Remseck am Neckar
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 48 ° 52 ' N , 9 ° 16' E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Baden-Württemberg | |
Administrative region : | Stuttgart | |
County : | Ludwigsburg | |
Height : | 212 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 22.82 km 2 | |
Residents: | 26,467 (Dec. 31, 2018) | |
Population density : | 1160 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postcodes : | 71686, 70378 | |
Primaries : | 07146, 07141, 0711 | |
License plate : | LB, VAI | |
Community key : | 08 1 18 081 | |
LOCODE : | DE NCR | |
City structure: | 6 districts | |
City administration address : |
Marktplatz 1 71686 Remseck am Neckar |
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Website : | ||
Lord Mayor : | Dirk Schönberger (independent) | |
Location of the city of Remseck am Neckar in the Ludwigsburg district | ||
Remseck am Neckar is a city on the northeastern city limits of Stuttgart in the state of Baden-Württemberg . It is the sixth largest city in the Ludwigsburg district and belongs to the central Ludwigsburg / Kornwestheim area within the Stuttgart regional center . It belongs to the Stuttgart region (until 1992 the Middle Neckar region ) and the European metropolitan region of Stuttgart .
The community, which was only newly formed as part of the regional reform on January 1, 1975, initially under the name of Aldingen am Neckar, was named Remseck am Neckar in 1977 and has been a major district town since January 1, 2004 .
geography
Geographical location
Remseck am Neckar is located to the north of the state capital Stuttgart in the natural area of the Neckar Basin . The city area is traversed by the Neckar , on whose banks four of the six city districts have a share. The mouth of the Rems is located in the Neckarrems district . Remseck has a share in the nature reserve Unteres Remstal and the bird sanctuary of the same name .
The individual districts are spread over the natural sub-units of the southwestern Neckar Basin (here in the Long Field ), Backnanger Bay and Waibling Bay . The lowest point in the urban area is the river bed of the Neckar at 203 m on the boundary to Poppenweiler , the highest point is 299 m above sea level in the Hochberger Wald.
Neighboring communities
The following cities and communities border the city of Remseck am Neckar. They are named in a clockwise direction starting in the west:
Kornwestheim , Ludwigsburg and Marbach am Neckar (district Siegelhausen), all belonging to the district of Ludwigsburg , Waiblingen (district Hegnach and Bittenfeld) and Fellbach (both Rems-Murr district ) and Stuttgart .
City structure
The city of Remseck am Neckar consists of the six districts Aldingen , Hochberg , Hochdorf , Neckargröningen , Neckarrems and Pattonville . With the exception of Pattonville, which was an American settlement until 1993, the districts of former communities of the same name and the spatial boundaries are identical to the former communities, from whose merger the present-day city of Remseck am Neckar was created. The village of Aldingen am Neckar and the Sonnenhof farm belong to Aldingen. The village of Hochberg and the abandoned town of Egenhöft belong to Hochberg . Hochdorf consists of the village of Hochdorf am Neckar. Neckargröningen consists of the village Neckargröningen. Neckarrems includes the village of Neckarrems and the Remseck farm as well as the abandoned village of Reningen. The eastern part of the settlement Pattonville belongs to Pattonville, the western part belongs to Kornwestheim.
Districts of the city of Remseck am Neckar and their population figures (as of November 30, 2019):
district | Residents |
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Aldingen * | 8 495 |
Hochberg ** | 3,536 |
Hochdorf ** | 2 180 |
Neckargröningen ** | 2 530 |
Neckarrems ** | 4,677 |
Pattonville *** | 5 195 |
City of Remseck a. N. | 26 613 |
* Settlement in the Aldinger district without Pattonville
** Settlement on the area of the same name
*** Share of the Pattonville settlement on the Aldinger district (excluding Kornwestheim-Pattonville)
Division of space
According to data from the State Statistical Office , as of 2014.
history
Precursor communities
The current districts of Aldingen, Hochberg, Hochdorf, Neckargröningen and Neckarrems are formerly independent communities. The villages of the same name were mentioned in documents as early as the Middle Ages .
Neckargröningen was the first Remseck district to be described in the year 806 as Gruonincheim in the Lorsch monastery donation book. Aldingen was first mentioned around 1100 under the name Almendingen . The name indicates a possible Alamannic local founder named Alamund . The first reliable mention of Hochdorf also comes from around 1100. Hochberg was first mentioned in 1231, when a copy of a document mentions a certain Herbrand von Hohenberg. Neckarrems was first mentioned in 1268 as Rems . The addition "Neckar" was only added in the 17th century.
Neckarrems and Neckargröningen have been part of Württemberg since the High Middle Ages . Aldingen, however, was handed over to the lords of Kaltental in 1278 as a fief. They ruled here until 1746. Hochberg came to the Lords Nothaft von Hohenberg around 1300, who also ruled Hochdorf for a long time. Both the Lords of Kaltental and the Nothaft von Hohenberg were enrolled in the knight canton of Kocher with their goods, which are now part of Remseck, from the 16th century . With the extinction of the Aldingen line of the Lords of Kaltental, Aldingen came to Württemberg in 1746. After the emergency died out in 1684, Hochberg and Hochdorf came to the von Gemmingen family , who sold the rule to Duke Friedrich Eugen von Württemberg in 1779 , who left it to his brother Carl Eugen two years later . This incorporated the rule into the ducal Hofkammergut as the Hochberg staff office.
After the implementation of the new administrative structure in the Kingdom of Württemberg founded in 1806, Aldingen and Neckargröningen belonged to the Oberamt Ludwigsburg , while the other three places were subordinate to the Oberamt Waiblingen . During the administrative reform during the Nazi era in Württemberg , all places were assigned to the new Ludwigsburg district in 1938. Since the villages had become part of the American zone of occupation after the Second World War , they had belonged to the newly founded state of Württemberg-Baden from 1945 onwards , which became part of the present state of Baden-Württemberg in 1952.
Community merger
The current town of Remseck am Neckar was created on January 1st, 1975 through the amalgamation of the communities of Aldingen, Hochberg, Hochdorf, Neckargröningen and Neckarrems, initially under the name of "Aldingen am Neckar municipality", which was renamed Remseck am Neckar on July 1st, 1977 . The new name is derived from the former castle of the same name high above the Rems estuary. Remseck Castle was built at the same location in 1842 , so that the name Remseck has been passed down from historical times.
In 1999 the population of the municipality of Remseck am Neckar exceeded the limit of 20,000. However, it was not until 2003 that the municipal administration submitted the application for a major district town, which the state government of Baden-Württemberg then decided with effect from January 1, 2004. Since then, the municipality has had city rights .
Pattonville
Pattonville was founded in 1955 when the US Army began building a settlement on the western edge of Aldingen on part of the old royal Württemberg parade ground . In 1992 the US Army withdrew from Pattonville. The Pattonville-Sonnenberg association was founded by the cities of Ludwigsburg, Kornwestheim and Remseck am Neckar for the further use of these areas. Since a large part of the US Army settlement in Pattonville was located in the Aldinger district, the establishment of the association was preceded by an extensive exchange of rings. Here, areas of the member cities were exchanged for one another, so that a favorable distribution was created for the establishment of the association. Today, the Pattonville neighborhood is divided by John F. Kennedy Avenue. The western part belongs to Kornwestheim, the eastern part to Remseck am Neckar. Only with the steady influx of new residents to Pattonville was it possible for the city of Remseck am Neckar to apply for the title of large district town. As a result of construction section VII, the Remseck part of Pattonville grew to almost 6000 citizens. Pattonville is the second largest district of Remseck after Aldingen and Neckarrems.
Population development
The figures are estimates, census results (¹) or official updates from the respective statistical offices ( main residences only ).
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¹Census
result ² Addition of the population of the predecessor communities
Religions
The districts of today's city of Remseck am Neckar originally belonged to the diocese of Speyer . The local lords or the Counts of Württemberg introduced the Reformation from 1534 , as a result of which the places were predominantly Protestant for many centuries. While Aldingen belonged to the Oberamt and the deanery or church district of Ludwigsburg , the other places were part of the deanery or church district of Waiblingen until 1938 . In 1938 the places of the Deanery Ludwigsburg were connected within the Evangelical Church in Württemberg . There are parishes in all parts of the city, whereby the Protestants of Pattonville belong to the Evangelical Martinsgemeinde Kornwestheim and the Catholics to the Catholic St. Martinusgemeinde Kornwestheim.
After the Second World War , Catholics also moved to what is now the town of Remseck am Neckar. The Catholic Church of St. Petrus Canisius was built in Aldingen in 1966 . The associated parish of Aldingen is also responsible for Neckargröningen and Neckarrems. In 1971 the church of St. Nikolaus and Barbara was built in the Hochberg district. In 1977 Hochberg became its own parish. This also looks after the Catholics from Hochdorf, but there is a separate St. Franziskus church from 1976. The Catholics from Pattonville belong to the Catholic parish of St. Martin Kornwestheim under canon law. The two Remseck parishes (Aldingen and Hochberg) today form the Remseck pastoral care unit in the dean's office in Ludwigsburg within the diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart .
In addition to the two large churches, there are also free churches in Remseck am Neckar , including a community of the people's mission of committed Christians in Neckargröningen and the Methodist Church in Neckarrems and Hochberg. The New Apostolic Church is also represented in Aldingen and Neckarrems.
There was also an Israelite community in Hochberg from 1760 to 1914. At its peak in 1852, it comprised 305 people. The Jewish cemetery on the outskirts is still preserved; he is looked after by the city. The synagogue is also still standing; today it is a Methodist Evangelical Church.
politics
Municipal council
The local council in Remseck am Neckar has 26 members. The local elections on May 26, 2019 led to the following 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 |
% 2019 |
Seats 2019 |
% 2014 |
Seats 2014 |
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CDU | Christian Democratic Union of Germany | 18.36 | 5 | 26.1 | 7th | |
FW | Free voters Remseck am Neckar e. V. | 26.17 | 7th | 24.7 | 7th | |
GREEN | Alliance 90 / The Greens | 22.68 | 6th | 19.4 | 5 | |
SPD | Social Democratic Party of Germany | 14.41 | 4th | 16.5 | 4th | |
FDP | Free Democratic Party | 17.71 | 4th | 12.6 | 3 | |
WSZS | We are strong together Remseck | 0.68 | 0 | - | - | |
total | 100.0 | 26th | 100.0 | 26th | ||
voter turnout | 58.13% | 48.9% |
mayor
At first the mayor was at the head of the municipality of Remseck am Neckar . With the elevation to the major district town on January 1, 2004, the mayor bears the official title of mayor . This is elected directly by the electorate for 8 years. He is chairman of the municipal council . It has two associates as general deputies. The first councilor bears the official title of “First Mayor”, the second the official title of “Mayor”.
Mayor or Lord Mayor:
- until 1998: Peter Kuhn (FWV)
- until August 31, 2014: Lord Mayor Karl-Heinz Schlumberger (CDU)
- since October 1, 2014: Dirk Schönberger (independent)
administration
With 435 employees, the city of Remseck am Neckar is the largest local employer. The core administration comprises around 130 employees. The main administration with the citizens' office is located at the intersection of the two wood-glass bridges over Neckar and Rems, directly on Fellbacher Straße in the Neckarrems district. The financial administration is located in the Neckargröningen district, the building management in the Neckaraue in the Hochberg district. The municipal building yard is located in the Aldingen district.
With the amalgamation of the formerly five independent municipalities, the administration has been divided between the existing town halls. Office space was also rented due to a lack of space. The construction of a sufficiently large central town hall has been underway since October 2017. It should be completed by the end of 2020. The new, four-storey town hall will be built right next to the old town hall. It is to be connected by a passage with the town hall, which will also be built on the area together with a cube. Due to a legal dispute due to excessive construction costs, the project, which had been planned since 2014, could only be tackled in 2017. As a result, the original plan, which was worked out as part of a realization competition, was changed significantly.
badges and flags
Blazon : "In a split shield in front in blue a golden fish placed on a pole, behind in silver a red eagle's wing." | |
Justification for the coat of arms: The fish symbolizes the Neckar and Rems. The coat of arms was also to be found in the previous coats of arms of Neckargröningen and Neckarrems. The colors blue and yellow or gold are taken from Aldingen's predecessor coat of arms and also form the city colors. The eagle wing is taken from the noble coat of arms of the Notthracht von Hohenberg clan and was also found in the municipal coats of arms of Hochberg and Hochdorf. The coat of arms and flag was awarded to the young community on June 21, 1977 by the Ludwigsburg district office. |
With the survey of the city in 2004, a separate city logo was created, the so-called “Remseck-R”, a curved yellow “R” combined with the blue word mark “Remseck am Neckar - Große Kreisstadt”. The city flag is in the city colors yellow-blue. The city's official flag also contains the city's coat of arms.
The coats of arms of the communities that were absorbed in Remseck were as follows:
Town twinning
The city Remseck maintains since 1975 with the municipality of Meslay-du-Maine in France and since 1997 with the community Sèn January di Fassa (until 2017 Vigo di Fassa ) in Italy , a city partnership . The activities are bundled by the City Partnerships Working Group. In 2014 the 40th anniversary was celebrated with Meslay, in 2012 the 15th anniversary with the Ladin Dolomite community Sèn Jan di Fassa. A town partnership with the Romanian city of Codlea (Zeiden) has also been maintained since summer 2018 .
Economy and Infrastructure
traffic
State and district roads lead through the urban area. The Neckar Bridge is heavily frequented, a second Neckar crossing in the course of the north-east ring of Stuttgart should bring relief . The A 81 Stuttgart-Heilbronn can be reached via the Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen, Ludwigsburg-Nord or Ludwigsburg-Süd junctions.
Since 1999 Remseck am Neckar has been connected to the city rail network of the state capital Stuttgart. From the final stop Remseck-Neckargröningen you can take the U 12 line (Remseck - Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof - Dürrlewang ) every 10 minutes in 25 minutes during the day. There are four stops in the Remseck urban area. Local public transport ( ÖPNV ) is also served by three (402, 403 and 405) bus routes operated by the Remseck city buses. The “Remseck-Neckargröningen” stop (final stop of the U 12) is served by lines 431, 432 ( Ludwigsburg traffic lines ) and 451 (Zeiher) in addition to the lines mentioned above . The night bus line N 43 (LVL) also stops here on the nights from Friday to Saturday, Saturday to Sunday and before public holidays. All lines can be used at uniform prices within the Stuttgart Transport and Tariff Association (VVS) . In the years 1910 to 1923, the districts of Neckargröningen and Aldingen were also connected to the Ludwigsburg train station by the Ludwigsburg trolleybuses .
Also since 1999 there has been a depot of the Stuttgarter Straßenbahnen AG (SSB) on a site on the Neckar in the Aldingen district , which accommodates around 40 vehicles. There you will also find the Hornbach stop of the U 12 and a large free park-and-ride area.
media
Numerous media report on local events in Remseck am Neckar, including the Ludwigsburger Kreiszeitung with its supplement “Our Remseck” and the Ludwigsburg editorial staff of the Stuttgarter Zeitung . The city's official gazette, the “Remseck Week”, appears every Thursday with a circulation of over 5200 copies. For Pattonville, the association publishes the "Pattonville Info" every two weeks.
Public facilities
The city has its own library in each of the city districts .
The district's own Kleeblatt nursing homes operate an old people's and nursing home in Remseck-Aldingen and Remseck- Pattonville . In addition, the Evangelical Home Foundation on Remsufer in Neckarrems and the operator Atlas Care in Hochberg each have a nursing home. In total, there are around 150 care places for senior citizens in Remseck am Neckar.
education
Remseck am Neckar has a high school ( Lise-Meitner -Gymnasium, Aldingen), a Realschule (Realschule Remseck, Pattonville), a community school ( Wilhelm-Keil -Schule, Aldingen) and a primary school in each district .
There are also 15 kindergartens, in Aldingen and Neckargröningen with offers for looking after children under three years of age.
youth
A new youth (culture) house has existed for the children and young people from Remseck since 2005. For this purpose, the rooms of the old youth department (container construction) on Meslay-Du-Maine Straße, at a central location near the terminus and the education center, were converted into the “House of Youth” with a new, colorful outfit. In the cellar of the Haus der Jugend is the "Café Impuls", which houses the rooms for open youth work as well as for events. The “niche”, which includes a skate park, a trampoline and a beach volleyball court, is also very close by. Concerts and festivals take place regularly in the “House of Youth” and on the “Niche Leisure Area”.
Culture and sights
The Neckarrems district is located on the Württemberger Weinstrasse , which leads past many sights.
Museums
The Heimatstube Neckarrems shows the rural life in the region, especially a complete shoemaker's workshop. In the village forge Neckargröningen, which has a fully functional forge , visitors can pick up hammers and anvils themselves.
Buildings
- Aldingen : The renaissance castle from 1580 has a baroque portal. The Gothic St. Margaret's Church from 1398 with grave monuments from the 16th and 17th centuries is the village's Protestant church.
- Hochberg : The castle with the knight's hall dates from 1593. The district has a neo-Gothic church from 1854 (Protestant), the wine press from 1752 today serves as a festival hall. The district also has a 19th century Jewish cemetery. The former synagogue now serves as a place of worship for the Methodist Church.
- Hochdorf : The castle from the 16th century was rebuilt 1612th There are still remnants of the wall. The Gothic parish church of St. Wendelin (Protestant) is a simple building. At Wilhelmsplatz there is an originally walled dairy farm from the 16th century.
- Neckargröningen : The district has several decorative half-timbered houses and an old town hall from 1592, but the front side was designed around 1850. The former fortified church of St. Martin with a Gothic choir from 1515 and remnants of late medieval wall paintings is the village's Protestant church.
- Neckarrems : The old town hall from 1564 has a gable framework from 1915. The late Gothic parish church of St. Michael and Sebastian was built around 1500. Remseck Castle (1842) stands on a mountain spur. The remains of the medieval Remseck Castle can also be found there.
The two bicycle and pedestrian bridges built in 1988 and 1990 over the Neckar (80 m) and the Rems (51.2 m) were the largest cantilevered wooden bridges in Europe at the time and still represent an architectural and timber-framed masterpiece made of wood and are protected against the weather with a roof made of overlapping glass panels. They were assembled on land and then pushed across the rivers.
Memorials
In Remseck am Neckar, the first Stolperstein was laid by the artist Gunter Demnig on July 1, 2019 . The small brass plate on the sidewalk in front of Hauptstrasse 18 in the Hochberg district commemorates the Jewish cattle dealer and butcher Adolf Falk, who had his last freely chosen residence there. Falk fled the National Socialists to live with his son in England in the summer of 1939 and died on October 5, 1943 in London .
Remstal Garden Show 2019
From May 10 to October 20, 2019, a green project of the state of Baden-Württemberg took place in the Remstal , in which Remseck also participated. This Remstal garden show 2019 was one of the "small" garden shows that alternate with the state garden shows every year.
In this context, a floating jetty with a connection to the Neckar beach was built at the mouth of the Rems and Neckar. Remseck took part in the “16 stations”, the garden show's architectural project, with a “bath house” that stood on the floating jetty.
Regular events
- May: May 1st Hocketse in the community hall in Aldingen
- May / June: Jazzhocketse in the community hall in Aldingen
- Pentecost: Rock am Zipfelbach
- July: Every two years Hochdorf Wilhelmsplatzfest
- July: Party at the fire brigade's house
- July: Big summer festival and musical fireworks in the Neckar Center (Hochberg)
- July: Neckarrems street festival
- July: School festival at Lise-Meitner-Gymnasium Aldingen every 2 years
- July / August: Neckar-Rems Pokal (football)
- October: Traditional Oktoberfest with Sunday shopping in the Neckar Center (Hochberg)
- October: Aldinger cherry
- December: Remseck Christmas market on the second Advent
Personalities
sons and daughters of the town
- Magnus Hesenthaler (1621–1681), political scientist and historian, born in Hochdorf
- Karl Ludwig von Gemmingen (1700–1752), Württemberg legation counselor
- Friedrich von Knauss (1724–1789), German watchmaker, machine builder and inventor, born in Aldingen
- Johann Christian Hiller (1734–1820), pastor, monastery professor in Maulbronn, teacher of the poet Friedrich Hölderlin , later Württemberg councilor and abbot of Anhausen an der Brenz monastery (now part of Herbrechtingen ), son of the song poet Philipp Friedrich Hiller (see below).
- Friedrich Heim (1789–1850), born in Hochdorf, Protestant pastor and founder of the Paulinenpflege Winnenden
- David G. Jüngling emigrated from Aldingen to the United States in 1823. He Anglicized his last name to Yuengling and founded the "Eagle Brewery" in Pottsville (today DG Yuengling & Son ) in 1829 , the oldest brewery in the USA still in existence today.
- Ludvig Holstein-Ledreborg (1839–1912), Danish politician, Prime Minister in 1909
- Wilhelm Rösch (1850–1893), sculptor, born in Neckarrems
- Ulrich Kienzle (1936–2020), journalist and Middle East expert, employee at ZDF and 3sat , known for the ZDF political program Frontal , born in Neckargröningen, grew up in Neckarrems.
- Thomas Zoglauer (* 1960), philosopher
- Fabio Leutenecker (* 1990), soccer player
- Gianni Otto (* 1995), basketball player
Other personalities associated with the city
- Philipp Friedrich Hiller (1699–1769), song writer, worked from 1732 to 1736 as a pastor in Neckargröningen
- Mayer Levi (1814–1874), worked from 1836 to 1843 as Chasan of the Jewish community in Aldingen
- George S. Patton (1885–1945) founded the Easternpart housing estate, now Pattonville , at the end of World War II
- Rainer Adrion (* 1953), former soccer coach of the German U21 national team and former soccer player
- Leonie Maier (* 1992), national soccer player
sport and freetime
In Remseck am Neckar there are among others the following sports clubs: TC Aldingen, TV Aldingen, TSV Neckargröningen, VfB Neckarrems , SGV Hochdorf and SKV Hochberg as well as the basketball club BG Remseck.
The most successful football club is currently VfB Neckarrems. In the 2009/10 season, he was the first club in Remseck's history to be promoted to the Baden-Württemberg Oberliga . But he had to relegate back to the association league after just one season.
The TV Aldingen is the only club in Remseck am Neckar active in handball. The women's team was promoted to the national league in 2009.
BG Remseck was promoted to the Southwest-South basketball regional league in 2013.
Remseck am Neckar has two large football and athletics fields. The Regental Stadium, near the education center in the Aldingen district, has a capacity for up to 7,000 people. The Layher-Arena Hummelberg can accommodate up to 2500 people. VfB Neckarrems plays its home games at the Hummelberg. For the 2013/14 season, the football pitch at Hummelberg was equipped with artificial turf .
literature
- The state of Baden-Wuerttemberg - official description by districts and communities , Volume III, Stuttgart district, Middle Neckar Regional Association, ed. from the Baden-Württemberg State Archives, Stuttgart 1978
- To the castles Hochberg, Hochdorf, Neckarrems and Aldingen → Harald Stark : The Notthracht family - looking for traces in Egerland, Bavaria and Swabia, Späthling, Weißenstadt 2006, ISBN 3-926621-46-X .
- The Ludwigsburg district. (Ed .: Ulrich Hartmann). 2nd edition, Theiss, Stuttgart 1994, ISBN 3-8062-1055-1
- Remseck - The local history of Neckarrems. Edited by Gerhard Bickel - Cardamina Verlag, 2018, ISBN 978-3-86424-422-3
- Remseck - Neckarremser emigrants - Ed. Gerhard Bickel - Cardamina Verlag, 2018, ISBN 978-3-86424-425-4
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg - Population by nationality and gender on December 31, 2018 (CSV file) ( help on this ).
- ^ Friedrich Huttenlocher, Hansjörg Dongus: Geographical land survey: The natural spatial units on sheet 170 Stuttgart. (PDF; 4.0 MB) Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1949, revised in 1967
- ↑ a b c Numbers & Dates. In: stadt-remseck.de. City of Remseck am Neckar, accessed on May 11, 2020 .
- ↑ a b c d Remseck am Neckar - main statute. (PDF, 154 KB) In: stadt-remseck.de. June 30, 2020, accessed August 8, 2020 .
- ^ 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. 442-446.
- ↑ State Statistical Office, area since 1988 according to actual use for Remseck am Neckar.
- ^ Remseck am Neckar - districts. In: stadt-remseck.de. Retrieved May 13, 2020 .
- ^ Lutz Reichardt: Place names book of the city district of Stuttgart and the district of Ludwigsburg . In: Publications of the Commission for Regional History in Baden-Wurttemberg - Series B . tape 101 . W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1982, ISBN 3-17-007970-0 , p. 9, 58, 72, 74, 123, 124 .
- ↑ Dr. Norbert Stein, Eduard Theiner, Heinz Pfizenmayer: The Lords of Kaltental and the imperial free Nothaft von Hohenberg . In: Heinz Pfizenmayer (Hrsg.): Local history series of publications of the municipality of Remseck am Neckar . tape 9 , 1989.
- ^ 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. 462 f .
- ↑ Pattonville Association - History. pattonville.de, accessed on May 13, 2020 .
- ^ City of Remseck am Neckar | Groundbreaking ceremony for the »New Center«. Retrieved April 23, 2019 .
- ^ City of Remseck am Neckar | Time schedule. Retrieved April 23, 2019 .
- ^ City of Remseck am Neckar | City celebrated the topping-out ceremony for the new town hall, town hall and cube. Retrieved April 23, 2019 .
- ^ City of Remseck am Neckar | Planning of the new town hall area. Retrieved April 23, 2019 .
- ↑ https://www.stadt-remseck.de/de/Die-Stadt/Stadtportrait/Stadtwappen-Logo
- ^ City of Remseck am Neckar | Codlea. Retrieved April 30, 2019 .
- ↑ Stefanie Saam: Retirement home for 53 people in the middle of Hochberg , online article from September 29, 2009, Stadtnachricht Stadt Remseck am Neckar, accessed on February 7, 2012.
- ↑ Kristina Winter: A stumbling block against oblivion . In: Ludwigsburger Kreiszeitung . July 2, 2019, p. 12 .
- ^ Julian Illi: Refuge from the Lords of Württemberg. In: Stuttgarter-Zeitung.de. April 7, 2015, accessed July 8, 2019 .
- ↑ David Mairle: A stumbling block for the last Jew from Hochberg. In: Stuttgarter-Zeitung.de. July 10, 2019, accessed July 11, 2019 .
- ↑ Architecture with 16 stations on remstal.de. Retrieved July 12, 2019.
- ↑ Cf. Reinhard Breymayer: Johann Christian Hiller and Justinus Kerner's cousin Johann Gottfried Mayer: Two Maulbronn monastery professors of the young Hölderlin. In: Stuttgarter Arbeit zur Germanistik , No. 423, Heinz, Stuttgart 2004 [2005], pp. 111–142. ISBN 3-88099-428-5
- ^ Regental Stadium - Remseck am Neckar
- ↑ Layher Arena Hummelberg - Remseck-Neckarrems