Remshalden

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

Coordinates: 48 ° 49 '  N , 9 ° 26'  E

Basic data
State : Baden-Württemberg
Administrative region : Stuttgart
County : Rems-Murr district
Height : 271 m above sea level NHN
Area : 15.14 km 2
Residents: 14,042 (Dec. 31, 2018)
Population density : 927 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 73630
Primaries : 07151, 07181
License plate : WN, BK
Community key : 08 1 19 090
Community structure: 5 districts
Address of the
municipal administration:
Marktplatz 1
73630 Remshalden
Website : www.remshalden.de
Mayor : Reinhard Molt
Location of the municipality of Remshalden in the Rems-Murr district
Allmersbach im Tal Allmersbach im Tal Althütte Auenwald Backnang Backnang Burgstetten Fellbach Großerlach Kaisersbach Kaisersbach Kaisersbach Kaisersbach Kirchberg an der Murr Leutenbach (Württemberg) Leutenbach (Württemberg) Leutenbach (Württemberg) Murrhardt Oppenweiler Plüderhausen Plüderhausen Plüderhausen Rudersberg Schorndorf Schwaikheim Spiegelberg Sulzbach an der Murr Waiblingen Waiblingen Waiblingen Weissach im Tal Welzheim Winnenden Winterbach (Remstal) Aspach (bei Backnang) Berglen Berglen Weinstadt Kernen im Remstal Urbach (Remstal) Alfdorf Alfdorf Korb (Württemberg) Remshaldenmap
About this picture

Remshalden is a municipality in the Rems-Murr district in Baden-Württemberg . It belongs to the Stuttgart region (until 1992 the Middle Neckar region ) and the European metropolitan region of Stuttgart .

geography

Geographical location

Remshalden is located around 25 kilometers northeast of Stuttgart in the Remstal along federal highway 29 . The municipal area extends over an altitude of 237 to 519 meters.

Neighboring communities

The municipality of Remshalden is enclosed by the following municipalities and cities (starting in the north, clockwise): Breuningsweiler ( Winnenden ), Berglen , Schorndorf , Winterbach , Weinstadt and a forest exclave belonging to Waiblingen .

Community structure

Church square, Grunbach

The districts of Buoch , Geradstetten , Grunbach , Hebsack and Rohrbronn , which are identical to the previously independent municipalities of the same name, belong to the municipality of Remshalden . The districts of Buoch, Hebsack and Rohrbronn only include the villages of the same name . The village of Geradstetten, the hamlets of Bauersberger Hof and Kernershof and the Rollhof homestead belong to the Geradstetten district. The village of Grunbach and the hamlet of Osterhof belong to the district of Grunbach. The districts are officially named by prefixed municipality names and, afterwards, separated by a hyphen, the name of the district.

The abandoned hamlet of Seldeneck (also Selneck) with the former Seldeneck Castle is in the area of ​​the Geradstetten district . The abandoned village of Erlachhöfe is in the area of ​​the Grunbach district. The abandoned villages Ober-Vehrenbach and Unter-Vehrenbach are located in both districts.

Division of space

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

Districts

Buoch

Buoch
Water tower, Buoch

Buoch is the highest district at 519 m above sea level, where around 700 people live. Buoch was first mentioned in a document in 1270. The place was originally owned by the Lords of Winnenden and came through the Lords of Neuffen to the Lorch Monastery and, as a result of the Reformation, to Württemberg and to the office, later Oberamt Winnenden , from 1808 to the Oberamt Waiblingen , from 1938 to the Waiblingen district . The late Gothic parish church of St. Sebastian has Romanesque components in the tower choir. The Museum im Hirsch was set up in April 1987 in the building of the formerly widely known Buocher Gasthof Hirsch . It shows ceramics production in Buoch in the 12th to 14th centuries as well as poets and painters in Buoch from the beginning of the 19th to the beginning of the 20th century.

Geradstetten

Geradstetten

Geradstetten has around 4700 inhabitants and is 255 m above sea level. NN. The place Geradstetten originated in the older expansion period , probably already in the 9th century. It was first mentioned in a document that was issued on January 8, 1291. In it a Rufoni de Gerhartstetin is mentioned. Several noble families held parts of the place as Württemberg fiefdom , including those of Urbach and von Zyllnhardt . The latter sold a part in 1506 and the rest in 1687 to the Duchy of Württemberg , which had now repossessed the entire village. Geradstetten came to the office, later Oberamt Schorndorf and in 1938 to the district of Waiblingen . The last mayor of Geradstetten was Wilhelm Gayer from 1950 to 1974. Wilhelm Gayer was in constant conflict with his main critic Helmut Palmer . The conflict arose because of differing opinions in fruit growing and escalated into Palmer's allusions to Gayer's Nazi past.

Grunbach

Grunbach

Grunbach was first mentioned in a document in 1142 and is the oldest and largest district with around 6000 inhabitants. In 1293, the county of Württemberg took over the protection of the goods of the Lorch monastery in Grunbach and also had the right to administer the place transferred by its own bailiff. There is evidence of a wine press in Grunbach as early as 1328, and the winemaking tradition can be proven by a large number of documents. It can also be read from the three former wine presses in Schillerstrasse. The landmark of Grunbach is the Protestant parish church, completed in 1481, a fortified church once consecrated to Saints Dionysius and Veranus. Grunbach was subordinate to the Württemberg office of Schorndorf, and since 1758 to the Oberamt Schorndorf . In 1861, with the opening of the Remsbahn , Grunbach got a connection to the rail network of the Württemberg Railway . In 1938 Grunbach was assigned to the Waiblingen district . The last mayor of Grunbach until the new municipality of Remshalden was formed in 1974 was Helmuth Kuhnle, who was also the first incumbent mayor of the municipality of Remshalden until January 30, 1975.
See also: Grunbach (Remshalden)

Lifting bag

Lifting bag

Hebsack has around 1500 inhabitants. This district was first mentioned in a document in 1299 and was mainly owned by the County of Württemberg . However, the Zimmer monastery also received income from Hebsack, which fell to the Counts of Öttingen after the Reformation . These were taken over by Württemberg in 1744. Hebsack belonged to the Winterbach court and had been a separate municipality in the Württemberg Oberamt Schorndorf since the 19th century , and thus part of the Waiblingen district since 1938 . The late Gothic Wendelinskirche was demolished in 1938/39 because of a road construction project. The Marien altar from 1512/13 as well as the baptismal font and the pulpit are located in the Kreuzkirche built in 1947. As early as 1920, a shirt factory was very important there, producing around 10,000 blue driver's shirts annually.

Rohrbronn

Rohrbronn

Around 700 people live in Rohrbronn, the smallest district of Remshalden. Rohrbronn was first mentioned in 1400. The settlement belonged to Winterbach and with this place came from Staufer possession to Württemberg. At that time there were only seven houses. The village of Rohrbronn belonged to the Winterbach staff office and became a part of Hebsack in 1809 and, after being briefly incorporated into Winterbach in 1828, an independent municipality in the Schorndorf Oberamt , which became the Schorndorf district in the Waiblingen district in 1938 . Over the centuries, the main occupation was viticulture and fruit growing, especially cherries, which is reflected in Rohrbronn's coat of arms. In 1965 the Evangelical Christ Church in Rohrbronn was completed.

Helmut Palmer's house, Geradstetten

Population statistics

Buoch - pencil drawing by General Eduard von Kallee , 1846
The Rems near Geradstetten
Vineyards, Remshalden

The population figures were determined on June 30th by the Remshalden municipal administration. The figures differ from the official figures of the State Statistical Office. The 1961 and 1970 numbers are census results.

year Buoch Geradstetten Grunbach Lifting bag Rohrbronn All in all
1961 432 3.127 3,232 768 353 7.912
1970 512 4,461 4,715 1,282 503 11,473
1980 620 4,374 5,310 1,573 668 12,545
1985 665 4,298 5,422 1,625 613 12,623
1997 686 4,697 5,808 1,607 709 13,507
2000 713 4,751 5,843 1,578 708 13,593
2005 673 4,739 5,966 1,564 686 13,628
2010 647 4,672 6,057 1,481 658 13,483
2013 647 4,697 6.154 1,443 647 13,588
2014 654 4,733 6.220 1,453 650 13,710
2019 698 4,984 6,561 1,574 692 14,509

Area distribution

As of November 22, 2004, the marking areas of the five districts show the following areas:

District Ha
Grunbach 473
Geradstetten 631
Lifting bag 110
Rohrbronn 141
Buoch 158
All in all 1513

history

Regional history affiliation of the predecessor communities in Remshalden

In the High Middle Ages, the district of Remshalden was part of the Pagus Ramesdal (Remsgau) in the northern outskirts of the Duchy of Swabia . In the course of the late Middle Ages, the suburbs belonged to the core areas of Old Wuerttemberg and were therefore also part of the newly founded Kingdom of Wuerttemberg and the Free People's State of Wuerttemberg , which emerged in 1918 . In 1938, in the course of a regional reform in Württemberg during the Nazi era , all places that had previously been divided between the regional offices (or, since 1934, districts) Schorndorf (namely Grunbach , Geradstetten, Hebsack and Rohrbronn) and Waiblingen (namely Buoch) came to Waiblingen district . In 1945 the district of Waiblingen fell into the American zone of occupation and thus belonged to the newly founded state of Württemberg-Baden , which was incorporated into the current state of Baden-Württemberg in 1952. Since the district reform that took place in 1973, the two predecessor communities Remshaldens, Geradstetten and Grunbach belonged to the newly formed Rems-Murr district.

Community merger

Remshalden and the surrounding area

Remshalden was created as part of the municipal reform in Baden-Württemberg through the following steps:

  • January 1, 1972: incorporation of Rohrbronn and Hebsack to Geradstetten and from Buoch to Grunbach
  • May 13, 1974: Agreement to form Remshalden was sealed by signature by Mayor Wilhelm Gayer von Geradstetten and Mayor Helmuth Kuhnle von Grunbach
  • October 1, 1974: Geradstetten and Grunbach merge to form the new municipality of Remshalden

Population development

The information relates to the current territorial status of the municipality.

year Residents
1961 7.912
1970 11,473
1980 12,545
1985 12,632
1991 13,234
1995 13,283
1997 13,507
2000 13,593
2005 13,628
2007 13,533
year Residents
2008 13,461
2009 13,396
2010 13,386
2011 13,455
2012 13,527
2013 13,494
2014 13,630
2015 14,076
2016 14.005
2017 14,077
year Residents

religion

Church square, Grunbach
View of the southern post-war settlement of Geradstetten with the Catholic Church of St. Elisabeth

Christian life in the Rems Valley began gradually in the 7th century after the Alemanni were Christianized due to their submission by the Franks. Grunbach owned a Catholic parish in the area of ​​jurisdiction of the Diocese of Constance very early on . The now Protestant Dionysius Church in Grunbach was built in 1481 in place of a previous church, presumably from the 12th century and consecrated to St. Dionysius of Paris . Geradstetten was a branch of Winterbach in the Middle Ages. The today Protestant Konradskirche in Geradstetten was built in the 14th century as a chapel in honor of Bishop Konrad von Konstanz and was rebuilt in late Gothic style from 1491 onwards. A separate parish, independent of Winterbach, was set up in 1497 by Bishop Hugo von Konstanz .

Protestant church

Ulrich von Württemberg pushed through the Reformation in his duchy in 1534 and thus founded his own Protestant regional church. All residents of the predecessor parishes of Remshalden thus became Protestant in the 16th century according to the principle of " Cuius regio, eius religio ".

The four parishes belonging to the Evangelical Church in Württemberg are spread over two church districts. The Protestant parishes in Grunbach , Geradstetten and Hebsack-Rohrbronn belong to the church district of Schorndorf . The evangelical parish in Buoch is located in the Waiblingen church district .

Other Protestant organizations with activities in Remshalden are, for example, the Württemberg Christ Association and the Old Pietist Community in Grunbach.

Catholic Church

Since the residents of the old parishes in Remshalden became Protestant during the Reformation under Duke Ulrich in 1534 due to their affiliation to Württemberg, the Catholic Church was only able to regain its status after the religious edict of October 15, 1806, with which the Catholic Church approved the Protestant Churches in the Kingdom of Württemberg were put on an equal footing, gradually spreading to old Württemberg territory. Until the end of World War II, however, there were hardly any Catholic residents in the Remshalden area. In 1850 z. B. in Grunbach only two Catholics. It was not until the flight and expulsion of Germans from Central and Eastern Europe in 1945–1950 that many Catholics also settled in what was later to become Remshalden. As early as 1946, a Catholic parish administrator was installed in Grunbach. From 1948 a barrack functioned as a Catholic emergency church in Grunbach. In 1961 the Grunbach parish administration was raised to a fully valid parish of the Rottenburg diocese . In 1962 the parish in the southern post-war settlement of Geradstetten received its first regular sacral building. This new church was consecrated in the name of St. Elisabeth of Thuringia . In 1964 the main church of the parish in Grunbach was consecrated. Their namesake was the holy Archangel Michael , who is also the patron of the entire Catholic parish in Remshalden. Around the year 2000 there were around 3,200 Catholics in the Catholic parish of St. Michael. Since then the number has been falling and at the end of 2015 it was around 2,800 members. The parish of St. Michael is now part of the pastoral care unit Beutelsbach, Endersbach, Kernen and Remshalden in the Rems-Murr dean's office .

As a Catholic institution independent of the parish, the Franciscan Community is also represented locally.

New Apostolic Church

In Remshalden there is also a congregation of the New Apostolic Church based in Geradstetten.

politics

Municipal council

The local council in Remshalden has 22 members. The local elections on May 26, 2019 led to the following final 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
Local elections 2019
 %
40
30th
20th
10
0
32.35%
21.46%
18.02%
14.65%
13.52%
BWV
FDP-FW
ALi
Gains and losses
compared to 2014
 % p
   4th
   2
   0
  -2
  -4
+1.15  % p.p.
-3.94  % p.p.
-1.38  % p
+ 0.45  % p
+ 3.72  % p.p.
BWV
FDP-FW
ALi
BWV Remshalden civil voters' association 32.35 7th 31.16 7th
CDU Christian Democratic Union of Germany 21.46 5 25.43 6th
SPD Social Democratic Party of Germany 18.02 4th 19.34 4th
FDP-FW Free Democratic Party / Free Voters 14.65 3 14.23 3
ALi Alternative list Remshalden 13.52 3 9.83 2
total 100.0 22nd 100.0 22nd
voter turnout 64.70% 55.28%

mayor

year mayor
1974-1975 Office administrator: Helmuth Kuhnle
1975-1990 Winfried Kübler
1990-1991 Bernd Friedmann (First Alderman)
1991-1999 Andreas Spätgens
1999-2013 Norbert Zeidler
2013-2018 Stefan Breiter
since 2018 Reinhard Molt

Partner in Europe

Gournay-en-Bray (France)

Gournay-en-Bray

Gournay-en-Bray is about 90 km northwest of Paris and therefore halfway from the French metropolis to the port city of Dieppe on the Channel coast. The city's history goes back to the 10th century. Gournay is the commercial and service center of the region of the same name with a number of small towns and about 6500 inhabitants. The collegiate church of St. Hildevert from the 11th and 12th centuries is an architectural monument . The partnership was officially sealed in October 1989 in Gournay and in July 1990 in Remshalden.

Etyek (Hungary)

Etyek

Etyek is located in the Ofner Mountains , 28 km west of Budapest at an altitude of approx. 176 m. The first documentary mention dates from the year 1326. After the municipality of Etyek and the surrounding areas had been almost completely depopulated by the Turkish wars and epidemics, from 1720 onwards, under the rule of Empress Maria Theresa Swabia, settled from southern Germany. Etyek has about 4,400 inhabitants, of which about 17% are German. Viticulture and the people who had to leave Etyek after the Second World War and found a new home in Remshalden are particularly common to the communities. The partnership was officially sealed in August 1994 in Remshalden and in October 1995 in Etyek.

Elterlein (Germany)

Parents

The mountain town of Elterlein with around 3000 inhabitants is a small town in the Ore Mountains with an eventful history and traditional roots. What is interesting about this city is the settlement along the historic salt route from Halle to Prague . First mentioned in a document in 1406, Elterlein was almost completely destroyed several times over the centuries. Around 1500 its own mining authority administered five silver mines . In 1763 the last silver tunnel was closed. Field management, cattle breeding and lace-making became the most important branches of business alongside nail and blacksmiths.

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

Remshalden is located in the Remstal on the federal highway 29 (Stuttgart– Aalen ) between Stuttgart and Schorndorf . Remshalden is connected to the Stuttgart S-Bahn network with the S 2 S-Bahn line (Schorndorf – Stuttgart– Airport - Filderstadt ) . The stations Grunbach and Geradstetten are in the local area of ​​Remshalden.

Established businesses

Ahoy shower

There are numerous companies in Remshalden. Nationally known are:

Other well-known companies that were formerly located in Remshalden or that had their origins in Remshalden are:

Educational institutions

Schools in changing buildings have an old tradition in Remshalden. For example, school buildings in Geradstetten have been around since 1660. Today there are two primary schools in Remshalden, one in the Grunbach district and one in the Geradstetten district. From 1962 to 2017 there was the Ernst Heinkel Realschule in Grunbach . To the west of the primary school building in Geradstetten, which went into operation in 1960, a reinforced concrete skeleton school building was built at the beginning of the 1970s on the outskirts, which was used by the Geradstetten secondary school from 1973 to 2013 . The operation of the secondary school ended in 2013 and after a phase of renovation, the former Ernst Heinkel secondary school moved from Grunbach to the renovated and expanded former main school building in Geradstetten. The new Realschule Remshalden has been located in this building since October 7, 2017 .

Other educational institutions in Remshalden are the training center building of the Academy of Education of the construction industry of Baden-Wuerttemberg in Geradstetten and the Chamber of Commerce Education Center of the Chamber of Commerce Region Stuttgart in Grunbach.

In Remshalden there is also a branch of the adult education center Schorndorf and the youth music school Schorndorf and the surrounding area .

societies

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the church

  • David Wolleber (around 1555–1597), born in Grunbach, chronicler
  • Friedrich Retter (1816–1891), born in Geradstetten, innkeeper, member of the Landtag and Reichstag
  • Theodor Völter (1874–1910), born in Geradstetten, Oberamtmann in Württemberg
  • Ernst Heinkel (1888–1958), born in Grunbach, engineer and aviation pioneer
  • Hannel Nitschke-Illg (1923–2018), born in Grunbach, artist
  • Rosemarie Glaser (* 1949), born in Geradstetten, member of the state parliament
  • Mine (singer) , middle-class Jasmin Stocker (* 1986), singer, songwriter and producer

People who worked in Remshalden

Hans Gottfried von Stockhausen, 2000
  • Eduard Hiller (* 1818 in Stuttgart, † 1902 in Buoch), poet, agricultural scientist
  • Andreas Stihl (* 1896 in Zurich; † 1973 in Rohrbronn), founder of the Waiblingen-based manufacturer of motor equipment
  • Hans Gottfried von Stockhausen (born May 12, 1920 at Trendelburg; † January 8, 2010 in Buoch), glass painter and artist
  • Helmut Palmer (* 1930 in Stuttgart-Untertürkheim; † 2004 in Tübingen), civil rights activist and pomologist known as the “Remstal rebel”, father of Boris Palmer , lived in Geradstetten
  • Ulrich Mack (* 1951 in Heidenheim an der Brenz), pastor in Remshalden-Geradstetten from 1984 to 1989
  • Boris Palmer (* 1972 in Waiblingen), grew up in Geradstetten, politician of the Greens , Mayor of the city of Tübingen since 2007

Honorary citizen

Honorary citizens of the community were u. a. Ernst Heinkel and Max Holder appointed. An honorary citizenship expires with the death of the honored person.

literature

  • Remshalden municipality: Remshalden connects: from diversity to unity. Self-published, Remshalden 2009.
  • Remshalden connects: Buoch, Geradstetten, Grunbach, Rohrbronn, Hebsack . Pressel Verlag, Remshalden 2010, ISBN 978-3-937950-66-2 .
  • Remshalden: life between forest and vines . Geiger-Verlag, Horb am Neckar 2001, ISBN 3-89570-771-6 .
  • Remshaldener Leut '- then and now': Change in time lapse . Manfred Hennecke, Remshalden 1994.
  • What was when in Remshalden: data collection of events and personalities from Remshalden with register and bibliography and Remshalden municipal coat of arms . Manfred Hennecke, Remshalden 1993.
  • Remshalden in old views . Europ. Library, Zaltbommel 1979.
  • Karl Apel: Buoch in words and pictures . Greiner Verlag, Remshalden 2002, ISBN 3-935383-11-8 .
  • Heimatverein Buoch: Buocher booklets . 1.1983 - 32.2012 ff. Manfred Hennecke u. Self-published, Remshalden.
  • Karl Apel & Heimatverein Buoch: Museum im Hirsch - history-ceramic-poet-painter in Buoch . Manfred Hennecke, Remshalden 1987.
  • Herbert Kuderna: Chronicle Remshalden. Young community with old roots. Greiner Verlag, Remshalden 2009, ISBN 978-3-86705-049-4 .
  • Herbert Kuderna: Wine press and joie de vivre. Remshalden wine presses. Remshalden local stories - stories and memories 2 . Bärenfelser-Verlag, Weinstadt 2011, ISBN 978-3-86372-003-2 .
  • Hermann Kull, Rosemarie Kull: Grunbach's historical buildings and their history / s - Part 1: Up in the village: around the village church. Remshalden local history, issue 10 . Greiner Verlag, Remshalden 2009, ISBN 978-3-86705-080-7 .
  • Hermann Kull, Rosemarie Kull: Grunbach's historical buildings and their history / s - Part 2: On the Landstrasse. Remshalden local history, issue 11 . Greiner Verlag, Weinstadt 2009, ISBN 978-3-86705-082-1 .
  • Hermann Kull, Rosemarie Kull: Grunbach's historical buildings and their history / s - Part 3: Viticulture, wine presses and mills. Remshalden local history, issue 12 . Bärenfelser-Verlag, Weinstadt 2009, ISBN 978-3-86705-084-5 .
  • Hermann Kull, Rosemarie Kull: Grunbach's historical buildings and their history / s - Part 4: In front of the village: Along the Vorderen Gasse. Remshalden local history, issue 13 . Bärenfelser-Verlag, Weinstadt 2009, ISBN 978-3-86372-005-6 .
  • Museum Association Remshalden: Remshalden local stories . Issue 1-10 (2003-2009). Greiner Verlag, Remshalden, ISBN 978-3-935383-18-9 .
  • Walter Nimmerrichter: Picturesque Remshalden. Tours through the old town centers of Buoch, Geradstetten, Grunbach, Hebsack, Rohrbronn . Kuppinger, R, Weinstadt 1984, ISBN 3-928856-05-7 .
  • Joachim Pressel: Remshalden in the old days. Postcard motifs . Pressel Verlag, Remshalden 2006, ISBN 3-937950-05-2 .
  • Hans Rilling: Village history (s) from Geradstetten . Greiner Verlag, Remshalden 2007, ISBN 978-3-86705-013-5 .
  • Hans Rilling: Remshalden in the mirror of old maps . Manfred Hennecke Verlag, Remshalden 1997, ISBN 3-927981-52-4 .
  • Hans Rilling: Around the Konradskirche Geradstetten . Issue 1-8 (1999-2003). Self-published u. Greiner-Verlag, Remshalden.
  • Rudolf Seibold: Des hot schau mai Vaddr gsait. Stories, anecdotes and sayings from Grunbach and Buoch . Greiner Verlag, Remshalden 2003, ISBN 3-935383-14-2 .
  • Jan Knauer: Citizen engagement and protest politics. The political work of the "Remstal rebel" Helmut Palmer and the reactions of his fellow men . (PDF; 3.6 MB) Dissertation at the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen, 2012

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. State Statistical Office Baden-Württemberg - Population by nationality and gender on December 31, 2018 (CSV file) ( help on this ).
  2. ^ Seldeneck Castle (Selneck Castle) [desert] . LEO-BW. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  3. Erlachhöfe [desert] . LEO-BW. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  4. Ober-Vehrenbach (Fehrbach) [desert] . LEO-BW. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  5. Unter-Vehrenbach (Fehrbach) [desert] . LEO-BW. Retrieved September 12, 2015.
  6. ^ 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. 537-540.
  7. State Statistical Office, area since 1988 according to actual use for Remshalden.
  8. ^ Jan Knauer: Citizen engagement and protest policy. The political work of the "Remstal rebel" Helmut Palmer and the reactions of his fellow men . Dissertation at the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen, 2012, p. 235 f.
  9. Wilhelm Gayer was originally a supporter of the SPD. In 1933 he became a member of the NSDAP in order not to endanger his office as Mayor of Aries . He was mayor of various other municipalities in Württemberg until 1943, including Ensingen and from March 1, 1939 until his entry into the Wehrmacht at the end of 1943 as mayor of Heubach . In his denazification file (in the Ludwigsburg State Archives) he was only classified as a fellow traveler who had only insignificantly promoted National Socialism. After the war, Gayer was a member of the CDU (see Jan Knauer's dissertation, Tübingen 2012)
  10. ^ 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. 459 .
  11. ^ 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. 464 .
  12. cm city media GmbH - www.cmcitymedia.de: Remshalden municipality | Data & facts |. Retrieved May 10, 2018 .
  13. ^ Description of the Konradskirche in Geradstetten
  14. ^ Church chronicle of Remshalden
  15. Church and religious communities in Remshalden
  16. Holder: single-axle and four-wheel tractor from Metzingen . September 6, 2015.
  17. Irmscher closes work in Remstal ( Memento of the original from October 23, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The 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. . Econo , November 21, 2012. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.econo.de
  18. ^ Website of the Geradstetten elementary school , school history, accessed on September 14, 2019
  19. Presentation of the Grunbach elementary school by the Remshalden community
  20. ^ Homepage of the Grunbach primary school
  21. Presentation of the Geradstetten primary school by the Remshalden community
  22. Festschrift of the Realschule Remshalden
  23. Presentation of the Remshalden secondary school by the community
  24. Presentation of the construction training center by the municipality of Remshalden
  25. Website of the Education Center for Construction in Geradstetten
  26. Presentation of the IHK Bildungshaus by the municipality of Remshalden
  27. Homepage of the training center of the IHK Region Stuttgart
  28. Award of the Eichendorff badge 2007 in Blätter des Schwäbischer Albverein, issue 1/2008, p. 29f