Trier-Ruwer / Eitelsbach
Ruwer / Eitelsbach
District of Trier
Coordinates: 49 ° 47 ′ 8 " N , 6 ° 42 ′ 35" E
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Height : | 130 m above sea level NHN |
Area : | 9.1 km² |
Residents : | 3013 (Dec. 31, 2017) |
Population density : | 331 inhabitants / km² |
Incorporation : | 7th June 1969 |
Postal code : | 54292 |
Area code : | 0651 |
Location in the city of Trier
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Ruwer / Eitelsbach is one of the 19 districts of the city of Trier in Rhineland-Palatinate . The uninhabited nature reserve Kenner Flur on the Moselle belongs to Ruwer-Eitelsbach .
geography
The district with 3,013 inhabitants and an area of 910 ha is mainly in the area of the Ruwer estuary and consists of the two districts "Ruwer" and "Eitelsbach", see also: Eitelsbacher Straße . The districts of Duisburgerhof and Karthäuserhof belong to Eitelsbach, the districts of Hüsters-Mühle, Lambertys-Mühle and Trier waterworks belong to Ruwer.
The right tributaries of the Moselle are the Meierbach on the boundary of Trier-Kürenz and the Ruwer with its right tributaries Eitelsbach and Wenzelbach . The summit of the Grüneberg lies in the Ruwer-Maximin district. Kevenich was once located between Ruwer and Kenn .
history
Ruwer-Maximin (left the Ruwer ) and Ruwer-Paulin (right the Ruwer) were separate properties of the Trier Abbey of St. Maximin and the Paulin Abbey in the Middle Ages . They came to the Prussian Rhine Province in 1815 as communities in the district of Trier and were united in 1930 to form the community of Ruwer.
Eitelsbach belonged in the Middle Ages kurtrierischen Office Pfalzel . In 1815 it moved to the mayor's office in Casel, then to the mayor's office and to the Ruwer office.
The Verbandsgemeinde Ruwer was established in 1968 from the Ruwer office . As part of a local reorganization, the municipalities of Ruwer (with 2626 inhabitants at that time) and Eitelsbach (with 255 inhabitants) were incorporated into the city of Trier on June 7, 1969. Since 1974 they have been part of Trier as Ruwer / Eitelsbach. Until 2005, Trier-Ruwer was the seat of the Ruwer Association , which was then moved to Waldrach .
politics
Local advisory board
A local district was formed for the Ruwer / Eitelsbach district . The local council has 13 members, the chair of the local council is chaired by the directly elected mayor.
After the local elections on May 26, 2019 , the CDU is the strongest member of the local advisory council with five seats, while the SPD and UBT each have four seats.
For more information and historical data, see the results of the local elections in Trier .
Mayor
Christiane Probst (UBT) has been the mayor since the 2019 election . Her predecessor Monika Thenot (CDU) did not take up office after 15 years. Probst prevailed in the direct election on May 26, 2019 with a share of 62.84% of the vote.
Culture and clubs
The clubs in Trier-Ruwer / Eitelsbach are: Angelclub 1964 Ruwer-Kenn e. V., Angelsportverein Ruwer, Förderverein Kindergarten St. Clemens, Förderverein der Grundschule Ruwer, Volunteer Fire Brigade Ruwer, Youth Group Ruwer / Mertesdorf, Carnevalsverein Ruwer 1992 e. V., church choir Cäcilia Ruwer, men's choir Moselland Ruwer 1882, music club 1920 Ruwer-Eitelsbach, sports club Eintracht Ruwer 1945 e. V., Tennis Club Ruwer 1979 e. V. and gymnastics club Ruwer 1894.
See also: List of cultural monuments in Trier-Ruwer / Eitelsbach
Economy and Infrastructure
Well-known wineries are the Karthäuserhof owned by the Tyrell-Rautenstrauch family and the Duisburger Hof owned by the Bischöfliche Weingüter Trier . Many small and medium-sized companies are based in Ruwer / Eitelsbach, including branches of Sparkasse Trier , Volksbank Trier and Deutsche Post . There is also a gas station in Ruwer. A commercial and industrial area is located along Ruwerer Strasse in the direction of the Pfalzeler Brücke . The main Trier sewage treatment plant, the Ruwertal sewage treatment plant and the Trier waterworks, also known as Kenner Wasserwerk, are located in Ruwer / Eitelsbach.
In the local district are the Catholic parish church of St. Clemens , the Catholic branch church Vierzehn Nothelfer Eitelsbach, the kindergarten St. Clemens, the elementary school Ruwer and the sports field on Dorheck. There used to be a hospital in Ruwer , today there are several doctors and a pharmacy.
traffic
The Rhineland-Palatinate state roads 145 and 149 run through the district . The L 145 runs parallel to the Moselle through the village and connects Ruwer in a south-westerly direction with Trier-Nord , in a northward direction with Kenn . The L 149, which comes from Waldrach , runs through the Ruwertal . On the banks of the Moselle, the A 602 runs from Trier-Nord to Kenn. For information on local public transport, see: Local transport in Trier .
In Ruwer, the now disused lines of the Mosel Railway and the Hochwald Railway crossed . For many decades the place had two train stations: Ruwer (DB) (1889–1981) and Ruwer West (1903–1967). The former railway station Ruwer (DB) has been the starting point of the Ruwer-Hochwald -Radweg since 2006 , which runs almost the entire length of the Hochwaldbahn and connects to the Mosel-Radweg .
Sons and daughters of the municipality
- Ernst Huberty , sports reporter
- Udo Samel , actor (* 1953)
Personalities who work or have worked on site
- Reinhold Wirtz (1842–1898) was a German architect , local district and diocesan master builder for the Diocese of Trier , who designed the Catholic parish church of St. Clemens together with Franz Georg Himpler .
- Carl-Ludwig Wagner , former Lord Mayor of Trier and former Finance Minister and Prime Minister of Rhineland-Palatinate
- Hans-Joachim Doerfert , manager, lived in Ruwer
literature
- Ruwer in the course of time , illustrated book by Matthias Kordel (Verlag Michael Weyand , Trier 1993), ISBN 3-924631-46-8
- Ruwer and Eitelsbach: Two villages in the mirror of their history , by Matthias Kordel ( Kliomedia Verlag , Trier 2003), ISBN 3-89890-069-X
- Ruwer im Wandel der Zeit II , illustrated book by Matthias Kordel (Verlag Michael Weyand , Trier 2011), ISBN 978-3-935281-85-0
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Main and secondary residences
- ↑ Official municipality directory 2006, State Statistical Office Rhineland-Palatinate ( Memento from July 18, 2011 in the Internet Archive )
- ^ City of Trier: main statute. (PDF) § 2 to June 6, 2017, accessed on October 22, 2019 .
- ^ City of Trier - mayor / local advisory board. Accessed July 31, 2019 .
- ^ The Regional Returning Officer Rhineland-Palatinate: direct elections 2019. Trier, independent city, see seventh row of results. Retrieved October 22, 2019 .
- ↑ Website on the Duisburger Hof ( Memento from January 3, 2016 in the Internet Archive )