Trier-Zewen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zewen
City of Trier
Coat of arms
Coordinates: 49 ° 43 ′ 16 ″  N , 6 ° 34 ′ 41 ″  E
Height : 148 m
Area : 7.84 km²
Residents : 3583  (December 31, 2017)
Population density : 457 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : 7th June 1969
Postal code : 54294
Area code : 0651
Biewer Ehrang/Quint Euren Feyen/Weismark Filsch Heiligkreuz Irsch Kernscheid Kürenz Mariahof Mitte/Gartenfeld Nord Olewig Pfalzel Ruwer/Eitelsbach Süd Tarforst West/Pallien Zewenmap
About this picture
Location in the city of Trier
Entrance sign

Zewen is one of the 19 districts of the Rhineland-Palatinate city ​​of Trier and has around 3900 inhabitants. The place on the Moselle is the most south-westerly district of Triers and is divided into the two places Zewen and Oberkirch .

geography

Geographical location

Panorama of Zewen

Zewen is a district of the independent city of Trier and is located around seven kilometers southwest of Trier city center; the border with the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg is about eight kilometers away. Zewen is located in the southwestern beginning of the 15 km long and therefore largest valley widening of the central Moselle valley , which narrows again in the north near Schweich . Zewen itself is not located directly on the Moselle, only the Oberkirch district. The outskirts of the district extend over the wooded and partly agricultural slopes to the foot of the Alzenach (341.1 m above sea level) in the north-west and the Olker Berg (311.4 m above sea level) in the south-west. The small Zewenerbach flows through the village . Its springs are located in the mountain slopes that close the Mühlental on three sides. It flows into the Moselle in Oberkirch. It dominated the Zewen townscape for centuries, but was canalized in the town center. The 4.7 hectare nature reserve Kiesgrube bei Oberkirch is located near Oberkirch .

geology

Stratigraphically , the soil in Zewen can be assigned to the Quaternary and Pleistocene . The earth is sandy and consists of medium to coarse gravel and is partially covered with clay. The river terraces in Zewen correspond to the type of the lower terraces.

Districts

The little village of Oberkirch belongs to Zewen and only found connection to Zewen in the 1950s through the Im Biest street . It is still dominated by agriculture. It was first mentioned as the Celtic village of Corniacum , later called Kerrig and Kerrich . Later the place was divided in terms of area and name into Oberkerrich and Kerrich , later Niederkirch . Niederkirch, which consisted of an estate and a residential tower similar to the Zewener tower , was demolished to make way for Monaise Castle. Oberkirch, which already had a chapel and its own residential tower, the Oberkircher Tower , has been preserved and has retained its village character.

Neighboring communities

As the most south-westerly district of Triers, Zewen borders in the south on Igel , in the north on the Trier district Euren and in the west on the town of Herresthal, which belongs to Euren. The Moselle flows to the east of the town; on the opposite side is the Konzer suburb of Karthaus.

climate

The climate in Zewen is very mild and oceanic, corresponding to the Moselle valley; this means winters with little snow and frost as well as warm and humid summers. The maximum temperatures are often over 30 degrees Celsius; This makes the area in and around Zewen one of the warmest regions in Germany. This also favors the occurrence of animal species that are more likely to be found in southern Europe due to the warmer climate.

population

Zewen has 3842 inhabitants (December 31, 2004, provisional MESO result) and is one of the smallest districts of Trier in terms of population (share about 3.8%). According to statistics from December 31, 2002, almost half (48.78%) of the residents of Zewen are married, only 20% of the residents are under the age of 21, and 25% have already passed the age of 65. At 4.3%, Zewen has a very low proportion of foreign citizens.

Population development

Zewen had the highest population in the years after its incorporation in 1969; it reached its maximum of 4,227 in 1973. Since then, due to a certain degree of urban exodus , it has sunk continuously until the provisional low in 1988 with 3,635 inhabitants. Since then, new building areas have brought more young families to Zewen, so that the population increased again in the 1990s - but since the mid-1990s it has stagnated at around 3800 inhabitants.

religion

Population by religion

Zewen, like the entire area around Trier, is shaped by Roman Catholicism . In 2002, 81.3% of the Zewener belonged to the Roman Catholic Church. The townscape is shaped by the Catholic Church of the parish of St. Martinus , consecrated in 1959 . In Oberkirch there is the St. Michael chapel as a branch church and a forest chapel. The parish of Zewen, independent since 1805, was merged with the parish of St. Helena in Trier-Euren in 1980. Since 1995 the priest has had his headquarters in the rectory of Euren.

Only 7.3% of the population are Protestant , however, a Protestant service has also been celebrated every Sunday in the church for years. There is also a New Apostolic Church.

Local politics

Local advisory board and mayor

Local advisory board
5
1
7th
7th 
A total of 13 seats
  • SPD : 5
  • UBT : 1
  • CDU : 7

A district was formed for the district of Zewen . The local council has 13 members, the chair of the local council is chaired by the directly elected mayor.

The local advisory board is composed as follows:

  • CDU: 7 seats
  • SPD: 5 seats
  • UBT: 1 seat

For more information and historical data on the local council, see the results of the local elections in Trier .

Christoph Schnorpfeil from the CDU has been the mayor since May 25, 2014. He prevailed with 62.9% and 826 votes against Wolfgang Otto from the SPD (37.1% and 487 votes). Schnorpfeil was re-elected in the local elections on May 26, 2019. Schnorpfeil's predecessor was Helmut Mertesdorf from the CDU on June 7, 2009 , who won 56.6% of the votes against Hans-Willi Triesch from the SPD (45.4%).

Electoral behavior of the Zewener

Zewen was a stronghold of the SPD until 1994. After all, 36.4% remained loyal to her in the 2009 local elections (CDU: 38.1%). The Zewener SPD achieved the best result (an average of 26.9%, the worst was in yours with 17.5%). In the 2006 mayoral election, 59.7% of Zewen voted for the independent candidate Klaus Jensen , supported by the SPD and the Greens , while the CDU candidate Ulrich Holkenbrink, who grew up in Zewen, received only 40.3% of the votes.

Zewen coat of arms.jpg

coat of arms

The Zewen coat of arms was decided by the local advisory board in 1998 and shows heraldically a red cross on a white background on the left (the symbol of the diocese and electorate of Trier) and on the right the stylized symbol of Zewen, the Zewen tower .

history

Antiquity

The mill valley in Zewen, but especially the area around the old village center, has traces of settlement from Celtic times. To Roman times extensive monuments such finds in the Kantstrasse, the chain road and occupy the cherry orchard originated there.

There is evidence that a settlement with a cemetery and church existed on the so-called Heidenberg in Zewen in the 5th century . The church was a so-called baptismal or burial church , in which clergy from the city or the high cathedral church performed acts. Bishop Magneric (566-586) sought at this time, eremitic to direct activities in the lanes of ordered pastoral and worked so opposite residues of paganism. It can be assumed that the Saints Paulus as well as Saint Beatus and Bantus worked in this Zewen church , who led a hermitic life in the Zewen forest.

Middle Ages and Modern Times

In the early Middle Ages the Franks moved to the Celtic - Roman town; around two hundred years later, Saxons were settled in the village by Charlemagne .

The place Zewen was first mentioned in 1098. The parish Zewen was mentioned for the first time in 1330, it was affiliated with the cathedral dechanei and was also supplied with clergy from there. At that time the place stretched from Mühlental to the upper Kirchenstrasse around the church, which stood on the still visible high retaining wall at the beginning of Kordelstrasse. This is evidenced by a picture of the court from 1589, commissioned by the Elector of Trier, Johann von Schöneberg , which is in the Museum Simeonstift in Trier. At that time Zewen was on the border between Kurtrier and Luxembourg and was often the victim of military campaigns and feuds between the two states, from which the Zewener Tower , a border, watch and customs tower , comes from .

In contrast to other villages in the Moselle valley, Zewen was spared the plague during the Thirty Years' War , but it suffered from looting and robbery and later from the wars of Louis XIV and the War of the Spanish Succession . In 1794 the French revolutionary troops occupied the left bank of the Rhine and with it Zewen. In 1815 the rule of the French ended, Trier and with it Zewen came to the Kingdom of Prussia .

Dispute between yours and Zewen

In the course of the regional reform in 1816, the suburbs of Euren , Kürenz , Olewig and Zewen / Kirch were incorporated into the city of Trier . But as early as 1852 Zewen was "ausgemeindet". In 1852 there was a solid dispute between Euren and Zewen, which was decided in 1853, regardless of history, at the expense of Zewen. The decision ultimately led to Monaise Castle and fertile farmland, on which the Zeppelin assembly hall , the old airfield and today's industrial area in Niederkircher Strasse were built, and are and are attributed to your corridor and thus to your economic strength. This “dispute” still served as an occasion and reason for many brawls in the 1920s and 1930s.

After 1852 Zewen belonged to different administrative areas; sometimes it was assigned to the mayor's office of the Trier suburbs, sometimes to Trierweiler .

From the German Empire to the Second World War

The construction and expansion of the railroad throughout Germany around 1860 brought workers and civil servants to the "melting pot" Zewen. This influenced the dialect of the Zewener to this day: it does not have the soft sound of the melodic Moselle Franconian of the Eifel - Hunsrück - Moselle region, it is harder.

After the First World War , in which 29 soldiers from Zewen died, the Ruhr occupied the Ruhr in 1923 and the French occupied the entire area on the left bank of the Rhine. Because many Germans offered passive resistance , the French expelled many railway employees. Zewen, whose residents worked almost entirely for the railroad, was severely affected by these deportations: 44 families were deported to the German Reich on the right bank of the Rhine . In 1924 the last French troops left the Rhineland.

The application for incorporation of 1929, which was supported by a unanimous vote of the 2055 residents at the time, was rejected , contrary to Biewer's inconsistent request . But meanwhile noticeably darker clouds were gathering over Zewen. Nothing is known about the voting behavior of Zewen citizens in the Reichstag election in 1933 , but the known mechanisms of the National Socialist dictatorship ( propaganda , Hitler Youth , BDM ) also moved into Zewen. In 1938, construction of the west wall began in the west of Zewen. Thousands of soldiers from across the empire came to the place, and many of them stayed. When war broke out in 1939 , Zewen was evacuated, and after the defeat of France in June 1940, the population was sent back. In September 1944, Zewen was evacuated a second time. Grenades and bombs destroyed the place, which was occupied by the Americans on March 3, 1945 without a fight. On July 12, 1945, the Americans handed it over to the French. In an accident in a munitions factory in Zewen in August 1945, in which the entire warehouse exploded due to inattention, one worker died, three workers and two French NCOs were critically injured. A total of 105 soldiers (49 are missing) and 14 civilians died from Zewen in World War II.

post war period

In the 1950s, Zewen approached the 4,000 inhabitant mark. In the course of the general regional reform in 1969, the community of Zewen-Oberkirch became a district of Triers on June 7, 1969, despite public protests, which were expressed in protest assemblies and car parades; the population at that time was 3683. In the 1960s and 1970s, the appearance of the site changed fundamentally with the demolition of some of the buildings that defined the site (church, parish hall), the construction of the new parish church in 1959 and the new school and gym in 1961/69 Sewerage of the Zewener Bach, which previously ran through the town, the construction of a sewerage system and the designation of new building areas (Im Biest, Lindscheidstraße). At the same time, the population fell to almost 3,600 by the end of the 1980s.

Zewen today

After the designation of new building land in Amselweg and In der Schard at the end of the 1980s to the beginning of the 1990s, the population rose to around 3800 inhabitants. It has leveled off at this number to this day. In 1994 Hermann Fries became head of the village, who shaped the district through the 1990s. After his sudden death in 2004, Maria-Elisabeth Grünhäuser was elected as the new mayor. A citizen's report commissioned in 2003 after a citizen survey as the basis for the district framework plan was unanimously rejected by the local advisory board a year later. In autumn 2005, after several accidents, a traffic light system was installed at the Zewen exit to the B49; this did not lead to an improvement in the situation, the traffic chaos became even greater and sparked a heated discussion. In December 2007, after a long construction period, the newly designed village square was opened, which consists of a raised bed framed in granite palisades and a round seating group; two display boards provide information about Zewen and the surrounding area. Although part of the city of Trier since 1969, Zewen has always retained a bit of independence. This can be seen not only in the lively club life, but also in a dialect with a few peculiarities , on which a book was published in 2005 (see literature ).

Development of the place name

The Celtic name evena initially remained unchanged under the Romans and Franks ; The name Euena (spoken: Evena) can still be found in a document book from 1098 . But the change must have started earlier, because around the year 980 the name was Zeuvena (spoken: Zewena) and Sceuna (spoken: Scewena). With the year 1258 a tendency towards the German ending was felt with the name Zhevene , even though Zevena appears equally in the tax files until the 14th century (compare also the origin of the place name Zeven ( Lower Saxony )). Since the 14th century, the pronunciation has remained the same whether the place was written Zeven (14th century), Cehuen or Zewen.

Culture and sights

Buildings

See also: List of cultural monuments in Trier-Zewen

Zewener Tower

The Zewener Tower , an old customs tower and the oldest building in the district, is the landmark of Zewen. Archbishop Poppo (1016-1047), Archbishop Eberhard (1047-1066) or Archbishop Balduin (1307-1354) are named as builders. The Zewener Tower stood on the border with Luxembourg and used to be a guard or defense tower; Narrow loopholes can still be seen in all four walls. The three-storey building has an external dimension of six by six meters, the walls are 1.10 meters thick. The entrances were on the north and south sides on the second floor; the entrance on the south side can no longer be seen due to a later extension. The tower house was secured by a moat that was still partially visible. The tower changed hands several times. The first floor was divided into two floors for residential purposes and received rectangular windows, the first floor doors, and external structures were added. At the beginning of the 18th century and at the end of the Second World War it was badly damaged and then rebuilt. The tower down a group of houses in Kanzelstrasse, Turmstrasse and Wasserbilliger Strasse; In recent years it has been renovated and outbuildings have been restored.

Zewener parish church

Main article: Zewener parish churches

The current Zewener parish church was built between 1957 and 1959. However, the construction was finally completed with the construction of the bell tower in 1986.

Forest chapel

The forest chapel was built in 1953. The basis was a contract between the parish of Sankt Martinus and the civil parish of Zewen, in which they had committed themselves to a new chapel at another for the Marienkapelle on the corner of Zewener Strasse and Kantstrasse, also called Zewener Dom (see below), which was demolished in 1939 Body to build. This is how this chapel came into being at the end of the village in the direction of Herresthal, which was inaugurated on October 4, 1953. The statue of Mary from the old chapel found its new place there. The people of Zewen and hikers alike use it as a place of silent adoration and veneration of Mary . The forest chapel is open on Sundays and public holidays from May to September.

Monaise Castle

Main article: Monaise Castle

Monaise Castle is located on the Moselle. It was built in 1779–1783 as a summer residence for the Trier cathedral dean and later Prince-Bishop of Speyer , Philipp Franz Wilderich Nepomuk von Walderdorf .

Old rectory

The old rectory was built around 1600 as a school, so it is the second oldest building still in existence in Zewen after the Zewener Tower . Only after the construction of the second parish church did it become a rectory; in 1830 it was raised by one floor. The new kindergarten was built in 1970 on the former parish garden behind the house. In 1975, after the second parish church was demolished, the old rectory was auctioned and is now privately owned and renovated.

Wayside crosses

There are seven crossroads in Zewen, some of which are over 400 years old. These are the Luzia- or Fischerskreuz (1701, Gutenbergstraße), the Kreuz im Brühl (1680, lower Wasserbilliger Straße), the Bäckerkreuz (1680, Zewener Straße), the Biesterkreuz (1815, Im Biest), the cross in the Kettenstraße (1678 , today Fröbelstrasse), the cross in the Waldstrasse (1718, corner of Waldstrasse / Lindscheidstrasse), and the Grund hebelkreuz (1826, opposite the Zewener tower ). In the late 1980s, most of the crosses were renovated.

The seven crossroads in Zewen

Buildings in Oberkirch

Saint Michaelis Chapel

The St. Michaels Chapel was built in 1768; a previous building has been documented since 1609. It is a tall three-axis building with a lance-cap vault over pilasters . In the choir part, which is closed on three sides, there is a simple wooden altar donated in 1785, the altarpiece of which depicts St. Michael the Archangel . On both sides of the altar there are closing doors with confessional grids on which the figures of St. Leonard and St. Walburga stand. There is an eight-sided turret with a hooded roof above the steep west gable. The original two bells did not survive the two world wars, and so a new bell was cast in 1950. In the Michaelskapelle there is a service once a month. It is a festive space for devotions and small church celebrations.

Oberkircher Tower

The Oberkircher Tower was a building very similar to the Zewener Tower , but it differed in that it was provided with many, almost two meters high, but very narrow, tapering window niches. According to a lost stone, it was built in 1238. For a while, the Karthaus monastery on the opposite side of the Moselle was the owner of this tower and the numerous ships that could sometimes stow back into the mouth of the Saar could be handled. In 1818 the tower was sold and in 1841 it was rebuilt in such a way that the original design can hardly be recognized. For a long time it was home to the Zum Hafen inn . It is now used as a residential building after further renovations in the 1980s.

Buildings that no longer exist

Parish churches

First Zewen parish church on the picture of the court in 1589

Main article: Zewener parish churches

In front of the parish church mentioned above there were already two other parish churches: The first Zewen parish church, which was mentioned in 1330 and existed for almost 500 years (until 1819), until it was finally demolished for reasons of space. The second parish church was consecrated that same year; But it only existed for less than 200 years and it was also torn down; this was in 1975.

Zewen Cathedral

The Zewener Dom was an old chapel from the 17th century at the intersection of Zewener Strasse and Kantstrasse. Their age-old architectural style was striking. It looked like a normal house, only on closer inspection did you see four arched windows that framed the door, as well as two thick crosses on the roof ridges. It had thick walls, the back wall was rounded flat, the room was barrel vaulted. Inside there was a wood-carved image of Our Lady and a wood-carved crucifixion group (which are now in the forest chapel). On April 11, 1939, the chapel was demolished as a traffic obstacle for the Luxemburger Straße (now Zewener Straße) to be expanded.

Girls school

The girls' school at the entrance to Kettenstrasse was built in 1864 due to a lack of space in the existing schools and served as a school for girls until 1935. Then it was the parish hall and seat of the mayor of Zewen. The exercise tower of the Zewen volunteer fire brigade was on the left. After the incorporation of Zewen, the house was sold and demolished in 1972.

Mill Valley

For centuries, part of Zewen was the Mühlental , above the Kordelstrasse on the so-called Zewener Wiesental; Numerous water mills have settled on the banks of the Zewenerbach . From 1865 the Zewener Bach carried less and less water, so that today, apart from the Tresselsmühle, which was converted into a residential building, there is no more mill.

Siegfried Line

The West Wall ran west of Zewen during the war years . Several bunkers were visible and accessible in the post-war years and some well into the 1980s. In the meantime, all bunkers have been torn down or blown up and left to nature.

Public buildings

Parish home

The parsonage was built in 1963 as a parsonage next to the newly built church; The Zewen priests lived there until 1994. After the demolition of the second parish church in Zewen and the sale of the old rectory, there was a lack of space for parish work, especially for youth work, and so the move to the kindergarten. When the priests moved to the Eurener rectory in 1995, the Zewener rectory was used as a parsonage. In 2000, a large hall, the so-called parish hall , was added during a renovation . This can be rented with a fully equipped kitchen for various festivities with up to 120 people. The hall can be divided by a partition so that small groups can celebrate comfortably. The parish youth as well as all institutions and groups of the parish have found their permanent place in the parish hall itself.

Primary and secondary school

In the village center is located as 1962, the elementary school was built Zewener school complex, which since 1970 primary and secondary school is. In 2007 the school yard was completely renovated and redesigned by a citizens 'initiative that emerged from the citizens' report. Funds of over 100,000 euros were collected from foundations, organizing music festivals, flea markets and a street collection. Due to the introduction of the all-day school , the former school in Lindscheidstrasse (which already housed the school from 1895 to 1962 and was later privately owned) was included and rebuilt so that there is now a large school complex in Zewen.

pavilion

The pavilion next to the primary and secondary school has been the clubhouse of the Eintracht 1906 Trier-Zewen music club, the Zewener DRK and the Cäcilia 1888 Trier-Zewen mixed choir since 1978 . It is a former pavilion class of a school, which the associations received from the city of Trier in 1978, because it was not possible to build such a house for the Zewen associations in the post-war years. The parties of the above-mentioned associations take place there, and the house can also be rented for parties and family celebrations.

Gym and multipurpose hall

In 1969 the new gymnasium and multi-purpose hall was built next to the school. This is where the school's events as well as those of the carnival club, as well as concerts and dance events, take place.

Photo gallery

Club life

Zewen has retained its village character as part of the city of Trier. This can be seen, among other things, in his lively club life. The numerous associations have long since joined forces to form the Kulturring Zewen , which coordinates the dates and represents the associations, especially towards the city of Trier .

Regular events in Zewen

  • On Shrove Sunday at 2:11 p.m., the Zewen Carnival parade, which is organized by the Zewen associations and numerous private groups
  • The Zewen strawberry fair traditionally takes place on the first weekend in July, starting with tapping on Saturday evenings and ending on Mondays
  • On April 30th, the music association and choral society will host the Zewen May Festival around the maypole at the pavilion
  • The parish festival takes place at the church on the first weekend in September
  • The Father's Day festival organized by the sports club takes place on Ascension Day in Oberkirch

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

Road traffic

At the southern edge of the village, the B 49 runs along the centuries-old route from Trier to Luxembourg . It was expanded into a main thoroughfare in the 1930s. The original route crossed the railway lines and led past the Zewener Tower to Igel. The new, shorter route cuts through the Heidenberg in the direction of Igel. As a result, Wasserbilliger Strasse is now divided into two parts; the two parts are connected by a pedestrian underpass. Zewen has four exits: the Heidenberg, the Eurener Weg (only partially accessible), the Trauf in the direction of Herresthal and the exit on the B 49 in the direction of Trier. The center of Trier can be reached in a quarter of an hour, as is the border with Luxembourg; There is a motorway connection to the A 64 in Trier, eight kilometers from the exit.

railroad

Zewen is on the Ehrang – Wasserbillig (L) railway line, which is also known as the Trier western line. Passenger traffic on this route was discontinued in 1983 and was taken over by local public transport buses that run every 10 minutes on weekdays (as of 2014). There were repeated declarations of intent and also serious efforts to use the railway line again for passenger traffic in order to improve the connection between the western districts of Trier and Luxembourg (most recently in September 2008); however, a reopening of the railway line is not to be expected in the very near future (as of October 2008).

Air traffic

The nearest international airports are Luxembourg Airport (around 35 km away) and Frankfurt-Hahn Airport (around 75 km away). Until the 1970s, there was an airfield in the immediate vicinity of Zewen in the Euren district to the north ; this was replaced by the Trier airfield in Föhren further north .

Industry and economy

Industrial area in Trier-Zewen

In earlier times, craftsmen such as blacksmiths , coopers , wagons and saddlers were of great importance due to Zewen's location on the busy trade route with passing merchants and traders as well as armies.

In addition, Zewen was shaped by agriculture until the 1950s. The fruit and horticultural association was founded in 1929 , and instead of potatoes and beetroots, more cherries and strawberries were grown, which were exported to the Ruhr area and Berlin until the 1960s, so basket factories were set up in addition to jobs in agriculture. The first iron foundries were built on Heidenberg in the middle of the 19th century; the railroad encouraged this development at the end of the century. Today there is no more industry in Zewen, it has migrated to the industrial and commercial area Gottbillstrasse, which borders Zewen, but belongs to the Euren district. Most of the people of Zewen are employed there and in downtown Trier; there are also many self-employed entrepreneurs. The proportion of those who work in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg is still small, but is growing steadily.

education

The first school in Zewen was built during the electoral era, the first schoolhouse was the old rectory. The population grew so explosively that three new schools were built in the 19th century. In 1962, the current primary and secondary school in Zewen was built as a primary school. With the introduction of the all-day school in 2004, the former school in Lindscheidstrasse was included and rebuilt so that there is now a large school complex in Zewen. Most of the school-age children in Zewen attend one of the numerous schools in Trier .

swell

  • "Festschrift 900 years Zewen" compiled in 1998 under the responsibility of the association "900 years Zewen e. V. "

literature

  • Josef Fisch: Small Zewener Chronicle. Volumes 1–5, self-published, Trier 1970.
  • Rigobert Hauptert: Zewen in the course of this century. Illustrated book. Verlag Res Trever Weyand, Trier 1986, ISBN 3-924631-07-7 .
  • Reinhold Zimmer: Zewena Platt - ees Mottersproach dialect dictionary from AZ. Self-published, Trier 2005, ISBN 3-00-017337-4 .

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. a b Official statistics on the website of the city of Trier
  2. ^ Geological overview map of the State of Rhineland-Palatinate , accessed on June 8, 2009.
  3. ^ City of Trier: main statute. (PDF) § 2 to June 6, 2017, accessed on October 22, 2019 .
  4. ^ City of Trier - mayor / local advisory board. Retrieved July 17, 2019 .
  5. PDF with table of the overall results for the Zewen 2014 mayor election on the website of the City of Trier , accessed on August 27, 2014.
  6. ^ City of Trier - mayor / local advisory board. Retrieved July 17, 2019 .
  7. PDF with table of overall results for the Zewen mayor election 2009 on the website of the city of Trier , accessed on August 27, 2014.
  8. ^ Election results on the website of the City of Trier , accessed on June 8, 2009.
  9. most likely Saint Paul of Verdun [1] or Paul the Deacon [2]
  10. Official municipality directory 2006, State Statistical Office Rhineland-Palatinate ( Memento from December 31, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), p. 198 (PDF; 2.6 MB)
  11. ↑ See larger representation of the cross and more photos of Zewen
  12. Oberkirch Chapel, Trier Parish Community (Euren). In: pg-euren.de. Retrieved December 4, 2016 .
  13. ^ History of the Zewener parish churches on pfarrei-zewen.de accessed on October 13, 2012. For primary sources, see the Sources section
  14. Mixed Choir Cäcilia 1888 Zewen ( Memento from December 17, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Internet archive
  15. ^ Zewen primary and secondary school , accessed on June 11, 2009.