Mindelaltheim

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mindelaltheim
Dürrlauingen municipality
Mindelaltheim coat of arms
Coordinates: 48 ° 27 ′ 49 ″  N , 10 ° 24 ′ 34 ″  E
Height : 459 m
Residents : 527  (2017)
Incorporation : May 1, 1978
Postal code : 89350
Area code : 08222
Mindelaltheim Ost.jpg
Mindelaltheim viewed from Lohholz to the south
ICE Mindelaltheim.jpg
Mindelaltheim viewed from the Mindeltal valley to the west
Mindelaltheim2.JPG
Mindelaltheim viewed from a hill in the southwest of the village
Mindelaltheim1.JPG
Left the Schelmengrube , in the background the Mindeltal with Burgau
Graduated landscape in the Schlemengrube near Mindelaltheim.jpg
Graduated landscape in the picaresque pit

Mindelaltheim is a district of the municipality of Dürrlauingen in the northern district of Günzburg in Bavarian Swabia .

Geography and geology

schematic map of Mindelaltheim and the surrounding area (scale approx. 1:15 000)
  • built-up area
  • Forest
  • Green areas and meadows
  • Waters
  • Natural structure

    In terms of nature , Mindelaltheim lies on the main unit Iller-Lech-Schotterplatten , namely on the border between the eastern Mindeltal and Zusamplatte .

    Mindeltal

    The Mindel passes with a slight gradient in a south-north direction around one kilometer west of the town center. The river, which is now straightened and dammed, was originally closer to the village. The Mindeltal is wide and flat at the height of Mindelaltheim (around 440 to 450 m above sea level ), so that the view extends to neighboring Burgau . Its shape is due substantially from the melt water - and gravel transport during the quaternary cold-warm-hours ago. Today, however, more recent alluvial deposits are deposited on these layers of gravel. A strip at the transition to the Zusamplatte , where glacial molasses emerges from the Tertiary , is an exception here.

    Agriculture is practiced in the valley , so that a network of drainage ditches characterizes the landscape due to the high groundwater level . In addition to the railway line , it is above all meadows and smaller groups of trees that characterize the Mindeltal, although swampy and boggy areas can also be found. The peat extraction there in the 19th century led to the creation of pits west of Mindelaltheim, which are now used as fish ponds . The fact that there are two ponds near the Offingen district is due to gravel mining .

    Compilation

    The composite plate, i.e. the east of the area around Mindelaltheim, was mainly formed by filling the tertiary freshwater trough with molasses . In the Quaternary it was finally formed by meltwater . On the slopes of the Platte, this hilly landscape is often wooded, which is usually due to the gravel-gravelly soil quality. Only further east, on the relatively flat landscape in the direction of Dürrlauingen (approx. 500 to 510 m above sea level), is there fertile loess , which favors arable farming.

    It is possible to subdivide the landscape of the Zusamplatte near Mindelaltheim more precisely. Three hill formations running in an east-west direction can be identified, which are "cut" by two depressions . In the north is the chain of hills consisting of Sallerberg , Bachberg and Kirchberg on whose relatively flat ridge - called Salach - is the water protection area of the Schnuttenbacher springs , from which the Lower Bach rises. To the south, these ridges merge into a valley in which the village stream runs into the fish ponds and the center of Mindelaltheim is located. This valley is bounded again by further hill formations, which are joined by the picaresque pit as a second depression. A small body of water also flows in the middle.

    District

    At the Heilig-Kreuz-Kirche the district boundary leads along the district road GZ 11 to the southwest - i.e. in the direction of Burgau - approximately to Riedmühle. From there it leads north and makes the Mindel its own as a border. About 350 meters south of the Offinger Lüßhof , it turns northeast and meets the Untere Bach , along the course of which the border then cuts through the forests between Mindelaltheim and Schnuttenbach . At the fields on the Dürrlauinger Plateau, it then takes a more southerly course until it passes west of the former sewage treatment plant and then follows GZ 11 again almost to the edge of the Dürrlauingen settlement. In the following it continues south to the dirt road that is in the valley of the Schelmengrube . It follows this until State Road 2025 . With this road the border goes to the already mentioned church.

    Riedmühle

    The desert Riedmühle is located southeast of Mindelaltheim an der Mindel , near the mouth of the Erlenbach , and was first mentioned in a document in 1361. The name is derived from the Middle High German term advised , which describes a "ground overgrown with marsh grass". The part of the name -mühle refers to an oil and flour mill - the latter was in use until the 1960s. A hydroelectric power station at the Riedmühle has been generating electricity since 1948, for which the Mindel is dammed. The energy obtained operates a pump, among other things, which supplies Burgau with drinking water.

    The Riedmühle was only incorporated into Mindelaltheim in the course of secularization . Before that it belonged to the Landensberg fiefdom , which in turn was owned by the Margraviate and Burgau ; until 1834 it remained part of the parish of Dürrlauingen .

    Neighboring places

    The following is a representation of the neighboring towns of the village. The length specifications relate to the distance between the respective town centers and are always rounded.

    DEU Offingen COA.svg
    Offingen
    3.7 km
    DEU Offingen COA.svg
    Schnuttenbach
    (municipality of Offingen)
    2.2 km
    DEU Rettenbach COA.svg
    Remshart
    (municipality of Rettenbach)
    2.7 km
    Neighboring communities Coat of arms of Dürrlauingen.svg
    Dürrlauingen
    1.6 km
    Coat of arms of Burgau (Swabia) .svg
    Burgau
    3.7 km
    Coat of arms of Haldenwang (Swabia) .svg
    Mehrenstetten
    ( Haldenwang municipality )
    1.2 km

    climate

    Mindelaltheim
    Climate diagram
    J F. M. A. M. J J A. S. O N D.
     
     
    49
     
    2
    -4
     
     
    45
     
    4th
    -3
     
     
    45
     
    8th
    0
     
     
    58
     
    13
    3
     
     
    82
     
    18th
    7th
     
     
    101
     
    21st
    11
     
     
    94
     
    23
    12
     
     
    90
     
    22nd
    12
     
     
    64
     
    19th
    9
     
     
    52
     
    14th
    5
     
     
    53
     
    7th
    1
     
     
    52
     
    2
    -3
    Temperature in ° Cprecipitation in mm
    Source: http://de.climate-data.org/location/714520/
    Average monthly temperatures and precipitation in Mindelaltheim
    Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    Max. Temperature ( ° C ) 1.5 3.5 8.2 13.0 17.6 20.9 22.8 22.2 19.1 13.5 6.5 2.4 O 12.6
    Min. Temperature (° C) -3.8 -3.1 -0.4 3.2 7.2 10.6 12.3 11.7 8.8 4.5 0.6 -2.6 O 4.1
    Temperature (° C) 1.2 0.2 3.9 8.1 12.4 15.7 17.5 16.9 13.9 8.8 3.5 -0.1 O 8.5
    Precipitation ( mm ) 49 45 45 58 82 101 94 90 64 52 53 52 Σ 785
    T
    e
    m
    p
    e
    r
    a
    t
    u
    r
    1.5
    -3.8
    3.5
    -3.1
    8.2
    -0.4
    13.0
    3.2
    17.6
    7.2
    20.9
    10.6
    22.8
    12.3
    22.2
    11.7
    19.1
    8.8
    13.5
    4.5
    6.5
    0.6
    2.4
    -2.6
    Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
    N
    i
    e
    d
    e
    r
    s
    c
    h
    l
    a
    g
    49
    45
    45
    58
    82
    101
    94
    90
    64
    52
    53
    52
      Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

    flora

    Specimen of the black- blue or violet oil beetle in a forest near Mindelaltheim. Both species are classified as endangered in Bavaria.

    The forests on the hills of the Zusamplatte are on the edge of the Western Forests Nature Park . Their original mixed forests have been largely displaced by spruce monocultures in the last few centuries . Exceptions are, for example, mesophilic forest biotopes , such as one on the Kirchberg - where oak , hornbeam , birch and some beeches have been identified - or in the valley of the Schelmengrube , where black alder and ash grow. In the Mindeltal, however, fragments of alluvial forest (often with willows) can be found. Reeds , nettle species , reeds and reed grass predominate as accompanying vegetation in the waters of the Mindeltal, but also of the Dorfbach . Hedgerows and -gehölze dominated by blackthorn and hazel grow in stages fields in the valley of the village of Bach and in the Schlemengrube. Are also found in the town hall at individual points Altgrasbestände, often marked by the district rare sage - oat item. Incidentally, the fox sedge , which is endangered in Bavaria, and the highly endangered sand violet have been identified near Mindelaltheim .

    fauna

    Bird of prey in a wooded area near Mindelaltheim.

    In the field of Mindel near the village there are kingfishers , dippers , wagtail and grass snake . Furthermore, beaver families there cause the damming of the drainage ditches, as well as damage to fields and infrastructure , that - despite species protection - specimens of this species can be killed. As far as the fish world is concerned, minnow , nose , burbot , barbel and blue-banded harlequin populate the river just mentioned. In addition, carp , trout , pike , pikeperch and koi are bred in the fish ponds located between Mindel and the village settlement (see section Economy ). Frogs , grass snakes, ducks , coots , gray geese and cormorants can also be found. Infestation by the bark beetle led to the clearing of forest areas in summer 2015.

    history

    Name story

    Mindelaltheim as Mindelalten on a map from the 17th or 18th century

    The basic word of the place name is the Old High German heim (house, home), which was determined more precisely by the also Old High German adjective old (old, previously available). According to other - but controversial - interpretations heim is linguistically related to Hain or is old from Ala (c) h (also Hain, temple ). Even if some places in the district of Günzburg end on home , Mindelaltheim is the only appropriately named settlement east of the Mindel . Due to the relative frequency of Altheim in southern Germany ( Donaualtheim , Zusamaltheim , various places called Altheim), additions to the name differentiation were necessary, from which the river name Mindel finally prevailed at the end of the 14th century. First this was appended to the place name, and later it was added in front. In the local dialect the place name is [mendl̥āltə].

    Some of the oldest traditional place names are: Althain (1173), ze Althain daz is located on the Mindel (1386), ze Althain by Burgaw in der Mindel (1392) and Althain prope Hafenhouen .

    Local history

    Origin of settlement

    Schematic map of the area around Mindelaltheim in Roman times:
  • Danube
  • Location of today's Mindelaltheim
  • Roman roads , u. a .:
  • - dashed: Via Julia from Günzburg to Augsburg
  • - dotted: junction of Via Julia northwards
  • - Continuous: Donausüdstraße
  • Roman forts and settlements:
  • - G: Günzburg ( Guntia )
  • - B: Bürgle near Gundremmingen , late antique
  • - A: Aislingen
  • - P: Faimingen ( Phoebiana )
  • - AV: Augsburg ( Augusta Vindelicorum )
  • Some evidence suggests a Roman settlement in the area around Mindelaltheim. For example the addition -old in the place name and the identification of perhaps Roman ashlar stones in the foundation of the parish church just mentioned. Wolfgang Wüst also argues that Mindelaltheim could be older than the Alemannic neighboring town of Dürrlauingen , as the latter was probably founded in the course of later clearing up the valley. Karl Bader also sees the hillside location of the nucleus of the village, which is remote from running waters, as an indication of a Roman estate ( villa rustica ). The Mauritian patronage of the parish church and the lack of archaeological finds from a corresponding period speak rather against these hypotheses .

    Regardless of this, 15 BC Chr. The area around Mindelaltheim, as part of the Celtic populated Alpine foreland , Roman occupied and owned since the 1st century to the newly established province of Raetia et Vindelicia , later Raetia secunda . To the north of Mindelaltheim are the remains of the Donausüdstraße and the attached forts , which formed the border to the unoccupied Germania on the other side of the Danube until the 1st and again since the late 3rd century . In addition, the Roman road from Günzburg to Augsburg and its branch over the Danube at Faimingen ran a few kilometers away from today's Mindelaltheim . Germanic tribes have been plaguing Raetia with wars since the 3rd century , which led to an economic decline and "downright depopulation of large areas". As a result, Teutons were incorporated into the Roman army and settled in peaceful coexistence with the residents. The Roman military rule over the Alpine foothills collapsed in the 5th century.

    A "more or less peaceful" settlement of the Alamanni in the area followed. The place name Mindelaltheim refers to such a settlement through the component -heim , which was confirmed by Merovingian graves from 1979 to 1989 near the parish church . A total of nine row graves (including two children's burials) were discovered, some of them were destroyed by construction work. The dead were given, among other things, precious metal jewelry (decorated with gemstones and pearls ), the minting of a Byzantine coin from the time of Justinian , the rest of a long sword , and parts of a horse's bridle . The latter in particular indicate an "early local nobility". The grave finds are classified as a ground monument. In the Altlandkreis Günzburg , Germanic landings in the swampy area of ​​the Mindel are limited to its dry, eastern valley.

    High and late Middle Ages

    Dominions until 1803
    1173 First mention of the place
    ? Noble family von Ellerbach
    1403 Charterhouse of Buxheim
    1413 Lorenz and Dorothea Egen
    ? Peter Egen the Elder J.
    1438 St. Catherine Augsburg
    1803 Electorate of Bavaria

    In 1173, the small town was first mentioned as Althain in a document from the cathedral chapter of Augsburg . A property in Mindelaltheim was awarded to the cleric Wortwinus of the Augustinian canons of Wettenhausen . A knight Heinrich von Ellerbach, known as "Wolf" , who died in 1397, is mentioned as the founder of the Mindelaltheim parish . At that time, the village was under the Ellerbachs , with the exception of the bailiwick rights , which were held by the Counts of Werdenberg in Aislingen . In 1363 the von Steinheim family acquired the rights, which they sold on to the von Leimberg family .

    The village as such was given away in 1403 by the Augsburg canon Heinrich von Ellerbach , a brother of the aforementioned "Wolf", to the Buxheim Charterhouse founded by him . This could also make the bailiwick their own. As early as 1413, the mayor of Augsburg Lorenz Egen and his second wife Dorothea Mindelaltheim bought. From their son Peter Egen d. 25 years later, J. acquired the St. Katharina Dominican convent in Augsburg for 2,450 Rhenish guilders . The Margraviate of Burgau has presumably held the high jurisdiction since the 12th century .

    After it was added to the Katharinenkloster, two nurses were appointed to the Mindelaltheim office , who until 1715 were accountable to both the women's monastery and the imperial city of Augsburg .

    As early as 1400, Mindelaltheim had a smithy , and fishing rights at Mindel even date back to the 14th century.

    Reformation and early modern times

    During the Peasants' War , 20 Mindelaltheimers were members of the Leipheimer Haufen , an association of about 5000 farmers under the preacher Hans Jakob Wehe , who had to surrender to the Swabian Armed Forces near Leipheim on April 4, 1525 .

    After the old-believing pastor died in 1544 , the people of Mindelaltheim asked the Augsburg city council for a “Christian preacher”. In the same year, the Gundelfingen preacher Hans Heß started his work in Mindelaltheim, but had to leave the village after a few months at the instigation of the Bishop of Augsburg and the Roman-German king . The latter was in fact owned by the Margraviate of Burgau. In the course of the Schmalkaldic War , an evangelical preacher was used again for a short time in 1546.

    Allegedly, the Bavarian Elector Maximilian II. Emanuel spared the village during the War of the Spanish Succession in 1702 because it belonged to the St. Catherine's Monastery in Augsburg . According to another account, he took up position with his cavalry between Mindelaltheim and Burgau from September 2nd to 3rd or 4th, 1703 .

    An inn with a bathing room has been mentioned since 1626 , which was located at the intersection of the roads to Konzenberg and Dürrlauingen . This has been called Zum Grünen Baum since the 19th century and at that time owned a brewery and hop garden .

    Changes in the 19th century

    For the time of the coalition wars , in this case from 1806 to 1810, the records of the then Mindelaltheim pastor vividly describe billeting , looting and "almost unaffordable" compulsory levies from various associations. A remarkable example of these requisitions is the relocation of an allegedly "more than 1000 men strong" hospital of the Imperial Army in August 1796. Similar numbers of Hungarian hussars were housed in the village just a few days later. In September of the same year, French troops marauded through the town by setting barns and piles of straw on fire, and robbing properties - but not parish and pilgrimage churches.

    The surroundings of Mindelaltheim on a map published between 1798 and 1828; Note the bridge over the Mindel near the Riedmühle .

    In 1803, in the course of secularization, the rule of the Katharinenkloster over Mindelaltheim, which had lasted for more than three and a half centuries, ended . The place was now part of the newly established Kingdom of Bavaria and, after a brief affiliation with the Dillingen district court , was incorporated into the Günzburg district court .

    In the middle of the 19th century, a second inn opened in town. In 1913 a station restoration on the train line.

    20th century

    The time of National Socialism in Mindelaltheim actually ended on April 24, 1945 when it was handed over to members of the 7th US Army without a fight . After the Second World War , 205 refugees were assigned to the village, which corresponded to a population growth of around 93 percent. Of all the communities in the Altlandkreis Günzburg, Mindelaltheim thus had the fifth highest pollution rate, which was calculated by dividing the number of residents and new arrivals. A large number of businesses were located in Mindelaltheim well into the post-war period, of which a biscuit and canning factory (this one with up to 86 seasonal workers) are just two examples.

    On November 14, 1966, 10 to 20 tons (approx. 30,000 liters) of crude oil from the Genoa-Ingolstadt pipeline flowed from a pumping station near Dürrlauingen . The environmentally harmful substance spread in the area around Mindelaltheim. Overall, the incident caused property damage amounting to around half a million DM , around 200 firefighters were on duty for several days.

    The latest history of the place is shaped by the municipal reform in Bavaria . On May 1, 1978, the previously independent municipality of Mindelaltheim (as well as Mönstetten ) was incorporated into the municipality of Dürrlauingen . In addition, three residential areas were approved: First the Sonnenbühl (1965), then the Weinberg (1982) including the Söldholzweg . All three areas mentioned are located on a hill northeast of the town center. In 1995 the Am Anger building area followed in a southerly direction near the meadows near the railway line.

    Population development

    Early evidence

    1173 1393 1413 1438 1486 1492 1603 1626 1753
    Residential buildings 1 4th 12 16 13 13 16 23 24

    1808 to 2017

    The following list shows specific points of reference for the population development of Mindelaltheim. If the population figures are not explained in more detail in the sources used, the years of publication of the works are given as a date.

    1808 1818 1823 1830 1831 1832 1839 1840 1852 1855 1858 1861 1863 1867 1870
    "Kerndorf" 171 171 160 153 171 150 185 179 182 154 164 152 166 166 161
    Riedmühle 5 * 5 5
    1871 1875 1880 1883 1885 1890 1895 1900 1905 1910 1919 1920 1925 1929
    "Kerndorf" 194 182 186 186 173 197 201 197 218 218 239 240 211 230
    Riedmühle 12 * 12 14th 18th
    1933 1939 1946 1948 1950 1952 1961 1965 1970 1973 1978 1987 1998 2014 2017
    "Kerndorf" 238 230 431 444 405 421 353 336 410 360 410 472 510 550 527
    Riedmühle 27 10 16 16 12

    * The role of the wasteland Riedmühle is not clear from the context

    Census in relation to the parish of Mindelaltheim

    The data in the following diagram is derived from the table in the previous section, with the population data from Kerndorf and - if available - from Riedmühle added together.

    The censuses of 1875 and 1883 also show that - despite the Catholic character of the village - believers of the Israelite faith lived in the village at that time .

    politics

    Mindelaltheim's coat of arms on the town's maypole
    Mindelaltheim coat of arms
    Blazon : “The coat of arms of Mindelaltheim shows under the shield head split by gold and green, split by green and gold; in the front half a golden wheel studded with silver knives, behind a red trefoil double cross. "
    Reasons for the coat of arms: The knife-studded straightening wheel as well as the double- leaf clover come from the coat of arms of the Dominican convent in Augsburg , the former being an attribute of St. Catherine of Alexandria . The colors green and yellow indicate the noble family Ellerbach . However, it should be noted that in practice a version of the coat of arms with gold knives is used.

    Since Mindelaltheim was incorporated into Dürrlauingen in 1978, the coat of arms no longer has legal force. Entry on the coat of arms of Mindelaltheim  in the database of the House of Bavarian History


    Attractions

    Pilgrimage Church of the Holy Cross

    lili rere
    The renovated Heilig Kreuz pilgrimage church
    The crucifix made by Christoph Rodt in 1604 in the choir of the church

    The pilgrimage church Heilig Kreuz - as the most art-historically significant building in the village - is located on the south-eastern outskirts of Mindelaltheim. The pilgrimage goes back to a crucifix made by the sculptor Christoph Rodt in 1604 , to which miraculous healings were attributed. The first church was built at the pilgrimage site in 1698, and Joseph Dossenberger expanded the church half a century later . In this context, Anton Enderle painted a 29-part fresco program on the church ceiling. The sacred building enjoys “supra-regional importance” due to its cross-shaped floor plan and its furnishings.

    Parish Church of St. Mauritius

    The baroque parish church of St. Mauritius with a modern war memorial

    The parish church of St. Mauritius , located by the vineyard in the middle of the village, dates from the beginning of the 18th century. Noteworthy are the profitable altars and some furnishings. The baroque building is contrasted by a modern war memorial with a glass roof and a figure of the Archangel Michael .

    Village center

    The village center of Mindelaltheim: on the left the storage shed, in the center the hall building (covered by a tree), on the right the listed rectory

    The Mindelaltheim village center is located below the parish church . It consists of an ensemble of buildings, which are grouped around a forecourt.

    The listed rectory was built in its current form (with a saddle roof and plaster structure) in 1864 and restored in 1997. However, a corresponding building is already shown on the Kolleffel map in the middle of the 18th century. A private apartment and a bank branch have been housed in the rectory since the 1990s. In the middle of the village center there has been an ornamental fountain since 2003 , which symbolizes the saying “Better to have a sparrow in your hand than a dove on the roof”.

    Other buildings in the ensemble are on the one hand a storage shed, on the other hand a hall building with a kitchen and - below - with the shooting range and clubhouse of the Gemütliche Schützen . The hall building is connected to the rectory by a wing and was designed by the Burgau architect Arno Kohl between 1992 and 1995 , and built with considerable initiative by the villagers.

    Chapel on the road to Schnuttenbach

    The chapel on the road to Schnuttenbach ( further pictures )

    One of the noteworthy smaller buildings in the village is a chapel on the road to Schnuttenbach near the so-called latitudes. It came in its original form from the 18th century and was expanded in 1867. The structure, inside of which there is a life-size dungeon savior behind a grille, had to be relocated several times due to rail and road construction work.

    Wayside shrine in the parish forest

    The wayside shrine in the Mindelaltheim parish forest from the early 19th century was restored at the end of the last century and until the 1950s it housed a late Gothic Madonna, which is now on display in the Holy Cross Church .

    economy

    Today Mindelaltheim has a locksmith's shop, a car workshop and - since 1935 - one of the few fish farms in Bavarian Swabia that keeps carp stocks . Its ponds result from peat cutting work in the period from the 19th century to the Second World War. The poultry farm in the village was operated until July 2016, a subsidiary of Raiffeisen Bank Aschberg (formerly Offingen ) eG closed end of September of the same year.

    The village was shaped by agriculture up to the present day . However, only a few part-time farms have survived from what were once around 40 farms.

    traffic

    Street names

    The following is a list of all local roads in the town:

    Fig. Street name Remarks
    Am Anger Mindelaltheim.jpg
    At the Anger The term Anger developed from the ahd. Angar or mdh. anger and describes a "wild green" grassland or a patch of grass
    Angerheckweg (Mindelaltheim) .jpg Angerheckweg
    At the wayside shrine
    Am Sonnenbühl.jpg At the Sonnenbühl Named after the former Zur Sonne inn located there
    At the vineyard Could indicate earlier viticulture
    Bahnhofstrasse Refers to the breakpoint Mindelaltheim the railway line Augsburg-Ulm
    At the Riedmühle
    Director-Rimmele-Strasse
    Fig. Street name Remarks
    Dossenbergerstrasse.jpg
    Dossenbergerstrasse
    Im Ried (MIndelaltheim) .jpg In the reed
    Fischerweg The name probably refers to the village's fish ponds
    Hirtengäßle Mindelaltheim.jpg Hirtengäßle Reminiscence of the Mindelaltheim shepherd's house , which was located nearby
    Kirchlesweg.jpg
    Kirchlesweg Named after the Sanctuary of the Holy Cross , which sometimes as Kirchle is called
    Mühlweg Corresponds to an earlier connection route to Riedmühle
    Söldholzweg Based on the term mercenary for small farmers or that of the Sölde , their property or land
    Urlesberg Named after the forest holdings of the Mindelaltheim Urles farmer

    The district road GZ 11 crosses the village as Urlesberg from Dürrlauingen until it briefly joins the state road 2025 in the village. The latter comes from Schnuttenbach . While the GZ 11 extends over the Mindelaltheimer railway bridge in the direction of Burgau, the state road continues to Mehrenstetten . In order to relieve the villagers of the traffic noise, a bypass road was built east of the town center in the 1990s.

    View from the road bridge above the
    Mindelaltheim stop towards Offingen ; in the background is the Gundremmingen nuclear power plant and the village of Mindelaltheim.

    Public transport

    The Augsburg – Ulm railway line has been running on the western edge of the town since 1853 , where the double-track Mindelaltheim stop is on a gentle curve, directly under a road bridge . Until February 7, 1971 staff was employed at the railway system. On the route, Mindelaltheim is served by the regional express line Fugger Express as the only stopping point every two hours. Regional trains will stop here every hour from December 12, 2020. The Verkehrsverbund Mittelschwaben supplies three bus stops in town with a total of four lines. In addition, 25 stops in Mindelaltheim will be served as part of the Flexibus concept .

    Cycle routes

    Mindelaltheim is part of several official cycle routes of the district of Günzburg and the district of Swabia:

    • The Holzwinkel tour begins in the village and continues via Dürrlauingen to the east over mostly wooded areas.
    • The Mindeltal cycle path , which follows the course of the river from its source to its confluence with the Danube , crosses the town.
    • The Seven Swabian Tour
    • The Swabian Potato Tour
    • The Via Julia leads past the Riedmühle

    societies

    The following is a list of the still existing or historical associations of the place with the corresponding founding date in brackets:

    Existing clubs

    • Volunteer Fire Brigade (1877)
    • Shooting Club Cozy Shooters (1903)
    • Soldiers and Comradeship Association (before 1926)
    • The Liederquell men's choir (1964) is one of the last men's choirs in the Günzburg district and also has members from Freihalden and Burtenbach in its ranks.
    • The association art and culture in the village (2004) organizes two music events per year in the local village center , which are framed by the art exhibitions.

    Historical clubs

    • The brotherhood of Christ's fear of death (17th century) was an association of men and women who hoped to be spared from hell through a certain organization of their religious life (such as prescribed prayers and worship). The brotherhood church of the association, which existed until the 20th century, was the Holy Cross Church .
    • The activities of the Raiffeisen -Darlehenskassenverein (1906) included the granting of cash credits, the agricultural trade, the weighing of cattle, and later the storage (for example of fertilizers) in its own warehouse.

    Personalities

    Honorary citizen

    • Max Rimmele (* 1877 in Mimmenhausen; † 1951 in Mindelaltheim) was a retired priest in Mindelaltheim from 1937 until his death. He is the only honorary citizen of the independent municipality of Mindelaltheim. According to him, was director-Rimmele Road named.
    • Since the incorporation to Dürrlauingen , however, Mindelaltheimers have also been made honorary citizens.

    Sons and daughters of the place

    • Johann von Gott Bundschue (born May 13, 1784 in Mindelaltheim, † spring 1851 in Kempten ) was Lyzeal professor in Kempten. He was also the author of mathematical and theological writings.

    Personalities who worked in Mindelaltheim

    Joseph Dossenberger (1721–1785) was a master builder in Wettenhausen and shaped the Swabian Baroque angle through his work. In Mindelaltheim in 1754 he expanded the pilgrimage church of the Holy Cross to create a special cross shape. The Dossenbergerstraße in the town center was named after him.

    Literature selection

    • Karl Bader, Bent Jörgensen, Anton H. Konrad, Philibert Magin, Emil Neuhäusler, Monika Rappöhn, Dieter Rappöhn: Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 .
    • Christopher W. Close: The Mindelaltheim Affair. High Justice, ius reformandi, and the Rural Reformation in Eastern Swabia (1542–1546) (=  The Sixteenth Century Journal . Volume 38 , no. 2 ). 2007, ISSN  0361-0160 .

    Web links

    Commons : Mindelaltheim  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

    Individual evidence

    1. a b Citizens should participate. Mayor appeal to Dürrlauinger. In: Günzburger Zeitung . November 16, 2017. Retrieved November 18, 2017 .
    2. ^ Hans Graul: sheet 180: GeographischeLandesaufnahme. Natural structure . In: Emil Meynen (Hrsg.): Handbook of the natural spatial structure of Germany . Sheet 180: Augsburg. Bad Godesberg 1962 ( online [PDF]).
    3. ^ Raimo Becker, Haumann, Ali Aktas, Karl Brunnacker :: Explanations for the geological overview map of the Mindel-Lech area 1: 100,000 . In: Bayerisches Geologisches Landesamt (Hrsg.): Drilling in the Molasse basin and contributions to the Quaternary stratigraphy of southern Bavaria . Geologica Bavarca, No. 106 , 2001, ISSN  0016-755X , p. 115 .
    4. a b FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Environment: Species and soil protection: Biotope mapping: Biotope 7528-1075. In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. State Office for the Environment, accessed on May 25, 2016 .
    5. ^ Karl Bader: Mindelaltheim - A village is born. 800 years to the present day village . S. 84 .
    6. a b GeoFachdatenAtlas (soil information system Bavaria). Bavarian State Office for the Environment, accessed on May 20, 2015 .
    7. a b Francis tearing Auer, Josef Weizenegger, Anton H. Konrad: Günzburg County. A portrait of its history and art . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 1966, p. 17-21 .
    8. a b Geological map of Bavaria 1: 500,000. In: BayernAtlas. State Office for Digitization, Broadband and Surveying, accessed on May 20, 2015 .
    9. a b c d e f Mindelaltheim. Village life around 1950 .
    10. Environment: Nature, Landscape: Bog Soil Map of Bavaria 1: 25,000 (MBK25). In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. Bavarian State Office for the Environment, accessed on August 28, 2016 .
    11. FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Environment: Species and biotope protection: Biotope mapping: Biotope 7528-1083. In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. Bavarian State Office for the Environment, accessed on August 28, 2016 .
    12. ^ BayernAtlas. Bavarian State Ministry of Finance, Regional Development and Homeland, accessed on August 28, 2016 .
    13. a b FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Administrative boundaries: District: Mindelaltheim. In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. Bavarian State Office for the Environment, accessed on April 21, 2016 .
    14. Hafner (Ed.): Appendix to Official Gazette No. 41 of October 14, 2011. Ordinance of the Günzburg District Office on the “Schnuttenbacher Quellen” water protection area in the Schnuttenbach and Dürrlauingen districts for the public water supply of the city of Burgau . Günzburg 2011 ( landkreis-guenzburg.de [PDF]).
    15. ^ Michaela Glenk: Günzburg . In: Stadt und Altlandkreis. Historical book of place names of Bavaria. Swabia . tape 11 . Commission for Bavarian State History, Munich 2012, ISBN 978-3-7696-6866-7 , p. 269-270 .
    16. a b c Karl Bader: In the middle of the village or out of the way and unknown - that too is Mindelaltheim . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 503-506 .
    17. ^ Wolfgang Wüst: Günzburg . In: Commission for Bavarian State History (Hrsg.): Historischer Atlas von Bayern; Part Swabia . tape 13 . Munich 1983, ISBN 3-7696-9933-5 , p. 216–217 ( geschichte.digitale-sammlungen.de ).
    18. Bavarian State Ministry for the Environment, Health and Consumer Protection (Ed.): Red List of Endangered Animals and Vascular Plants in Bavaria . Short version. Munich 2005, p. 63 ( bayern.de ).
    19. Josef Stechele: Nature Park Augsburg - Western Forests. Hiking paradise between the Danube, Schmutter, Wertach and Mindel . Ed .: Naturpark Augsburg - Westliche Wälder e. V. BRV, Brigitte-Settele-Verlag, Augsburg 1988 (inside front cover).
    20. Karl Bader: In the middle of the village or out of the way and unknown - that too is Mindelaltheim . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 507 .
    21. FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Environment: Species and soil protection: Biotope mapping: Biotope 7528-0090. In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. State Office for the Environment, accessed on May 25, 2016 .
    22. FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Environment: Species and soil protection: Biotope mapping: Biotope 7528-0108. In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. State Office for the Environment, accessed on May 25, 2016 .
    23. FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Environment: Species and soil protection: Biotope mapping: Biotope 7528-1075 (sub-area -004). In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. Bavarian State Office for the Environment, accessed on May 23, 2016 .
    24. FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Environment: Species and soil protection: Biotope mapping: Biotope 7528-1165 (sub-areas -005 and -006), 7528-1166 (sub-areas -003 and -006), 7528-1073 (sub-areas - 001 to -011) 7528-1075 (sub-areas -004) and 7528-1083 (sub-areas -001 and -002). In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. Bavarian State Office for the Environment, accessed on May 26, 2016 .
    25. ^ Karl Bader: Mindelaltheim - A village is born. 800 years to the present day village . S. 16 .
    26. FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Environment: Species and soil protection: Biotope mapping: Biotope 7528-0092 (sub-areas -007 and -008). In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. Bavarian State Office for the Environment, accessed on August 15, 2016 .
    27. FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Environment: Species and biotope protection: Biotope mapping: Biotope 7528-1168. In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. Bavarian State Office for the Environment, accessed on August 29, 2016 .
    28. Thomas Meyer: Species of the aggregate Carex vulpina agg. In: Flora-de: Flora of Germany. Retrieved June 4, 2016 .
    29. Brigitte Adler, Jürgen Adler, Günther Kunzmann (ed.): Flora von Nordschwaben. The fern and flowering plants of the districts of Dillingen ad Donau and Donau-Ries . Nördlingen 2017, ISBN 978-3-943599-63-3 , pp. 316 .
    30. Regionalized Flore list Bavaria with hazard Einstufunge. (PDF) Bavarian State Office for the Environment, 2003, pp. 137 and 244 , accessed on June 17, 2018 .
    31. a b habitat. In: Mindelkinder. Retrieved March 10, 2016 .
    32. Angela Effenberger: Exception: Beavers may be killed. In: Augsburger Allgemeine. September 9, 2010, accessed March 10, 2016 .
    33. FIS Nature Online (FIN-Web): Environment: Species and soil protection: Biotope mapping: Biotope 7528-1073 (sub-area -010). In: FIS - Bavarian Specialized Information System for Nature Conservation. State Office for the Environment, accessed on May 28, 2016 .
    34. News. (No longer available online.) In: Mindelkinder. Formerly in the original ; accessed on May 26, 2016 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.mindelkinder.de  
    35. A life with and for nature. In: Augsburger Allgemeine. April 25, 2009, accessed March 10, 2016 .
    36. a b Lent is carp season. Archived from the original on March 19, 2016 ; accessed on February 13, 2016 .
    37. Forest has to go because of bark beetles. In: Augsburger Allgemeine. August 16, 2015, accessed April 21, 2016 .
    38. a b c d e f Michaela Glenk: Günzburg. City and Altlandkreis . Historical book of place names of Bavaria. Swabia, No. 11 . Commission for Bavarian State History, Munich 2012, ISBN 978-3-7696-6866-7 , p. 218-219 .
    39. a b Wolf-Armin von Reitzenstein: Lexicon of Swabian place names: origin and meaning . CH Beck, Munich 2013, ISBN 978-3-406-65208-0 , p. 250.
    40. ^ Bent Jörgensen: On the history of the community Dürrlauingen up to 1806 . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 32, note 3 .
    41. ^ A b c Anton von Steichele (continued by Alfred Schröder): The land chapters: Ichenhausen and Jettingen (=  The Diocese of Augsburg, historically and statistically described . Volume 5 ). Augsburg 1895, p. 700–701 (note 1) ( daten.digitale-sammlungen.de ).
    42. Horst Gaiser: Small district description Günzburg, city and district . Association for district descriptions, Neu-Ulm 1966, p. 6 .
    43. a b c d e f Bernt von Hagen, Angelika Wegener-Hüssen: Landkreis Günzburg. Ensembles, architectural monuments, archaeological monuments (=  monuments in Bavaria: independent cities and districts in Bavaria . Volume 91,1 , 7 (Swabia, districts)). Lipp, Munich 1997, ISBN 3-87490-589-6 , pp. 118-124 .
    44. ^ A b c Karl Bader: Streiflichter on the village history . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 395-399 .
    45. ^ Wolfgang Wüst: Günzburg . Historical Atlas of Bavaria; Part Swabia, No. 13 . Commission for Bavarian State History, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-7696-9933-5 , p. 22–23 ( daten.digitale-sammlungen.de ).
    46. ^ Karl Bader: Mindelaltheim - A village is born. 800 years to the present day village . S. 11 .
    47. ^ Michaela Glenk: Günzburg. City and Altlandkreis . Historical book of place names of Bavaria. Swabia, No. 11 . For Bavarian regional history, Munich 2012, ISBN 978-3-7696-6866-7 , p. 54 * .
    48. Hans-Jörg Kellner: The Romans in Bavaria . 2nd, supplemented edition. Süddeutscher Verlag, Munich 1972, p. 23 .
    49. a b c d e f g h i Karlheinz Dietz, Wolfgang Czysz: The Romans in Swabia . In: Andreas Kraus (Ed.): Handbook of Bavarian History . 3rd, revised edition. III / 2 History of Swabia up to the end of the 18th century. CH Beck, Munich 2001, ISBN 3-406-39452-3 .
    50. ^ BayernAtlas. In: Geoportal Bavaria. Bavarian State Ministry of Finance, State Development and Homeland, State Office for Monument Preservation, accessed on July 25, 2018 .
    51. ^ Czysz, Wolfgang, Krahe, Günther, (collaborators: Mayer, Anton): Excavations and finds in Bavarian Swabia 1979 . In: Journal of the Historical Association for Swabia . tape 74 . Commission publishing house books Seitz, Augsburg 1980, p. 68-69 .
    52. Wolfgang Czysz, Günther Krahe: Excavations and finds in Bavarian Swabia 1982 . In: Journal of the Historical Association for Swabia . tape 77 . Wißner-Verlag, Augsburg 1983, p. 54-55 .
    53. Mapping: soil monuments. In: BayernAtlas. State Office for Digitization, Broadband and Surveying, accessed on May 6, 2016 .
    54. ^ Wolfgang Wüst: Günzburg . Historical Atlas of Bavaria; Part Swabia, No. 13 . Commission for Bavarian State History, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-7696-9933-5 , p. 22–23 ( daten.digitale-sammlungen.de ).
    55. ^ Bent Jörgensen: On the history of the community Dürrlauingen up to 1806 . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött. Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 14 .
    56. a b Wolfgang Wüst: Günzburg . Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Swabia, No. 13 . Commission for Bavarian State History, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-7696-9933-5 , p. 188–189 ( geschichte.digitale-sammlungen.de ).
    57. a b Bent Jörgensen: On the history of the community Dürrlauingen up to 1806 . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 9-12 .
    58. Franz Ludwig Baumann: Files on the history of the German Peasant War from Upper Swabia . Herder, Freiburg i. Br., Munich 1877, p. 181 ( books.google.de ).
    59. Christopher W. Close: The Negotiated Reformation. Imperial Cities and the Politics of Urban Reform 1525–1550 . Cambridge University Press, Cambridge u. a. 2009, ISBN 978-0-521-76020-1 , pp. 186 ff .
    60. Dietmar Schiersner: politics, religion and communication. Studies on the Catholic denomination of the Margraviate Burgau 1550–1650 . Colloquia Augustana, No. 19 . Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 2005, ISBN 3-05-004091-2 , pp. 24 and 38 ff .
    61. ^ Christopher W. Close: The Mindelaltheim Affair. High Justice, ius reformandi, and the Rural Reformation in Eastern Swabia (1542-1546) . In: The Sixteenth Century Journal . tape 38 , no. 2 , 2007, ISSN  0361-0160 , p. 371-392 .
    62. Hannliese Hafner: The Dominican convent St. Katharina in Augsburg in the 18th century . Buchdruckerei H. Heber, Augsburg 1938, p. 46 .
    63. ^ Karl Staudinger: History of the Bavarian Army under Elector Max II. Emanuel 1680–1726 . Second half volume. J. Lindauersche Buchhandlung (Schöpping), Munich 1905, p. 972 .
    64. ^ Karl Bader: Pastor in the village. Pastors, builders, patrons, chroniclers and lawyers for their parishioners: Appendix I. From the notes of Pastor Ignaz Steichele . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 459-466 .
    65. State Office for Geoinformation and Rural Development Baden-Württemberg (Ed.): Maps, geodata, aerial photographs . April 1, 2017, p. 22 ( lgl-bw.de [PDF]).
    66. Horst Gaiser: Small district description Günzburg, city and district . Association for district descriptions, Neu-Ulm 1966, p. 21-22 .
    67. ^ Karl Bader: Pastor in the village. Pastors, clients, patrons, chroniclers and lawyers for their parishioners: Appendix 3: From the diary of Director Max Rimmele, the last pastor in our rectory . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 490-495 .
    68. Hans Frei (Ed.): Historical Atlas of Bavarian Swabia. 1. Delivery . 2nd revised and supplemented edition. Verl. D. Schwäb. Research Association, Augsburg 1982, p. XV .
    69. ^ A b c Xaver Schieferle: The city of Burgau and its administration. From archive documents and from personal experience . Burgau 1982, p. 46 .
    70. Barbara Sallinger: On the integration of expellees in the Günzburg district in the period 1945/46 to 1987 . Augsburg 1989, p. 38 .
    71. ^ A b Franz Glogger: Economy in Staig: Oil from Italy made for wealth. In: swp.de. July 19, 2017, accessed December 7, 2018 .
    72. ^ German Bundestag (ed.): 75th session . November 25, 1966, p. 3506 ( bundestag.de [PDF] Question from MP Ludwig Fellermeier (SPD) to the Federal Minister of Health).
    73. Important events and special missions after the war. In: Burgau volunteer fire brigade. Burgau volunteer fire brigade, accessed on December 7, 2018 .
    74. Roland Gottfried, Karl Bader: Chronicle of the Mindelaltheim Fire Brigade, quoted in: Freiwillige Feuerwehr Mindelaltheim . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 537 .
    75. ^ 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. 775 .
    76. ^ Karl Bader: Mindelaltheim - A village is born. 800 years to the present day village . S. 38-39 .
    77. ^ A b Emil Neuhäusler: History of the three districts from 1978 . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 137-140 .
    78. a b c d e f g Karl Bader: Mindelaltheim - A village emerges. 800 years to the present day village . S. 21 .
    79. a b c d e f Karl Bader: Mindelaltheim - A village emerges. 800 years to the present day village . S. 97 .
    80. a b c d Wolfgang Wüst: Günzburg . In: Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Swabia . tape 13 . Commission for Bavarian State History, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-7696-9933-5 , p. 242 ( geschichte.digitale-sammlungen.de ).
    81. ^ Intelligence Journal of the Royal = Bavarian Upper Danube = District. 28 (July 12, 1830). Augsburg 1830.
    82. Joseph Anton Eisenmann, Karl Friedrich Hohn: Topo-geographical-statistical lexicon of the Kingdom of Bavaria, or alphabetical description of all the districts, cities, markets, villages, hamlets, farms, castles, wastelands, mountains, excellent mountains and forests contained in the Kingdom of Bavaria, water etc: . Ed .: Johann Jacob Palm and Ernst Enke. tape 1 : A-L . Johann Jacob Palm and Ernst Enke, 1831, p. 45 ( books.google.de ).
    83. ^ A b Gerhard Willi (ed.): Folklore and regional history description from the district of Günzburg. The physics reports of the regional courts in Günzburg, Burgau and Krumbach (1858–1861). With a contribution by Peter Fassl (=  Publications of the Swabian Research Foundation: Series 10. Sources on Historical Folklore and Regional Studies, No. 4 ). Wißner, Augsburg 2007, ISBN 978-3-89639-592-4 , pp. 341 .
    84. a b Georg Friedrich Kramer: Statistical manual for the government district of Swabia and Neuburg . tape 1 . Self-published, Augsburg 1839, p. 61 ( books.google.de ).
    85. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Bavarian State Statistical Office (Hrsg.): Historical municipality register: The population of the municipalities of Bavaria from 1840 to 1952 (=  contributions to Statistics Bavaria . Issue 192). Munich 1954, DNB  451478568 , p. 227 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb00066439-3 ( digitized version ).
    86. ^ Royal Bavarian Circle = Official Gazette of Swabia and Neuburg. 61 (July 29, 1863). Augsburg 1863.
    87. ^ Royal Bavarian Circle = Official Gazette of Swabia and Neuburg. 1111 (December 14, 1870). Augsburg 1870.
    88. Joseph Anton Eisenmann, Karl Friedrich Hohn: Topo-geographical-statistical lexicon of the Kingdom of Bavaria, or alphabetical description of all the districts, cities, markets, villages, hamlets, farms, castles, wastelands, mountains, excellent mountains and forests contained in the Kingdom of Bavaria, water etc: . tape 2 : M-Z . Johann Jacob Palm and Ernst Enke, 1832, p. 65 ( books.google.de ).
    89. a b c Kgl. Statistical Bureau (ed.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria. According to districts, administrative districts, court districts and municipalities, including parish, school and post office affiliation ... with an alphabetical general register containing the population according to the results of the census of December 1, 1875 . Adolf Ackermann, Munich 1877, 2nd section (population figures from 1871, cattle figures from 1873), Sp. 1415 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb00052489-4 ( digitized ).
    90. ^ Gustav Neumann: Entry on Mindelaltheim . In: Leipzig, Bibliographisches Institut (Hrsg.): Geographical Lexicon of the German Empire, with Ravenstein's Special Atlas of Germany . tape 2 . Verlag des Bibliographisches Institut, Leipzig 1883, p. 774 ( archive.org ).
    91. a b c K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Localities directory of the Kingdom of Bavaria. According to government districts, administrative districts, ... then with an alphabetical register of locations, including the property and the responsible administrative district for each location. LIV. Issue of the contributions to the statistics of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Munich 1888, Section III, Sp. 1351 ( digitized version ).
    92. a b K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Directory of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria, with alphabetical register of places . LXV. Issue of the contributions to the statistics of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Munich 1904, Section II, Sp. 1437 ( digitized version ).
    93. a b Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Localities directory for the Free State of Bavaria according to the census of June 16, 1925 and the territorial status of January 1, 1928 . Issue 109 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1928, Section II, Sp. 1472 ( digitized version ).
    94. Meyer, Joseph (Ed.): Meyers Orts- und Verkehrslexikon des Deutschen Reiches, the free city of Danzig and the Memel area . 6th edition. Bibliographisches Institut AG, Leipzig 1935, p. 408 ( wiki-de.genealogy.net ).
    95. a b Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official place directory for Bavaria - edited on the basis of the census of September 13, 1950 . Issue 169 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1952, DNB  453660975 , Section II, Sp. 1293 ( digitized version ).
    96. a b Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official city directory for Bavaria, territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census . Issue 260 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1964, DNB  453660959 , Section II, Sp. 944 ( digitized version ).
    97. Horst Gaiser: Small district description Günzburg, city and district . Association for district descriptions, Neu-Ulm 1966, p. 32 .
    98. a b Bavarian State Statistical Office (Hrsg.): Official local directory for Bavaria . Issue 335 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1973, DNB  740801384 , p. 206 ( digitized version ).
    99. Arno Ruoff: Fundamentals and methods of studying spoken language . Idiomatica, no. 1 . Max Niemeyer Verlag, Tübingen 1973, ISBN 3-484-10146-6 , p. 328 .
    100. a b Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing (Ed.): Official local directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 25, 1987 . Issue 450 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich November 1991, DNB  94240937X , p. 403 ( digitized version ).
    101. ^ A b Georg Bayerle: Village of the future. What is happening to Bavaria's core identity? BR Bayern 2, November 16, 2014, accessed on February 16, 2016 .
    102. History of the coat of arms and photography of the coat of arms on the website of the House of Bavarian History .
    103. ^ Eduard Zimmermann: Augsburg symbols and coats of arms. Including the citizens of the imperial city of Augsburg and the holders of higher ecclesiastical dignities of the episcopal city of Augsburg, its monasteries and monasteries . Mühlberger, Augsburg 1970, p. Coat of arms 2540 and 7071 .
    104. ^ Georg Hartmetz: Christoph Rodt (around 1578–1634). Sculptor between Renaissance and Baroque (=  studies of southern German wooden sculpture of the early 17th century ). Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2019, ISBN 978-3-87437-586-3 , p. 144 and 270-271 .
    105. ^ A b Karl Bader: Pastor in the village. Pastors, builders, patrons, chroniclers and lawyers for their parishioners . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 453-458 .
    106. Mention of the Mindelaltheimer Fountain on Paul Auer's website. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on May 18, 2015 ; accessed on May 15, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.wolfgangauer.de
    107. Karl Bader: In the middle of the village or out of the way and unknown - that too is Mindelaltheim . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 496-502 .
    108. a b Ulrich Mayer, Josef Weizenegger: wayside shrines and chapels in the district of Günzburg (= local series for the district of Günzburg. Volume 4). Günzburg, ISBN 3-924375-03-1 , pp. 113-114.
    109. ^ Website of the company Soukup Zerspanungstechnik. Retrieved May 2, 2015 .
    110. Fischzucht Vollmann-Schipper. Fachpresse Verlag Michael Steinert eK, accessed on March 10, 2016 .
    111. ^ Website of Fischzucht Vollmann-Schipper. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on April 2, 2015 ; accessed on May 2, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.fischzucht-vollmann-schipper.de
    112. Peter Wieser: The ducks and geese are already gone. In: Augsburger Allgemeine. June 6, 2016, accessed June 12, 2016 .
    113. Report of the Augsburger Allgemeine The last cow left Mindelaltheim (March 18, 2013)
    114. ^ Hermann Hirt: German dictionary . Ed .: Friedrich L. Weigand. tape 1 . Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 1968, ISBN 978-3-11-081798-0 , Sp. 61 ( books.google.at ).
    115. ^ Karl Bader: Streiflichter on the village history . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 400 .
    116. Cf. Karl Weichenmeier: Jettingen local history . In: Marktgemeinde Jettingen-Scheppach (Hrsg.): Heimatbuch Jettingen-Scheppach. Jettingen, Scheppach, Freihalden, Schönenberg, Klingenburg, Ried, Eberstall . 1986, p. 56 .
    117. ^ Karl Bader: Mindelaltheim - A village is born. 800 years to the present day village . S. 28-29 .
    118. See Heilig Kreuz Mindelaltheim. Festschrift on the occasion of the reopening of the pilgrimage church Heilig-Kreuz Mindelaltheim with altar consecration . 1990.
    119. ^ Karl Bader: Mindelaltheim - A village is born. 800 years to the present day village . S. 93 .
    120. Franz Xaver Schönberger: Grammatical-critical dictionary of the High German dialect, with constant comparison of the other dialects, but especially the Upper German . Ed .: Johann Christoph Adelung. tape 4 . B. Ph.Bauer, Vienna 1811, Sp. 131 ( daten.digitale-sammlungen.de ).
    121. ^ Karl Bader: Mindelaltheim - A village is born. 800 years to the present day village . S. 83 .
    122. Bavaria's classified road network. In: BayernAtlas. State Office for Digitization, Broadband and Surveying, accessed on May 20, 2015 .
    123. Christian Kirstges: This is how it looks today in the former Burgau train station. In: Augsburger Allgemeine. July 30, 2019, accessed August 1, 2019 .
    124. Fugger-Express will soon always stop in Mindelaltheim. In: Augsburger Allgemeine. January 29, 2020, accessed January 30, 2020 .
    125. Anita Ehlert: Fugger-Express will stop every hour in Mindelaltheim in future. In: B4B Economic Life Swabia. January 30, 2020, accessed January 30, 2020 .
    126. Timetables online: Mindelaltheim. VVM - Verkehrsverbund Mittelschwaben GmbH, accessed on June 4, 2016 .
    127. FLEXIBUS Burgau, Haldenwang, Offingen. Verkehrsbund Mittelschwaben GmbH, accessed on June 4, 2016 .
    128. Information about the Holzwinkel tour . (No longer available online.) Formerly in the original ; accessed on May 1, 2015 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.familien-und-kinderregion.de  
    129. Information about the Mindeltal cycle path . (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on May 21, 2015 ; accessed on May 1, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.familien-und-kinderregion.de
    130. Information about the Sieben-Schwaben-Tour . (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on March 4, 2016 ; accessed on May 1, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.bayerisch-schwaben.de
    131. Information about the Swabian Potato Tour . (No longer available online.) Formerly in the original ; accessed on May 1, 2015 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.bayerisch-schwaben.de  
    132. Information about the Via Julia . (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on March 4, 2016 ; accessed on May 1, 2015 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.bayerisch-schwaben.de
    133. ^ A b c d e f g Karl Bader: Associations in Mindelaltheim . In: Anton H. Konrad (Ed.): Dürrlauingen Mindelaltheim Mönstetten. Community between Mindel and Glött . Anton H. Konrad Verlag, Weißenhorn 2011, ISBN 978-3-87437-553-5 , p. 520-553 .
    134. Emil Neuhäusler: Not all choirs are created equal. In: Augsburger Allgemeine. April 28, 2015, accessed May 15, 2015 .
    135. ^ Website of the association "Art and Culture in the Village e. V. Mindelaltheim ” ( Memento of the original from March 22, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.kunstundkultur-mindelaltheim.de
    136. Roswitha Ebersberger: The Freising Cathedral Chapter in the Age of Faith Struggles . In: Georg Schwaiger (Ed.): The Diocese of Freising in the modern age (=  history of the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising ). tape 2 . Wewel, Munich 1989, ISBN 3-87904-155-5 , p. 196 .
    137. ^ Friedrich Heiler: Torrentinus . In: Laetitia Boehm (Ed.): 1. Biographical Lexicon of the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich. Ingolstadt-Landshut 1472 - 182 . Ludovico-Maximilianea: Researches, No. 18 . Berlin 1998, ISBN 3-428-09267-8 , pp. 439 .
    138. Tobias Appl: The expansion of spiritual centers as the core of the church policy of Duke Wilhelm V (1579–1597 / 98) in Bavaria . Regensburg 2009, p. 150 ( epub.uni-regensburg.de ).
    139. Gerd Teffer: From Ingolstadt professor to confessor of the Bavarian duke on the 450th birthday of Caspar Torrentinus . In: Historische Blätter [the city of Ingolstadt] .
    140. Biography of Dr. Johann von Gott Bundschue, royal. bayer. Lyzeal professor in Kempten . Dannheimer, Kempten 1829 ( books.google.de ).
    141. ^ Dataset on Bundschue, Johann von Gott. In: Catalog of the German National Library. German National Library, accessed on January 28, 2016 .
    142. ^ Johann Georg Meusel: Bundschue (J von Gott) . In: Johann Wilhelm Sigismund Lindner (Hrsg.): The learned Teutschland or Lexicon in the nineteenth century . 10; First delivery. Meyerische Buchhandlung, Lemgo 1829, p. 427-428 ( books.google.de ).
    143. ^ Bavarian landlady . No. 66 , 1851, pp. 4 ( books.google.de ).
    144. ^ Karl Heinrich Koepf: Joseph Dossenberger (1721-1785). A Swabian builder of the Rococo . Konrad, Weißenhorn 1973.