Gutenstein (Sigmaringen)

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Gutenstein
District town of Sigmaringen
Former Gutenstein municipal coat of arms
Coordinates: 48 ° 4 ′ 42 ″  N , 9 ° 6 ′ 56 ″  E
Height : 604 m above sea level NN
Area : 13.11 km²
Residents : 512  (December 20, 2007)
Population density : 39 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : July 1, 1974
Postal code : 72488
Area code : 07570
Gutenstein
Gutenstein

Gutenstein is a district of the Baden-Württemberg city ​​of Sigmaringen in the district of Sigmaringen ( Germany ). Until the district reform of 1973 in Baden-Württemberg , Gutenstein was an independent municipality in what was then the Stockach district ; On July 1, 1974, the place was incorporated into the district town of Sigmaringen.

geography

Geographical location

The village of Gutenstein, with an area of ​​1311 hectares (888 hectares of forest), is located 604 meters above sea ​​level on the valley slope of a Danube loop between Sigmaringen and Beuron , in the middle of the Upper Danube nature park and the breakthrough of the young Danube through the southwestern foothills of the Swabian Alb on Edge of the Heuberg . Gutenstein is divided into the core town south of the Danube and the settlement Furtäcker on the north bank .

geology

Gutenstein is framed by pre-glacial rocks that show how nature created the river's breakthrough valleys through the White Jura and how everything was once covered by a Jura sea - cf. also Jura (geology) - was surrounded by limestone reefs .

history

Gutenstein sword scabbard

The silver scabbard from Gutenstein

Gutenstein is a place steeped in history, whose origins go back to the Alemannic history of the early expansion period: In the Alemannic period Gutenstein was in the Gau Perahtoltspara, the Bertholdsbaar (there again in the Scherragrafschaft ). In 1887, during construction work in the immediate vicinity of St. Gallus Church, the row graves of two wealthy men from the end of the 7th century were found. In one of these graves there was a silver sword scabbard among the grave goods, which first went to the Museum of Prehistory and Early History in Berlin and, in the course of World War II, as looted art to the Pushkin Museum in Moscow . It can be assumed that Gutenstein's sword scabbard belonged to a high Alemannic nobleman, perhaps even from the Alaholfinger family , as part of a splendid sword .

Old documents and regesta for Gutenstein and St. Gallus in Gutenstein

  • A document dated 1212 shows the foundation of Kloster Wald by the Staufer Reichsministeriale ( Ministerialis Domini Imperatoris ) Burkard von Weckenstein (around 1180 to after 1241) for his sisters Judintha (= 1st abbess) and Ita (= 1st prioress) ; The brothers Cunrado and Wernherus de Gutenstain are also mentioned among the witnesses . Knight Burkard von Weckenstein, whose castle of the same name, Burg Weckenstein , was above Storzingen , on the right bank of the Schmeie , acquired the "praedium Wald" (today's village of Wald (Hohenzollern) and Kloster Wald) for 55 silver marks on March 21, 1212 by a noble man ( nobilis homo ) named Ulrich von Balbe and his mother Adelheid and sister Gertrud, on which there was already a small church ( ecclesiola ), which owned the parish rights and passed on to the buyer. The von Weckenstein family died out as early as 1383.
  • A confirmation letter dated July 15, 1216, issued in Überlingen , shows that the Staufer Friedrich II took the Wald nunnery under his protection. In addition to the abbots of St. Gallen and Salem, Werner von Guttenstein was among the witnesses. Under the same date, the minor Heinrich VII issued a letter of protection and confirmation to the Wald monastery in literal accordance with the privilege of his father Friedrich II. Conrad and Werner von Gutenstein were listed as witnesses.
  • In a document of the St. Gallen Monastery of August 17, 1264, a R (udolf) advocatus de Guotinstein is mentioned among the witnesses of a legal transaction, i.e. a noble bailiff of the place Gutenstein or that of the St. Gallen monastery, but perhaps also a bailiff from the von Wildenstein family , which Gutenstein had as a fief of St. Gallen .
  • In another St. Gallen document from March 13, 1372 a church in Gutenstein (kilchen ze Guotenstaine) is mentioned for the first time. It is a lapel that Johan Schmid von Wil issued to Abbot Georg von St. Gallen for the benefices of St. Leonhard in St. Gallen that remained to him.
  • Another St. Gallen document dated June 27, 1461 shows that Countess Anna von Zimmer, born von Kirchberg († August 15, 1478), wife of Werner the Younger von Zimmer (1423-1483), and the mayor of the village of Gutenstein (Ammann?) explain, “that she has to lend the parish church to Gutenstein, the Abbot Kasper of St. Gallen and a priest, whom the Lord zu Gutenstein and the subjects there elect and for whom they ask, should remain , the priest Hans Harthuser von Mengen unanimously chosen as church lord ”.

timeline

Gutenstein Castle

Alemannic row graves from the end of the 7th century have been proven. In 1212 Konrad and Werner von Gutenstein witnessed the founding of the Wald monastery, which was incorporated into the Cistercian order in 1217 and subordinated to the Salem Imperial Abbey , under the then Abbot Eberhard von Rohrdorf . Already before 1300 Gutenstein Castle with the village and Engelswies, which was probably already connected with Gutenstein at that time, came to Austria as a St. Gallen fief ( Habsburg land register from 1306/1307); previously with the Lords of Wildenstein. In 1292 Heinrich von Magenbuch became pledge master of the Habsburg fief Gutenstein, which had already been designated as a rulership district. There is evidence that Konrad von Magenbuch lived in the Altgutenstein (Burgfelden) in Gutenstein between 1345 and 1353 . In 1306 Duke Friedrich I of Austria pledged the goods and income of Gutenstein and "transferred" the fishing there (the right to fish) to Heinrich von Magenbuch. Konrad von Magenbuch loaned Duke Rudolf of Austria 1,200 guilders in 1362 and received Gutenstein, Engelswies and the bailiff to Mengen and Sigmaringendorf . On February 14, 1373, Burkhard von Reischach zu Niedergutenstein on the Danube certified that he was compared to Count Eberhard II of Württemberg , and opened his fortress Gutenstein (Burgfelden), which was a fiefdom of Austria. From 1398 to 1427 the gentlemen Hans and Marquard von Ramsperg (see also: Ramsberg Castle (Großschönach) ) held the Gutenstein pledge. From 1427 to 1455 the place and castle Gutenstein as well as the Gutenstein rule - in addition to Gutenstein at that time Engelswies (now part of Inzigkofen ) was pledged to the lords of Zimmer . In 1455 Archduke Sigismund of Austria (cf. Siegmund (Austria-Tyrol) zu Innsbruck) renounced the release of the pledge (castle and village Gutenstein and Engelswies) as long as the male line of the brothers Werner and Gottfried von Zimmer existed. In 1458, Duke Sigismund of Austria zu Radolfzell gave Werner von Zimmer the other half in addition to the pledge of Gutenstein, which included the wild ban on this side of the Danube as far as the Mühlheim valley. As long as the pledge lasted, he and his heirs were allowed to hunt in this district. The Gutenstein pastor Gregor Spätt (approx. 1480–1537) put on a parish bar in 1513 , which for Gutenstein and Vilsingen (at that time a church branch of Gutenstein) beyond the recording of grain income, interest and taxes of the parish is of great historical importance. After the death of the last Count of Zimmer, Wilhelm von Zimmer , in 1594 the Gutenstein pledge fell back to Austria, after which the village belonged to the upper county of Hohenberg (Swabian noble family) . In addition to Engelswies, which had been associated with Gutenstein since the 14th century, Ablach and Altheim also came under Gutenstein's rule in 1595 .

From 1609 to 1618 Austria lent the rule of Gutenstein to Margrave Karl von Burgau (1560–1618), who resided in Günzburg . In 1624 Prince Johann von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen became a pawn of Gutenstein. During the Thirty Years' War , Gutenstein stayed with Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen during this time , 104 men from the Gutenstein lordship were set up as musketeers , who were under the leadership of Captain Andreas Riester, Lieutenant Urban Mors and Sergeant (Veldwaibels) Wilhelm Barfüeßer. A "Trummenschlager and a Pfeiffer" completed the line-up, while 68 double mercenaries formed the reserve. On February 15, 1632 at midnight there was fighting and looting in Meßstetten under the Obervogt zu Gutenstein. Several citizens of Meßstetter were fatally wounded. According to oral tradition, the bells were removed from the church tower and transported to Schwenningen. In 1652 Count Maximilian von Mohr became pledge master of the Gutenstein estate. From 1655 to 1834 the Barons Schenk von Castell (originally from Thurgau , Mammertshofen Castle ) received the Gutenstein rule as a pledge. In the same year, Emperor Leopold I of Austria elevated the barons Schenk von Castell to hereditary imperial count because of their “services to the emperor and empire”. In the 18th century, the Count Schenk von Castell was given the rule of Gutenstein as a fief. The most famous feudal lord of the Schenk von Castell family was Franz Ludwig Reichsgraf Schenk von Castell , the famous and notorious Malefizschenk . Already after the Second Coalition War , Napoleon forced the fall of Upper Austria , which resulted in profound social changes. Instead of the small lordly territories, new state structures emerged, such as the Grand Duchy of Baden , the Kingdom of Württemberg or the Principality of Hohenzollern .

With the abdication of Emperor Franz II , the end of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation had come. The King of Württemberg and the Grand Duke of Baden sealed on October 2, 1810 in Paris a "Frontier Treaty between the Kingdom of Württemberg and the Grand Duchy of Baden". As a result, Gutenstein was assigned to the Grand Duchy of Baden. Gutenstein was administered by the district office of Meßkirch , from 1824 on by the district office in Pfullendorf , from 1826 on by the district office of Stetten am kalten Markt , and in 1849 it was again transferred to the office of Meßkirch. After the so-called "rule of the hundred days" of Napoleon I and his decisive defeat against the allies (Prussia, Austria, Great Britain) in the Battle of Waterloo on June 18, 1815, at the same time the end of the Napoleonic Wars , Austrian military police troops of the 11th Imperial Regiment quartered in Gutenstein on the march back to Austria on November 25th and 26th, 1815. The first-born son of the “Malefizschenk”, Hereditary Count Franz Joseph Schenk von Castell (1767–1845), sold the “manorial hillside Gutenstein” on October 29, 1834 for 35,000 guilders to the “Countess von Langenstein'sche Guardianship”, represented by the “ Gräflich Langenstein'schen Rentamtmann ”in Stetten akM, for Countess Katharina von Langenstein (1799–1850), formerly Katharina Werner, and her underage son Ludwig Graf von Langenstein (1820–1872). The sale specifically included the manorial goods and rights in the village of Gutenstein, including the castle of the same name. The seller undertook to provide the two municipalities of Engelswies and Altheim with the necessary funds, namely the municipality of Engelswies 30,000 guilders, the municipality of Altheim 13,000 guilders (Ablach became a Hohenzollern sovereign in 1812, and in 1831 also a landlord), the two communities Engelswies and Altheim, because of the contractually already concluded ransom from their manor Gutenstein. to advance. The revolution broke out in Baden in 1848 , and it also reached Gutenstein. In June 1849 a people's association with 32 members was founded there under the leadership of former mayor Johann Blender. In addition to the Volksverein, another ten Gutensteiners were involved in the revolutionary army and in the May revolution of 1849; all those involved were listed as prisoners in Rastatt "Fort C" or "Fort A" from July 29, 1849 . With the abolition of the district of Stetten am kalten Markt on November 19, 1849 by the Grand Ducal Baden Ministry of the Interior, Gutenstein was reassigned to the district office of Meßkirch.

After construction began in 1848 and with several interruptions, the Danube Valley Road between Sigmaringen and Beuron was completed in 1858, thus opening up the romantic Danube Valley. In the Gutenstein district, five tunnels were blasted into the rock and knocked out. On January 18, 1871, the imperial proclamation was made before the assembled Federal Prince of Wilhelm I of Prussia in the Palace of Versailles by Grand Duke Friedrich I of Baden ; Baden became a federal state in the German Empire . The Tuttlingen – Inzigkofen railway was completed in 1890. On November 26th, the opening and handover of a train station for passenger and freight traffic was celebrated. The Baden communities of Gutenstein, Langenhart , Kreenheinstetten , Leibertingen with Lengenfeld, Buchheim, Worndorf, Engelswies, Liptingen, Oberschwandorf and the Württemberg Neuhausen ob Eck founded the "Heuberg water supply association on the right of the Danube" on August 20, 1898 in Meßkirch. Gutenstein's Mayor Albert Blender (1855–1915) was elected chairman of the administrative committee. The new water supply went into operation between January 31 and February 1, 1900.

In November 1918, at the end of the First World War , Gutenstein had 22 casualties - or victims who died from their immediate war wounds - as well as missing persons. Gutenstein came to the Stockach Oberamt in 1936 , and from 1939 to the Stockach district. When the unconditional surrender came into effect on May 9, 1945 after the Second World War , Gutenstein had 27 casualties - or victims who died from their immediate war wounds - as well as missing persons to mourn. Gutenstein was placed under French occupation . The Constituent Assembly of Baden-Württemberg was elected on March 9, 1952, and on April 25, it elected Reinhold Maier as the first Prime Minister of the new federal state. On May 17, the state parliaments and governments of the previous states of Baden, Württemberg-Baden and Württemberg-Hohenzollern were repealed. The Stockach district and thus Gutenstein were incorporated into the newly created south-west state .

As part of the regional reform in Baden-Württemberg , Gutenstein was incorporated into the town of Sigmaringen on July 1, 1974. This was preceded by sometimes heated debates about whether a merger with Beuron - Hausen im Tal - Thiergarten would not be more favorable for Gutenstein. As part of a by the district administrator of the district of Sigmaringen, Max Gögler scheduled, and the mayors concerned citizens' decision , the vast majority of the merger voted with the town Sigmaringen. The last mayor of Gutenstein, Karl Kleiner (1915–1978), handed over the official business to the first mayor August Stroppel (1908–1995). At that time the mayor of Sigmaringen was Rudolf Kuhn (1928-2010).

The Baden part of Thiergarten on the right of the Danube also belonged to the community of Gutenstein . The Baden community was assigned to the community of Gutenstein in 1890. After hearing the residents, this and the Hohenzollern part of Thiergarten, which last belonged to the municipality of Inzigkofen , was reclassified to the municipality of Beuron on January 1, 1977 .

In February 2011, Gutenstein was shooting Die Sterntaler , a film adaptation of the Grimm fairy tale of the same name for the ARD fairy tale series " Six in one stroke ".

religion

The last election in the Archdiocese of Freiburg for the five-member parish council of Gutenstein took place on March 14, 2010. In virtue of his office as head of the Laiz - Inzigkofen pastoral care unit and pastor of Laiz and Gutenstein, the Gutenstein parish council also includes dean Christoph Neubrand. All members of the local parish council belong to the overall parish council of the pastoral care unit, whose chairman is Klaus-Peter Bürkle from the parish council Gutenstein.

The pastoral care unit Laiz-Inzigkofen - and thus Gutenstein - belongs in the structure of the Archdiocese of Freiburg to the dean's office Sigmaringen-Meßkirch and this in turn belongs to the diocese region of Lake Constance / Hohenzollern .

Since 1803 the Salem Monastery was secularized and fell to the House of Baden, there have also been individual Protestant believers in the originally Catholic area. Around 60 Protestant Christians live in Gutenstein today. You belong to the Ev. Parish of Stetten am kalten Markt.

politics

Local council

In the last local election in Baden-Württemberg on June 7, 2009, the FWV achieved five seats (joint electoral list), Gutenstein's mayor is Peter Herr.

coat of arms

Gutenstein coat of arms
Blazon : "In a shield divided by silver and red, a deer antler with mixed up colors."
Justification of the coat of arms: The deer antlers and the subdivided colors go back to the Count Schenk von Castell . Gutenstein accepted the coat of arms in 1897 at the suggestion of the General State Archives.

Partnerships

Gutenstein maintains a partnership or friendship with the following municipalities:

Culture and sights

Buildings

  • Parish Church of St. Gallus (1541 built as a Gothic choir tower with gable roof , in the 18th century Baroque style of the nave. Its wall is decorated with a created wooden Crucifixion that Felizian Hegenauer is attributed. The church organ was constructed in 1890 as Opus 51 by the organ builder William Black & Son from Überlingen ). Next to the church there is a memorial to commemorate those who died in both world wars.
  • Gutenstein Castle (T-shaped floor plan with three gables, three-storey plastered limestone building, probably built in the 16th century or rebuilt in the 18th century, in the spur position ); not accessible, private since 1978.
  • Altgutenstein castle ruins (remains of the Burgfelden wall on the neighboring rock, can be attributed to the 12th century, mentioned as early as 1212.)
  • The ruins of the Broken Gutenstein castle were a humpback square built between two rock teeth not far from the Dietfurt ruins and the Inzigkofen train station. Already mentioned in 1354 as "New Guotenstain", later owned by the Lords of Reischach, the castle finally fell to Hohenzollern in 1783. Remnants of masonry have been preserved from the castle.
  • The ruins of Lenzenberg Castle on a rock above the Danube.
  • Road tunnel, on the left side of the Danube in the Gutenstein district there are five tunnels, built in the period 1854–1855 and 1856–1857, which are considered unique technical monuments in southwest Germany from the 19th century. The father of the Gutenstein writer Joseph Stöckle , the stone carver Andreas Stöckle (1817–1897), played a key role in these tunnel construction .

Natural monuments

  • The Kreuzfelsen , formerly called "Brechfelsen", north of the Donautalstraße (L 277), used to have two peaks, as an engraving from 1890 shows. Both were adorned with a summit cross. Later a peak was removed and the material was transported by train to the Karlsruhe stone works for carbide production . In a storm in 1977, the cross was swept off the other rock. The community erected a new cross, for this purpose a metal frame was concreted in the rock for attachment. The striking small memorial was renewed at the end of April 2015 by the Gutenstein volunteer fire brigade and consecrated on St. Florian Day . The cross was made of oak cut in the city forest, is 6.50 meters high and has a 2.50 meter wide, bolted cross beam. A stainless steel sheet bears the words "In memory of our deceased fire-brigade comrades". It is illuminated at Christmas time. The unpaved rock head at around 650  m above sea level. NN offers a good view of town and valley.
  • Castle rocks , on which Gutenstein Castle rises.
  • Teufelslochfelsen , with two inaccessible caves, one of which is a stalactite cave ; the antiquity finds made in the period from July 3 to October 4, 1933 through excavations by Eduard Peters (1869–1948) gave evidence of cave settlement since at least the Mesolithic or Mesolithic .
  • Below the ruins of Broken Gutenstein there are two rocks approved for climbing: the lookout rock and the triangular rock . The Danube Calanques is at the weir .
  • To Broken Gutenstein is a dry grassland with characteristic small vegetation, the special flora and fauna has, such as old stocks of juniper , the vulnerable Schell flower , or shrubs such as hazel and honeysuckle as well as book and ash trees . There are also rare butterfly species such as the buckthorn hairstreak .

societies

  • Altenkreis / Senior Circle Gutenstein
  • Charitable association of the Catholic parishes of St. Peter & St. Paul in Laiz, St. Johannes dT in Inzigkofen and St. Gallus in Gutenstein from 2001
  • Fishing club "Donautal" Gutenstein
  • Gutenstein fishing association
  • Sigmaringen voluntary fire brigade , Gutenstein department from 1927
  • Aid project MARIPHIL (Association of Friends); Seat: Gutenstein
  • Catholic Church Choir Gutenstein (member of the General Cecilia Association for Germany from 1868 in the Diocesan Cecilia Association of the Archdiocese of Freiburg)
  • Catholic rural youth movement - KLJB - Gutenstein
  • Musikverein "Eintracht" Gutenstein from 1833 (2009 award of the Pro Musica plaque )
  • Motorcycle Club - MCG - Gutenstein
  • Swabian Albverein , Upper Danube Gau - Gutenstein local group (code 230-15)
  • Social association VdK , Gutenstein local association from 1948
  • Theater and Carnival Association "Felsenpicker" Gutenstein from 1990
  • Gymnastics and Sports Club (TUS) Gutenstein from 1965 (departments for football, tennis and popular sports)

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

The place is on the Tuttlingen – Inzigkofen railway line, but the trains no longer stop at Gutenstein station, so the bus has to be taken from Sigmaringen or Beuron.

Largely parallel to the romantic Danube Valley Road (L 277), with its tunnels carved into the limestone rock between 1854 and 1857 , the so-called Danube Cycle Path leads directly through the village. Coming from Donaueschingen, you can take this exciting long-distance cycle path to Vienna , from there you can travel through the Donau-Auen National Park to the Slovakian border and on to the Black Sea .

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the place

  • Alfons Beil (born September 3, 1896 in Gutenstein; † March 1, 1997 in Heidelberg ): priest, dean, monsignor, Dr. phil. and Dr. theol., author of various books and book chapters as well as numerous articles.
  • Albert Blender (* December 25, 1855 in Gutenstein; † February 2, 1915 ibid): Mayor from 1889 to 1914, initiator to this day of essential infrastructure measures such as B. the Heuberg water supply to the right of the Danube or the construction of the council and school building.
  • Hedwig von Gutenstein : she lived in the 13th century and was abbess of the Cistercian monastery in Wald until August 1, 1279 at least. She belonged (probably) to the Staufer family of imperial ministers from Gutenstein, whose family members appear in the Walder foundation letter of 1212.
  • Alfons Semler (January 6, 1886 in Gutenstein; † March 14, 1960 in Überlingen ): Professor Dr. phil., librarian and archivist, author of many books and articles.
  • Max Solbrig (born October 15, 1889 in Gutenstein, † June 4, 1959 in Darmstadt ): Deputy NSDAP Gauleiter Kurhessen-Waldeck, founding president of the Brothers Grimm Society (1942).
  • Joseph Stöckle (born December 19, 1844 in Gutenstein; † May 27, 1893 in Schwetzingen ): former philologist, high school professor, writer, founder of the German bushel union.

Personalities related to the place

  • Hans Jörgen Gerlach (born November 23, 1950 in Altshausen; † January 7, 2011 in Berlin): local researcher on the history of Gutenstein, wrote the church history of Sankt Gallus (still unpublished).
  • Erich Felix Beck (born April 29, 1887 in Sigmaringen; † February 25, 1973 in Gutenstein): priest, dean, clergyman, author, honorary citizen of Möhringen an der Donau .
  • Balthasar Bücheler (* 1615 in Kreenheinstetten ; † October 30, 1687 in Gutenstein): priest, relative and presumed supporter of the boy Johann Ulrich Megerle from Kreenheinstetten (now part of Leibertingen), who later became Abraham a Sancta Clara (1644–1709) became famous, especially in Vienna; Pastor in Gutenstein from 1657 to 1687.
  • Hildegard Gerster-Schwenkel (born March 11, 1923 in Stuttgart; † November 27, 2016 in Gerlingen): daughter of the former Württemberg state curator Hans Schwenkel (1886–1957), teacher, author of Swabian dialect poems, many publications. She lived in Gutenstein for several years, most recently in Gerlingen .
  • Franz Ludwig Reichsgraf Schenk von Castell (born August 25, 1736 in Oberdischingen ; † May 21, 1821 there): the so-called Malefizschenk; after the death of his father, Marquart Willibald Graf Schenk von Castell in 1764, he took over the rule of Gutenstein.
  • Franz Anton Scherzinger (born February 7, 1735 in Triberg ; † August 21, 1793 in Gutenstein): priest, dean, grand canon.

annotation

  1. Inhabitants of the "Furtäcker" tied back to the core area . In: Südkurier of March 24, 2011
  2. a b Teufelsloch and Rabenfelsen . Pp. 14-16. In: Wanderbar ... the most beautiful routes. Experience the Sigmaringen district . Sigmaringen district office, Schönebeck printing company, Meßkirch 2004.
  3. See also Baar (history)
  4. see National Museums in Berlin
  5. Original: General State Archives Karlsruhe; Replica: document no. 1249, REC Volume I, Regesta of the Bishops of Constance, in the Freiburg Diocesan Archives
  6. cf. in addition Weckenstein Castle
  7. cf. also Regesta Imperii , reference RI V1, 1 n.870.
  8. cf. to Regesta Imperii , reference RI V1, 2 n. 3845th
  9. Certificate No. 1741 of the Regesta in the Chartularium Sangallense , Volume VIII, St. Gallen 1998.
  10. Certificate No. 5313 of the Regesta in the Chartularium Sangallense , Vol. VIII; St. Gallen 1998.
  11. Certificate No. 6524 in the document book of the Abbey of Sanct Gallen, Part VI, St. Gallen 1955.
  12. ^ Hermann Krauss: Local and Church History of Meßstetten . 75th anniversary of the church. Ed .: Organ Fund Pastor Peter Gall. Meßstetten 1989, p. 27 .
  13. a b Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality register 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. 549 f .
  14. See Common Official Gazette for Baden-Württemberg 197 , p. 662.
  15. Ute Korn-Amann / uka: Film work: Donautal becomes little Hollywood. Several scenes for the fairy tale "Die Sterntaler" are shot at Gutenstein's . In: Schwäbische Zeitung from February 3, 2011
  16. Helmut Stroppel: National Day of Mourning. Gutensteiners commemorate the war dead. In: Schwäbische Zeitung from November 18, 2008
  17. To Inzigkofer Park . Pp. 11-13. In: Wanderbar ... the most beautiful routes. Experience the Sigmaringen district . Sigmaringen district office, Schönebeck printing company, Meßkirch 2004.
  18. Helmut Stroppel (sys): Vicar Gompper consecrates rock cross. Look into history. In: Südkurier from May 6, 2015.
  19. Firefighters dedicate a new wooden cross on the cross rock to their deceased comrades. In: Südkurier of April 30, 2015.
  20. Ute Korn-Amann (uka): Landscape maintenance . The chainsaws howl at Gutenstein's. In: Schwäbische Zeitung from October 6, 2010.
  21. See above "Old documents"

literature

  • Marion Bertram: Алеманньі - The Alamanni - The Alamans ; in: Wilfried Menghin (ed.): Merovingian time - Europe without borders . Catalog manual. Wolfratshausen: Edition Minerva, 2007; Pp. 168-181. (On page 174 full-page illustration of the “sword scabbard of Gutenstein”) ISBN 978-3-938832-18-9 .
  • Hermann Eris Busse: In the tip of the Baden riding boot ; in: “Badische Heimat. Journal for Folklore, Heritage, Nature and Monument Protection ”, 21st year, annual issue 1934,“ Between Lake Constance and Danube. Stockach - Meßkirch - Pfullendorf ", ed. by Hermann Eris Busse, Freiburg i.Br., 1934; Pp. 4-68.
  • Hansmartin Decker-Hauff (ed.) With the collaboration of Rudolf Seigel: The Chronicle of the Counts of Rooms. Manuscripts 580 and 581 of the Princely Fürstenbergische Hofbibliothek Donaueschingen . Constance: Jan Thorbecke Verlag, 1964–1972 (3 volumes, incomplete).
  • Friedrich Eisele: On the history of the parish Vilsingen . Freiburg Diocesan Archives: New Series, Volume 24, 1923.
  • Walter Gans: The Gutenstein rule as a type of the unclosed Swabian dwarf rule (based on the Gutensteiner land register of 1690) . Unpublished typescript (approval work Weingarten), 1967. (Holdings: library of the Pedagogical University Weingarten; call number: 67/48.)
  • Friedrich Garscha: The sword scabbard from Gutenstein ; in: “People and prehistory. Popular notebooks for Upper Rhine prehistory and early history ", ed. from the Baden State Office for Monument Preservation. Karlsruhe 1/1939; Pp. 1-11.
  • Friedrich Garscha: The Alemanni in South Baden . Berlin: Verlag Walter de Gruyter, 1970; P. 82/83 and plate 31.
  • Franz Götz & Alois Beck: Langenstein Castle and Lordship in Hegau . Hegau Library Volume 22. Radolfzell: Verlag Huggle and Meurer, 1972.
  • Gisela Gros: The beginnings of the Wald monastery. From the founding year 1212 to 1300 . Unpublished typescript (approval work Freiburg i. Br.), 1955. (Holdings: Princely Hohenzollern House and Domain Archive, Sigmaringen.)
  • Werner Hacker: Emigration from the northern Lake Constance area in the 17th and 18th centuries - archival documentation (Hegau library, vol. 29). Singing: Hegau History Association, 1975. ISBN 3-921413-00-1 .
  • P. Notker Hiegl, OSB: Hausen im Tal. Castles and citizens then and now . Engen: Stähle Druck und Verlag, [o. D., presumably 1990].
  • Erika Jeuck & Wolfgang Schaffer (eds.): 1200 years of Stetten am kalten Markt (799–1999). History of the community and its districts Frohnstetten, Glashütte, Nusplingen, Storzingen . Ulm: Süddeutsche Verlagsgesellschaft, 1999. ISBN 3-88294-275-4 .
  • Alfons Kasper: Art walks all over the Danube . Bad Schussenried: Dr. Alfons Kasper Verlag, 1964. 2nd, revised edition, 1985.
  • Franz Xaver Kraus (ed.): The art monuments of the Grand Duchy of Baden . First volume: The art monuments of the Constance district . Freiburg i.Br .: Academic Publishing Bookshop JCB Mohr, 1887.
  • Albert Krieger: Topographical Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden , 2 volumes; ed. from the Baden Historical Commission. Heidelberg: Carl Winter's university bookstore, 1904–1905.
  • Anton Kronenthaler: The end of the war in Gutenstein in 1945 ; in: "From dictatorship to occupation". Local history series of publications from the district of Sigmaringen, Volume 4. Konstanz: UVK Verlagsgesellschaft, 1995; Pp. 227-232.
  • Maren Kuhn-Rehfus : The Cistercian convent forest (= Germania Sacra , new part 30, the dioceses of the ecclesiastical province of Mainz. The diocese of Constance, volume 3 ). Walter de Gruyter, Berlin & New York 1992. ISBN 3-11-013449-7 .
  • Landesarchivdirektion Baden-Württemberg (ed.): The state of Baden-Württemberg. Official description by district and municipality . Stuttgart: Verlag W. Kohlhammer, 1974–1983; 8 volumes, on Gutenstein cf. volumes 2 and 7.
  • Rudolf Maag (ed.): The Habsburg land register. Volume I. The actual land register on the income and rights . Basel: Verlag Adolf Geering, 1894. (In it specifically on Gutenstein pp. 427–433.)
  • Ursula Mallkowsky & Johann Blender: Gutensteiner operated a lively trade in Roman snails - a delicacy in Parisian gourmet restaurants. On the slimy track to prosperity ; in: “Südkurier” No. 9 / MP, Konstanz, January 13, 2005; P. 25.
  • Philipp Anton Guido Meyer (ed.): Corpus Juris Confoederationis Germanicae or State Acts for History and Public Law of the German Confederation (Part 1: State Treaties). Frankfurt am Main, ³1858. In it on pp. 125–127 the “Frontier Treaty between the Kingdom of Württemberg and the Grand Duchy of Baden; Paris October 2nd, 1810 ”.
  • Julius Naue: The silver scabbard from Gutenstein (Grand Duchy of Baden) ; in: “Communications from the Anthropological Society in Vienna”, Volume XIX (NF Vol. IX); Vienna 1889; Pp. 1-7.
  • Heinrich Niester: Castles and palaces in Baden. Based on templates from ancient times (Volume 18 of the series “Castles - Palaces - Manor houses”). Frankfurt am Main: Verlag Wolfgang Weidlich, 1961.
  • Willi Rößler: Field crosses, wayside shrines, memorials and boundary stones in the Sigmaringen district . Horb am Neckar: Geiger-Verlag, 2005. ISBN 3-86595-043-4 .
  • Christoph Schmider & Edwin Ernst Weber: Municipal and church archive maintenance in rural areas. History, problems and perspectives using the case study of the parish and parish archives in Kreenheinstetten . Local history publication series of the district of Sigmaringen, Volume 5. Saulgau: Gebrüder Edel, 1997; ISBN 3-931634-01-9 .
  • Joseph Stöckle: Guide through the Upper Danube Valley from Donaueschingen to Sigmaringen and its side valleys (Woerl's travel guides). Würzburg & Vienna: Verlag Leo Woerl, 1888.
  • Joseph Stöckle: Memories from the Donauthale . Meßkirch: Karl Willi printing works, 1889.
  • Alfred Stroppel: From a late medieval pastor - from church keepers and holy courts, from anniversaries and carnival cakes from a 500-year-old manuscript of the parish of Gutenstein and Vilsingen . Dettingen / Teck: self-published, 2005.
  • Helmut Stroppel: The Gutenstein district and their field names . Unpublished typescript (approval work Weingarten), 1972. (Holdings: library of the Pedagogical University Weingarten; call number: 72/244.)
  • Berthold Sütterlin: History of Baden - Volume I: Early times and the Middle Ages . Karlsruhe: Verlag G. Braun, ²1965.
  • Edwin Ernst Weber (arr.): Between pilgrimage, poverty and liberalism. The local history of Engelswies in village testimonies . Published by the district of Sigmaringen in conjunction with the municipality of Inzigkofen. Sigmaringen: Jan Thorbecke Verlag, 1994.
  • Edwin Ernst Weber: Between ore house, pawnbrokers and feudal lords. The Upper Austrian rule Gutenstein ; in: Andreas Zekorn et al. (Ed.): Front Austria on the Upper Neckar and Upper Danube . Constance: UVK Verlagsgesellschaft, 2002; Pp. 181-202. [Published on behalf of the Rottweil, Sigmaringen, Tuttlingen and Zollernalb districts] ISBN 3-89669-966-0 .
  • Friedrich Wielandt : The treasure trove of Gutenstein, an Upper Swabian cash capital from the 17th century ; in: “German coin sheets. Organ of the United Numismatic Societies of Germany and Austria ”, ed. by Tassilo Hoffmann and Busso Peus, 57th year, no. 414/415; Berlin, June / July 1937; Pp. 341-346.
  • Michael Wilhelm: The Gutenstein stalactite cave (Swabian Alb 7920/20) ; in: “Announcements Association of German Cave and Karst Researchers”; 20th year, No. 2 (Munich, June 1, 1974); Pp. 38–43 (3 illustrations).

Essential archive sources for Gutenstein

Web links

Commons : Gutenstein  - collection of images, videos and audio files