 1871 1900 1925 1939 1950 1961 1970 1987 2011 2017 2019
2788 3042 3461 4623 4687 7894 6848 7211 8318 10.133 10,476 10,526

politics

Market council

Distribution of seats in the municipal council
year CSU SPD Green FW DB UBV BP oKD ZfD The party total voter turnout
2020 4th 2 5 6th 4th 1 1 - 0 1 24 67.9%
2014 5 3 3 5 4th 2 1 0 1 - 24 58.1%
2008 6th 2 3 4th 4th 2 1 2 - - 24 62.4%
2002 7th 2 2 4th 2 2 1 0 - - 20th 63.5%

FW = Free Voters Dießen
DB = Citizens of Dießen
UBV = Independent Citizens' Association
BP = Bavarian Party
oKD = Open Circle Dießen
ZfD = Future for Dießen

Mayoress

Sandra Perzul (Dießener Bürger e.V.) has been mayor since May 1, 2020. Out of seven applicants, she reached the runoff election on March 15, 2020 with 21.36% and received the majority on March 29, 2020 with 55.84%. Her predecessor was Herbert Kirsch (Dießener Bürger e.V.) from May 1, 1996 to April 30, 2020.

coat of arms

Official coat of arms description ( blazon )

St George standing in gold in silver armor with a red cross and a red tunic, his right hand supported on a silver shield with a red cross, in his left the cross banner; to the left, a vertical blue fish.

Coat of arms history

St. George is the patron saint of the famous Augustinian canons of Dießen, which is said to have been built in the 9th century in the St. Georgen district and was re-founded by the Counts of Andechs in the 12th century. In 1140 they left the town of Dießen to the monastery. St. George with a shield and flag, accompanied by two fish, can be found in the oldest market seal from the mid-14th century, which has been preserved in prints since 1403. This is called civitas (city) in 1231 , but is later considered a market. The later seals only show a fish. The fish refers to the location on the fish-rich Ammersee. In the colored images from the 16th century, the flag is missing, but a lindworm was partially inserted. In the 16th century and later, the coat of arms was depicted again with two fish. St. George and the fish also result in a picture combination that speaks for the two original settlement cores of Dießen: St. Georgen, the original monastery settlement on the high terrace, and the fishery, a very old village of fishermen on the lake shore. In between is the younger market town of Dießen.

Town twinning

Transport and infrastructure

Rail transport

The single-track Ammerseebahn runs through Dießen from Mering via Geltendorf to Weilheim . It is managed by Deutsche Bahn as the route book route 985. The Riederau , St. Alban and Dießen train stations are located on the Ammerseebahn in the municipality . While Riederau and St. Alban are stops with only one track, Dießen station is a train crossing station with three platform tracks, two of which are still in operation. The state capital Munich can be reached by train in just under an hour.

Dießen station in 1906
Dießen train station in 2016

The station Dießen is located in the northwest of the town center of Dießen and is right by the Ammersee. It was opened on June 30, 1898 as the northern end point of the Ammerseebahn section Weilheim – Dießen. At the same time, the Royal Bavarian State Railways also put the Ammerseebahn section from Mering to Schondorf into operation. Alternatively, ships ran across the Ammersee between Schondorf and Dießen. When the gap between Schondorf and Dießen was closed on December 23, 1898, Dießen station became a through station . Initially, the station had a makeshift wooden station barracks. Due to the great importance of the station, a new brick building was built in 1901. It consists of a two-storey and a three-storey building with a gable roof , which are connected by a half-open waiting hall. The station originally had three platform tracks. There were also other loading and stabling tracks that have since been dismantled. The third platform track was also closed at the end of the 1990s. The station building is now a listed building .

The St. Alban stop was reopened on September 29, 2006, construction began on April 24, 2006. It is located in the north of the St. Alban district and serves to connect the Ammersee high school, which opened in 2005. The stop consists of a 120 meter long side platform on the continuous main track. Initially, the stop was only served by individual trains, since the timetable change in December 2006, all trains have stopped in St. Alban. From May to September 2009, an underpass was also built under the railroad track at the stop, which was opened on September 18, 2009.

Riederau train station

The Riederau train station , which is located in the Riederau district of Dießen, is now only an occupied stop. The stop was not included in the preliminary planning. However, since it was needed for loading wood, the Royal Bavarian State Railways finally set up a train station in Riederau. Initially, the station only had a corrugated iron hut as a reception building. In 1901 this was replaced by a wooden barrack that had previously served as a reception building at Dießen train station. There was a goods shed with a loading ramp to the north of the building. In 1938 a brick entrance building with a gable roof , an open waiting room and waiting room was built, on the roof of which there is a clock tower covered with wooden shingles. As with all station buildings in the southern part of the Ammerseebahn, a mural was attached to the southern wall of the house. Over time, this work of art was plastered over during renovation work, as was the clock on the gable roof. The goods shed was also rebuilt, the old loading ramp was retained. The track systems of the station consisted of the continuous main track on the house platform and a loading track that could be used from the direction of Dießen. The freight track was dismantled around 1983, and since 1976 the station has been operationally just a stop with a block . The reception building is still occupied today. The ticket issuing service was given up at the end of the 1990s and the waiting room was permanently closed. The no longer used goods shed annex is still preserved, the platform length was adapted to today's traffic needs a few years ago and shortened by about a third by means of information boards.

The stations have been served every hour since 2008 by trains of the Bayerische Regiobahn (BRB) from Augsburg-Oberhausen to Schongau . During rush hour , amplifier trains run every half hour between Geltendorf and Peißenberg . All trains that run on the route serve the three train stations. Long-distance trains have not been running on the Ammerseebahn since 1991 .

Dießen am Ammersee from the north

Bus transport

Already village is in the public transport (public transport) to the Landsberger Verkehrsgemeinschaft connected (LVG) in the rail transport, however, is not integrated. The LVG bus routes open up the main town of Dießen and the districts of St. Alban , Bierdorf, Riederau, Rieden, Dettenhofen, Dettenschwang and Obermühlhausen.

The following bus routes currently operate in Dießen:

Ammerseeschifffahrt

Jetty

As early as 1877, twelve citizens of Dießen founded the Ammersee AG steamship company . After the first ship, the Omnibus , proved to be inadequate, the steamer Marie was purchased in 1878 . The steamer Gisela (from 1919 Augsburg ), launched in Stegen in 1893, shaped the Ammersee shipping industry until 1963.

The oldest passenger ship still in regular service today is the wheel motor ship Diessen , which was launched in 1908 and named after the market .

From Easter Sunday to Kirchweih , the four passenger ships of the Bayerische Seenschifffahrt , including the Herrsching side-wheel motor ship, which went into service in 2002, can be used to reach other places on Lake Ammersee. From located on the eastern shore Herrsching line S8 to the Munich S-Bahn in about 50 minutes via the Munich-Herrsching railway to the main station in Munich .

Attractions

  • The Marienmünster in Dießen , built by Johann Michael Fischer between 1732 and 1739, is well known on a hill and is clearly visible from the lake.Until 1803, it was the center of the former Augustinian canons. You can also visit a museum exhibition in the famous Carl Orff Museum.
  • Not far from Marienmünster stands the Marian column, erected around 1900 on the square in front of the Helmer bakery . During the Second World War, Allied soldiers destroyed the memorial while marching into the village. After a complete renovation, it was put back up in front of the inn on Kirchsteig in June 1981 .
  • The chapel of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary in the Bierdorf district, which, at 403 years old, is one of the only chapels that have survived from this era in this area, is also a building worth seeing.
  • Coming from Andechs, the König-Ludwig-Wanderweg leads past the Marienmünster via the Schatzbergalm on to Wessobrunn.
  • The Schacky Park borders in the south of Dießen . The park was named after Baron von Schacky and is privately owned, but can be visited on Sundays in summer.
  • Since 1991, the Carl-Orff-Museum , which is only open in the afternoon on weekends and public holidays, can also be visited by appointment. After about 800 meters, it is halfway from the Dampfersteg to Marienmünster.
  • In St. Georgen , in the north of Dießen, there is the doll museum, run by Mrs. Ilse Schweizer. In decades of work, dollhouses were built and collected there. Viewing by telephone registration.
  • Since 2010 a wooden observation tower ( ), which is used for bird and nature observation, has stood not far east of the village in the nature reserve "Vogelfreistätte Ammersee-Südufer" .
  • Since April 2016 the 2.30 large sculpture Der Diez by the artist Matthias Rodach has stood on Untermüllerplatz at the end of Mühlstrasse on an approx. 6 m high oak trunk . From 179 submissions that Rodach received from the population in response to his call to find a name for his work, the six jurors mutually agreed on the name Der Diez . Diez is the abbreviation for "Diezen", the name of Dießen in the Middle Ages.

See also: List of architectural monuments in Dießen am Ammersee

Soil monuments

See: List of soil monuments in Dießen am Ammersee

educational institutions

Sports

In addition to three beach resorts, the market also offers one of the oldest and largest inland sailing schools in Germany with sailing boat rentals, including traditional ships . There are large soccer fields and a mini golf course by the lake. Pedal boat rental is also possible in the lake facilities. Wide cycling and hiking trails allow a nice tour around the whole lake (about 45 km long).

Ice hockey: MTV Dießen / ice hockey took part in the BEV's game operations from 1963 to 2003 , winning the Bavarian natural ice championship in 1987 and becoming champion of the Bavarian State League South in 1996 . In the 1963/64 season, MTV played in the then fourth-class BLL . Source: rodi-db.de

Regular events

Dießen is known for its pottery market, which takes place every year from Ascension Day until the following Sunday on the waterfront. The so-called "Brunnenfest" usually takes place at the end of May. Every year the Dießen handicraft market takes place on the Assumption Day.

On the second Sunday in August, “The big flea market for the Seefest” takes place in the Seeanlagen, one of the most popular and largest flea markets in Bavaria. “Market Sunday” is an annual event that is held on the third Sunday in September in the picturesque Mühlstrasse, which leads to the lake.

Other attractions are the Christmas market, which usually takes place on the first weekend of Advent directly in front of the famous Marienmünster, and the "British Week". Every two years the Freundeskreis Ammersee-Windermere e. V. as part of the town twinning with Windermere (Lake District, UK) in mid-September this week of the encounter, during which cultural and culinary reference is made to the relationship that has existed since 1998.

Personalities

Born in Dießen am Ammersee

Connected to Dießen am Ammersee

  • Johann Michael Feuchtmayer the Younger (1709–1772), sculptor and plasterer, made the stucco in the Marienmünster in Dießen in 1739
  • Franz Xaver von Haeberl (1759–1846), German physician, retired in Dießen and died there
  • Sir Roger Casement (1864-1916), Irish freedom fighter; lived in 1915 in the district of Riederau.
  • Georg Schuster-Woldan (1864–1933), German painter and graphic artist, lived in the St. Georgen district.
  • Thomas Theodor Heine (1867–1948), draftsman of the Simplicissimus , moved in 1917 into his house, which had been used for summer holidays up until then, which was located in the park above the Augustinum residential monastery. Later he also had his own studio building here. His wife and daughter had to give it up during the Nazi era .
  • Herman George Scheffauer (1878–1927), German-American writer and translator, lived and worked here.
  • Karl Lösche (1878–1964), sculptor, founded a ceramic workshop in 1947 with his son Ernst Lösche in Dießen and died in Dießen
  • Richard Trunk (1879–1968), composer, lived in the Riederau district from 1945 until his death in 1968.
  • Alwin Seifert (1890–1972), garden architect, university professor, landscape designer, conservationist and pioneer of biodynamic agriculture and the early ecological movement.
  • Walter Becker (1893–1984), artist; from 1974 he spent the last years of his life in Dießen; there he created an abstract old work
  • Carl Orff (1895–1982), composer and music teacher; lived from 1955 in the district of Sankt Georgen
  • Helmuth Brinkmann (1895–1983), the German naval officer, ship commander and vice admiral in World War II, died in Dießen
  • Manfred Curry (1899–1953), scientist, doctor, inventor, sailor and author; lived in the district of Riederau for a long time.
  • Heinrich Hauser (1901–1955), writer, lived here for a few years and was buried (like his last wife) in Dießen.
  • Johanna Sibelius (1913–1970), screenwriter and writer, lived here
  • Walter Popp (1913–1977) ran a ceramics workshop in Dießen
  • Adele Hoffmann (born January 13, 1920), Bavarian actress and children's radio play author, lives here.
  • Ernst Lösche (1923-2010), ceramicist, ran a well-known ceramic workshop in Dießen and researched the Dießen ceramic tradition
  • Barbara König (1925–2011), writer and radio play author; lived here
  • Hans Joachim Swieca (1926–2013), journalist and writer; lived here since 1960
  • Jörg Hube (1943–2009), actor, director and cabaret artist; spent part of his childhood here
  • Dagmar Heller (1947–2015), actress and voice actress, lived in the Bierdorf district
  • Hajo Düchting (1949–2017), art historian; lived and died here
  • Annunciata Foresti (* 1953 in Bergamo / Italy), painter; has lived and worked here since 1980.
  • Ulrike Umlauf-Orrom (* 1953 in Haßlach near Kronach ), glass artist and designer, has lived and worked here since 1990.
  • James Orrom (* 1958 in Kendal , Great Britain ), has lived and worked here since 1990.
  • Martin Gensbaur (* 1958), painter and art teacher; lives and works here
  • Rupert Eder (* 1968), painter; lives and works here with Ms. Monika Gaertner , architect
  • Juliane Banse (* 1969), opera singer; lives here with husband Christoph Poppen and their children.
  • Stephan Fürstner (* 1987 in Munich), soccer player; grew up here and started playing football here.
  • Sandro Kaiser (* 1989 in Fürstenfeldbruck), soccer player; grew up here and started playing football here.

In its past, Dießen cast a spell over many artists who worked and lived here, including Carl Spitzweg , Wilhelm Leibl , Fritz Winter , Hermann Nitsch , Edgar Reitz , Alexander Koester , Hans Schilcher, Carl Orff , Hermann Stahl , Clara Nordström , Erich Retzlaff , Heinz Piontek .

See also

literature

  • Dagmar Dietrich: Former Augustinian Canons Monastery in Dießen am Ammersee . Schnell and Steiner, Munich and Zurich 1986, ISBN 3-7954-0618-8 .
  • Thomas Raff: Walks through Dießen am Ammersee . Photos by Bernhard Jott Keller. Published by the market town of Dießen. Dussa-Verlag, Steingaden 2006, ISBN 3-922950-51-5 .
  • M. Aquinata Schnurer OP: Home book of the market in Dießen am Ammersee . Market in Dießen am Ammersee. Jos. C. Huber KG, Dießen am Ammersee 1976.

Web links

Commons : Dießen am Ammersee  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. "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 ).
  2. Municipal Council. Municipality of Dießen am Ammersee, accessed on June 7, 2020 .
  3. See lexicon entry: Brockhaus' Kleines Konversations-Lexikon. fifth edition, volume 1. Leipzig 1911, accessed on November 10, 2014.
  4. Markt Dießen am Ammersee in the location database of the Bavarian State Library Online . Bavarian State Library, accessed on September 8, 2019.
  5. District. Office for Digitization, Broadband and Surveying | Landsberg am Lech with the Starnberg branch, accessed on April 10, 2019 .
  6. ^ Pankraz Fried, Peter Fassl: From Swabia and Altbayern . Thorbecke, 1991, ISBN 3-7995-7073-X , p. 123 .
  7. Jos. A. Hugo, E. Gabelsberger: Chronicle of the market and the parish of Diessen . Ed .: Markt Diessen am Ammersee. Jos. C. Huber, Dießen am Ammersee 1901.
  8. M. Aquinata Schnurer OP: Home book of the market in Dießen a. Ammersee . Ed .: Markt Dießen a. Ammersee. Dießen am Ammersee 1976, p. 54 .
  9. ^ Josef Anton Hugo, Eduard Gabelsberger: Chronicle of the market and the parish of Diessen . Dießen am Ammersee 1901, p. 41-68 .
  10. Bruno Schweizer: The Diessener Heimatbüchlein . Ed .: Jon Schweizer. Josef Reisinger, Dießen am Ammersee 1999, p. 17-35 .
  11. ^ Heide Weißhaar-Kiem: Landsberg am Lech district . Ed .: Landsberg am Lech district. 1st edition. EOS Verlag St. Ottilien, 2010, ISBN 978-3-8306-7437-5 , p. 175 .
  12. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 507 .
  13. ^ 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. 580 .
  14. Municipal statistics: Dießen am Ammersee. (PDF) Bavarian State Office for Statistics, 2018, accessed on April 15, 2019 .
  15. ^ House of Bavarian History - Bavaria's municipalities. Retrieved February 14, 2017 .
  16. ^ Andreas Janikowski: The Ammerseebahn. Traffic development in western Upper Bavaria . Transpress, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-344-71033-8 , pp. 13-14 .
  17. ^ Andreas Janikowski: The Ammerseebahn. Traffic development in western Upper Bavaria . Transpress, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-344-71033-8 , pp. 60-62 .
  18. Alwin Reiter: Diessen. (No longer available online.) Ammerseebahn.de, archived from the original on January 7, 2015 ; accessed on April 15, 2017 .
  19. List of architectural monuments in Dießen am Ammersee (PDF; 160 kB) from the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation
  20. ^ Alwin Reiter: St. Alban. (No longer available online.) Ammerseebahn.de, archived from the original on January 11, 2015 ; accessed on April 15, 2017 .
  21. ^ Andreas Janikowski: The Ammerseebahn. Traffic development in western Upper Bavaria . Transpress, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-344-71033-8 , pp. 59-60 .
  22. ^ Alwin Reiter: Riederau. (No longer available online.) Ammerseebahn.de, archived from the original on January 4, 2015 ; accessed on April 15, 2017 .
  23. ^ Andreas Janikowski: The Ammerseebahn. Traffic development in western Upper Bavaria . Transpress, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-344-71033-8 , pp. 94 .
  24. Line network of the Landsberger Verkehrsgemeinschaft ( Memento from December 3, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 69 kB) on lvg-bus.de
  25. Thomas Raff: Dießen am Ammersee in old views . Ed .: European Library. 4th edition. tape 1 . Zaltbommel 1992.
  26. Ammersee Courier. (No longer available online.) Ammerseekurier.de, July 7, 2009, archived from the original on September 27, 2013 ; accessed on April 15, 2017 .
  27. Augsburger Tagblatt from June 20, 2009
  28. Homepage of the Friends of the Chapel of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary ( Memento from July 19, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
  29. Homepage of the Schacky-Park Diessen am Ammersee e. V.
  30. ^ Homepage of the Dießen Carl Orff Museum
  31. Pilot project at the lake - observation tower with jetty on the south bank of the Ammersee, decided on in Kreisbote.de on June 5, 2009, accessed on December 8, 2015
  32. Photo of the nature observation tower on the website of the market town of Dießen am Ammersee
  33. Stephanie Millonig, In Dießen is now "der Diez" , in: Augsburger Allgemeine , May 31, 2016, accessed on September 11, 2016
  34. ref rodi-db.de, leagues belonging MTV Dießen