Obersulm

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

Coordinates: 49 ° 8 '  N , 9 ° 23'  E

Basic data
State : Baden-Württemberg
Administrative region : Stuttgart
County : Heilbronn
Height : 203 m above sea level NHN
Area : 31.07 km 2
Residents: 13,914 (Dec. 31, 2018)
Population density : 448 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 74182
Primaries : 07130, 07134, 07946
License plate : HN
Community key : 08 1 25 110
Community structure: 6 districts
Address of the
municipal administration:
Bernhardstrasse 1
74182 Obersulm
Website : www.obersulm.de
Mayor : Tilman Schmidt (independent)
Location of the municipality of Obersulm in the Heilbronn district
Abstatt Abstatt Bad Friedrichshall Bad Rappenau Bad Wimpfen Beilstein Beilstein Beilstein Brackenheim Cleebronn Eberstadt Ellhofen Ellhofen Eppingen Erlenbach Flein Gemmingen Güglingen Gundelsheim Hardthausen am Kocher Heilbronn Ilsfeld Ittlingen Jagsthausen Jagsthausen Kirchardt Langenbrettach Lauffen am Neckar Lauffen am Neckar Lehrensteinsfeld Leingarten Löwenstein Löwenstein Löwenstein Massenbachhausen Möckmühl Neckarsulm Neckarwestheim Neudenau Neuenstadt am Kocher Nordheim Obersulm Oedheim Offenau Pfaffenhofen Roigheim Schwaigern Siegelsbach Talheim Untereisesheim Untergruppenbach Weinsberg Widdern Wüstenrot Zaberfeldmap
About this picture
Eschenau
Hamlet in front of the Breitenauer See

Obersulm is a municipality in the district of Heilbronn , Baden-Württemberg , which was created in 1972 through the merger of the municipalities Affaltrach , Eichelberg , Eschenau , Weiler bei Weinsberg and Willsbach and in which Sülzbach was incorporated in 1975 . It belongs to the Heilbronn-Franconia region (until May 20, 2003 Franconia region ) and the peripheral zone of the European metropolitan region of Stuttgart . The name Obersulm is derived from the Sulm river flowing through the municipality .

geography

Geographical location

Obersulm is part of the natural areas of the Swabian-Franconian Forest Mountains and Hohenloher-Haller Ebene . The community is located in the Sulmtal in the southeast of the Heilbronn district, at the foot of the Löwenstein Mountains in the Swabian-Franconian Forest Nature Park at an altitude of 200 to 502 meters. The Breitenauer See is partly on the municipal area. In the municipality, the Schlierbach, the Michelbach, the Seebächle, the Sülzbach (all from the right) and the Hambach (from the left) flow into the Sulm.

Neighboring communities

Neighboring towns and communities in Obersulms are ( clockwise , starting in the south) the town of Löwenstein , the communities of Lehrensteinsfeld and Ellhofen , the town of Weinsberg and the community of Bretzfeld ( Hohenlohekreis ). Except for Bretzfeld, all of them belong to the Heilbronn district. Obersulm has entered into an agreed administrative partnership with the city of Löwenstein .

Community structure

Obersulm consists of the following localities, which were previously independent municipalities:

The Friedrichshof court belongs to Eichelberg, the Wieslensdorf hamlet to Eschenau , which is located in the northeast of the district between Eschenau and Bretzfeld-Scheppach, and the Kriegshölzle and Waldhof farms, and the Neuhaus and Zeilhof farms to Willsbach. Places that have been removed and no longer exist today are on the Weiler Neidlingen marker and Willsbach Hanbach marker.

Division of space

According to data from the State Statistical Office , as of 2014.

history

The six districts of Obersulm can all look back on centuries of history. Willsbach must have existed as early as the 7th century, according to soil finds, Eschenau was first mentioned as Villa Esginaha 780. The other places were first mentioned in the 11th and 13th centuries, most recently Eichelberg in 1275. Wieslensdorf was first mentioned in 1387. The places were owned by local noble families or the Schöntal monastery .

Affaltrach belonged to the Counts of Löwenstein and the Lords of Weinsberg in the 13th century . The Löwenstein part was owned by the Catholic Order of St. John (now also known as the Order of Malta ) from 1278 to 1805 , who moved his congregation from Schwäbisch Hall to Affaltrach around 1600. The first town and court order for Affaltrach with rules for the duties and salaries of the mayor , the judges and clerks as well as the duties of the craftsmen and saints carers dates from 1586. Around 1600 around 600 inhabitants were counted. In the 17th century the Thirty Years' War and the plague brought great misery to the place, so that the population fell to 128 people by 1648.

Eschenau was a fiefdom of the Counts of Löwenstein, as feudal people the Lords of Eschenau had a castle here, which was destroyed in 1504. From the late 15th century the place belonged to the lords of Gemmingen , who built a castle here in 1573. In 1650 the place came to the Lords of Moser, 1705 to those of Ziegesar and around 1740 to those of von Killinger.

Weiler was first mentioned in 1037 and was the ancestral seat of the barons of Weiler , an old noble family from Württemberg.

Sülzbach and Willsbach had been part of Württemberg since 1504 ; the other places followed in 1805. After the reorganization of the Kingdom of Württemberg , all places belonged to the Oberamt Weinsberg . An administrative reform carried out by the People's State of Württemberg in 1926 led to the dissolution of the Oberamt Weinsberg, so that all places of the later municipality of Obersulm came to the Oberamt Heilbronn . During the administrative reform during the Nazi era in Württemberg , the villages came to the Heilbronn district in 1938 .

In 1939, 807 inhabitants were counted in Affaltrach, 308 in Eichelberg, 905 in Eschenau, 515 in Sülzbach, 321 in Weiler and 1272 in Willsbach.

Since the district of Heilbronn had become part of the American zone of occupation after the Second World War , the localities had belonged to the newly founded state of Württemberg-Baden since 1945 , which was merged into the current state of Baden-Württemberg in 1952.

On May 1, 1972, the new municipality of Obersulm was created through the merger of the municipalities of Affaltrach, Eichelberg, Eschenau, Weiler bei Weinsberg and Willsbach. On January 1, 1975, Sülzbach was incorporated.

Religions

Obersulm is predominantly Protestant. In Affaltrach, Eschenau, Sülzbach, Weiler mit Eichelberg and Willsbach there are their own Protestant parishes , all of which belong to the Weinsberg-Neuenstadt church district of the Evangelical Church in Württemberg . In Affaltrach, the former Johanniter - Kommende , there is a Catholic parish, which is also responsible for the other districts and other parishes apart from Obersulm. The New Apostolic Church is also represented in Obersulm.

According to older records of individual Jews, Jewish communities in Affaltrach and Eschenau have been recorded since the 17th century. Both the Jewish community Affaltrach and the Jewish community Eschenau had in 1850 its greatest strength members with a total of about 300 people. After that, the size of the community quickly declined due to emigration and emigration. The Eschenau Jews originally visited the synagogue in Affaltrach and also had their burial in the Affaltrach Jewish cemetery . Due to disputes between the communities, a separate synagogue was built in Eschenau in 1797. The allocation of the Eschenau community as a subsidiary community of Affaltrach, decreed in 1823, was later canceled. In 1851 the Affaltrach synagogue was built in its current form. Of the few Jews who still lived in Affaltrach or Eschenau after 1933, six people died after 1940 in the course of euthanasia or the deportation of German Jews . In 1941/42 more than 100 older Jews from other places were quartered in the Eschenau Castle ( forced retirement home ). Eleven of them died and were buried in the Jewish cemetery in Affaltrach. The others were deported to Theresienstadt in 1942 and died there or in the extermination camps in the East.

politics

Town hall in Obersulm-Affaltrach

mayor

  • 1972–1988: Horst Finkbeiner
  • 1988–2011: Harry Murso
  • since 2011: Tilman Schmidt

In the mayoral election on May 8, 2011, the 42-year-old mayor of Langenbrettach , Tilman Schmidt, prevailed against three other candidates. The incumbent was no longer running.

Local council and local councils

The local elections on May 25, 2014 resulted in the following distribution of votes and seats:

Political party be right +/- Seats +/-
FW 31.3% (−0.3) 7th (± 0)
CDU 24.3% (+1.6) 5 (± 0)
SPD 24.2% (−1.5) 5 (−1)
GREEN 20.1% (+1.0) 5 (+1)

The turnout was 50.7%, 3.9% lower than in the 2009 local elections. The local council has 15 men and seven women.

Another member of the council and its chairman is the mayor.

In each of the six villages of Affaltrach, Eichelberg, Eschenau, Sülzbach, Weiler and Willsbach there is also a local council, each with six members. On its proposal, the council elects a volunteer for each village mayor . These bodies are to be heard on important matters affecting the locality.

badges and flags

Obersulm's coat of arms

The blazon of the Obersulm coat of arms reads: In red over a lowered, silver wavy bar, a golden grape, from the stem of which a golden vine leaves on each side. The flag of the municipality is yellow and red.

The newly created municipality of Obersulm adopted its current coat of arms after a survey of the citizens, which combines the motifs proposed by the Stuttgart State Archives . The grape symbolizes the viticulture that is practiced in all districts, the wavy bar stands for the Sulm , which also appears in the name of the community. The colors silver and red are the colors of the coat of arms of both the Lords of Weinsberg and the Counts of Löwenstein , who formerly owned significant parts of today's municipal area. The coat of arms and flag were awarded to the municipality by the district office of Heilbronn on July 26, 1976.

Partner locations

In addition to the partner towns of Beaumont-le-Roger in France and Rohrendorf near Krems in Austria, the wine-growing community of Hercegkút (former German name: Trautsondorf) , located in northeast Hungary, joined the third partner town on September 23, 2006 .

Culture and sights

Eschenau, Affaltrach, Weiler, Willsbach and Sülzbach are on the Württemberger Weinstrasse .

Museums

Museum for the history of the Jews in the district and city of Heilbronn in the former synagogue in Affaltrach

In Weiler there is a school museum (the largest of its kind in Baden-Württemberg) with an attached toy museum , in Affaltrach the museum on the history of the Jews in the district and city of Heilbronn in the Affaltrach synagogue built in 1851 .

Buildings

Affaltrach Castle
Affaltrach
  • Affaltrach Castle is the commentary building of the former Johanniter Kommende from 1694. The Affaltrach Castle Cellar , founded in 1928, is located in the castle grounds.
  • The Protestant St. John's Church goes back to a late Gothic building, which received its present form through a neo-baroque redesign in 1903. From 1706 until the construction of the Catholic Church, the church building served as a simultaneous church . An equal and considerate relationship between the denominations did not develop until 1806 when the clerical rulers, including the orders, lost their sovereign rights. Affaltrach came to Württemberg as a whole. After the completion of the Catholic Church of St. Johann Baptist in 1899, the Protestant parish became the sole owner of the old parish church of St. Johann, which they then expanded and renovated with a transept with architect Theophil Frey until 1902. In 1991/92 the church was renovated outside and in 1996/97 inside. The choir window with the motif Jesus blesses the children was designed by the Stuttgart artist Theodor Bauerle , and it was executed and installed in 1902 by the Stuttgart glass painting workshop Waldhausen & Ellenbeck . In 1997 the painting Christ as World Ruler from 1812 was donated by the Viennese artist Heinrich Friedrich Füger from Heilbronn .
  • Around the church was the original cemetery of the place, which was replaced from 1819 by today's Affaltrach cemetery .
  • The historic half-timbered Protestant parsonage is located near the church. The old Catholic parsonage , which is also located near the church , is a half-timbered house that was renovated in 1832. It goes back to an old Johanniter hostel and came into the possession of the Protestant community in 1983, which integrated it into their community center.
  • The Catholic parish church of St. Johann Baptist was built in 1898/99 according to plans by Richard Raisch . The originally richly decorated church received its simple interior in the course of a renovation in 1957. The stations of the cross, the baptismal font and the organ gallery with organ date from the time the building was erected. Four figures of saints made of linden wood and a Madonna figure from the late 15th century come from the older Johanneskirche.
  • The Affaltrach synagogue was built in 1851 and today serves as a museum on the history of the Jews in the district and city of Heilbronn. The Jewish cemetery in Affaltrach was laid out in the 17th century.
  • The Catholic schoolhouse , which was opened in 1913 and is also known as the village castle , is one of the other distinctive buildings in the village .
Old town hall in Eichelberg
Eichelberg
  • The old wine press was built on Hundsberg in 1738 , later expanded several times and moved to its current location in 1924. It has a length of 59 meters and is now used as a village community room.
  • In the Vorderdorf there is a bakery , the old town hall and the former Gasthaus zum Adler .
  • Above Eichelberg is the Friedrichshof , a baroque estate that was built in 1799 by Freiherr Friedrich von Weiler and is now used as a long-term therapy facility.
Eschenau Castle (left), in front of it the town hall
Eschenau
  • Eschenau Castle , built in the 16th century. Around 1740 in the possession of Johann Melchior von Killinger, who had the palace rebuilt in 1745 based on designs by Leopoldo Retti under the direction of Georg Philipp Wenger . In the park of the castle there is also a garden house and an orangery.
  • The town hall is the former Gemmingen administrative building, which was mentioned as a widow's residence in 1649 and has replaced the old town hall since it was renovated in 1890.
  • Wendelinskirche : The base of the octagonal tower structure is medieval, the baroque nave was given its present shape in the 18th century by the master builder Johann Michael Krauß from Windsheim, probably based on plans by Philippe de la Guêpière , but has beenrestoredby the architect Hannes Mayer in 1959 designed more simply. In 1790 the local rule of the Barons von Killinger had a crypt installed under the base of the tower, which was only used for burials for a few decades in the second half of the 18th century and then closed, but has recently been made accessible again. In 2006/08 the west gable of the church received a renovation. Three colored standing figures made of limewood come from the late 15th century. A high relief plaque formerly in the Eschenau churchwith the legend of St. Ursula , probably from the shrine of a smaller altar around 1500, was sold to the Stuttgart antiquities collection in 1885 and is now in the Württemberg State Museum . On the right of the choir arch wall are the tombstones of the Gemmingen-Fürfeld couple († 1597 and 1601). The wooden baptismal font from 1706 and a stylistically matching large candlestick are reminiscent ofthe earlier baroque furnishings of the churchwith their colors and ornamentation . The organ was built by Karl Schäfer in1879.
  • Two wine presses around 1600 and the baroque Gasthaus zum Ochsen (1788) in the center of the village are also worth mentioning.
  • The old town hall from 1546 on the castle wall and the old synagogue from 1797 were converted into residential buildings. A historic cloister courtyard of the Lichtenstern Monastery has since been demolished.
  • Historical epitaphs of local rule (barons von Ziegesar) are embedded in the cemetery wall, and there are also tombs of the von Üxküll-Gyllenband .
  • South-east of Eschenau, in the middle of the forest, directly on the boundary with Bretzfeld, is the Waldhof, which was laid out in 1851 by Albert von Hügel.
Kilian's Church in Sülzbach
Sülzbach
  • The Protestant Kilian Church is the original church of the Weinsberger Valley, founded towards the end of the 8th century under the influence of Würzburg. The previous wooden church was replaced by a Romanesque stone building around 1150, which was later expanded into a fortified church complex with a fence and converted into a Gothic style in the 14th century. In the substructure of the choir tower there are Romanesque and Gothic stonemason's marks. The church was rebuilt in 1619 by the ducal church builder Friedrich Vischlin in the Renaissance style and in the 17th century it was richly decorated on the inside with scrollwork and fittings and decorative woodwork. The most important art treasure of the church is an entombment group carved in high relief on the altar from around 1480, also noteworthy are the ornate Oettinger epitaph from 1626 attached to the north wall and the masterful, but repair-prone supporting structure of the needle-pointed church tower. The glass painting in the choir window was designed and executed by Christian Heinrich Burckhardt in the Munich workshop in 1895 and shows the crucifixion of Jesus. In the churchyard surrounded by a defensive wall there is a copy of the Beheim atonement cross, next to the church there is a baroque rectory .
  • In the center of the village is the old school and town hall , as well as the modern citizens' office, which has several awards from the state competition Our village should be more beautiful (Golden Prize coin 2001).
  • In Sülzbach there are also several interesting half-timbered buildings , including four magnificent properties with ornamental half-timbering in Eberstädter Straße, which date back to 1556 and which also include the former Schöntal monastery courtyard with old wine press from 1790.
Weiler Castle
hamlet
  • Weiler Castle probably goes back to a medieval moated castle and was rebuilt from 1588.
  • The former rent office with ornamental framework and Renaissance portal from 1558 is located in the former mansion adjoining the castle, where there are also historical outbuildings.
  • The Evangelical Church “Our Lady of Hamlet” is a choir tower from 1399 and was expanded in 1758. The ship had to be rebuilt in 1931 because of damp subsoil and masonry. The architect was probably Emil Weippert from Stuttgart. A sacristy was also added to the east and a small stained glass tower choir window decorated with Christian symbols: Alpha and Omega, the Christ initials Chi and Rho and the Eye of God. The church contains two bells from the 15th century and funerary monuments of the Lords of Weiler. Up until the 1930s there was a winged altar in the church, originally in the castle chapel of Lichtenberg Castle , which was then sold and has been in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (Cloisters Collection, Acc. No. 53.21) since 1953 .
  • In the center there are several late medieval and Renaissance half-timbered houses .
  • In the cemetery there is the family crypt of the Barons von Weiler , which was established around 1850 in an old pilgrimage church.
Old town hall in Willsbach
Willsbach
  • The Protestant St. George's Church reached its present size in 1486, among other things by expanding an older chapel to the south. It has baroque furnishings from 1683 (font, pulpit) and has a characteristic onion dome built in 1732. During the major interior renovation in 1962/63, the side galleries and a few rows of seats below were dismantled, the pulpit was moved from the right to the left to the choir arch, thereby creating space for the Bornefeld organ from 1973. Nine wooden panel paintings are attributed to the Prague painter Johannes Stiegler, who was active in some churches in the region around 1750. The eight colored glass image fields in the large pulpit window were designed by the artist Lydia Jost-Schäfer in 1928 . The choir window from 1970 comes from the artist Wolf-Dieter Kohler and illustrates the mission command Mt 28: 18-29  Lut . In the center sits the risen Christ in his glory ( Majestas Domini ), surrounded by angels. His commission for mission, which he gives to the disciples, is expressed in the lower part of the window through baptism, the sermon and Holy Communion.
  • The Catholic Our Father Church was built in the 1960s.
  • The old town hall is a classicist building from 1845, which originally also housed a wine press.
  • Old school house
  • Historical memorial plaques remind of the famine of 1771 and the construction of the tithe barn as well as the "great taxation" of 1817.

Natural monuments

Between Friedrichshof and Waldhof stood the well-known Zigeunerfohrle , a conspicuously shaped Scots pine that has been declared a natural monument . It had to be felled in the summer of 2017 because it had largely died and was a danger to the public. In the woods above Friedrichshof, southeast of Eichelberg and close to the municipality border with Bretzfeld, there is the Hohle Stein , a natural rock bridge that has been washed away by the water , which is also a natural monument .

economy

Viticulture

Viticulture is an important branch of industry in Obersulm . The members of two winegrowers ' cooperatives , including the winegrowers from Weinsberger Tal , and some self-marketers cultivate a total of 387 hectares of vineyards. The Affaltrach Castle Cellar is also located in Obersulm and produces sparkling wine as well as wine. The sites belong to the large Salzberg site in the Württemberg lowlands of the Württemberg wine-growing region .

Light rail railcars at the new Wieslensdorf stop on the Crailsheim – Heilbronn line

traffic

Obersulm is located on the B 39 from Heilbronn to Mainhardt and with the stations Willsbach and Eschenau and the stops Sülzbach, Sülzbach Schule, Affaltrach and Wieslensdorf on the Crailsheim – Heilbronn railway line . Since December 2005, line S4 of the Heilbronn tram to Heilbronn and Öhringen has been running every half hour there .

Established businesses

The emü furniture factory founded by Emil Müssig in the Affaltrach district in the 1950s was one of the most important companies in the municipality and was particularly successful with two-column tables . The subsidiary Interfort produced high-circulation do-it-yourself shelves that were sold through department stores.

The company CD Cartondruck AG, based in the Willsbach district and founded in 1969, produces complex packaging for the cosmetics and confectionery industry in Obersulm with 380 employees (as of 2007) . There is a branch in Poland ( Danzig ) and a sales office in France ( Paris ). In May 2011 CD Cartondruck AG was integrated into the American Multi Packaging Solutions , Inc. (MPS). The previous branch in the USA ( Fairview ) was taken over by MPS. In 2011 Cartondruck made a turnover of over 73.5 million euros.

media

The daily newspaper Heilbronner Voice reports on the events in Obersulm in its edition for the Weinsberger Tal (WT).

Since October 2000 the weekly advertising and news paper sulmtal.de has been published in Obersulm - the extra sheet , which is also distributed free of charge in some neighboring communities.

education

Obersulm has two primary schools in Affaltrach and Eschenau, a combined primary and secondary school with Werkrealschule in Sülzbach ( Michael-Beheim School), the Käthe-Kollwitz-Schule in Weiler and the Obersulm Realschule in Willsbach. In the 2004/2005 school year, the private Evangelical Gymnasium Obersulm , supported by a foundation, started work. On October 28, 2005 the grammar school was renamed Evangelisches Paul-Distelbarth-Gymnasium Obersulm, after Paul Distelbarth , the former publisher and co-founder of the daily Heilbronner Voice . The Volkshochschule Unterland has a branch in Obersulm.

The Obersulm community library has a stock of 27,000 media units.

Personalities

Honorary citizen

  • Harry Murso (born March 2, 1945), Mayor from 1988 to 2011 (awarded in 2011)

Sons and daughters of the Obersulm community

Other people connected with Obersulm

literature

  • Obersulm. Six villages - one municipality . Obersulm municipality, Obersulm 1997.

Individual evidence

  1. State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg - Population by nationality and gender on December 31, 2018 (CSV file) ( help on this ).
  2. Tilman Schmidt applies in Obersulm. Stimme.de, March 3, 2011
  3. Natural areas of Baden-Württemberg . State Institute for the Environment, Measurements and Nature Conservation Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart 2009
  4. ^ Source for the section on community structure: Das Land Baden-Württemberg. Official description by district and municipality. Volume IV: Stuttgart district, Franconian and East Württemberg regional associations. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1980, ISBN 3-17-005708-1 . Page 131–134
  5. a b Source for Wieslensdorf and Neidlingen: Obersulm. Six villages - one municipality . Pages 81–85 and 99.
  6. State Statistical Office, area since 1988 according to actual use for Obersulm.
  7. Communications of the Württemberg Stat. State Office No. 4/5 of December 10, 1940: Results of the population and occupational census on May 17, 1939
  8. ^ 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. 451 .
  9. ^ 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. 465 .
  10. ^ Website of the Evangelical Church Community Affaltrach
  11. ^ Website of the Evangelical Church Community Eschenau
  12. ^ Website of the Evangelical Church Community Sülzbach
  13. ^ Website of the Evangelical Church Community of Weiler-Eichelberg
  14. ^ Website of the Evangelical Church Community Willsbach
  15. ^ Website of the Evangelical Church District Weinsberg-Neuenstadt
  16. To the former synagogue building in Eschenau at www.alemannia-judaica.de
  17. ^ Schmidt becomes mayor in Obersulm. Stimme.de, May 8, 2011
  18. Joachim Kinzinger and Sabine Friedrich: 75 minutes of tense attention . In: Heilbronn voice . May 4, 2001 ( from Stimme.de [accessed on May 8, 2011]).
  19. Source: Preliminary results of the 2014 municipal council election , obersulm.de, accessed on December 13, 2014
  20. See election results in: Local election Baden-Württemberg on May 25, 2014 , obersulm.de, accessed on December 13, 2014
  21. Heinz Bardua: The district and community coats of arms in the Stuttgart administrative region . Theiss, Stuttgart 1987, ISBN 3-8062-0801-8 (district and municipality coat of arms in Baden-Württemberg, 1). Page 111
  22. ^ Anne Väisänen: Certificate seals friendship . In: Heilbronner Voice of September 26, 2006, p. 31
  23. a b c d e Otto Friedrich: Evangelical churches in the deanery Weinsberg - picture reading book ; ed. Ev. Deanery Weinsberg, 2003
  24. Photos from 2001: German Documentation Center for Art History - Photo Archive Photo Marburg see [1]
  25. Hartmut Gräf: Unterländer Altare 1350–1540 , Heilbronn 1983, pp. 170/171, No. B 55.
  26. triptych from Weiler at metmuseum.org
  27. Jost-Schäfer, Lydia . In: Hans Vollmer (Hrsg.): General Lexicon of Fine Artists of the XX. Century. tape 2 : E-J . EA Seemann, Leipzig 1955.
  28. Gustav Döttling: Dead "Zigeunerfohrle" had to be felled . In: Heilbronner Voice , August 21, 2017
  29. Dr. Julius Keil: West German industry and its leading men, Vol. VI: Land Baden-Württemberg, Frankfurt am Main 1966, pp. 71–73.
  30. ^ Manfred Stockburger: Carton printing under pressure . In: Heilbronn voice . December 12, 2007 ( from Stimme.de [accessed on March 29, 2009]).
  31. Christina Hanck: CD Cartondruck AG records sales growth of 13 percent . print.de, February 23, 2012 ( Memento from March 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  32. sulmtal.de - the extra sheet no. 35/2006, page 9
  33. agency flumoto, corporate communication: schools & school social work | Obersulm community. In: www.obersulm.de. Retrieved May 14, 2016 .
  34. VHS Unterland branch offices .
  35. Barbara Barth: Mayor with body and soul . In: Heilbronn voice . August 1, 2011 ( from Stimme.de [accessed on August 2, 2011]).
  36. The Prussian Harry Murso . In: Heilbronn voice . March 2, 2010 ( from Stimme.de [accessed on August 2, 2011]).

Web links

Commons : Obersulm  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files
Wikivoyage: Obersulm  - travel guide