Nohfelden

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the municipality of Nohfelden
Nohfelden
Map of Germany, position of the municipality of Nohfelden highlighted

Coordinates: 49 ° 35 '  N , 7 ° 9'  E

Basic data
State : Saarland
County : St. Wendel
Height : 350 m above sea level NHN
Area : 100.71 km 2
Residents: 9878 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 98 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 66625
Primaries : 06852 (districts Eiweiler and Selbach: 06875, district Mosberg-Richweiler: 06857)Template: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / area code contains text
License plate : WND
Community key : 10 0 46 114
Community structure: 13 districts ; 12 parishes
Address of the
municipal administration:
At the castle
66625 Nohfelden
Website : www.nohfelden.de
Mayor : Andreas Veit ( CDU )
Location of the municipality of Nohfelden in the St. Wendel district
Nonnweiler Nohfelden Freisen Tholey Oberthal (Saar) Marpingen Namborn St. Wendel Rheinland-Pfalz Landkreis Merzig-Wadern Landkreis Saarlouis Landkreis Neunkirchenmap
About this picture

Nohfelden is a municipality in the St. Wendel district in Saarland . It was newly formed as part of the Saarland regional and administrative reform on January 1, 1974 from the merger of 13 previously independent municipalities.

geography

Community structure

District Residents
Evil 1220
Eckelhausen 229
iron 492
Eiweiler 609
Gonnesweiler 894
Mosberg-Richweiler 375
Neunkirchen 865
Nohfelden 1126
Selbach 778
Sötern 1235
Turquoise mill 732
Walhausen 619
Wolfersweiler 1017

Population as of January 2012, all districts are also municipal districts. Bosen and Eckelhausen form a common district of Bosen / Eckelhausen.

Nohfelden is a national park community in the Hunsrück-Hochwald National Park .

climate

Precipitation diagram for the district of Türkismühle

The annual precipitation is 1205 mm and is thus in the upper tenth of the values ​​recorded by the measuring points of the German Weather Service . Over 93% indicate lower values. The driest month is April; it rains most in December. In the wettest month, around 1.8 times more rain falls than in the driest month. The seasonal fluctuations in precipitation are in the upper third. In over 89% of all places, the monthly precipitation fluctuates less.

history

Archaeological finds from the Celtic and Roman times were discovered or excavated in Bosen, Eisen, Eiweiler, Mosberg-Richweiler, Neunkirchen (Nahe), Nohfelden, Selbach, Sötern, Türkismühle, Walhausen and Wolfersweiler. Nohfelden Castle was first mentioned in 1286 and an office in Nohfelden in 1372.

From the High Middle Ages (around 1200) to July 1, 1879 and in 1946/47 (change from Rhineland-Palatinate to Saarland), the historical development of the 13 districts in the Nahegau has been somewhat different. Around 1790 the rulers were divided into the following 4 areas:

  • Duchy of Pfalz-Zweibrücken, which emerged from the county of Veldenz by way of succession in the 15th century, associated places: Eckelhausen, Eisen, Mosberg-Richweiler, Nohfelden, (Türkismühle), Walhausen and Wolfersweiler,
  • Imperial rule Eberswald with the associated places Bosen and Sötern,
  • Imperial rule Dagstuhl with the associated place Eiweiler,
  • High court Neunkirchen (Nahe) with the associated places Gonnesweiler, Neunkirchen (Nahe) and Selbach.

Due to the French Revolution and the subsequent occupation of the entire left bank of the Rhine in 1794, the four aforementioned lordships also perished. New administrative divisions were created under French rule. The 13 districts of the municipality of Nohfelden belonged to the Saardepartement and were assigned to the following Mairien (mayor's offices):
a) Mairie Achtelsbach = Eisen
b) Mairie Neunkirchen = Eiweiler, Neunkirchen (Nahe) and Selbach
c) Mairie Nohfelden = Nohfelden and Wolfersweiler
d) Mairie Otzenhausen = Bosen, Eckelhausen and Sötern
e) Mairie Walhausen = Gonnesweiler, Mosberg-Richweiler and Walhausen
The union of the Saardepartment with France took place on February 9th 1801 with the conclusion of the final peace treaty. Through this treaty, France was given the entire left bank area.

After Napoleon's defeat in the Battle of Leipzig in October 1813, France was referred back to its former borders on January 1, 1792 by a peace treaty of May 31, 1814. At the same time, the Congress of Vienna (September 18, 1814 to June 9, 1815) began a reorganization of the territories. In Articles 49 and 50 of the Vienna Final Act, the Kingdom of Prussia was obliged to use certain parts of the preserved areas and a. to cede to the Duchy of Saxony-Coburg and the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg . In an interim solution, “Mairien” became mayor's offices without changing the affiliation of the individual municipalities .

While the Duchy of Saxony-Coburg took over the intended area on the basis of the Royal Prussian dismissal patent of September 9, 1816 and the Ducal Saxony-Coburg occupation patent of September 11, 1816, the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg continued to seek one other territory assignment. After these efforts were unsuccessful, however, on April 9, 1817 in Frankfurt between the Kingdom of Prussia and the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg, the corresponding handover / takeover protocol for the takeover of territory was concluded. With the Royal Prussian dismissal patent from the same day, the dismissal of the contractually agreed area to the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg was pronounced. Due to the patent on the possession of the Principality of Birkenfeld from April 16, 1817 by the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg, u. a. all of today's parish belonging to the newly created Principality of Birkenfeld .

By ordinance of September 9, 1817, the Principality of Birkenfeld was divided into the 3 administrative districts of Birkenfeld, Oberstein and Nohfelden on October 1, 1817, each office comprising 3 mayorships:
a) Amt Birkenfeld with the mayorries of Birkenfeld, Leisel and Niederbrombach,
b) Amt Oberstein with the mayor offices of Herrstein, Oberstein and Fischbach,
c) Amt Nohfelden with the mayor offices of Nohfelden, Neunkirchen and Achtelsbach

With this division, the following area allocation was associated with the Nohfelden office and the 3 associated mayor's offices:

  • Mayor's office Nohfelden (9 municipal districts)

Nohfelden (with Holzhauserhof), Wolfersweiler, Gimbweiler, Walhausen (with Schwarzhof), Asweiler, Eitzweiler, Mosberg-Richweiler, Hirstein, Steinberg -ckenhardt,

  • Mayor's office Neunkirchen (8 municipal districts)

Neunkirchen (Nahe), Selbach, Imsbach, Gonnesweiler, Eiweiler, Sötern, Bosen, Schwarzenbach,

  • Mayor's office in Achtelsbach (7 municipal districts)

Achtelsbach (with Neuhof), Meckenbach, Traunen, Eisen, Dambach, Ellweiler, Eckelhausen .

By ordinance of March 6, 1819, the Duchy of Saxony-Coburg named the area that it took possession of on September 11, 1816 (and bordering the Principality of Birkenfeld) as the Principality of Lichtenberg (with its seat in St. Wendel). However, it was ceded to the Kingdom of Prussia by the State Treaty of May 31, 1834. With the possession of the same by the Royal Prussian occupation patent of August 15, 1834 and the formation of the St. Wendel district on April 1, 1835 in the administrative district of Trier , the Principality of Birkenfeld was now completely enclosed by the Kingdom of Prussia ( Rhine Province ).

The "Schwarzhof" area of ​​the municipality of Gonnesweiler was separated from the municipality of Walhausen by decree of April 24, 1833 and assigned to the municipality of Gonnesweiler. The law of April 23, 1855 introduced the abolition of the offices in the Principality of Birkenfeld while retaining the previous mayor's offices. With the ordinance of August 8, 1856, a new regulation of the division of tasks between the mayor's offices and the government was made. The announcement of August 9, 1856 determined the date of the resignation of the offices on October 1, 1856.

In the run-up to a later reorganization of the mayor's offices, a. by announcement of December 23, 1875, the registry office districts Achtelsbach and Neunkirchen were united to form the registry office district Neunkirchen, whereby the community Ellweiler (mayor Achtelsbach) was assigned to the registry office district Nohfelden. The "law regarding the revised municipal order for the Principality of Birkenfeld" of March 28, 1876 led to October 1, 1876 a. a. the following reorganizations:

  • The Imsbach community was merged with the Selbach community.
  • The mayor's office in Achtelsbach was abolished. The communities of Achtelsbach, Traunen Dambach, Meckenbach, Eisen and Eckelhausen became the mayor's office of Neunkirchen,
  • the community of Ellweiler was assigned to the mayor's office in Nohfelden.

With the "law concerning the amendment of the mayor's districts" of March 1, 1879, on July 1, 1879 u. a. the next reorganization, which at the same time meant the end of the previous different historical development of today's 13 districts of the municipality of Nohfelden:

  • The mayor's office of Neunkirchen was abolished and merged with the mayor's office of Nohfelden to form a mayor's office (mayor's office in Nohfelden).
  • The communities of Achtelsbach, Traunen, Dambach and Meckenbach were merged with the mayor's office of Birkenfeld.

As a result of the abdication and the renunciation of the succession to the throne of Grand Duke Friedrich August von Oldenburg on November 11, 1918, the Principality of Birkenfeld became the Birkenfeld region (province). The peace treaty of June 28, 1919 , which came into force on January 10, 1920 as a result of the First World War , brought new border neighbors to the Birkenfeld region with the creation of the Saar area and the associated separation of the previous district of St. Wendel (parent district St. Wendel in the Saar area and Remaining district of St. Wendel-Baumholder in the state of Prussia - administrative district Trier / Rhine province).

Through the Administrative Simplification Act of September 22, 1933, the municipality of Ellweiler was separated from the Nohfelden mayor on October 1, 1933 and merged with the mayor of Birkenfeld. With the law to supplement and amend the Simplification Act of March 24, 1934, a. the communities Asweiler and Eitzweiler united to form a new community Asweiler-Eitzweiler.

Due to the referendum of January 13, 1935, the Saar area was incorporated into the National Socialist German Reich with effect from March 1, 1935 and was now called “Saarland”. The so-called “ Greater Hamburg Law ” of January 26, 1937 with its implementing ordinances of February 15, 1937 and March 25, 1937 brought on April 1, 1937 u. a. the following new regulations:
a) the Oldenburg region of Birkenfeld was transferred to the State of Prussia and formed a district in the Rhine Province,
b) the new district was named "District Birkenfeld" in the administrative district of Koblenz,
c) the remaining district of St. Wendel-Baumholder (from the administrative district of Trier) was incorporated into the district of Birkenfeld,
d) the introduction of the Prussian official regulations on October 8, 1934 determined the new Nohfelden office as the legal successor to the Nohfelden mayor.

The end of the Second World War (capitulation on May 8, 1945) introduced a major reorganization (gradual change in affiliation to Saarland). For example, on the basis of order no.8 of July 18, 1946 (allocation of municipalities to the Saarland from the Birkenfeld district / administrative district Koblenz) and order no.73 of July 18, 1946 (allocation to the St. Wendel district) July 1946 in a first section the municipalities of Bosen, Eckelhausen, Eisen, Eiweiler, Gonnesweiler, Hirstein, Mosberg-Richweiler, Neunkirchen, Schwarzenbach, Selbach, Sötern, Steinberg -ckenhardt, Türkismühle and Walhausen to the new Amt Türkismühle (Saarland / Kreis St . Wendel) merged. In the joint meeting of the local mayors of the aforementioned communities in Gonnesweiler on July 21, 1946, all the local mayors, with the exception of Hirstein, who wanted his community to join the Namborn district association due to its geographical location, to found a new district association with a seat in Türkismühle (in the absence of suitable rooms with a temporary administrative seat in Gonnesweiler). At the request of the French military government on August 12, 1946, the municipal name "Walhausen-Birkenfeld" was changed to "Walhausen (St. Wendel)" by an order of August 16, 1946 by the district president. Furthermore, by the ordinance of August 21, 1946 to September 1, 1946, the place "Türkismühle" was separated from the municipality of Nohfelden (still in the district of Birkenfeld) and established as an independent municipality (in the district of St. Wendel). The ordinance of February 26, 1947 changed the designation “offices” in the Saarland to “administrative districts”. The office of Türkismühle became the administrative district of Türkismühle . On May 1, 1947, the Hirstein community was, as suggested in the meeting of July 21, 1946, separated from the Türkismühle administrative district and incorporated into the Namborn administrative district.

As in the above-mentioned first section, in the second section, on the basis of ordinance no. 93 of June 6, 1947, further municipalities were initially connected by allocation to the Saarland, by order no. 215 of June 7, 1947 to the district of St. Wendel and to June 24, 1947 a. a. finally the assignment of the communities Asweiler, Eitzweiler, Freisen, Nohfelden and Wolfersweiler to the administrative district of Türkismühle. In addition, the official seat of Gonnesweiler was relocated to Nohfelden on July 1, 1947. According to the order of May 4, 1949, the Asweiler-Eitzweiler community was dissolved on March 1, 1949 and the Asweiler and Eitzweiler districts were each declared to be their own independent communities. At this point in time the administrative district of Türkismühle consisted of the following 18 communities: Asweiler, Bosen, Eckelhausen, Eisen, Eitzweiler, Eiweiler, Freisen, Gonnesweiler, Mosberg-Richweiler, Neunkirchen, Nohfelden, Schwarzenbach, Selbach, Sötern, Steinberg -ckenhardt, Türkismühle, Walhausen and Wolfersweiler. The municipal ordinance of July 10, 1951 changed the designation administrative districts back to "Ämter" (Amt Türkismühle) on September 1, 1951 . The efforts of the municipality of Nohfelden to give the office the name "Amt Nohfelden", which has been used for centuries, led to success in 1956. With the decision of the administrative board of the office of Türkismühle on July 31, 1956, the application of the municipality of Nohfelden was granted. The formal renaming to “Amt Nohfelden” took place on November 1, 1956 through the announcement of the state government on October 30, 1956.

With the reorganization law of December 19, 1973, the previous independent municipalities were merged into unitary municipalities on January 1, 1974 and the previous offices were dissolved. The legal successor of the Nohfelden office was the municipality of Nohfelden with the 13 districts (municipal parts) Bosen, Eckelhausen, Eisen, Eiweiler, Gonnesweiler, Mosberg-Richweiler, Neunkirchen (Nahe), Nohfelden, Selbach - without the parcels mentioned in § 47 Paragraph 2 (= Imsbach), Sötern, Türkismühle, Walhausen and Wolfersweiler. The remaining 5 former municipalities were assigned to the following new municipalities:
a) the municipality Freisen = Asweiler, Eitzweiler and Freisen,
b) the municipality Nonnweiler = Schwarzenbach,
c) the municipality Oberthal = Steinberg-ceilinghardt,
d) the municipality Tholey = parts of Selbach (Imsbach / Theley)

politics

Municipal council

The municipal council election on May 26, 2019 resulted in the following distribution of seats in the council:

Political party Share of votes difference Seats difference
CDU 47.4% + 1.4% p 13 - 3
SPD 35.2% - 5.2% p.p. 10 - 4th
ULBN 4.8% - 3.6% p.p. 1 - 1
FLN 4.5% + 4.5% p 1 + 1
GREEN 4.1% + 2.6% p 1 + 1
LEFT 4.0% + 0.3% p 1 ± 0
Turnout: 75.1% (+ 3.5% p)

The municipal council was reduced from 33 to 27 seats as part of the local elections, as the population of Nohfeldens on March 27, 2019 was below the limit of 10,000.

mayor

  • 1974–1988: Hermann Scheid (CDU)
  • 1988-2004: Heribert Gisch (CDU)
  • since 2005: Andreas Veit (CDU)

Mayor Andreas Veit was elected as the youngest mayor of Saarland in 2005 and was last confirmed in office in 2019 with 67.4% of the votes.

Community partnerships

Nohfelden has been a partner municipality with Jeleśnia in Poland since 1996 . In April 2006, a large delegation from Jelesnia celebrated ten years of the Nohfelden-Jelesnia partnership in Nohfelden.

Culture and sights

Art and culture center at the Bostalsee , Bosener Mühle : located between the districts of Bosen and Eckelhausen directly on the lake. The art center Bosener Mühle offers a comprehensive range of courses all year round in almost all areas of artistic design for all ages (drawing or painting, ceramics, plastic design, stone carving, printmaking, mixed media, calligraphy). The courses are led by well-known professional lecturers. The annual cultural program also offers numerous events from other cultural areas (literary readings, concerts, cabaret, etc.).

Jewish cemeteries : In Gonnesweiler and Sötern there are two of the oldest Jewish cemeteries in Saarland (laid out around 1800). During National Socialism, the cemeteries were massively damaged and numerous gravestones were removed.

Nohfeld herb garden : Dr. Over 30 years ago, Karl-Heinz Potempa set up a private pharmacy garden with poisonous and medicinal herbs . This offers over 400 plants, trees and shrubs and is therefore one of the largest herb gardens in Germany. Visits and guided tours are possible from the beginning of May to the end of September.

English garden in Gonnesweiler: A landscape garden, which was laid out in the English style, leads past the Nepomuk Chapel and offers a circular path that is also suitable for wheelchair users.

Nahe spring with game enclosure : This is where the Nahe rises . The Nahequelle is the starting point for the Nahequelle path. It is a family-friendly excursion destination with a game reserve, in which there is a large game population with animals such as peacocks, goats, ducks, geese and deer.

Nahe spring in Selbach

Hinkelstein Walhausen : There is an old menhir in Walhausen, which can be dated to about 2000–1800 aC. The legend that a golden carriage with the war chest of Attila's king of the Huns is buried under the menhir, which weighs a ton, is still alive today.

Foam pile in Walhausen : The foam pile, built in 1998, is reminiscent of the pre-industrial production of charcoal, on the historic pile you can get an insight into the construction of a pile.

Star observatory Peterberg : On the 584 meter high Peterberg, amateur astronomers have the opportunity to gain a glimpse into space.

Peterberg observatory

Street of Sculptures : The Street of Sculptures , initiated by Leo Kornbrust , extends over a distance of around 25 km . Stones and sculptures by renowned artists have been viewed here since 1972. The road of the sculptures also leads past the Bostalsee along many scenic points. Art and sculpture were staged in an extraordinary way.

Museums

Museum of Fashion and Costume : The only museum in Saarland, the Museum of Fashion and Costume deals with the clothes and clothing habits of our ancestors. Clothing and traditional costumes with the corresponding lingerie and accessories from 1845 to 1920 are currently on display. Approx. 200 exhibits can be seen on an exhibition area of ​​123 m². The Saarland Folk Dance and Costume Association opened the museum in Nohfelden in September 2005. It is located in the old office building by the castle.

Buildings

Nohfelden castle tower in spring

Nohfelden Castle ( Burg Veldenz ): The castle, considered the landmark of Nohfelden, was built in 1285 by Wilhelm Bossel von Stein. After an extensive restoration, only the 20 m high castle keep can be seen, which serves as a wonderful observation tower. Numerous events take place on and around the castle every year. Castle summer begins on May 1st and lasts until October. In this romantic setting there is also the opportunity to be married.

Evangelical Parish Church Wolfersweiler : A historic church from 1788 whose tower foundations date from the 12th century. The tower itself is from 1586. It is a simple village church with old wooden stalls and a silent organ from 1834. Guided tours for the church and organ are offered and concerts take place regularly. The church is open during the day from May to October. In the winter months it is possible to visit them by appointment.

St. Nepomuk Chapel Gonnesweiler : In 1748 the nobleman Florent Joseph de Latre de Feignis had the Nepomuk Chapel built. This historic building, which even survived the French Revolution, had to be demolished in 1970, as the main street next to the chapel was expanded. In 2005, volunteer citizens of the cultural association began to reconstruct the Nepomuk chapel, but from a different point of view.

St. Nepomuk Chapel in Gonnesweiler

Jagdgut Bocksborn zu Gonnesweiler (more precisely: in the forest or on the Silberberg), built in 1894 by the Saarbrücken engineer Fritz von Rexroth. It served as living, leisure and work accommodation, but above all to accommodate hunting guests. Today it is private residence.

Forest chapel in Selbach : It is so idyllically situated by the forest that many cyclists and hikers pass by it to take a break and light a candle. It was built in 1954.

Kathreinenkapelle in Selbach, was built in the 16th century and is the oldest surviving building in the community of Nohfelden, it has what is probably the oldest traceable late baroque Way of the Cross in northern Saarland.

Peterbergkapelle Eiweiler : In 1983 the Peterbergkapelle, which is now quietly located, was built on the foundation of a dilapidated chapel.

Parks

Nohfelden is part of the Saar-Hunsrück Nature Park . The Nahe rises in the Selbach district .

Leisure destinations

The Bostalsee

The Bostalsee leisure center is very popular with surfing and sailing fans. In addition to hiking on the 7 km long circular path along the lake, there is also the possibility of fishing, swimming, rowing, diving, pedal boating or simply relaxing by the lake while watching the sun go down.

Center Parks Bostalsee

The Center Parks, built in 2013, is located directly on the 120-hectare Bostalsee and offers not only the guests of the park, but also visitors from the region a wide range of leisure activities. In addition to indoor mini golf, there is also a mini golf area right on the water. High ropes course, archery, petting zoo, swimming pool and bowling always attract many visitors.

Bostalsee Golf Park in Eisen

In addition to a practice course for beginners, the Eisen Golf Park also offers 3 public fairways. The whole park is idyllically situated and only 5 km away from the Bostalsee. It extends over a wide area with pond and biotope areas, open streams, bunkers and beautifully staged green areas.

The Buchwald in Nohfelden

Buchwald in Nohfelden

The 250-year-old larches, a Köhler Schaumeiler and the largest Douglas fir in southwest Germany are worth seeing in the extensive beech forest. It is also suitable for hikers and cyclists who can explore the region thanks to the good signage.

Amusement park Neunkirchen / Nahe

The amusement park inspires with a lookout tower, a mini golf course and a large play area for children and families. In addition, the park offers fitness in the leisure facility, with an outdoor fitness station with 7 machines everyone can strengthen their fitness independently.

traffic

The community is crossed by the A 62 motorway and has its own connection to the regional road network with the Nohfelden-Türkismühle junction. With the B 41 , a heavily frequented federal road also runs directly through the municipality. The international airports of Saarbrücken and Frankfurt-Hahn can be reached by car in less than an hour.

The station Türkismühle provides for the community to connect to the Nahe Valley Railway (KBS 680/672) on the route Saarbrücken-Frankfurt / Main is. So the Frankfurt / Main airport by train can be reached in less than two hours' drive to Saarbrücken is only around 45 minutes.

Personalities

Honorary citizen

Sons and daughters of the church

Others

  • Meinrad Maria Grewenig (born June 9, 1954 in Saarbrücken), General Director of the World Heritage Site Völklinger Hütte , Meinrad Maria Grewenig has lived with his parents and brothers in Nohfelden-Selbach since the 1970s and designed the Nohfeld municipal coat of arms. He also created most of the documentation "Community Nohfelden 1974–1984".

literature

  • Literature about Nohfelden in the Saarland Bibliography
  • August E. J Barnstedt - Geographical-historical-statistical description of the Grand Ducal Oldenburg Principality of Birkenfeld with topography and map - Birkenfeld 1845
  • H. Baldes / P. Wesner - Birkenfeld local history - history of the country - Birkenfeld 1911
  • Heinrich Baldes - The hundred-year history of the Principality of Birkenfeld - for the anniversary 1917 - Birkenfeld 1921
  • Heinrich Baldes - Historical local history of the Birkenfeld landscape from prehistoric times to 1817 along with a historical local history - Birkenfeld 1923 - Reprint of the original edition from 1923 with an addendum by H. Peter Brandt - Birkenfeld 1999
  • Nohfelden Traffic and Beautification Association - 600 years of Nohfelden office 1372 - 1972
  • Albrecht Eckhardt - archival material on the history of the Birkenfeld region in the State Archives in Oldenburg (1817–1937) - publications by the Lower Saxony archive administration - 1983
  • Municipality - Municipality of Nohfelden 1974 - 1984
  • Peter Brommer / Werner Knopp - 50 years of the Birkenfeld district 1937 - 1987 - Koblenz 1987
  • Sascha Grosser - Giant trees and forest areas in Nohfelden - A documentation, GROX.MEDIA Verlag, Nohfelden-Neunkirchen / Nahe 2008
  • Albrecht Eckhardt / Heinrich Schmidt (eds.) - History of the State of Oldenburg - A manual (pages 591–636 - The Birkenfeld region by H. Peter Brandt) - 1987
  • Municipality - Municipality of Nohfelden 1974 - 1999

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Saarland.de - Official population figures as of December 31, 2019 (PDF; 20 kB) ( help ).
  2. ↑ New Structure Act - NGG of December 19, 1973, § 49, published in the Saarland Official Gazette 1973, No. 48, p. 857 (PDF page 29; 487 kB)
  3. Günter Scholl: Joint historical development of the 13 districts, the newly established community of Nohfelden on January 1, 1974 - 27 selected documents from "650 Years Heisterberg - Local Chronicle 2010" as well as 22 documents from the legal and official gazettes of the principality / state part of Birkenfeld 1817-1937 a. a.
  4. Municipal elections 2019 - 46114 - Nohfelden. State Returning Officer Saarland, May 26, 2019, accessed on August 6, 2019 .
  5. ↑ Mayoral election 2019. Municipality of Nohfelden, accessed on August 6, 2019 .
  6. ↑ The street bears Martin Weiler's name. In: Saarbrücker Zeitung. ( online at: neunkirchen-nahe.de , PDF; 499 kB)