Miedelsbach

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Miedelsbach
Large district town of Schorndorf
The Miedelsbach coat of arms shows a flying swallow and two wavy bars in white (silver) on a blue background.
Coordinates: 48 ° 50 ′ 29 ″  N , 9 ° 32 ′ 32 ″  E
Height : 267 m
Area : 2.75 km²
Residents : 2077  (Jan 31, 2008)
Population density : 755 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : 1st January 1973
Postal code : 73614
Area code : 07181
View of Miedelsbach
View of Miedelsbach

Miedelsbach , the third largest district of Schorndorf with around 2100 inhabitants , is located in a wide hollow of the Wieslauftal at the foot of the Welzheimer Forest . The built-up area is surrounded to the east in its entire extent by orchards that characterize the landscape and that border directly on forest areas. The town center is traversed by the Tannbach, which flows into the Wieslauf at the western boundary of the marker.

history

In 1297, the town of Muotinspach, which belongs to the Adelberg Monastery, was first mentioned in a document as a sub- town of Steinenberg , when the monastery acquired local goods from the Lords of Urbach. The tithe rights therefore belonged to the monasteries of Adelberg , Oberelchingen and Lorch . In a Oberamtsbeschreibung from 1851 569 inhabitants were given, also it says there:

“... the fields are better than in Steinenberg, less laborious to cultivate and more productive, but the inhabitants are in more depressed conditions. The growth is excellent. Several trade in dried yellow beet, cucumber, white boiled beans, wholemeal grain and millet. The hamlet has a poor house and a school. "

In 1807 Miedelsbach became part of Steinenberg in the Oberamt Schorndorf, before it initially gained independence in 1856. Since 1938, the village has belonged to the Waiblingen district , which was dissolved in the course of a regional reform on January 1, 1973 and was completely absorbed by its legal successor , the Rems-Murr district, to which Miedelsbach belongs today. For a very long time, the village was lined up in terms of its development only along a single street arch and was therefore very small. After the Second World War , the center of the village became more concentrated around the northern center of the village through the new development areas Kelterwiesen , Brunnenäcker and Rohräcker , which were built in the 1950s. In the 1960s the new residential areas Hiller , Goldwiesen and Hanfwiesen were added. In the course of the regional reform, Miedelsbach lost its independence on January 1, 1973 and was incorporated into the town of Schorndorf .

politics

The area of 1973 incorporated municipality Miedelsbach forms a town within the meaning of Baden-Württemberg municipal code with its own twelve members existing Ortschaftsrat .

coat of arms

Miedelsbach 1685 (view from the forest inventory books by Andreas Kieser )

Miedelsbach's coat of arms shows a white (silver) flying swallow on a blue shield above two white wavy bars. The swallow was chosen because once every year swallows settled at the old town hall, which had to give way to traffic in the 1970s. The wave bars symbolize the two bodies of water Tannbach and Wieslauf.

Facilities

In Miedelsbach there is a Protestant church, a primary school, a day care center, several sports and playgrounds, a tennis court and a multi-purpose hall.

The new Protestant church was consecrated in 1967. Architect Gerhard Fetzer planned the Christ Church with an asymmetrical roof from which a "bell carrier" protrudes. A colored strip of light and indirect light through the bell tower characterize the interior, in which an altar cross by the Stuttgart artist Wolf-Dieter Kohler is attached. Church and parish rooms can be connected to one another. There are more rooms in the basement.

traffic

Miedelsbach is on the 1148 road that connects Schorndorf with Rudersberg , and also on the Wieslauftalbahn (RB61), which runs between Schorndorf and Rudersberg-Oberndorf.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Leo BW: Miedelsbach. Retrieved on August 8, 2012.
  2. ^ 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. 459 .
  3. Main statute of the city of Schorndorf in the new version of July 24, 2000, last amended on May 30, 2018
  4. ^ Evangelical community sheet for Württemberg: Church of the week . No. 48/2017 , November 26, 2017, p. 23 .

literature

  • Horst Lässing (Hrsg.): Home and work: The Rems-Murr-Kreis . Konrad Theiss, Stuttgart 1980, ISBN 3-8062-0243-5 , p. 300.

Web links