Sinnerthal

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Sinnerthal
City of Neunkirchen
Coordinates: 49 ° 21 '8 "  N , 7 ° 8' 38"  E
Residents : 549  (Dec. 31, 2018)
Postal code : 66540
Area code : 06821
Sinnerthal (Saarland)
Sinnerthal

Location of Sinnerthal in Saarland

Sinnerthal is a district of Neunkirchen (Saar) west of the city center. Today the place is a purely residential area with six streets.

geography

Sinnerthal is located on the Sinnerbach between Neunkirchen and Landsweiler-Reden, not far from the marshalling yard of Neunkirchen main station .

history

Memorial at the Sinnerthal sewage treatment plant

A settlement can be proven around 1200. The place name, formerly Sindern or Sinderthal, allows several interpretations. In 1430 iron smiths and coal mines are mentioned in Sinderdal .

A sawmill had existed here since around 1700, which was bought and demolished by the Neunkirchen community in 1908. That is why Sinnerthal used to be called "the Säemiahl" in Neunkirchen. The Schlawerie housing estate was built on the Sinnerthaler Weg between Neunkirchen and Sinnerthal in the 18th century .

Sinnerthal was hit by the gasometer explosion in Neunkirchen on February 10, 1933 .

Economy and Infrastructure

There is a mine in the Reden mine on site. In 1888, 57% of the workforce worked in mining . This changed with the success of the Neunkircher Eisenwerk , whose employees made up 24% of the labor force in 1939, while only 10% were employed in mining.

With the decline of the Neunkircher Hütte and the Reden mine in the 1980s, the retail sector left the district, which became a purely residential area. In the 1990s, the Praktiker DIY store set up shop and took over the building of the old Real store . Both belonged to the Metro Group . In 2013 the Praktiker branch was changed to a Max Bahr DIY store . The property has been vacant since the Praktiker / Max Bahr group went bankrupt.

In 2004, Reha GmbH built a dormitory for people with the most severe disabilities .

Number of inhabitants
year 1951 1977 1988 2000 2015
Residents 977 714 600 620 574

Culture and sights

The place is shaped by its club life. A horticultural club and a gymnastics club are based in Sinnerthal. The Prellball team played in the Bundesliga for years and hosted the German Prellball Championship in 2003 . The Saukaulenweg, a 7.2 km long hiking trail, "leads through the forest towards Madenfelder Hof and over the Nusskopf hill back to the Sinnerthal fish pond".

The Frankenfeldstrasse cemetery for Heinitz , Sinnerthal and the Schlawerie has been occupied since 1936 and has had a morgue since 1951 . There is a cemetery for Soviet prisoners of war in World War II .

A sewage treatment plant is located on the area of ​​the former prisoner of war camp . There is a memorial by the artist Seiji Kimoto to commemorate the camp. It represents a collapsing barrack against which a person is bracing himself.

Personalities

Individual evidence

  1. Neunkirchen: Population status 2018 , accessed on March 24, 2019
  2. a b c d Karin Mayer: Sinnerthal. (No longer available online.) SR 3 Saarlandwelle , September 2004, formerly in the original ; Retrieved April 23, 2012 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.sr-online.de  
  3. a b Werner Fried: Vom Sinderdale, Plättchesdohle and Hofern ( Memento of the original from May 26, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . In: Neunkirchen city magazine "es Heftche" , issue 128, December 2008. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.nk.es-heftche.de
  4. Cf. Rolf Spang : The names of the waters of the Saarland. Saarbrücken 1982, ISBN 3-921646-45-6 , p. 170.
  5. ^ Uwe Eduard Schmidt: Forest and hunting history in the Neunkirchen area up to the end of the 19th century . In: Rainer Knauf and Christof Trepesch (eds.): Neunkircher Stadtbuch . District town Neunkirchen, 2005, ISBN 3-00-015932-0 , p. 77 .
  6. ^ The hour of birth of the iron and steel industry in Neunkirchen. Saarbrücker Zeitung , July 2, 2009, accessed on April 23, 2012 .
  7. Sinnerthal district. (No longer available online.) City of Neunkirchen, formerly in the original ; Retrieved April 23, 2012 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.neunkirchen.de  
  8. ^ Helmut Frühauf: Neunkirchen's settlement development in industrialization . In: Rainer Knauf and Christof Trepesch (eds.): Neunkircher Stadtbuch . District town Neunkirchen, 2005, ISBN 3-00-015932-0 , p. 113 .
  9. Live and live according to needs . In: Saarbrücker Zeitung . September 16, 2005 ( reha-marketing.de ).
  10. Katrin Carl, Christian Reuther, Dennis Schuld: Kleine chroNiK. A journey through time through the history of Neunkirchen. District town Neunkirchen 2019. pp. 23–25
  11. Saukaulenweg Sinnerthal. (No longer available online.) City of Neunkirchen, formerly in the original ; Retrieved April 23, 2012 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.neunkirchen.de  
  12. ^ Cemetery Sinnerthal / Frankenfeldstrasse. City of Neunkirchen, accessed on April 23, 2012 .
  13. ^ Rainer Knauf: Fallen memorials, war victims' memorials, memorials for the victims of National Socialism . In: Rainer Knauf and Christof Trepesch (eds.): Neunkircher Stadtbuch . District town Neunkirchen, 2005, ISBN 3-00-015932-0 , p. 324 f .