Deep louder

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Deep louder
community Lautertal
Coordinates: 50 ° 19 ′ 50 ″  N , 10 ° 58 ′ 11 ″  E
Height : 344 m above sea level NN
Residents : 297  (2004)
Incorporation : 1st July 1969
Postal code : 96486
Primaries : 09566, 09561
Francis Chapel
Francis Chapel

Tiefenlauter is a district of the Upper Franconian community Lautertal in the Coburg district .

location

Tiefenlauter is located about eight kilometers northeast of Coburg an der Lauter (also known as Lauterbach), into which the Weißbach flows. The district road CO 27, formerly federal road 4 , leads through Tiefenlauter . A community road to Drossenhausen branches off from the district road.

history

Tiefenlauter was first mentioned in 1317 as "Tyffenlutter" in the Urbarium , a list of possessions of the Hennebergers when they acquired the New Rulership. The place name indicates the location deep between the highest mountains.

At the beginning of the 14th century, Tiefenlauter was under the rule of the Henneberger . In 1353 the place with the Coburg Land came by inheritance to the Wettins and was thus part of the Electorate of Saxony from 1485 , from which the Duchy of Saxony-Coburg later emerged. From around 1440 to around 1580, the settlement was deserted , i.e. uninhabited. Around 1618 there were three estates and seven Sölden in Tiefenlauter. In 1508 six and in 1618 nine able-bodied men lived in Tiefenlauter. There were also six horses and twenty cattle. After the Thirty Years' War there were five able-bodied men in 1650 and there were still five inhabited houses.

After two and a half years of construction, the Werra Railway was inaugurated in November 1858 , which was laid on the slope east of the village. In 1887 a bus stop with a turnout was set up on the deep-loud corridor. In 1908 the extension followed with another siding. On April 8, 1945, rail operations were stopped. The line was closed for the section between Görsdorf and Tiefenlauter in 1949. Passenger traffic was carried out for the Lautertal with a bus line to Rottenbach. The tracks were dismantled by April 6, 1977.

From 1820 the children attended school in Neukirchen . Before that, the children went to school in Unterlauter . In 1851 a new school house was inaugurated. In 1965 the three-class Neukirchen-Tiefenlauter school was relocated to the newly built schoolhouse of the communities Unterlauter and Oberlauter .

In 1953, the community joined the association for the water supply of the Lautergrund communities. The ring water supply was inaugurated in 1965.

On May 4, 1969, out of 211 eligible voters, 121 voted for and 24 against the merger with Unterlauter, Oberlauter and Neukirchen. A total of 68 percent of the voters in the four towns were in favor of the union. With effect from July 1, 1969, Tiefenlauter was merged with the communities of Neukirchen, Unterlauter and Oberlauter to form the new community of Lautertal in accordance with a decree of the Bavarian State Ministry of the Interior.

On May 20, 2000, the Franziskuskapelle, built on the route of the former Werra Railway, was ecumenically consecrated. It was donated and built by 17 companies in Lautertal.

Population development

year population
1856 107
1910 178
1933 211
1939 204
2004 297

literature

  • Walter Eichhorn: Lautertal; The Zent Lauter link between Franconia and Thuringia . Sheets on the history of the Coburg country, Coburg 1992, ISBN 3-926480-06-8 .

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. a b Müller's Large German Local Book 2007. Verlag de Gruyter, ISBN 978-3-00-042206-5 .
  2. Horst GRASSMUCK: Place names of the county Coburg. Inaugural dissertation from the University of Erlangen 1955, p. 40.
  3. ^ Walter Eichhorn: Lautertal. P. 182
  4. ^ Walter Eichhorn: Lautertal. P. 28
  5. ^ Walter Eichhorn: Lautertal. P. 191
  6. ^ Walter Eichhorn: Lautertal. P. 116
  7. ^ Walter Eichhorn: Lautertal. P. 28
  8. ^ Walter Eichhorn: Lautertal. P. 21f
  9. ^ Walter Eichhorn: Lautertal. P. 31
  10. ^ Walter Eichhorn: Lautertal. P. 165
  11. www.gemeindeververzeichnis.de
  12. ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to reunification in 1990. City and district of Coburg. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).