Neuravensburg

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Neuravensburg
Municipality coat of arms of Neuravensburg
Coordinates: 47 ° 38 ′ 15 ″  N , 9 ° 45 ′ 23 ″  E
Height : 522 m above sea level NHN
Area : 15.58 km²
Residents : 2994  (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 192 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : May 1, 1972
Postal code : 88239
Area code : 07528
Neuravensburg castle ruins

Neuravensburg is the most populous and southernmost of the six villages in the large district town of Wangen im Allgäu in the Ravensburg district in Baden-Württemberg . The place is about 10 km southwest of the main town Wangen.

geography

The following places and places to live belong to Neuravensburg:

  • Neuravensburg, village, with the Hagmühle residential area
  • Roggenzell, parish village
  • Moos, hamlet, with the Buckelhof residential area
  • Hub, hamlet
  • Dabetsweiler, Weiler, with the residential areas Altschmitte, Trollenhof, Hundriß, Schillerhalde, Loch and Fuchsbühl
  • Bettensweiler, Weiler, with the Gugelis residential area
  • Cooker builder, hamlet
  • Hüttenweiler, Weiler, with the residential areas of Halders, Schlachters and Metzgerhof
  • Ried, Weiler, with the residential areas Buhlmüller and Weißenhaus
  • Strohdorf, hamlet
  • Schwarzenbach, Pfarrdorf, with Knolpers living space
  • Engetsweiler, Weiler, with the residential areas Irgenhaus and Kögelhof
  • Degetsweiler, Weiler, with the Rothen residential area
  • Föhlschmitten, Weiler, with the residential areas Maierhalden and Wuhr
  • Mindbuch, Weiler, with the residential areas Dittis, Argenhof, Friedhag and Gugelloch
  • Grub, Weiler, with the Hinterberg residential area
  • Reute, hamlet, with the Bergler residential area
  • Untermooweiler, hamlet, with the residential areas Füßinger, Schmalholz, Bachhofen and Tegernmoos
  • Kiesgrub, hamlet
  • Dametsweiler, abandoned residential area, popularly called "Geisterhof"

Neuravensburg and Schwarzenbach have grown together along the L320 over the years. The border is at the level of the Gasthaus Fässle.

The upper Argen flows through Neuravensburg coming from Niederwangen to the confluence of the Argen, which lies between Neuravensburg, Neukirch and Haslach not far from the Pflegelberg residential area. The united Argen forms the border to Neukirch from here.

The neighboring communities of Neuravensburg are, starting from the west counterclockwise: Neukirch (Bodenseekreis), Achberg (Ravensburg district), Weißensberg , Hergensweiler and Hergatz (all Lindau districts; Bavaria) as well as the Wangen localities Niederwangen and Schomburg .

A landmark of Neuravensburg is the. Neuravensburger Weiher , next to the historic castle ruins .

history

Neuravensburg was first mentioned in 1271 as Nuwen Ravenspurg . The landmark of Neuravensburg was the castle , which was first mentioned in a document in the 13th century. At that time it was owned by the Reich Ministerial Heinrich von Ravensburg, who also founded the village below the castle. After his death around 1270, Neuravensburg went to the St. Gallen Monastery until the village was sold to the city of Lindau in 1450 , where it remained until 1586 before it fell back to the St. Gallen Monastery. In the Peasants' War in 1525 the castle was completely destroyed and only rebuilt as a castle in 1614 under St. Gallen rule.

After the castle was sold to a citizen of Wangen in 1836, demolition began the following year. Only the tower remains today.

As a result of the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803, Neuravensburg came from the monastery of St. Gallen to the Prince of Dietrichstein. In 1806, as part of the Paris State Treaty, the area was added to the Kingdom of Württemberg, in which it first came to the Oberamt Altdorf. In 1810 Neuravensburg became an independent mayor's shop (later a municipality) within the Oberamt Wangen. From 1938 Neuravensburg belonged to the enlarged district of Wangen.

On May 1, 1972 Neuravensburg was incorporated into the city of Wangen im Allgäu, with which it came to the Ravensburg district on January 1, 1973.

Religions

The majority of the residents of Neuravensburg are Roman Catholic, as is almost everywhere in Upper Swabia.

The village is divided between the Catholic parishes of St. Gallus in Roggenzell in the south and St. Felix and Regula in Schwarzenbach in the north. Both parishes belong to the deanery of Allgäu-Oberschwaben within the diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart .

In addition to the parish village of Roggenzell and the village of Neuravensburg, the parish Roggenzell also includes the following hamlets, each with their respective living spaces: Bettensweiler, Dabetsweiler, Hub, Kocherbauer, Moos, Ried and Strohdorf. In addition to the parish village of Schwarzenbach, the parish of Schwarzenbach includes the following hamlets, each with the associated living spaces: Degetsweiler, Engetsweiler, Föhlschmitten, Grub, Kiesgrub, Mindbuch, Reute and Untermooweiler.

The Protestant residents belong to the Wangen parish, which belongs to the Ravensburg church district within the Evangelical Church in Württemberg .

politics

As an electoral district of Neuravensburg, the town of Neuravensburg has three fixed seats in every municipal council election in Wangen. In the local elections on May 26, 2019, Matthias Bernhard (CDU), Hermann Schad (Free Voters) and Birgitta Haug (GOL) won mandates for the local council seats from Neuravensburg.

Furthermore, an eleven-member local council is elected for Neuravensburg , which decides directly on the interests of the locality. Since May 26, 2019, the distribution of seats in the local council has been as follows (changes to the 2014 election in brackets):

  • Free voters: 5 seats
  • CDU: 4 seats (-1)
  • GOL: 2 seats (+1)


Mayor of Neuravensburg:

  • 1911–? Plazidus Bernhard
  • 1933–1945 August Heiler
  • 1942–1946 as Alois Nassal's representative
  • 1946–1954 Otto Blank
  • 1954–1960 Albert Dürrenberger
  • 1960–1972 Vitus Zauner (CDU)


Mayor of Neuravensburg:

  • 1972–1974 Vitus Zauner (CDU)
  • 1974–1980 Michael Leib (CDU)
  • 1980–1994 Rupert Sutter (CDU)
  • 1994–2014 Horst Büssenschütt (Free Voters)
  • since 2014 Hermann Schad (Free Voters)

literature

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. wangen.de - Neuravensburg . 
  2. leo-bw.de - Neuravensburg . 
  3. ^ 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. 536 .