Gäufelden
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 48 ° 34 ' N , 8 ° 50' E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Baden-Württemberg | |
Administrative region : | Stuttgart | |
County : | Boeblingen | |
Height : | 470 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 20.07 km 2 | |
Residents: | 9350 (December 31, 2018) | |
Population density : | 466 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 71126 | |
Area code : | 07032 | |
License plate : | BB, LEO | |
Community key : | 08 1 15 016 | |
Community structure: | 3 districts | |
Address of the municipal administration: |
Rathausplatz 1 71126 Gäufelden |
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Website : | ||
Mayor : | Benjamin Schmid | |
Location of the community of Gäufelden in the district of Böblingen | ||
Gäufelden is a municipality in Baden-Württemberg and belongs to the Boeblingen district . The seat of the municipal administration is in the district of Öschelbronn.
geography
Geographical location
Gäufelden is located in the upper Gäu about seven kilometers from Herrenberg and just as far from Nagold . The district extends over a height of 390 to 545 meters.
Community structure
Gäufelden is divided into the three districts of Nebringen, Öschelbronn and Tailfingen, which are identical to the former communities of the same name. In the area of the district of Nebringen is the abandoned village of Sindlingen and in the area of the district of Öschelbronn are the abandoned villages of Denslingen and Weildorf.
Neighboring communities
Gäufelden borders (starting in the north, counterclockwise) on Herrenberg , Jettingen , Mötzingen and Bondorf in the district of Böblingen, as well as on Rottenburg am Neckar and Ammerbuch in the district of Tübingen.
history
Community merger
The community of Gäufelden was newly formed on July 1, 1971 through the voluntary amalgamation of the previously independent communities of Nebringen, Öschelbronn and Tailfingen, after the majority of the citizens had voted in favor. Since then, the number of inhabitants has more than doubled.
Regional historical affiliation of the predecessor communities
When the Kingdom of Württemberg was established in 1806, the Protestant old - Württemberg predecessor communities Nebringen, Ober- and Unteröschelbronn (united to form Öschelbronn from 1824) and Tailfingen were in the Oberamt Herrenberg , which did not change during the time of the People's State from 1919. It was not until the administrative reform in Württemberg during the Nazi era that they came to the Böblingen district in 1938 . From 1945 to 1952 the three communities Nebringen, Öschelbronn and Tailfingen were part of the state of Württemberg-Baden in the American zone of occupation . Since 1952 they belonged to the administrative district of North Württemberg in the newly established state of Baden-Württemberg.
Nebringen
The place, mentioned for the first time in the 12th century in connection with Hirsau property, came to the County of Württemberg in 1382 from the Count Palatine of Tübingen . Ecclesiastically Nebringen originally belonged to the parish Validstein , became independent at the end of the Middle Ages and came with the Reformation in 1534 as a branch to Tailfingen ( Evangelical Dean's Office Herrenberg ). In Nebringen, on the occasion of the construction of the B 14 bypass, a large number of Celtic graves with rich grave goods were uncovered. The secured grave goods can be viewed in the Württemberg State Museum . The former railway attendant's house, which inspired the sculptor Lutz Ackermann to create the “Kunst-Kraft-Werk” (KKW) titled “Kunst-Kraft-Werk” (KKW), is worth seeing . The sculpture park is open on the first Sunday of each month in the summer.
Öschelbronn
The community of Öschelbronn (around 1150 Eskelbrunnen) was created in 1824 through the agreement on the merger of Ober- and Unteröschelbronn. Until 1612 Oberöschelbronn was gradually acquired by the Duchy of Württemberg from the property of the Lords of Genkingen, Validlingen and others. One half of Unteröschelbronn was bought by the Bebenhausen monastery between 1408 and 1413 from Friedrich von Enzberg and the Reutlingen citizen Peter Remp. After the Reformation, this part became part of Württemberg. The other half changed hands several times until Württemberg took it over too in 1774. The church set in Unteröschelbronn had been with the Bebenhausen monastery since 1402 and came with this to Württemberg. Oberöschelbronn and the half of Unteröschelbronn acquired in 1774 belonged to the old Oberamt Herrenberg . The Bebenhauser half was added in 1807 after the abbey office was dissolved.
Tailfingen
In the 12th century the place is called Dalvingen. Local nobility can be proven from the 12th to the 14th century. In the 12th century, the Hirsau and Reichenbach monasteries, and by the 13th century at the latest, the Alpirsbach and Bebenhausen monasteries received property in Tailfingen. In 1266 Bebenhausen acquired the Alpirsbach estates here. From 1418 to 1457, Württemberg bought the local shares of the monasteries Bebenhausen and Hirsau, Benz-Kechler von Schwandorf, the Sichenpflege zu Reutlingen and Balthasar von Bühel. The church set came from the Lords of Hailfingen to the Sindelfingen Abbey around 1350 and, when it was transferred, to the Tübingen Abbey . Nebringen was a branch of the Evangelical Parish (Deanery Herrenberg). The old rectory near the church, built by the Herrenberg master builder Heinrich Schickhardt in 1614, is privately owned.
There was a night fighter airfield south of Tailfingen from 1937 to 1945 and a concentration camp satellite camp in 1944 and 1945.
Tailfingen was the center of hop growing in the Gäu.
Population development
These are population numbers according to the respective territorial status. The numbers are census results (¹) or official updates from the Baden-Württemberg State Statistical Office (only main residences ).
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politics
Municipal council
In Gäufelden, the municipal council is elected using the spurious choice of part of town. The number of local councils can change due to overhang mandates . After the last election, the municipal council in Gäufelden has 18 members (unchanged). The local elections on May 25, 2014 led to the following official final result. The municipal council consists of the elected voluntary councilors and the mayor as chairman. The mayor is entitled to vote in the municipal council.
Parties and constituencies |
% 2014 |
Seats 2014 |
% 2009 |
Seats 2009 |
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FW | Free voter association Gäufelden | 44.19 | 8th | 37.2 | 7th | |
CDU | Christian Democratic Union of Germany | 39.68 | 7th | 42.6 | 8th | |
Green | Alliance 90 / The Greens | 16.13 | 3 | 9.0 | 1 | |
SPD | Social Democratic Party of Germany | - | - | 11.7 | 2 | |
total | 100.0 | 18th | 100.0 | 18th | ||
voter turnout | 56.72% | 53.1% |
mayor
The mayor is directly elected for a term of eight years.
- 1971–2003: Hermann Wolf
- 2003–2019: Johannes Buchter (Greens)
- since October 2019: Benjamin Schmid
In the first ballot on July 14, 2019, Benjamin Schmid achieved the required majority of 50% + 1 vote with 52.2% of the votes against 9 other applicants.
coat of arms
The blazon of the coat of arms reads: In a split shield in front a black abbot in silver, behind in red a silver chalice.
The abbot's staff was both the symbol of Nebringen and in the coat of arms of Öschelbronn. The chalice comes from the old Tailfingen coat of arms.
The municipality flag is white and red.
Culture and sights
- Hailfingen-Tailfingen subcamp - former subcamp of the Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp (November 1944 to February 1945)
- Hailfingen-Tailfingen Concentration Camp Memorial with a memorial on the former “runway”, an exhibition and documentation center in Tailfingen's town hall and a memorial plaque on the Tailfingen cemetery.
- Resurrection Church, 1994 glass design by Albrecht Pfister
- Lutz Ackermann's sculpture garden - works in steel, wood and stone
Economy and Infrastructure
traffic
railroad
Gäufelden is connected to the national rail network by the Gäubahn . The train station is two hours by regional express trains on to sing (in the opposite direction to Stuttgart ), also of every two hours in Eutingen im Gäu dividing regional trains to Freudenstadt or Rottweil and from isolated regional trains to Herrenberg (in the opposite direction to Bondorf (b Herrenberg ) ) served. In addition, in the evening from Monday to Friday, a pair of trains on the S81 line of the Karlsruhe Stadtbahn , which otherwise ends in Eutingen im Gäu, is tied through to Herrenberg, which also stops in Gäufelden.
Bus transport
In order to provide a connection to the S1 of the Stuttgart S-Bahn to Kirchheim unter Teck , which ends in Herrenberg, Gäufelden is served by buses in the direction of Herrenberg every hour.
Streets
Gäufelden lies on several state and district roads .
education
In addition to the Gäufelden community school in the Nebringen district, there is also a primary school in Öschelbronn and Tailfingen. The local library in Gäufelden has branches in all three districts. The Volkshochschule Gäufelden has its office in Nebringen and a branch in Öschelbronn.
communication
In Gäufelden broadband internet is available across the board in the Telekom network, for the most part (as of 2020) with a download speed of up to 250Mbit.
The cable network, which is partially available in the entire local network, was taken over by Vodafone Germany in 2020 and modernized to make it suitable for the Internet. This enables bandwidths of up to 1000Mbit download speeds.
In addition, Gäufelden is located in the gigabit region of Stuttgart, which means that the fiber optic network will be expanded across the board over the next few years.
Personalities
Honorary citizen
- Albrecht Maurer was mayor of the former municipality of Öschelbronn from 1945 to 1971
- Hermann Wolf, from 1961 to 1971 mayor of the former municipality of Nebringen, from 1971 to 2003 he was mayor of the newly formed municipality of Gäufelden
Sons and daughters of the church
- John Martin Schaeberle (1853–1924), born in Öschelbronn, German-American astronomer
Other personalities associated with the community
- Lutz Ackermann (* 1941), sculptor, he lives in the district of Nebringen
literature
- Dorothee Wein, Volker Mall, Harald Roth: Traces of Auschwitz in the Gäu. The Hailfingen / Tailfingen subcamp. Markstein-Verlag, Filderstadt, 2007. 264 pages. ISBN 978-3-935129-31-2 .
- Burkhart Oertel : Ortssippenbuch Nebringen, community Gäufelden, district Böblingen, Baden-Württemberg, 1558–1980. Neubiberg: Self-published by the author 1980 (= Württemberg local family books 3)
- Burkhart Oertel: Ortssippenbuch Tailfingen: community Gäufelden, district Böblingen, Württemberg, 1559–1981. Neubiberg: Self-published by the author 1981 (= Württemberg local clan books 5)
Movie
- Johannes Kuhn (director): Protected green stock - the Hailfingen-Tailfingen satellite camp . Documentary (Germany 2006, 57 min.). Production: Association “Against Forgetting - For Democracy”.
Web links
- At Wikisource there are the descriptions of the former communities Nebringen , Öschelbronn and Tailfingen in the description of the Oberamt Herrenberg from 1855
- Official website of the municipality
Individual evidence
- ↑ State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg - Population by nationality and gender on December 31, 2018 (CSV file) ( help on this ).
- ^ The state of Baden-Württemberg. Official description by district and municipality. Volume III: Stuttgart District, Middle Neckar Regional Association. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1978, ISBN 3-17-004758-2 , pp. 91-93.
- ^ 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. 447 .
- ↑ Population development in Baden-Württemberg from 1871 to 2014 ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ^ Election information from the Stuttgart municipal data center