Perchtoldsdorf

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market community
Perchtoldsdorf
coat of arms Austria map
Coat of arms of Perchtoldsdorf
Perchtoldsdorf (Austria)
Perchtoldsdorf
Basic data
Country: Austria
State : Lower Austria
Political District : Mödling
License plate : MD
Surface: 12.57 km²
Coordinates : 48 ° 7 '  N , 16 ° 16'  E Coordinates: 48 ° 7 '10 "  N , 16 ° 15' 54"  E
Height : 265  m above sea level A.
Residents : 14,996 (January 1, 2020)
Population density : 1193 inhabitants per km²
Postal code : 2380
Area code : 01
Community code : 3 17 19
Address of the
municipal administration:
Marktplatz 11
2380 Perchtoldsdorf
Website: www.perchtoldsdorf.at
politics
Mayor : Martin Schuster ( ÖVP )
Municipal Council : ( 2020 )
(37 members)
18th
7th
5
3
3
1
18th 7th 
A total of 37 seats
Location of Perchtoldsdorf in the Mödling district
Achau Biedermannsdorf Breitenfurt bei Wien Brunn am Gebirge Gaaden Gießhübl Gumpoldskirchen Guntramsdorf Hennersdorf Hinterbrühl Kaltenleutgeben Laab im Walde Laxenburg Maria Enzersdorf Mödling Münchendorf Perchtoldsdorf Vösendorf Wiener Neudorf Wienerwald NiederösterreichLocation of the municipality of Perchtoldsdorf in the Mödling district (clickable map)
About this picture
Template: Infobox municipality in Austria / maintenance / site plan image map
Perchtoldsdorf market square: on the left the Martinskapelle, in the middle the parish church, on the right the defense tower and in the foreground the Trinity (plague) column
Perchtoldsdorf market square: on the left the Martinskapelle, in the middle the parish church , on the right the defense tower and in the foreground the Trinity (plague) column
Source: Municipal data from Statistics Austria

Perchtoldsdorf is a market town with 14,996 inhabitants (as of January 1, 2020) in the Mödling district in Lower Austria and one of the numerous wine towns in the vicinity of Vienna . Colloquially , Perchtoldsdorf is also known as Petersdorf or P'dorf .

geography

Perchtoldsdorf is located on the southern city limits of Vienna. In the west, the market town borders the Vienna Woods . After the district capital Mödling , it is the largest town in the Mödling district.

At the beginning of 2012, Perchtoldsdorf and Kaltenleutbaren carried out an area swap in the size of 58 hectares , which shifted the municipality boundaries a little and the municipality now borders a short distance on the cadastral municipality Weissenbach of the Hinterbrühl municipality in the south-west . Some of the properties in the Tirolerhofsiedlung were located in the Kaltenleutgenz area, although the residents used all the facilities in the market town of Perchtoldsdorf and not in their home town. Cold people were not directly accessible for them. In return, Perchtoldsdorf ceded an equally large area on the property of the former Perlmooser AG to Kaltenleutgabe.

Föhrenberge Nature Park, Perchtoldsdorfer Heide

The west of Perchtoldsdorf consists of the Föhrenberge Nature Park , which is a popular local recreation area for the Viennese population and also has several restaurants with the Franz Ferdinand Refuge on the Parapluieberg , the Teufelstein Hut and the Kammersteiner Hut . The Perchtoldsdorfer Heide, a dry grassland area with rare animals and plants, is part of the nature park. This area was used as pastureland and by several quarries until the 1960s. It was one of the first winter sports areas in the Vienna area (user fees for tobogganers were already being collected in 1910, which led to protests). Motocross races were also held in the area of ​​the Saugraben from 1955 to 1960 . The "Rablhütte", an inn on the western edge of the heath that was built in the 1920s, was acquired by the Perchtoldsdorf community to avoid building speculation and demolished in 1986.

Theresienau

In the east of the community lies the area of ​​the former aristocratic Theresienau estate. It encompasses the area of ​​the former Speich mill (Spach mill) on Petersbach , which was built in the 2nd half of the 18th century by Johann Georg Widter, who was also the builder of the Schellenhof brewery in Siebenhirten and the Waldmühle in Rodaun . The estate has been called this since 1866. The name has nothing to do with the “Empress” Maria Theresa , but refers to Therese von Orlando, the wife of the landowner Franz von Orlando, who had already run a model farm on the estate before the name was changed. In this context, he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Franz Joseph Order in 1872. The poet Fritz von Herzmanovsky-Orlando was related to the landowners. The opinion has been published that one of the bizarre characters in Herzmanovsky-Orlando's novel “The Gaulschreck im Rosennetz”, namely Baron Nadir von Semlin , also goes back to suggestions from the estate (it is said to be a baptized son of the Shah of Persia who kept a harem and collected skulls as part of his rural refuge near Mödling). The estate was sold to the Brenner-Felsach family in 1882 .

Neighboring communities

Vienna-Liesing
Give cold people Neighboring communities Brunn am Gebirge
Hinterbrühl Giesshübl

history

Municipal Office, Marktplatz 11

The area high street rolling alley was some 15 million years ago, in the time of Badeniums in the Miocene , a surf terrace of the former sea, Paratethys . In 1995, when a cellar was being built, fossils were found (sea hedgehogs, shark teeth and scallops).

According to today's knowledge, the flat part of Perchtoldsdorf was settled as early as 6000 BC. Archaeological excavations show a settlement in the municipality since the Neolithic Age, including two circular moats and graves from late antiquity . Further excavations, during which the remains of a wine press were found, prove the economic use of the area in the Middle Ages.

The name Perchtoldsdorf is mentioned for the first time in 1140. Settlement took place around the castle on today's market square. At the time of the Babenbergs, the influential lords of Perchtoldsdorf were at Perchtoldsdorf Castle . There is no historical record of who the name comes from. After the Lords of Perchtoldsdorf, the rulership rights passed to the Habsburgs in 1286 . Perchtoldsdorf Castle was used as the widow's seat of the Habsburgs, the place took off again and achieved market rights in 1400 .

When the Hungarians brought Lower Austria under their rule under Matthias Corvinus , Perchtoldsdorf was badly affected and ownership changed often. The place only recovered under Emperor Maximilian . The defense tower was completed and some town houses that still exist today were built back then.

During the first Turkish siege in 1529 , the place itself was devastated, but the residents were able to entrench themselves in the fortified fortified church and got off lightly. It was not until the second Turkish siege in 1683 that the market town, which had previously been economically very weak, was hit hard. Almost the entire population was murdered or driven out by the Ottoman troops. Only slowly did the place recover.

For the period towards the end of the 17th and the first half of the 18th century, a passion play in Perchtoldsdorf with the subject of the outcast Ishmael is documented, which is associated with influences from Vienna (1st book of Moses, 21st chapter, verse 9 ff.). At the beginning of the 19th century, the previously rather Protestant place even became a place of pilgrimage .

In the second half of the 19th century, Perchtoldsdorf became a popular summer resort, and more and more villas were built next to the vineyards, most of which are still standing today. In 1860/1870 , a cottage district was planned to be built in the north-west of the community . This trend continued into the 20th century.

The food shortage after the end of World War I hit the population hard. Help was provided by the ARA - "American Relief Administration". In the winter of 1919/20, 70% of Perchtoldsdorf children were malnourished, 47% were affected by skin diseases and almost 10% were suspected of having tuberculosis . On July 8, 1919, a feeding point of the American relief mission (Child Feeding Station Perchtoldsdorf) was opened in the school on Leonhardiberg. One of its sponsors was the pediatrician Clemens von Pirquet . About 500 children were fed via this feed for two years and about 300 children were provided with clothes and shoes for almost three years. The focus of the campaign was the serving of a daily warm lunch according to the NEM system .

In 1938 Perchtoldsdorf was attached to " Greater Vienna " by the National Socialist dictatorship . In 1946, Vienna and Lower Austria agreed that the place should again belong to the province of Lower Austria. As an occupying power, the Soviet Union prevented this until 1954. Then the 25th district of Vienna, to which the town had belonged, was dissolved. Perchtoldsdorf was largely spared from damage in the Second World War .

Rudolf von Alt : Parish Church and Defense Tower in Perchtoldsdorf, 1883

Population development

census Residents
2011 14,566
2001 13,998
1991 14.051
1981 13,451
1971 11,486

Source: Population development of Perchtoldsdorf. (PDF) Statistics Austria

Today the approximately 14,000 residents still have 2,500 second home owners.

partnership

coat of arms

The market town was given the coat of arms, which is still valid today, in 1406. In the red-white-red shield there is the castle with a tower in the middle.

politics

The municipal council has 37 members.

  • With the municipal council elections in Lower Austria in 2000, the municipal council had the following distribution: 17 ÖVP, 9 SPÖ, 6 FPÖ, 3 PBL (Perchtoldsdorfer Bürgerliste), and 2 LIF ( Liberales Forum ).
  • With the municipal council elections in Lower Austria in 2005, the municipal council had the following distribution: 23 ÖVP, 7 SPÖ, 3 Greens, 2 FPÖ, and 2 PBL.
  • With the municipal elections in Lower Austria in 2010 , the municipal council had the following distribution: 24 ÖVP, 6 SPÖ, 4 Greens, 2 FPÖ, and 1 PBL.
  • With the municipal council elections in Lower Austria in 2015 , the municipal council had the following distribution: 23 ÖVP, 4 SPÖ, 4 GRÜNE, 2 FPÖ, 2 PBL, and 2 NEOS.
  • With the municipal council elections in Lower Austria 2020 , the municipal council has the following distribution: 18 ÖVP, 7 Greens, 5 Perchtoldsdorf citizens list, 3 SPÖ, 3 NEOS and 1 FPÖ.

In June 2020 the municipal council election was repeated, the ÖVP lost a mandate compared to the January ballot that was canceled.

mayor

economy

The commercial economy of Perchtoldsdorf was very differentiated even in older times. Numerically more represented trades were grouped into guilds - called "collieries" - like those of butchers, cobblers, bakers, weavers, blacksmiths and binders. Their “mines” can be traced back to the Middle Ages. The “collieries” developed a certain self-administration in handicraft matters - to store their documents and the cash register, chests were used, some of which have been preserved in Perchtoldsdorf and can be viewed in the local museum, which was set up in the defense tower. In addition to the craft mines, there were non-guild trades that were also important in Perchtoldsdorf in the 18th and early 19th centuries. These include saltpetre production, calico printing, production of cans and oilcloth, candle production, brewing and vinegar production.

In the north of the municipality in the valley of Kaltenleutbaren there are a number of quarries in which the limestone found there is broken, but also (in abandoned quarries) landfills are or have been operated. Because of its complex geological structure, this area has been extensively studied in a number of geological publications.

Viticulture

Perchtoldsdorf is a wine village in the Lower Austrian thermal region and as such is known for its Heurigen . The reason why the wine thrives so well in Perchtoldsdorf is that the soil contains loess .

Wine is produced in Perchtoldsdorf according to traditional methods, whereby the oak barrel ( barrique ) has played an important role since 1990. The wine-growing businesses are small to medium-sized businesses, while there are no large businesses or winegrowers' cooperatives.

Industry

Only in the last few decades have industrial companies settled in the flat eastern part of the town. One of the oldest was the Austrian branch of 3M , which moved to Meidling in January 2014. Other companies, such as Stihl , also have branches there, especially sales offices.

The headquarters of the Austrian fashion company Kleid Bauer is located near the Perchtoldsdorf train station . This employs more than 1,000 people across Austria.

traffic

Steam tramway in Wienergasse station (picture before 1921)

The southern line from Vienna to Wiener Neustadt runs through Perchtoldsdorf . However, only trains from the S 2 / S 3 / S 4 S-Bahn lines stop at the stop . Furthermore, a local bus and other buses leave the municipal area.

The terminus of tram line 60 is located on the northern outskirts of Vienna at the Vienna city limits. This route, which connected Perchtoldsdorf with Hietzing , was built by Krauss & Comp. On the basis of the concession of July 30, 1882, it was built as a local train (steam tramway) , partly as a tram , was solemnly tested on October 18, 1883 and opened on October 27, 1883, as Austria's first steam tramway . Until further notice, nine trains were used daily in each direction . The line, which was built to Mödling in accordance with the concession of March 26, 1886, was opened to traffic on May 12, 1887.

After the route was taken over by the municipality of Vienna on January 1, 1908, the electrification of this so-called southern line began immediately , and on August 7, 1912 the last steam-powered train drove to Mauer. Influenced by the war, the line from Mauer to Mödling was operated with steam tram locomotives and sidecars until 1921 . In 1920 the electrification of the line could be tackled and concluded with the opening ceremony on May 27, 1921: From now on the line carried the signal 360. (Reinforcement trains that were pushed in to Perchtoldsdorf showed the signal board 260 until 1938 and from 1945 to 1963. )

The line 360/260 connected to the line 60 of the Wiener Verkehrsbetriebe ( Wiener Linien ). It began first in Mauer , from November 24, 1963 (because of the extension of line 60) only in Rodaun and in Perchtoldsdorf ran largely on its own track body outside of streets.

In the years 1964 to 1966 the line was largely modernized; Among other things, the Perchtoldsdorf depot was renewed in 1964, and the entire track system on Mödlinger Boden in 1966. During the renovation work, there was talk of an imminent cessation of operations, first January 1, 1967, then May 1, 1967. - On November 30, 1967, political disputes over the financing of the line (Lower Austria refused to contribute) came to an end Closure of the tram line. After the line was closed, Donauwörther Strasse and some residential buildings were built on the route. The track systems in the area of ​​the 60s terminus were still visible in 2017. The dismantling of the line after 1967 was described by the mayor of Perchtoldsdorf as a serious mistake in 2017, which should not be repeated in connection with the Kaltenleutgabe railway.

There is a direct motorway connection to the Vienna outer ring motorway A 21, but it is also not far to the south motorway A 2.

There are also several taxi companies that - with subsidies from the municipality - offer discounted journeys in the area of ​​the village and in the surrounding areas. This is done with the P'Card.

More than 80 percent of the Liesing – Kaltenleuthaben ( Kaltenleutgabeer Bahn ) line, which was opened in 1883, runs through Perchtoldsdorf municipality. The railway line still exists in full in the Perchtoldsdorf area, and was recently only used for cement transports. The official shutdown as a public railway took place in 2013, the railway was then recognized as a connecting railway, its land was leased by the market town of Perchtoldsdorf in 2015 and acquired in 2017. The route now only leads to the Waldmühle terminus in the former Holcim cement works (formerly Lafarge Perlmooser ) in Kaltenleut ents. It has been regularly used by excursion trains since 2017. Perchtoldsdorf station, relatively close to the center, on the Liesing – Kaltenleutgabe railway line, was already the second station in the Perchtoldsdorf municipality: the first station was located far from the center north of the road bridge on Mühlgasse on the southern railway (see historical maps ), opened in 1841 and in 1883 after the Kaltenleutgabe family had been established Railway closed again. Today's Perchtoldsdorf stop on the Südbahn was only created after the Second World War. The historic station building on the Liesing – Kaltenleuthaben railway line still existed in 2010 in its original, albeit very poor, condition. The track systems of the station were however substantially dismantled in the 1990s.

Perchtoldsdorf is the starting point of the Northern Alpine Trail , a long-distance hiking trail that leads to Lake Constance. The Mariazellerweg in Vienna also begins here . The beginning of these paths at the upper end of Hyrtlgasse is marked with a monument.

Culture and sights

Trinity column with a defense tower in the background

The main attractions are the centrally located castle , the partly medieval market square and the largest preserved defense tower in Austria. The fortified tower also serves as a church bell tower, but there is no structural connection between the church and the tower.

  • Defense tower Perchtoldsdorf
  • Parish Church Perchtoldsdorf
  • Perchtoldsdorf cultural center
  • Trinity Column ; a baroque plague column from the beginning of the 18th century.
  • Resurrection Column by Perchtoldsdorf; a baroque savior column from the middle of the 18th century. This sacred building is one of the few remaining structures of the former pilgrimage site "Leonhardiberg".
  • The graves of honor of the anatomist Josef Hyrtl and the painter Hans Fronius are located at the Perchtoldsdorf cemetery . The important medieval theologian, university professor and historian Thomas Ebendorfer (1388–1464) found his final resting place in the parish church (the tombstone can now be found in the fortified tower in the Nikolauskapelle).
  • Way of the Cross Hochberg
  • The house at Hauptplatz 20 was called the “Melker Lesehof” and was the center of the tithing and other rights of the Melk Abbey in the Perchtoldsdorf area. From 1323 a hostel for members of the monastery was run there, in 1380 the monastery acquired the building, later the adjacent courtyard "Im Holz" (later Elisabethstrasse 2). The complex, which included spacious wine cellars, was sold after 1848. The Melk monastery archive contains a working document from the last decade of the 15th century for the introduction of the wine toe, of which a German copy was made around 1600 and contains the field names that are still used today: the Directorium novelli decimatoris or . Directorium a new bookmark master .
  • Josefswarte and Kammersteinerhütte
  • Kammerstein castle ruins

Since 1976, the Perchtoldsdorf Summer Games have been held annually in the courtyard in July .

regional customs
  • Perchtoldsdorfer Hütereinzug : Wine festival on Saturday to Monday after Leonhardi Day (November 6th), thanksgiving procession by the young men of the winegrowing community, humorous Gstanzln singing on the market square, included in the list of intangible cultural heritage in Austria in 2010 .
  • White stone: A piece of rock above the Hochrain vineyard in the edge of the forest in the southwest of the village: The rock is regularly cut free from bushes and painted with white lime paint. It is a reminder that in 1422 the wine keeper Thomas was knocked down by brewery assistants. He was then rescued by vintners and nursed back to health, the arrival of the guard is also intended to be a reminder of this incident.
  • Urban Chapel: This chapel in the Hagenau vineyards was consecrated on September 22, 1968 in honor of St. Urban . The statue of the saint is the work of the sculptor Margarete Hanusch , which was erected thanks to a donation from Atzgersdorf wine maker Magdalena Edelmoser. The plans for the chapel were drawn up by Paul Katzberger .

education

Perchtoldsdorf has well-developed educational institutions. There are five kindergartens, two elementary schools, a new middle school, a grammar school and a special school as well as the Franz Schmidt music school in the village. In 2019, the community's holiday care was awarded by the Familienland GmbH .

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the church
Brigitte Neumeister with husband (2006)
People related to the community
Grave of Auguste and Josef Hyrtl at the Perchtoldsdorfer Friedhof
  • Thomas Berlower (around 1421–1496), clergyman, bishop of Konstanz, from 1480 pastor of Perchtoldsdorf
  • Heinrich Berté (1857–1924), composer, creator of the operetta “Das Dreimäderlhaus”, died in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Herbert Boeckl (1894–1966), painter, lived in Perchtoldsdorf from 1930 to 1935
  • Alfred Böswald (1931–2018), German historian and local politician, Mayor of Donauwörth , honorary citizen
  • Hans Breuer (1870–1929), singer (tenor) and opera director, died and buried in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Sebastian Brunner (1814–1893), clergyman, newspaper founder, 1839–1842 chaplain in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Albert Camesina (1806–1881), graphic artist and archaeologist, owner of a country estate in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Ludwig Derleth (1870–1948), writer and mystic, lived in Perchtoldsdorf between 1928 and 1935
  • Thomas Ebendorfer (1388–1464), clergyman, university professor, author, from 1435 pastor of Perchtoldsdorf
  • Victor von Eckhardt (1864–1946), painter, lived in Perchtoldsdorf from 1904
  • Johann Fercher von Steinwand (1828–1902), poet, from 1862 to 1879 in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Franz Fröhlich (1823–1889), architect, numerous buildings in Perchtoldsdorf, buried in the local cemetery
  • Hans Fronius (1903–1988), painter, lived in Perchtoldsdorf from 1961
  • Pietro Giannone (1676–1748), Neapolitan lawyer and historian, summer guest and partly exiled in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Christoph Willibald Gluck (1714–1787), owner of a summer estate in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Karl Gölsdorf (1861–1916), locomotive designer, numerous summer stays in the family villa
  • Maria Grengg (1888–1963), author, painter, illustrator, buried in the Perchtoldsdorfer Friedhof
  • Jacques Hannak (1892–1973), journalist and writer, lived in Perchtoldsdorf until 1934
  • Eduard Heinl (1880–1957), politician, Minister for Trade and Reconstruction, lived in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Edmund von Hellmer (1850–1935), sculptor, buried in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Auguste Hyrtl (1818–1901), writer, lived in Perchtoldsdorf from 1869
  • Josef Hyrtl (1810–1894), anatomist, lived in Perchtoldsdorf from 1869
  • Ottokar Janetschek (1884–1963), writer, lived in Perchtoldsdorf from 1938
  • Gerd-Klaus Kaltenbrunner (1939–2011), Vienna-born writer, private scholar and philosopher, buried in the Perchtoldsdorf cemetery
  • Franz Kieslinger (1891–1955), art historian and dealer, involved in the Nazi art theft
  • Herbert Alois Kraus (1911–2008), journalist, politician
  • Rudolf Kremayr (1905–1989), publisher, art collector
  • Karl Lehrmann (1887–1957), architect, designer of the Perchtoldsdorfer Notgeldes 1920
  • Siegfried Ludwig (1926–2013), politician, governor of Lower Austria, mayor of Perchtoldsdorf
  • Ernst Wolfram Marboe (1938–2012), journalist, author, director and regional, television and program director of the ORF, buried in Perchtoldsdorf.
  • Max Margules (1856–1920), physicist and meteorologist, died in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Rebecca De Mornay (* 1959), American actress and film producer, went to school in Perchtoldsdorf and was seen in the 1993 film The Three Musketeers .
  • Carl Thomas Mozart (1784–1858), second son of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , attended school in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Rudolf Nagiller (* 1943), journalist, lives in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Julius Patzak (1898–1974), chamber singer
  • Felix Petyrek (1892–1951), composer and pianist, buried in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Johanna von Pfirt (1300–1351) resided in Perchtoldsdorf Castle as a dowager from 1332
  • Walter Pissecker (1929–1985), author and journalist, lived in Perchtoldsdorf for decades and is also buried here
  • Wolfgang Pissecker (* 1965), actor, author, cabaret artist, has lived in Perchtoldsdorf since he was born
  • Erwin Plevan (1925–2005), architect, resident and buried in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Johann Siegmund Popowitsch (1705–1774), linguist and natural scientist, spent the last years of his life in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Michael Powolny (1871–1954), ceramic designer and sculptor, in Perchtoldsdorf from 1942
  • Robert Priebsch (1866–1935), Germanist, died in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Karl Prusik (1896–1961), alpinist, musicologist, died in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Edwin Rambossek (* 1943), politician
  • Ambros Rieder (1771–1855), composer and organist, worked from 1802 until his death as a school teacher, organist and choirmaster in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Ferdinand Schirnböck (1859–1930), academic painter and engraver, designer of banknotes and postage stamps, died in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Franz Schmidt (1874–1939), composer, lived in Perchtoldsdorf from 1926 until his death
  • Franz Schuselka (1811–1886), politician, 1861–1865 Member of the Perchtoldsdorf state parliament
  • Martin Schuster (politician) (* 1967), politician, Mayor of Perchtoldsdorf since 2001
  • Rudolf Schuster von Bonnott (1855–1930), civil servant, banker and politician, buried in the Perchtoldsdorf cemetery
  • Alois Theodor Sonnleitner (1869–1939), writer
  • Leo von Spaur (around 1440–1479 or 1480), from 1466 pastor of Perchtoldsdorf, in 1471 first Catholic bishop of Vienna
  • Franz Steindachner (1834–1919), zoologist, lived in Perchtoldsdorf and buried at the Perchtoldsdorf cemetery
  • Clemens Steindl (* 1944), President of the Austrian Catholic Family Association, from 1992 to 1999 local councilor in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Rita Streich (1920–1987), German opera singer, buried in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Georg Strnadt (1909–1980), writer and dialect poet
  • Karl Hans Strobl (1877–1946), Austrian writer, lived in Perchtoldsdorf from 1916
  • Michael Sturminger (* 1963), director and author, director of the Perchtoldsdorf Summer Games since 2014
  • Carl Teibler (1821–1895), portrait and history painter, died in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Viktor Tilgner (1844–1896), sculptor, from 1884 house owner in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Hermann von Trenkwald (1866–1942), art historian, died in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Josef Mathias von Trenkwald (1824–1897), painter, died in Perchtoldsdorf
  • Gerhard Tötschinger (1946–2016), 1999 to 2001 director of the Perchtoldsdorf Summer Games
  • Franz Viehböck (* 1960), the first Austrian spaceman, lived in Perchtoldsdorf for decades
  • Franziska Weisz (* 1980), actress, attended the Bundesrealgymnasium in Perchtoldsdorf and did her Matura here
  • Gisela Wer Bezirk (1875–1956), actress, lived in a villa in Perchtoldsdorf from 1913 to 1928
  • Jürgen Wilke (1928–2016), 1981–1996 director of the Perchtoldsdorfer Summer Games
  • Hugo Wolf (1860–1903), composer and music critic, lived temporarily in Perchtoldsdorf during the winter months

literature

Paul Katzberger's books were only subsequently combined into a series of books as “Perchtoldsdorf Art Topography”. The volume count is therefore not found on the individual volumes.

  • Irene Drozdowski, Alexander C. Mrkvicka (Ed.): Perchtoldsdorf Natur . Verlag des Naturhistorisches Museum, Vienna 2017, ISBN 978-3-903096-13-4 .
  • Gregor Gatscher-Riedl , Harald Eschenlor (ed.): Perchtoldsdorf once & now III. Local views from three centuries. With texts by Gregor Gatscher-Riedl. Heimat-Verlag, Schwarzach 2016, ISBN 978-3-9503395-3-8 .
  • Gregor Gatscher-Riedl, Harald Eschenlor (Hrsg.): Perchtoldsdorf once & now II. Local views from three centuries. With texts by Gregor Gatscher-Riedl. Heimat-Verlag, Schwarzach 2014, ISBN 978-3-9503395-3-6 .
  • Stefan Pukl: Economic structural change in Perchtoldsdorf since the 18th century. Diploma thesis at the University of Vienna 2014.
  • Christine Mitterwenger, Ingrid Pachmann (Red.): Perchtoldsdorf Castle, a castle for the 21st century . Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf, Perchtoldsdorf 2013, ISBN 978-3-200-03200-2 .
  • Gregor Gatscher-Riedl: Haurer and Hiata. A history of Perchtoldsdorf viticulture in pictures. Edited by Franz Nigl and Franz Distl. Heimat-Verlag, Schwarzach 2013, ISBN 978-3-9503395-7-4 .
  • Gregor Gatscher-Riedl, Johannes Seidl: Of people and houses in Perchtoldsdorf. On the history of ownership of houses in a small town in Lower Austria . Writings of the archive of the market community Perchtoldsdorf, volume 5.Market community Perchtoldsdorf 2013, ISBN 978-3-901316-23-4 .
  • Gregor Gatscher-Riedl, Harald Eschenlor (ed.): Perchtoldsdorf once & now. Local views from three centuries. Heimat-Verlag, Schwarzach 2012, ISBN 978-3-9503395-3-6 .
  • Gregor Gatscher-Riedl: Jewish life in Perchtoldsdorf: From the beginnings in the Middle Ages to the extinction in the Shoah. Writings of the archive of the market community Perchtoldsdorf, Volume 4. Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 2008, ISBN 978-3-901316-22-7 .
  • Gregor Gatscher-Riedl: "There was no industry in Perchtoldsdorf ...". 130 years of social democracy on the outskirts of the city of Vienna 1871–2001. Dissertation at the University of Vienna. 2007.
  • Gregor Gatscher-Riedl (arrangement): Perchtoldsdorfer Geschichte.n. The historical lecture series 2004. With contributions by Silvia Petrin, Johannes Seidl, Gertrude Langer-Ostrawsky and Ferdinand Opll. Writings of the archive of the market community Perchtoldsdorf, Volume 3. Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 2006, ISBN 3-901316-21-3 .
  • Paul Katzberger: Supplements to the Perchtoldsdorf art topography. With the contribution of Otto Riedel: On the problem of the construction time of the choir of the parish church Perchtoldsdorf . Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 11. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 2006, ISBN 3-901316-22-1 .
  • Christine Mitterwenger, Gregor Gatscher-Riedl: Perchtoldsdorfer Straßenlexikon. Street names tell a story. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf, 2004, ISBN 3-901316-20-5 .
  • Paul Katzberger: Perchtoldsdorf in paintings, drawings and prints. With additions and corrections to all illustrated books. Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 10. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 2003.
  • Paul Katzberger: Historicism, Art Nouveau and New Objectivity in Perchtoldsdorf. Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 9. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 2001.
  • Walter Trübswasser: The Perchtoldsdorfer Weinhütereinzug. A custom between the center and the periphery. Diploma thesis at the University of Vienna 1998. Printed in: Axel Borsdorf (Hrsg.): Convergence and divergence of cultures in the peripheral zones of cities. International conference "The Unifying of Cultures", November 7th to 9th, 2003, Vienna. Austrian Academy of Sciences, Institute for Urban and Regional Research or WUW Verlag Vienna. Publication series Wohnwesen Umland Wien Volume 2. ISBN 3-9502069-8-1 or ISBN 3-9502069-6-5 .
  • Paul Katzberger: Works of sculpture and small monuments in Perchtoldsdorf. Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 8. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 1998.
  • Paul Katzberger: Weinhauer- and town houses of Perchtoldsdorf. Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 7. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 1996.
  • Johannes Seidl, Hermann Steininger, Gregor Gatscher-Riedl: Historical bibliography of the market Perchtoldsdorf. Writings of the archive of the market community Perchtoldsdorf, Volume 2, Perchtoldsdorf 1997, ISBN 3-901316-14-0 .
  • Otto Riedel: The Melker Leshof from Perchtoldsdorf. A contribution to the history of building and the style of the courtyard arbors at the time of the Counter Reformation. Perchtoldsdorf 1996.
  • Paul Katzberger: 1000 years of Perchtoldsdorf 991-1991. A settlement history of Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 6. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 1993.
  • Paul Katzberger: Perchtoldsdorf Castle: Kammerstein Castle; the city castle of Otto II of Perchtoldsdorf. Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 5. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 1990.
  • Paul Katzberger: The Karner of Perchtoldsdorf (today Martinikapelle). Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 4. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 1989.
  • Paul Katzberger: The hospital church of Perchtoldsdorf. Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 3. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 1988.
  • Paul Katzberger: The parish church of Perchtoldsdorf. Perchtoldsdorfer Kunsttopographie Volume 2. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 1987.
  • Paul Katzberger: The defense tower of Perchtoldsdorf Perchtoldsdorfer Art Topography Volume 1. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 1986.
  • Silvia Petrin: From the beginning until 1683. In: History of the market Perchtoldsdorf. Publishing house of the market town of Perchtoldsdorf 1983.
  • Gertrude Ostrawsky: History of the market Perchtoldsdorf 1683-1983. In: History of the Perchtoldsdorf market. Volume 2. Verlag der Marktgemeinde Perchtoldsdorf 1983.
  • Silvia Petrin, Rudolf Steuer: Archive of the market town of Perchtoldsdorf. Inventory. Publishing house of the market town of Perchtoldsdorf 1980.
  • Erich Witzmann: The social structure of Perchtoldsdorf in the 18th century with special consideration of viticulture. Dissertation at the University of Vienna in 1973.
  • Adalbert Klaar : Building age plan of Perchtoldsdorf. In: Bundesdenkmalamt (Hrsg.): Atlas of the historical protection zones in Austria. Volume 1. Böhlau Verlag, Graz 1970.
  • Perchtoldsdorfer Heimatbuch. Published by the market town of Perchtoldsdorf. Wedl Publishing House, Melk 1958.
  • Emerich Schaffran: Perchtoldsdorf. A home book. Austrian art books, booklet 35. Verlag Hölzel, Vienna 1923 (cover with postcards from the Austrian photo agency with booklet)
  • Josef Jahne: Local history of the political district Hietzing – environment for school and home. Self-published by the kk district school council for Hietzing area, Vienna 1911, pp. 141–158.
  • Primo Calvi: Representation of the political district Hietzing surrounding area through a comprehensive description of all villages, localities, churches, schools, castles, institutions and notable objects etc. etc. Self-published, Vienna 1901. Supplementary volume: The judicial district Liesing as a supplement to the representation of the political district Hietzing- Surroundings. Vienna 1904, pp. 22–46.
  • Adam Latschka: History of the Lower Austrian market Perchtoldsdorf. Commission publisher Heinrich Kirsch, 1884.

Pictures and historical maps

Web links

Commons : Perchtoldsdorf  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
Wiktionary: Perchtoldsdorf  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations

Individual evidence

  1. All Tirolerhofers now “compatriots” in the NÖN edition Mödling: Week 04/2012.
  2. ^ Gregor Gatscher-Riedl: New demarcation in Perchtoldsdorf . Area swap with Kaltenleutgabe and Hinterbrühl as a new neighboring municipality. In: perchtoldsdorfer rundschau . tape 02-03.2012 , p. 4–5 ( pdf [accessed July 24, 2015]).
  3. Illustrated Österreichisches Sportblatt from January 15, 1910 (quoted from: Mitterwenger, Winterfreuden, p. 5.)
  4. Christine Mitterwenger: Winter joys on the Perchtoldsdorfer Heide. For après-ski in the Rablhütte. In: Perchtoldsdorf Rundschau issue 2–3 / 2015, pp. 4–5.
  5. Gustav Tellheim: How Karnuntum was discovered. From the story of a Viennese patrician family. In: Neues Wiener Journal. No. 13.512, July 5, 1931, p. 18.
  6. Austrian-Hungarian Veterinarian , No. 19, year 1872, July 1, 1872. p. 1.
  7. ^ Gregor Gatscher-Riedl: The Perchtoldsdorfer “Theresienau” and Fritz von Herzmanovsky-Orlando . In: perchtoldsdorfer rundschau . tape 08-09.2018 , p. 4–5 ( [1] [accessed July 31, 2018]).
  8. The first guests were fish. In: “Ausg'steckt.” Perchtoldsdorfs Guest Magazine No. 52, Volume 14 No. 2/2012, pp. 1 and 10–12.
  9. ↑ Circular moat systems .
  10. Dorothea Talaa, Ingomar Herrmann: Late antique grave finds in the Lower Austrian thermal region (districts Mödling and Baden). 2.1. Perchtoldsdorf cemetery - Aspetten. Pp. 14-76. Karin Wiltschke-Schrotta: Perchtoldsdorf - Aspetten, excavation 1998–2000: Anthropological analysis. Pp. 193-221. In: Roman Austria. Annual journal of the Austrian Society for Archeology - ÖGA. Born 27. Vienna 2004. Self-published by the Austrian Society for Archeology.
  11. ^ Johann Rudorfer: From winemakers and mercenaries. Results of the archaeological investigations at Marktplatz 17 in Perchtoldsdorf, Lower Austria. In: Find reports from Austria. Volume 48, year 2009. Vienna 2010, pp. 171–264.
  12. ^ Otto Gerhard Schindler: The libretto collection of the Klosterneuburg monastery. In: Max Kratochwill (editor): Yearbook of the Association for the History of the City of Vienna. Volume 23/25. Born in 1967/69. Verlag Ferdinand Berger & Sons, Horn, p. 184 with references to the publications by the same author: About the late baroque play of the suffering of Christ in the quarter under the Vienna Woods. In: Our home. Monthly newspaper of the Association for Regional Studies of Lower Austria and Vienna. 38th year. Vienna 1967, issue 10/12, p. 225 ff. And: Barockes Volksschauspiel in Perchtoldsdorf. Fragments of a late baroque passion play from the Lower Austrian market. Vienna 1969. Österreichische Zeitschrift für Volkskunde No. 23/72, pp. 73–115.
  13. Bundesdenkmalamt (Ed.): The art monuments of Austria - Lower Austria south of the Danube, in two parts. Part 2: MZ. Verlag Berger, Horn 2003, ISBN 3-85028-364-X , p. 1633.
  14. ^ New Viennese villa suburbs. In:  Badener Zeitung , April 17, 1926, p. 3 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / bzt
  15. ^ Gregor Gatscher-Riedl: New Year 1919/20: Hunger Winter and American Children's Aid . In: Perchtoldsdorfer Rundschau . Edited by the market town of Perchtoldsdorf. Issue 02–03 / 2020. P. 9.
  16. In the landmark of the tower on the side of the market town of Perchtoldsdorf, accessed on December 19, 2016
  17. ^ Election result of the 2015 municipal council election in Perchtoldsdorf. Office of the Lower Austrian State Government, December 1, 2015, accessed on July 2, 2019 .
  18. Results of the local council election 2020 in Perchtoldsdorf. Office of the Lower Austrian State Government, January 26, 2020, accessed on January 26, 2020 .
  19. GR-Wahl Perchtoldsdorf: ÖVP loses Absolute - Greens and List as election winners. In: Niederösterreichische Nachrichten . June 8, 2020, accessed June 8, 2020 .
  20. ^ Georg Rosenberg: The limestone Vienna Woods around Kaltenleutzüge (Lower Austria and Vienna). Yearbook of the Federal Geological Institute . Volume 108, Vienna 1965, pp. 115–153. opac.geologie.ac.at (PDF; 4.3 MB) with extensive bibliography and colored geological map 1: 10,000.
  21. Gregor Gatscher-Riedl: "Among the Austrian varieties, the local grape occupies an excellent place". A "mixed sentence" from Perchtoldsdorf viticulture, wine serving and local history in the 19th and 20th centuries. In: Our home. Journal for regional studies of Lower Austria, vol. 84/2014, issue 1–4, St. Pölten 2015, pp. 28–47.
  22. ^ Certificate of concession for the locomotive railway from Hietzing to Perchtoldsdorf. RGBl. 1882/118
  23. (Steam Tramway Hietzung-Perchtoldsdorf.). In:  Wiener Zeitung , October 6, 1883, p. 5 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / wrz
  24. ^ Steam tramway from Hietzing to Perchtoldsdorf. In:  Neue Freie Presse , October 19, 1883, p. 5 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / nfp
  25. a b History of the Railways of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. Volume: 1.2. Karl Prochaska, Vienna 1898, p. 549 f. ÖNB
  26. ^ News from the districts. Dampftramway .. In:  Badener Bezirks-Blatt , November 3, 1883, p. 4 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / bbb
  27. (Steam Tramway.). In:  Wiener Zeitung , October 27, 1883, p. 6 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / wrz
  28. ^ Certificate of concession for the locomotive railway from Perchtoldsdorf to Mödling. RGBl. 1886/60
  29. Hellmuth R. Figlhuber: Tram 360 from wall to Mödling 1921-1967. Medilihha, 28.1988. District Museum Association Mödling, Mödling 1988, Permalink Austrian Library Association .
  30. Then the 360 ​​was finally dead ... In: Arbeiter-Zeitung . Vienna December 2, 1967, p. 7 ( berufer-zeitung.at - the open online archive - digitized).
  31. ^ Peter Wegenstein: Lines 360 and 317 of the Vienna public transport company. Bahn im Bild Volume 16. Verlag Pospischil, Vienna 1980, DNB 204083435 , pp. 3-4. UBW
  32. Perchtoldsdorfer Rundschau. Volume 2017, issue 10–11, p. 3.
  33. P'Taxi travel with the P'Card .
  34. Perchtoldsdorfer Rundschau. Year 2002, issue 11, p. 11 with the keyword "Schönerergasse".
  35. Primo Calvi: The judicial district of Liesing. As a supplement to the representation of the political district Hietzing environment. Vienna 1904, p. 33.
  36. See the market town of Perchtoldsdorf
  37. ^ Silvia Petrin: The Melker Lesehof in Perchtoldsdorf. Perchtoldsdorfer Rundschau. Volume 2017, Issue 10–11, pp. 4–5.
  38. Perchtoldsdorfer Hütereinzug ( memento of the original from February 1, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / nationalagentur.unesco.at archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , National Agency for Intangible Cultural Heritage, Austrian Commission for UNESCO
  39. Festschrift 125 Years of the Perchtoldsdorf Wine Growing Association 1890–2015 Ed. Perchtoldsdorf Wine Growing Association Perchtoldsdorf 2015. p. 24.
  40. Thanksgiving . In: Ausg'steckt. Perchtoldsdorf guest magazine No. 64 . tape 10-12.2018 , pp. 5 .
  41. Thanksgiving . In: Ausg'steckt. Perchtoldsdorf guest magazine No. 64 . tape 10-12.2018 , pp. 23 .
  42. 50 years of the Urbanus Chapel in Hagenau. Perchtoldsdorfer Rundschau. Volume 2018, Issue 8–9, p. 23.
  43. ^ Leopold Wurth: 50 Years of Urban Chapel 1968–2018. Edited by Weinbauverein Perchtoldsdorf. Perchtoldsdorf 2018.
  44. Where holiday care works best Communal on July 4, 2019
  45. The Three Musketeers (1993) - Trivia , imdb.com, accessed December 25, 2013.

Remarks

  1. ↑ In the proceedings, the Imperial and Royal Ministry of Commerce pointed out that standard gauge as a licensing condition was still three months before the route was opened. - See: (Dampf-Tramway Hietzing-Perchtoldsdorf.). In:  Wiener Zeitung , August 8, 1883, p. 5 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / wrz
  2. The route revision took place on March 27, 1885. - See: News Rundschau. Local railways .. In:  Badener Bezirks-Blatt , March 14, 1885, p. 4 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / bbb
  3. The Perchtoldsdorf-Salitergasse stop was only built 20 years later. - See: From near and far. Weekly calendar. Perchtoldsdorf .. In:  Neulengbacher Zeitung / Wienerwald-Bote , May 4, 1907, p. 5 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / wwb
  4. Information in this and the two other paragraphs: Figlhuber 1988. passim.
  5. The stop on the southern railway was probably not closed until June 1, 1885. - See: From the area. Südbahn .. In:  Badener Bezirks-Blatt , June 4, 1885, p. 3 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / bbb