Moosburg on the Isar

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the city of Moosburg adIsar
Moosburg on the Isar
Map of Germany, position of the city Moosburg adIsar highlighted

Coordinates: 48 ° 28 '  N , 11 ° 56'  E

Basic data
State : Bavaria
Administrative region : Upper Bavaria
County : Freising
Height : 421 m above sea level NHN
Area : 43.85 km 2
Residents: 18,656 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 425 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 85368
Area code : 08761
License plate : FS
Community key : 09 1 78 143
City structure: 25 parts of the community

City administration address :
Stadtplatz 13
85368 Moosburg
Website : www.moosburg.de
First Mayor : Josef Dollinger ( Free Voters Bavaria )
Location of the city of Moosburg adIsar in the Freising district
Landkreis Dachau Landkreis Erding Landkreis Kelheim Landshut Landkreis Landshut Landkreis München Landkreis Pfaffenhofen an der Ilm Allershausen Attenkirchen Au in der Hallertau Eching (Landkreis Freising) Fahrenzhausen Freising Gammelsdorf Haag an der Amper Hallbergmoos Hörgertshausen Hohenkammer Kirchdorf an der Amper Kranzberg Langenbach (Oberbayern) Marzling Mauern Moosburg an der Isar Nandlstadt Neufahrn bei Freising Rudelzhausen Wang (Oberbayern) Wolfersdorf Paunzhausen Zollingmap
About this picture
St. John and St. Castulus

Moosburg an der Isar (officially Moosburg adIsar ) is the oldest town in the Upper Bavarian district of Freising . It is located 45 kilometers northeast of Munich , halfway between the large district town of Freising and the Lower Bavarian district capital Landshut, in a kind of island location between the Isar and its tributary Amper . Moosburg received the in 1331 city law . Today it is a medium-sized center in the Munich region .

The Munich airport is 17 kilometers as the crow flies and the highway exit Moosburg-south on the A92 to reach. As a regional express stop in the Munich Transport and Tariff Association (MVV), the city is a popular place to live for 4,755 commuters to Munich, Freising, Landshut and the airport. On the other hand, as the location of various industrial companies, the city is also the destination of around 3,100 commuters from the surrounding area and has 1,718 employees subject to social insurance contributions . In addition to the chemical, electrotechnical and food industries, there is also a machine factory in the city.

geography

location

Moosburg is located at the northeastern end of the Munich gravel plain at the transition to the Danube-Isar hill country and the Isar-Inn hill country . While the old city center and other parts of the city lie on a tertiary ridge between the Isar and the Amper that flows north of the city , the rest of the city area is bounded by the floodplain forests of the two rivers; in the south of the city there is the Isarauen nature reserve between Hangenham and Moosburg . The urban area is also characterized by a multitude of rivers, streams and canals. In addition to the Isar and Amper, the Sempt and Mittlere-Isar Canal also flow directly past Moosburg. The Uppenbornwerke of Stadtwerke München are located here . The reservoirs of this facility form the bird sanctuary Middle Isar reservoirs . The Mühlbach, which flows into the Amper, and the Schleiferbach, which is derived from it, flow through the urban area .

Parish parts

The municipality has 25 officially named municipal parts (the type of settlement is given in brackets ):

The core area of ​​the city between Isar and Amper is divided into the districts of Altstadt, Michaelivorstadt, Bonau, Westerberg and, since 1945, Neustadt. The urban area also includes the integrated places Thonstetten with Grünseiboldsdorf and Moosham, Niederambach with Oberambach, Feldkirchen and Kirchamper and Pfrombach with Aich, some of which are already in the middle of the Tertiary hill country, so that the urban area expanded from 14 to over 43 km².

In the former municipality of Pfrombachs, the Degernpoint commercial and industrial area was also built as a new district in the immediate vicinity of the city. The Uppenbornstrasse settlement is also part of the urban area.

Neighboring places

The city of Moosburg an der Isar is located on the border between Lower and Upper Bavaria, the districts of Freising, Erding and Landshut. In the north and northeast, the urban area is enclosed by the municipality of Wang . In the east, the municipalities of Eching and Buch am Erlbach in the Landshut ( Lower Bavaria ) district border . In the south , the municipalities of Langenpreising and Berglern in the district of Erding . In the west, finally, the municipalities of Langenbach and Haag an der Amper in the Freising district .

Middle center

Moosburg an der Isar, as a medium-sized center identified in the state development program, is the central location for the surrounding communities of Hörgertshausen , Gammelsdorf , Nandlstadt , Mauern , Wang and Langenpreising, i.e. for a total of over 33,000 inhabitants. In addition, it is, also because of the central facilities such as schools, diverse shopping opportunities and not least because of the short distances and good road connections, partly also for the residents of the communities of Bruckberg , Buch am Erlbach and Vilsheim in the districts of Landshut, Kirchberg , Wartenberg , Fraunberg and Berglern in the district of Erding as well as Langenbach, Haag an der Amper and Attenkirchen in the district of Freising, a total of over 30,000 inhabitants.

Nature reserves

  • Terrace near Niederhummel (geotope number 178A001)
  • Isarauen nature reserve between Hangenham and Moosburg (NSG-00246.01)

history

Moosburg in 1644
The Moosburg town hall (built in 1867)

The historic old town lies on a headland that is formed by two rivers that run almost parallel in this area - the Amper and the Isar . Immediately north-northeast of Moosburg, the Amper flows into the Isar, which flows into the Danube. Both rivers were important natural trade routes for millennia. The natural protection formed by the rivers with their once much larger floodplains was reinforced by the Moosburg settlement hill on which the later town developed. Finds from the old town attest to the presence of people in prehistoric times. There are also a number of, in some cases larger, areas known from the surrounding area with traces of prehistoric settlement, which range from the Neolithic to the Celtic Latène period . In Roman times the area was dominated by rural areas, traces of settlement, in particular cremation burial grounds from the Middle Imperial period and a presumed Villa Rustica , were found north, west and south-west of the modern city. Excavations in the urban area have confirmed the early importance of the Moosburg region. Particularly south of the Isar, remains of an extensive Roman road network have been secured by excavation findings and aerial archeology . A road ran along the Isar from the Danube to the supraregional trade route between Salzburg and Augsburg.

Early middle ages

The monastery settlement "Mosabyrga" was first mentioned around 770. The monks Albin and Rhenobot brought the relics of St. Castulus to Moosburg around 800 . The widow of Karlmann Liutswind , King of the East Franconia , chose Moosburg Abbey as her widow's residence. In 895 the former imperial monastery came into the possession of the Freising diocese .

High Middle Ages

In 1021 the Benedictine monastery was dissolved and a canon monastery was founded. A large fire destroyed in 1207, the Count's Castle and much of the cathedral . The Kastulusmünster was consecrated in 1212. In 1281 the counts of the Moosburg family died out .

Late Middle Ages

1329 Moosburg took over the district court seat from the Inkofen office . In 1331 Moosburg received city ​​rights . In 1403 construction began on the city wall and city gates. In 1599 the Moosburg Canons' Monastery was transferred to the Landshut Martinskirche . On April 26, 1632 Moosburg was conquered by the Swedes during the Thirty Years War and sacked in 1634. In 1702 almost half of the city was destroyed by a major fire; another fire struck the city in 1865.

19th century to the present

Mid-19th century view

After the secularization of the monasteries, Moosburg became the seat of a regional court in 1803 and thus an independent administrative district in what was then the Isar District , which later became the administrative district of Upper Bavaria . The district court of Moosburg comprised the area of ​​today's northern district of Freising and the neighboring communities from Schweitenkirchen via Wolnzach and Obersüßbach to Bruckberg. In 1858 Moosburg was connected to the railway network with the opening of the Munich-Landshut railway line . In 1862 it merged with the district court district of Kranzberg to form the newly formed district office of Freising (renamed the district of Freising in 1939). Between 1867 and 1899 the three medieval city gates were demolished. In 1906 the Moosburg Tonwerk was founded , the forerunner of Süd-Chemie (now “Clariant”).

In September 1939, shortly after the outbreak of the Second World War , the POW camp STALAG VII A was built in the north of Moosburg , which was liberated by US troops in 1945. Towards the end of the Second World War, 80,000 prisoners of war of many nationalities were interned there and in its sub-camps, making it the largest prisoner-of-war camp in Germany. How many people were murdered there is still unclear. There is a small memorial in Oberreit. The camp museum is open two hours a week. After the end of the war, a US civilian internment camp was set up there for Germans who were to be held accountable for their activities during the Nazi tyranny . From 1948 onwards, the Moosburg district of Neustadt was built, which was initially populated mainly by refugees and displaced persons. In 1949 the construction of the Isar bridge, which was blown up by the Waffen SS in 1945, was completed.

In 1965 the city was given the current name "Moosburg an der Isar". In 1971, as part of the regional reform in Bavaria , the then city council decided to remain in the Freising district and thus in Upper Bavaria and not - like the neighboring Bruckberg - to move to Lower Bavaria . In 2002 the Moosburg district hospital was closed, and in 2006 the Moosburg branch of the Freising District Court was closed .

In 2010, a festival was staged for the first time in Moosburg (“The Forbidden City”), which was under the patronage of the Bavarian Prime Minister and dealt with the history of the historically significant city.

Incorporations

On April 1, 1971, the previously independent municipality of Thonstetten (with Grünseiboldsdorf and Moosham) was incorporated. On January 1, 1976 Niederambach (with Oberambach, Feldkirchen and Kirchamper) was added. Pfrombach (with Aich) followed on January 1, 1978. The Uppenbornstraße settlement of the Wang community , previously part of the disbanded Volkmannsdorferau community , rounded off the series of incorporations on May 1, 1978.

Population development

The population of Moosburg (earlier figures converted to today's city limits for comparability) has developed as follows since the first census in 1840:

year Residents
(V) 1840 2,643
(V) 1871 3,459
(V) 1900 3,970
(V) 1925 5,093
(V) 1939 6,169
year Residents
(V) 1950 10,023
(V) 1961 11,310
(V) 1970 13,050
1980 13,236
(V) 1987 14,251
year Residents
1990 15,243
1995 16,273
2000 16.607
2005 17,276
2006 17,284
year Residents
2007 17,492
2008 17,430
2009 17,487
2010 17,554
2011 16,852
year Residents
2012 16,971
2013 17,363
2014 17,654
2015 17,837
2016 18,181
2018 19.206

(always on December 31 / (V): day of the census )

Between 1988 and 2018 the city grew from 14,476 to 18,510 by 4,034 inhabitants or 27.9%.

politics

City council

The local elections in 2002, 2008 , 2014 and 2020 produced the following results:

Distribution of seats
Party / group of voters 2002 2008 2014 2020
CSU 9 10 7th 6th
SPD 6th 5 3 2
Green 2 3 4th 6th
Free voters 5 6th 5 4th
Independent citizens of Moosburg 2 - 3 -
ÖDP - - 1 1
The left - - 1 1
AfD - - - 1
FDP - - - 1
Fresh - - - 2
total 24 24 24 24
Voting shares
Party / group of voters 2002 2008 2014 2020
CSU 37.8% 41.2% 30.2% 25.7%
SPD 25.1% 19.3% 12.5% 9.9%
Green 9.3% 14.4% 17.0% 23.7%
Free voters 19.5% 25.0% 19.9% 19.3%
Independent citizens of Moosburg 8.3% - 14.4% -
ÖDP - - 3.2% 3.5%
The left - - 2.8% 2.8%
AfD - - - 5.7%
FDP - - - 2.6%
Fresh - - - 6.9%
total 100% 100% 100% 100%
Turnout : 60.05%

mayor

Josef Dollinger was elected as first mayor by the FW in the runoff election on March 29, 2020 with 51.17% of the vote. Anita Meinelt was no longer available. The second mayor is Georg Hadersdorfer from the CSU, the third mayor is Michael Stanglmeier from the Greens.

First mayor since 1933

Surname from to Political party
Hermann Muller 1933 April 29, 1945
Max Fertl 05/09/1945 August 13, 1945
Richard Braun 08/13/1945 April 30, 1956 CSU
Josef Erber 05/01/1956 July 19, 1965 SPD
Oscar Hertel 10/01/1965 April 30, 1978 SPD
Herbert Franz 05/01/1978 April 30, 1984 CSU
Anton Neumaier 05/01/1984 April 30, 2002 SPD
Anita Meinelt 05/01/2002 April 30, 2020 CSU
Josef Dollinger 05/01/2020 FW

Twin cities

The city of Moosburg an der Isar connects four city ​​partnerships and two city ​​sponsorships with other cities:

Town twinning
  • FranceFrancesince September 29, 1973: Bry-sur-Marne , France
  • United StatesUnited Statessince July 18, 1981: Rochester , USA
  • AustriaAustriasince July 15, 1991: Moosburg , Austria
  • United KingdomUnited Kingdomsince March 13, 2018: Sawbridgeworth , United Kingdom
City sponsorships
  • Czech RepublicCzech Republicsince April 8, 1968: Kynšperk nad Ohří (Königsberg an der Eger) , Czech Republic
  • SerbiaSerbiasince July 9, 1973: Odžaci (Hodschag) , Serbia

Honorary citizen

coat of arms

Coat of arms in the Ursula chapel

Blazon : Divided by silver and red; above two red heraldic roses, below a silver heraldic rose, all with golden tugs.

Coat of arms history: Originally the coat of arms goes back to the Earls of Moosburg, who died in 1281 in the male line and who lived in Moosburg until then. After the Count's house died out, the city was able to claim the three roses for itself. The oldest depiction of the coat of arms can be seen in the Ursulakapelle in the Kastulusmünster. There it adorns the ceiling fresco of the former burial place of the counts. Here, however, the color scheme is reversed.

Culture and sights

Buildings

On the map: St. Johannes and Kastulusmünster
Kastulusmünster: interior

The city center, located on a hill, is dominated by the towers of the Kastulus Minster and the Johanneskirche. Since both church towers are 50 meters high, have a very similar exterior and both churches are very close together, coming from the direction of the cathedral city of Freising one has the impression that the city of Moosburg an der Isar also has its own cathedral with two towers .

  • Kastulusmünster (famous pilgrimage church at the beginning of the 19th century): The high altar in the Kastulusmünster carved in 1514 by the Landshut sculptor Hans Leinberger is particularly well known . The following figures adorn this altar : in the center St. Mary with child, enclosed by St. Kastulus and St. Heinrich. The Kastulus shrine can be seen behind the altar cross. Most of the bones of St. Kastulus, which were originally brought to Moosburg by Albin and Rhenobot, are now in Landshut Martinskirche .
  • Johanniskirche : from the 15th century. Only two wing reliefs have survived from the altar by Hans Leinberger and are in museums. In 1980 several tombstones and frescoes were discovered at the right side portal. The tower of the Johanniskirche served for a long time as the city tower, in which the apartment of the tower keeper was. That is why the tower of the Johanniskirche, in contrast to the tower of the Kastulusmünster, is owned by the city.
  • St. Michael Cemetery Church: Built in the 13th century. Partly Gothic, but also baroque elements
  • Piuskirche: In the area of ​​the former prisoner camp, especially for those who have been expelled from their homeland. It was financed, among other things, by a large donation from Pope Pius XII. Planned by architect Friedrich Haindl , inaugurated in 1950. Right next to the church is the Franzosenbrunnen, which was designed in 1942 by a French prisoner of war in Stalag VII A and on which the four largest French rivers are shown; it was installed here in 1963.
  • St. Valentin branch church (Thonstetten)
  • Local history museum on Kastulusplatz in the old monastery school (prehistory and early history, town history, handicrafts, agriculture, folk art)

Memorials

  • Memorial stone with fountain: North of the city area, the Wehrmacht's POW camp VII A was built in 1939 . Up to 80,000 prisoners were detained in the camp, at least 2,000 of whom died. In the 21st century, the Neustadt district was largely overbuilt after the Free State of Bavaria had apartments built on the site for displaced persons from 1948 onwards. A memorial fountain by the French sculptor Antoniucci Volti has been commemorating Stalag VII A since 1963. On the 70th anniversary of the camp's liberation, the green space on which the fountain stands was officially named the Stalag Memorial Square in April 2015 . The German Foundation for Monument Protection is made up in 2019 to ensure that the last remaining unchanged camp barrack remains. In 2020 this was provided with an additional roof to protect it from the weather.
  • Oberreit memorial , a wooden cross and a memorial stone commemorate the prisoners of war camp dead who were initially buried here

Events

The Utopia Island Festival has been taking place in the Aquapark since 2013 .

Infrastructure

Agencies and public authorities

The city of Moosburg has three independent fire departments in Moosburg, Thonstetten and Aich. The Jungheinrich company maintains a company fire brigade at the Moosburg location

schools

There are eight educational institutions in Moosburg.

The majority of the students come from surrounding communities in the districts of Freising , Erding and Landshut , so that the city is the educational center of a small region spanning across the district.

Lately the Moosburg schools have had more and more space problems due to the increasing number of pupils, especially due to the new school systems (R6 and G8). The solutions were handled differently. The long controversial three-story extension was built at the grammar school and opened in the 2007/08 school year. The building of the former agricultural school, which was sold by the city of Moosburg an der Isar to the district of Freising and located directly next to the secondary school, was renovated and converted for the secondary school and moved into in September 2007. The middle school was also expanded with a new building.

The schools in Moosburg are listed below:

Elementary schools
  • Theresia Gerhardinger Elementary School ("Elementary School North")
  • Anton Vitzthum Primary School ("Primary School South")
  • Georg Hummel Middle School
Further training
  • Kastulus Realschule Moosburg
  • Karl-Ritter-von-Frisch-Gymnasium
More schools
  • Adult Education Center Moosburg
  • Evangelical adult education center

Leisure and sports facilities

  • outdoor pool
  • Indoor swimming pool
  • Ice stadium (Sparkassen-Arena), EV Moosburg , EV Aich
  • DAV climbing facility
  • Skate park
  • Bowling hall
  • youth Center
  • Indoor tennis hall with tennis courts (TC Moosburg)
  • Football facility Bonau (merger to form FCM from the clubs Real Bonau and SpVgg)
  • Neustadt football facility (TSV Moosburg Neustadt)
  • Bicycle tricks area and football field
  • Volleyball court
  • Two triple gyms (Albinstrasse and Realschule) as well as a double gym (grammar school), the town hall gym and the SGM gym next to the ice rink

economy

Several larger industrial companies are located in Moosburg, some of which are of international importance. The following is a non-exhaustive list of the resident companies and businesses:

Since October 2009 Moosburg has its own marketing agency "Moosburg Marketing", which is organized as a cooperative. At the end of 2014 the cooperative had almost 110 members.

Transport links

train

Donau-Isar-Express (DB class 440)

The city of Moosburg an der Isar has been crossed by the Munich-Landshut-Regensburg main line since 1858 . This line has been double-tracked since November 25, 1891 and has been electrically operated since October 3, 1925. On weekdays 82 (2009: 66) regional express trains and regional trains to Munich, Landshut, Regensburg, Nuremberg and Passau stop at the station, on Saturday 66 and Sunday 63 (2009: 48) trains. The travel time to Munich main station is 32 to 34 minutes with the regional express, which is even less than the corresponding values ​​of some S-Bahn stations at the outer branches. Over 5000 passengers use Moosburg station every day. On October 28, 2007, the Moosburg electronic interlocking went into operation, which (remote-controlled from the Munich operations center) takes over the operations of 28 km of the route, 2 stations and 18 remaining level crossings for the Landshut - Marzling area.

In December 2009, the train offer was reorganized as part of the tender by the Bavarian Railway Company, particularly with the introduction of the Danube-Isar-Express on the Munich - Landshut - Passau route. Since then, 24% more trains have stopped, i.e. at least every hour.

With the 2018 timetable change, Moosburg has a direct hourly train connection to Munich Airport; the journey with a stop in Freising takes 20 minutes and uses the newly built Neufahrner curve .

It has also been considered for a long time to extend the Munich S-Bahn to Moosburg an der Isar. To this end, the intermediate stops in Marzling (2007) and Langenbach (2010) have received new platforms and access systems. While the travel time of the extended S1 of 56 minutes would still be less than the 68 minutes of a S-Bahn journey from Munich to Altomünster , it would still be significantly longer than with today's regional express. An extension therefore only makes sense in connection with the planned express S-Bahn system, which is to be implemented through the second Munich S-Bahn tunnel and thus shortens the travel time of the S-Bahn, which then runs every half hour, to just 44 minutes. Since December 2009, a regional train has been running, mostly every two hours, between Freising and Landshut with S-Bahn-like multiple units of the 425 series.

Public transport

There is a city bus within the city of Moosburg. In addition, there are regional buses of the Munich Transport and Tariff Association (MVV), u. a. the lines 683 (Hörgertshausen-Mauern-Rudelzhausen) and 501 (Langenpreising-Wartenberg-Erding).

Street

Moosburg is connected supraregionally by the federal highway 92 with 2 exits north and south. In the urban area, the former federal road 11 (now state road 2350) and state roads 2054 (Zolling - Geisenhausen), 2085 (Mainburg - Langenpreising) and 2331 (to Erding) intersect .

Crossing of the former B 11 in Moosburg

From July 2005 to the end of 2007, after 80 years of planning for over 14 million euros, the St 2085 level crossing, which is used by over 14,000 vehicles and 173 trains every day and located in the area of ​​7 connecting road branches, was replaced by a 250 m long road tunnel with ramp structures. The opening was out of town on September 7, 2007, inward of town on October 13, 2007. At the same time, a new, traffic-dependent set of traffic lights was put into operation in the generously designed confluence area of ​​Industriestraße and St. 2085. Since the traffic routing in the inner city area, as with the completion of the southern bypass in the course of the B 11 in 1965, remained unchanged and there has been no bypass to date, the historically narrow city center is excessively heavily loaded with over 23,000 vehicles a day.

From the end of June to September 10, 2008, at least as a first measure to build the strongly relieving western bypass (district road FS 15), a roundabout was built at the accident-prone west entrance of the former federal road 11 with the state road 2054.

On July 28, 2008, after 20 years of discussion, the city council decided to change the right of way at two junctions at Stadion-, Westerberg- (St 2054) and Münchener Straße (St 2085), so that at least a partial relief of through traffic in the city center is achieved . The necessary reconstruction of both junctions can, however, only be carried out by the Freising State Building Authority after the western bypass has been completed. The western bypass leads from the roundabout of the former federal road 11 at route km 56.16 over the Munich – Regensburg railway line , in a generous curve that relieves the noise of the existing residential buildings, to St 2054, which is crossed with a roundabout. The second construction phase ran along the Amper until shortly before the Amperbrücke the St 2085 is reached, which is also connected with a roundabout. The associated development plan came into force on August 1, 2009. The fast connection between Hallertau and the then B 11 was opened on November 28, 2012.

Moosburg Airfield (2013)

Air traffic

Personalities

literature

  • Ludwig Weg: History of the City of Moosburg , Moosburg: L. Weh 1991
  • Moosburg / Isar - history and art of the city
  • Michael Braun: History of the city of Moosburg , Moosburg: Senftl 1902.
  • Dominik Reither: How Moosburg was overtaken by Landshut and Munich: A comparative city history , Norderstedt: Books on Demand 2016, ISBN 978-3-7431-4669-3 .

Web links

Commons : Moosburg an der Isar  - 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. a b c State Office for Statistics - home page. Retrieved February 6, 2019 .
  3. ^ Municipality of Moosburg an der Isar in the local database of the Bavarian State Library Online . Bavarian State Library, accessed on September 11, 2019.
  4. ^ Alfons Wörner: Heimatbuch Hörgertshausen . Ed .: Municipality of Hörgertshausen. Hörgertshausen 1982. , p. 22
  5. ^ Commission for Bavarian State History: Historical Atlas of Bavaria - Part of Old Bavaria - Regional Court Moosburg , Munich 1950
  6. Till Kronsfoth: Moosburg has a hard time remembering . In: sueddeutsche.de . June 21, 2019, ISSN  0174-4917 ( sueddeutsche.de [accessed July 6, 2019]).
  7. History - Moosburg adIsar. Retrieved July 6, 2019 .
  8. ^ Moosburg Festival. Retrieved February 6, 2019 .
  9. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 464 .
  10. ^ 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. 574 .
  11. ^ 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. 575 f .
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  13. a b City Council Election 2014. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on April 21, 2016 ; accessed on March 1, 2018 . 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 / wahlen.moosburg.de
  14. Local elections 2020 - Preliminary allocation of seats City Council from 2020 - City of Moosburg - City of Moosburg. Retrieved April 19, 2020 .
  15. Local elections 2020 - Preliminary allocation of seats City Council from 2020 - City of Moosburg - City of Moosburg. Retrieved April 19, 2020 .
  16. Alexander Kappen: 200 votes more. Süddeutsche Zeitung, March 30, 2020, accessed on June 4, 2020 .
  17. Nico Bauer: Two voting votes: Moosburg's deputy mayor have been determined. Freisinger Tagblatt, May 5, 2020, accessed on June 4, 2020 .
  18. ^ City partnerships - City of Moosburg - City of Moosburg. Retrieved March 16, 2020 .
  19. ^ House of Bavarian History - Bavaria's municipalities. Retrieved September 18, 2019 .
  20. ^ Franz Heilmann: The acquisition of the Moosburger Johanniskirche by the city of Moosburg . In: Amperland , 1968, pp. 10-11.
  21. Memorial sites for the victims of National Socialism. A documentation, volume 1. Federal Agency for Civic Education, Bonn 1995, ISBN 3-89331-208-0 , p. 166.
  22. In memory of the victims of Stalag VII A on www.merkur.de , April 27, 2015
  23. Monuments : Here we interfered - In danger: Stalag VII A in Moosburg , issue 1/2020, p. 15.
  24. Christine Fößmeier: A little part of Moosburg's history takes a deep breath at www.idowa.de , May 29, 2020
  25. Home. Retrieved February 6, 2019 .
  26. ^ Moosburg Marketing eG - City of Moosburg adIsar. Retrieved February 6, 2019 .
  27. ^ Moosburger Stadtmarketing: Managing Director leaves. November 4, 2014, accessed February 6, 2019 .
  28. ^ Karlheinz Jessensky: Trains stop every hour. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung . October 13, 2017, accessed November 25, 2019.
  29. Home / News - City of Moosburg adIsar. Retrieved February 6, 2019 .