Ohmbach
coat of arms | Germany map | |
---|---|---|
Coordinates: 49 ° 27 ' N , 7 ° 21' E |
||
Basic data | ||
State : | Rhineland-Palatinate | |
County : | Kusel | |
Association municipality : | Upper Glantal | |
Height : | 260 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 3.9 km 2 | |
Residents: | 796 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density : | 204 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 66903 | |
Area code : | 06386 | |
License plate : | KUS | |
Community key : | 07 3 36 076 | |
Association administration address: |
Rathausstrasse 8 66901 Schönenberg-Kübelberg |
|
Website : | ||
Local Mayor : | Gerhard purchase | |
Location of the local community Ohmbach in the Kusel district | ||
Ohmbach is a municipality in the Kusel district in Rhineland-Palatinate . It belongs to the community of Upper Glantal .
geography
Ohmbach is about 260 m above sea level. NHN in the North Palatinate Uplands. The community is framed in the southwest and east by wooded heights such as the Wartenstein or the Knechtenberg. At 387 m, the latter is the highest point in the Ohmbach district.
The place is traversed by the Ohmbach of the same name . The next larger cities are Kaiserslautern about 35 km east and Saarbrücken about 40 km southwest.
The following municipalities border on the municipality of Ohmbach and - starting clockwise in the north - are all in the district of Kusel: Herschweiler-Pettersheim , Steinbach am Glan , Brücken (Pfalz) , Dittweiler , Altenkirchen (Pfalz) , Frohnhofen , Krottelbach .
history
Early history
Ohmbach developed from the originally independent communities of Ober- and Niederohmbach (formerly Weitersbach).
Both villages are of Franconian origin and were probably built in the 7th and 8th centuries. The two places were probably named after the elders of the clan, so Witharisbach after Witharis , from which Weitersbach later developed, and Ohmbach after Bach des Ovo and Bach des Obo . Over the centuries this became 977 Ovenbach or Ouenbach, 1256 Ovinbach, 1410 Obinbach, 1477 Obenbach, 1585 Ombach and, since 1592, today's Ohmbach. It should be noted that the different spellings are due to the ignorance of princely writers. Ernst Christmann derives the name from the Old High German auwa , Middle High German ouwe , New High German Aue , and interprets it as a stream flowing through floodplains .
The first inhabitants of the landscape were probably the Celts. Burial mounds from them can be found in Wahnwegen, Krottelbach and Ohmbach.
In addition to Celtic burial mounds, there are also Roman settlements in the district of Ohmbach. Excavations from the 20th century on the Rennweiler hill brought out walls, fragments of architecture and even terra sigillata . The remains of the structure are located directly adjacent to a Roman road that connected Waldmohr with Kusel and crossed the Ohmbach valley here.
Documentary mention
Oberohmbach was first officially known as Ouenbach on April 12, 977 . In the certificate of Emperor Otto II., At the request of the Archbishop of Mainz Willigis, the possession of the Salvatorkapelle in Frankfurt am Main was confirmed. Archbishop Willigis arranged for the reconstruction of the Disibodenberg monastery in 975/976 and various donations from Mainz property for its entertainment. This document has not survived, however, the content can be found in later documents from 1108 and 1128.
To 1900
In 1256, Count Gerlach V. von Veldenz bought the goods of the Disibodenberg monastery, including tithes, interest and patronage rights of the church in Ovinbach. 1444, with the extinction of the male line of the Veldenz counts, Ovinbach came by inheritance to the Duchy of Pfalz-Zweibrücken . Weitersbach belonged to the Reichsland until 1437, which came to the Electoral Palatinate after changing seizures . This territorial affiliation of both places has remained unchanged for over 300 years. In 1612, the Electoral Palatinate and Pfalz-Zweibrücken agreed in the Landau Treaty to share the income from the assets of the Ohmbach Church, whose real estate was in the districts of both communities, and to give half of the money and grain to the Collectur and half to the Kirchschaffnei Lichtenberg to deliver.
In the Thirty Years War, Ohmbach and its two districts were largely destroyed. From Ohmbach it says in a tax book of the former mayor Hans Müller: Nothing has been built since 1628 and nobody lives there . In 1673 the Palatinate was occupied by the troops of the French King Louis XIV. In 1779 Niederohmbach fell to Pfalz-Zweibrücken by exchanging the sub-office of Kübelberg in the Electoral Palatinate . In 1793 the French revolutionary army conquered the area. In the newly formed Sarre department , the two places were merged for the first time to form the Commune d'Ohmbach . From 1616 Ohmbach was Bavarian . In 1838 Ober-Ohmbach applied to dissolve the Ohmbach municipal association. This separation had existed for almost 100 years. An attempt by the Nieder-Ohmbacher to reunite the two communities in 1877 failed due to the protest of the Oberohmbacher. The reason for this was the fear of the predominantly Protestant Oberohmbach, after the unification of the places that Catholics would use their majority in municipal elections and thus silence the Protestants.
Because of the bad economic and social situation in the Palatinate and because of the special political conditions, many Ohmbachers also put their only hope in emigration to America. From 1841 to 1854, 30 family and individual applications for emigration were made, which corresponds to about 50 people; that was ten percent of the Ohmbach population.
20th century
The First World War claims great sacrifices. The communities mourn 16 deaths. In 1936 Ohmbach was merged again by decree of the National Socialist government. The Second World War left 48 dead and 25 missing.
After the Second World War it became part of the then newly formed state of Rhineland-Palatinate. Now a profound social change also occurred in Ohmbach. The community, which at the beginning of the 20th century mainly consisted of miners and smaller farmers and craftsmen, in addition to a few larger horse farmers, now became an industrial workers' community. The small agricultural part-time businesses were gradually given up in the 50s and 60s.
The Rennweiler new building area was developed and developed in 1955. In 1957, in the Gewanne in the courtyards , the first large new building area was built parallel to the main street on the eastern bank of Ohmbach. The new development areas at Hühnerberg and Laimersbach have been developed since the 1960s . In 1970, after a long effort, the Catholics got their own modern church.
For the 1000th anniversary in 1977, a five-day festival program with a large historical pageant was organized. A new kindergarten was built in the 1990s.
Population development
The independent development of the communities Niederohmbach and Oberohmbach also resulted in their own statistics on the number of inhabitants.
|
|
religion
The state border between the Electorate of Palatinate and the Duchy of Zweibrücken, which has been running across Ohmbach along the Weitersbach (also called Betzenbach) since medieval times, was not only the political but also the ecclesiastical development of the two districts separate. Oberohmbach was predominantly Protestant, Niederohmbach Catholic. In 2012 around 40% of the population were Catholic and 43% Protestant. The rest belonged to another religion or were non-denominational.
Evangelical Christ Church
The Protestant church is the oldest building in Ohmbach from the 9th century. From 1779 to 1785 the nave of the Romanesque church was replaced by a baroque hall church due to its disrepair. The medieval tower was preserved in the basic principles. The church is home to what is probably the oldest silent organ in the Kusel district.
Catholic Church of Our Lady
The Catholic church was built in 1969/70 and inaugurated on October 18, 1970, the day of the Ohmbacher Kerwe. The church rises as a counterpoint to the old Protestant church above the Ohmbachtalaue. In 2014 the church became the property of the local parish. This now uses the lower church as a community center, known as the “Heimat- und Kulturtreff”. This is one of the rare cases in the Federal Republic of Germany in which a church building becomes the property of a commune, but the worship room and the worship service are retained.
politics
Community leaders
Heads of Niederohmbach
|
Heads of Oberohmbach
|
Heads of Ohmbach
|
Gerhard Kauf became local mayor of Ohmbach on August 16, 2019. In the direct election on May 26, 2019, he was elected for five years with 67.79% of the vote.
Municipal council
The local council in Ohmbach consists of twelve council members who were elected by a majority vote in the local elections on May 26, 2019 , and the honorary local mayor as chairman. Until 2009, the council members were elected in a personalized proportional representation.
The distribution of seats in the municipal council:
choice | SPD | CDU | FWG | total |
---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | by majority vote | 12 seats | ||
2014 | by majority vote | 12 seats | ||
2009 | 4th | 7th | 1 | 12 seats |
2004 | 3 | 7th | 2 | 12 seats |
coat of arms
Split by black and gold, on the right a red-armored and tongued golden lion, on the left a growing, left-curved red abbot, covered by a blue wavy bar below. Ohmbach and its two districts belonged to the Electoral Palatinate in the Old Kingdom, which is expressed by the left half of the shield and the shield colors. The church used to belong to the Disibodenberg monastery, which is what the crook stands for. The wavy bar indicates the Ohmbach corresponding to the place name. This coat of arms was approved by the Rheinhessen-Palatinate district government in 1971.
Culture and sights
Watch tower
The Ohmbacher watch tower was built in 2005 a little below the 375.8 m above sea level southwest of Ohmbach in the district of Dittweiler . NHN high Wartenstein and serves as a lookout point. The 8.2 m high tower is part of the "Walk-in History Book", which leads through the community of Schönenberg-Kübelberg with three circular hiking trails and many sights.
Clubs and associations
|
|
Economy and Infrastructure
The state road 350, which connects Konken with bridges , runs through Ohmbach . The A 6 runs south- east and the A 62 to the north-east . In Glan-Münchweiler there is a train station on the Landstuhl – Kusel railway line . Südwest Mobil GmbH bus lines connect Ohmbach with the Homburg and Kusel train stations .
literature
- Literature about Ohmbach in the Rhineland-Palatinate state bibliography
Web links
- Website of the local community Ohmbach
- Local community Ohmbach on the website of the Verbandsgemeinde Oberes Glantal
Individual evidence
- ↑ State Statistical Office of Rhineland-Palatinate - population status 2019, districts, communities, association communities ( help on this ).
- ↑ Ernst Christmann: The settlement names of the Palatinate . Speyer 1952, p. 449
- ↑ Nils Bantelmann: The prehistory of the Kusel district. Speyer 1972, p. 57
- ^ Ruthardurkunde, in Mainzer Urkundenbuch, Die Urkunde up to the death of Archbishop Adalbert I (1137). Edited by Manfred Stimming, Darmstadt 1932, doc. 436, p. 342
- ^ Adalberturkunde, Manfred Stimming, MUB Vol. 1, Doc. 553, p. 461
- ^ Local council Ohmbach elects three councilors. Die Rheinpfalz, August 19, 2019, accessed on May 8, 2020 .
- ^ The Regional Returning Officer Rhineland-Palatinate: direct elections 2019. see Oberes Glantal, Verbandsgemeinde, 16th line of results. Retrieved May 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Local election Rhineland-Palatinate 2019, local council
- ↑ Map service of the landscape information system of the Rhineland-Palatinate nature conservation administration (LANIS map) ( notes )
- ↑ Wartturm Ohmbach on warttuerme.de.
- ↑ New line network for bus traffic in the Kusel district. (No longer available online.) In: www.vrn.de. Archived from the original on May 19, 2016 ; Retrieved July 6, 2016 . 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.