Bad Vilbel
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 50 ° 11 ′ N , 8 ° 44 ′ E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Hesse | |
Administrative region : | Darmstadt | |
County : | Wetteraukreis | |
Height : | 111 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 25.68 km 2 | |
Residents: | 34,216 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density : | 1332 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 61118 | |
Area code : | 06101 | |
License plate : | FB, BÜD | |
Community key : | 06 4 40 003 | |
LOCODE : | DE BVI | |
City structure: | 5 districts | |
City administration address : |
Am Sonnenplatz 1 61118 Bad Vilbel |
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Website : | ||
Mayor : | Thomas Stöhr ( CDU ) | |
Location of the city of Bad Vilbel in the Wetterau district | ||
Bad Vilbel [ ˈfilbəl ] with 34,216 inhabitants (as of December 31, 2017) is the largest city in terms of population in the Hessian Wetteraukreis and borders the northern outskirts of Frankfurt am Main . It is known nationwide for its mineral springs .
geography
Geographical location
Bad Vilbel lies at an altitude of 109 m above sea level on the southern tip of the Wetterau , a stretch of land between Taunus and Vogelsberg that has been populated since the Neolithic because of its very fertile soils . Its end is the collection located in the south of Bad Vilbels Schoell mountain with the settlement Heilsberg and the city limits to Frankfurt.
Coming from Vogelsberg, the Nidda flows through the city to flow into the Main near Frankfurt-Höchst . In the southeast is the Vilbel forest . Fall winds and cold air currents from the Taunus ensure a complete exchange of air almost every day.
Neighboring communities
The neighboring districts are those of the city of Karben in the north, the municipality of Niederdorfelden ( Main-Kinzig district ) in the east, and the independent city of Frankfurt am Main in the south, west and southeast, which borders Bad Vilbel on almost three sides. It is so much closer to downtown Frankfurt than some parts of Frankfurt itself. That is why the political incorporation of Bad Vilbel into Frankfurt is always an issue.
City structure
Bad Vilbel today consists of the city center and four other districts:
district | Incorporation | |
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Core city Bad Vilbel | ||
Heilsberg | District since 1948 | |
Gronau | Incorporated in 1971 | |
Dortelweil | Incorporated in 1972 | |
Massenheim | Incorporated in 1972 |
history
For the history of the individual districts, see:
Prehistory and early history
In Vilbel there are traces of settlement from all times since the Neolithic ( band ceramic culture ) such as later the Celts , Teutons , Romans or Burgundians .
In the course of the construction of the Main-Weser Railway in 1848/1849, remains of Roman thermal baths were discovered near today's Bad Vilbel Süd stop .
The Roman bath had a magnificent mosaic. The original is now in the Landesmuseum Darmstadt , a replica of the mosaic can be viewed in its own glass pavilion in the spa gardens.
middle Ages
The oldest surviving mention of Vilbel comes from the year 774, when it was mentioned in a deed of donation to the Lorsch Monastery . The earliest surviving mention of the salt springs found in an exchange certificate Emperor Louis the Pious of 817. Subsequently Vilbel came under the rule of Ministerialengeschlechts the family of Hagen-Münzenberg , after their extinction in 1255 it was the Münzenberger inheritance between the Lords of Hanau and the Lords of Falkenstein shared. Within this condominium there was a real division with the nidda as the border. The part to the right of the Nidda belonged to the Falkensteiners, the part to the left of the Nidda to Hanau and was counted there as part of the Bornheimerberg court and later office . After the death of the last Falkensteiner in 1418, his share fell to the Electorate of Mainz . When the County of Hanau was divided in 1458, the Bornheimerberg - and with it Hanau's share in Vilbel - became part of the County of Hanau-Münzenberg .
The ministerial family of the Knights of Vilbel , which died out in the 17th century, also originated from Vilbel and had a heraldic shield divided into squares with a rose in the center. His most famous representative was the Benedictine abbot and chronicler Apollo von Vilbel († 1536).
Early modern age
Probably under the influence of the Counts of Hanau-Münzenberg, in whose county the Solms land law was customary , Vilbel also adopted this legal system. The common law was only valid if the Solms land law contained no provisions for a matter. The Solms land law also remained in force when Vilbel belonged to the Grand Duchy of Hesse in the 19th century , and was not replaced by the civil code that was uniformly applicable throughout the German Empire on January 1, 1900 .
After the death of the last Hanau count, Johann Reinhard III. , In 1736 Landgrave Friedrich I of Hessen-Kassel inherited the county of Hanau-Münzenberg with the Bornheimerberg office and thus also half of Vilbel. Since then the place has belonged to the Landgraviate of Hessen-Kassel . This situation lasted until the 19th century.
Modern times
After the territorial adjustments during the Napoleonic period, Vilbel came to the Grand Duchy of Hesse . It belonged to 1821 the Office Vilbel until 1832 for District District Vilbel and to 1848 for Kreis Friedberg . During the revolution of 1848, the Friedberg administrative district , which existed only for a short time, was dissolved again in 1852. This was followed by renewed membership in the Vilbel district until 1874 and then again in the Friedberg district for almost 100 years. Bad Vilbel has been in the Wetterau district since 1972.
In 1948, Vilbel was given the title bathroom due to its numerous sources , and in the same year it was also granted city rights . The former spa business was largely given up in the 1960s, so that in the 1990s there was a threat of the "bath" label being withdrawn. Since around the year 2000, considerable areas have been designated for residential development and service industries, including in Dortelweil-West and in the Krebsschere construction area between Bad Vilbel and Massenheim.
At the end of 2004 the Bad Vilbel District Court was closed.
From the beginning of 2012 to 2017, the use of electronic ankle cuffs was monitored throughout Germany from Bad Vilbel.
Incorporations
As part of the regional reform in Hesse , the municipality of Gronau was incorporated into Bad Vilbel on July 1, 1971 on a voluntary basis from the Hanau district . Dortelweil followed on December 31, 1971. The series of incorporations was completed with the incorporation of Massenheim on June 1, 1972. The city districts have partially grown together structurally and this process is continuing.
Population development
- 1821: 1,430 inhabitants
- 1939: 6,257 inhabitants
- 1961: 14,237 inhabitants
- 1970: 17,866 inhabitants
- 1998: 28,509 inhabitants
- 2002: 30,290 inhabitants
- 2006: 31,348 inhabitants
- 2008: 31,456 inhabitants
- 2010: 31,822 inhabitants
- 2011: 31,673 inhabitants
- 2014: 32,584 inhabitants
- 2015: 33,020 inhabitants
- 2016: 33,458 inhabitants
- 2017: 33,745 inhabitants
politics
City Council
The local elections on March 6, 2016 produced the following results, compared to previous local elections:
|
Parties and constituencies |
% 2016 |
Seats 2016 |
% 2011 |
Seats 2011 |
% 2006 |
Seats 2006 |
% 2001 |
Seats 2001 |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CDU | Christian Democratic Union of Germany | 48.3 | 22nd | 46.7 | 21st | 55.6 | 25th | 62.7 | 28 | |
SPD | Social Democratic Party of Germany | 21.2 | 10 | 25.5 | 11 | 24.7 | 11 | 21.9 | 10 | |
Green | Alliance 90 / The Greens | 16.0 | 7th | 18.9 | 9 | 10.2 | 5 | 10.8 | 5 | |
FDP | Free Democratic Party | 6.7 | 3 | 4.4 | 2 | 6.4 | 3 | 4.5 | 2 | |
FW | Free voters | 7.7 | 3 | 4.4 | 2 | - | - | - | - | |
left | The left | - | - | - | - | 3.1 | 1 | - | - | |
total | 100.0 | 45 | 100.0 | 45 | 100.0 | 45 | 100.0 | 45 | ||
Turnout in percent | 52.9 | 52.9 | 52.0 | 56.7 |
mayor
The past mayoral elections produced the following results:
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Thomas Stöhr (CDU) was elected on March 28, 2003 in the first ballot with 71.9% of the votes and a turnout of 53.3%. On February 21, 2010 he was re-elected in the first ballot with 57.8% of the vote and a turnout of 49.1%. On March 6, 2016, he was confirmed again in his office. In the first ballot he received 65.7% of the votes with a turnout of 54.1%. The full-time city councilor is Sebastian Wysocki (CDU).
coat of arms
Blazon : “Divided and split at the top by gold and silver, each with three red rafters; divided below by red and gold. "
The coat of arms , confirmed by Grand Duke Ludwig of Hesse in 1858, goes back to a court seal from the 17th century. It illustrates the rulership in Vilbel before the Falkensteiner inheritance (1419) through the historical coats of arms of the noble families Hanau ( rafter in gold), Eppstein (rafter in silver) and Münzenberg-Falkenstein (lower half of the shield). In the older heraldic books the two rafter coats of arms were falsely drawn together; Otto Hupp brought the correct tinging for the first time. The city flag contains the coat of arms. Once a village on the northern border of the Dreieich Wildbanns , Vilbel became a market town in the 19th century and was named "Stadt" in 1858. |
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Town twinning
Bad Vilbel maintains partnerships with the following cities:
- Glossop (England)
- Moulins (France)
- Brotterode (Germany)
- Eldoret (Kenya)
From 1972 on there was also a town twinning with Huizen in the Netherlands , which ended at the end of the 20th century.
Sponsorship
- In 1990, the sponsorship for the Sudeten Germans who were expelled from the cities of Tepl and Bečov and the rest of the communities in the Teplá district after the Second World War was adopted.
Culture, leisure and sights
Buildings
City center and spa gardens
In the center of Bad Vilbel there are many preserved Franconian half-timbered houses, especially the old town hall , which was built in 1498 and last restored in 2005. A multitude of old and new as well as artificial fountains throughout the city shows Bad Vilbel's history as a “spring city”, including the Roman fountain . The spa park is lavishly planted with primroses and tulips every spring and also offers facilities for leisure activities such as an indoor swimming pool and several playgrounds. The Kurhaus with its changing events can also be found there. Since May 2007 one of the most beautiful Roman mosaics in Germany can be seen in its own glass pavilion as a complete reconstruction in a water basin. The sea god Oceanus is depicted, surrounded by sea creatures, grotesque hybrid creatures and real animals.
In June 2013, Niddaplatz, called "New Center" during the construction phase, was opened on the site of the old central car park. Lined with many shops and a modern underground car park, it forms the new heart of Bad Vilbel and is well received by residents and tourists. The new city library, which was built on a bridge over the Nidda and houses a café, is an eye-catcher and architecturally worth seeing. The large concrete stairs along the Nidda and the previously missing part of the Niddaradweg were completed in May 2014 and invite you to relax.
Castle
In the northern part of the spa park on the banks of the Nidda are the ruins of Vilbel Castle , the oldest components of which date from the 12th century. It was partially or completely destroyed several times, most recently by the French army in 1796, and ultimately remained in ruins. Nevertheless, the preserved parts of the castle are still worth seeing and are the venue for castle festivals . The castle has been extensively repaired outside of the season since 2007.
Bad Vilbel Castle Festival
The Bad Vilbel Castle Festival , which has been taking place in the moated castle every year from the beginning of June to the beginning of September since 1987, is known nationwide. The focus is on the four own Bad Vilbeler productions, for which up to 40 artists are engaged. There is also a wide range of guest performances and matinees (cabaret and solo programs by well-known artists) as well as numerous theater performances for children. Since 2001, the Bad Vilbel Castle Festival has been part of the working group of ten German festival venues, an association of professional open-air theaters in Germany.
Further cultural and leisure activities
- The Alte Mühle cultural center offers a variety of events. Theater and cinema performances are offered every 14 days. For two weeks in summer there is an open-air cinema with a wide supporting program in the outdoor pool, which is very popular.
- In summer, Bad Vilbel's cultural department organizes a number of open-air jazz events, such as jazz under the plane trees in the spa gardens and other concerts in the districts of Massenheim, Dortelweil and Gronau. Traditional Dixie music is usually played here. Admission to these performances is generally free.
- The city forest , located in the southeast of the city center, is criss-crossed by signposted hiking trails and includes a forest teaching and fitness trail , as well as a large adventure playground. The firing range, which was laid out in the 1930s and used by the US Army after the end of the war, has been renatured and is now a nature reserve.
- Other regular events are the Quellenfest with a big street festival as the highlight in the week after Pentecost and the Christmas market around the moated castle on the third weekend in Advent. Further Christmas markets are on the first Advent in Dortelweil and on the second Advent in Massenheim.
- The annual village square festival in Massenheim takes place every September.
- The fountain and bath museum emerged from the fountain museum in the Wasserburg and was opened in January 2010 and is located in the Weihl'schen Haus.
- A local museum was set up in the former town hall of Massenheim . The half-timbered house dates from 1731 and was renovated for the museum in 1999.
- In 2018 Bad-Vilbel participates in city cycling .
- Every year an open-air cinema takes place in the Bad Vilbel outdoor pool during the summer holidays.
Bad Vilbeler market
The Bad Vilbeler Markt was first mentioned in 1820. The largest festival in the Wetterau attracts around 250,000 visitors from all over the Rhine-Main area every year. The market, which takes place on the fairground north of the castle park, begins every year on the third Saturday in August and lasts eight days, with Wednesday and Thursday closed. The cattle market is on market Tuesday.
Churches, religions and denominations
The oldest church in Bad Vilbel, today's Evangelical Church of the Resurrection , stands in the old cemetery above and on the outskirts of the city. Chapels and churches have stood there since the early Middle Ages, first documented in writing in 1298. Destroyed in the Thirty Years War , two small inscriptions with the year “1697” in the portal of the north wall and in the sound cover of the pulpit testify to the reconstruction.
The Evangelical Christ Church was built in the center in the 1960s . Both churches, Resurrection Church and Christ Church, are used by the Evangelical Christ Church Congregation.
After the creation of the “Heilsberg” by the Evangelical Church in Hesse and Nassau in 1948, the Catholic parish was founded in 1957 with the title “Transfiguration of Christ”. The bell tower is separated from the church building. The parish "Transfiguration of Christ" belongs to the diocese of Mainz , like all Catholic parishes in this area.
Other, partly old Protestant and Catholic churches exist in all parts of the city. There is a New Apostolic Church on Alfred-Brehm-Strasse in the city center, the Syrian Orthodox Church Parish Yoldat Aloho (Mother of God Church) on Dieselstrasse and the mosque of the Turkish-Islamic Congregation ( DITIB ) on Büdinger Strasse . A Free Evangelical Congregation has existed in the Dortelweil district since 1998.
The Protestant community of Gronau belongs to the Evangelical Church of Kurhessen-Waldeck , as the village of Gronau used to belong to Kurhessen .
nature
traffic
Trunk roads
Bad Vilbel is on federal highways 3 and 521 . The former is built like a motorway in the urban area and serves as a feeder to the 661 federal motorway . The next motorway connections are Frankfurt-Friedberger Landstraße (A 661, AS 9, Heilsberg and southern core city) and Frankfurt-Preungesheimer Dreieck ( A 661 , AS 8, northern core city and other districts) in the south, as well as the Friedberg junction ( A 5 , AS 16) from the north.
Rail transport
Located on the Main-Weser-Bahn and Niddertalbahn routes , Bad Vilbel is connected to the Deutsche Bahn network with a train station and three stops . The S-Bahn line 6 goes to the stations Bad Vilbel , Bad Vilbel Süd and Dortelweil , regional trains of the Niddertalbahn ( RMV line 34) stop in Bad Vilbel and Bad Vilbel-Gronau .
During the day, Bad Vilbel is connected to Frankfurt city center by the S6 every 15 minutes, the travel time to Frankfurt Central Station is around 20 minutes. In addition there is the hourly RB connection by the Niddertalbahn (RMV line 34) to Frankfurt and the two hourly RB connection by the Mittelhessen Express (RMV lines 40 & 41). The travel time with the RB from Bad Vilbel to Frankfurt (Main) Wes t is 10 minutes. To Frankfurt Main Station in 17 minutes.
In May 2015, Deutsche Bahn and the Hessian Ministry of Transport announced that the expansion of the S6, which has been planned for many decades, should begin in mid-2017. With two of its own tracks from Frankfurt to Bad Vilbel, the Hessian state government's 10-point program is intended to help improve local traffic in the Rhine-Main conurbation.
Bus transport
Bad Vilbel is connected to the surrounding cities by several bus routes: The Frankfurt line 30 connects Bad Vilbel train station, city center and Heilsberg with the north end of Frankfurt and the city center ( Konstablerwache ) and continues to the southern outskirts of the city, to Frankfurt , during rush hour -Sachsenhausen . The Frankfurt line 65 connects the Bad Vilbeler Bahnhof with Massenheim, Frankfurt am Main - Nieder-Erlenbach , Bad Homburg - Ober-Erlenbach and until December 2011 Karben- Petterweil. The Wetterau line FB-74 runs from Bad Vilbel via Gronau to Karben, while the regional bus line 551 runs from Bad Vilbel train station to Heilsberg and to Frankfurt-Bergen-Enkheim , -Fechenheim , Offenbach am Main and on to Neu-Isenburg-Gravenbruch . The night bus line n96 runs from (Frankfurt-Konstablerwache -) Bad Vilbel via Niederdorfelden and Schöneck to Bad Vilbel from 1 to 4 a.m. every hour on weekends. Between Bad Vilbel, Niederdorfelden and Schöneck there is an hourly service from Friday evening to Sunday morning from 7 a.m. to 4 a.m. the following day. In favor of an improved transport offer on the Niddertalbahn (RB 34) at the weekend and in the evenings, the line 5150 has been running since the beginning of May 2008 under the new name FB-45 as school transport only between Konradsdorf, Glauburg and Altenstadt .
In addition, there are five city bus routes (called "Vilbus", routes FB-60 to FB-64 ) that connect the districts and the residential areas of the core city with the city center. Designed as a “shopping bus”, the city bus only runs on weekdays (Mon - Sat) and not after 8 p.m.
economy
Companies
Over twenty mineral and healing springs existed in the city area, today only the Hassia Mineralquellen company exists as an independent company.
Several other companies have their headquarters or main administration in Bad Vilbel, including Lahmeyer International , Radio FFH , the German headquarters of Brother Industries and the pharmaceutical company Stada .
The Dottenfelderhof farming community is important in organic farming .
media
Local parts for Bad Vilbel appear in the daily newspapers Frankfurter Rundschau , Frankfurter Neue Presse , Wetterauer Zeitung and in the Rhein-Main-Zeitung, the local section of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung .
The Bad Vilbeler Anzeiger (public announcement organ) has the highest circulation (around 34,500) in Bad Vilbel , which is distributed as a free advertising and weekly newspaper in the city as a direct mail. It is based on a takeover of FNP local news and editorially own as well as municipal contributions ("Der direkt Draht"). The first edition of the Bad Vilbeler Anzeiger appeared on August 1, 1852 as a regular newspaper.
The radio house of Radio / Tele FFH GmbH & Co. Betriebs-KG, which produces the private radio programs Hit Radio FFH , planet radio and harmony.fm , is located in Bad Vilbel .
The central association for body and vehicle construction technology is also located in Bad Vilbel.
There are also the headquarters of the Association of Hessian Newspaper Publishers e. V. and RTL Programmfenster Hessen GmbH in Bad Vilbel.
education
schools
- Fountain School - School for learning assistance and educational assistance, special educational advice and support center
- Ernst Reuter School - Primary School (Heilsberg)
- Georg Büchner High School
- John F. Kennedy School - secondary and secondary school with special needs
- Rainbow School - Primary School (Dortelweil)
- Saalburg School - Primary School
- City school - elementary school
- European School RheinMain (Dortelweil)
Other educational institutions
- Vocational Promotion Agency Frankfurt am Main - facility for vocational rehabilitation
- The Technische Hochschule Mittelhessen operates a branch in Bad Vilbel as part of the dual university course Studium Plus .
- Bad Vilbel Music School V. - Music school with over 2500 students and 84 employees (state-certified teachers and administration) for children, young people and adults.
- Freizeitzentrum Bad Vilbel - The Freizeitzentrum (EFZET) is a municipal facility for children, youth and adult education in the city of Bad Vilbel. A wide range of cultural, sporting and creative offers.
People and personalities
Born in Bad Vilbel
- Wilhelm von Finck (1848–1924), banker, co-founder of the Allianz insurance company
- Konrad Dickhardt (1899–1961), politician (SPD)
- Katharina Seifried (1904–1991), politician, member of the state parliament
- Friedel Lutz (* 1939), former national soccer player
- Gerhard Glück (* 1944), caricaturist
- Hansfried Münchberg (* 1946), painter and graphic artist
- Thomas Stöhr (* 1966), politician, mayor of Bad Vilbel
Associated with Bad Vilbel
- Friedrich Carl Michael Grosholz (1810–1888), co-founder of the Bad Vilbel mineral fountain industry
- Bernhard Rechthien (1876–1941), Mayor of Bad Vilbel between 1919 and 1928
- Klaus Havenstein (1922–1998), 1990 to 1992 director of the Castle Festival
- Herbert Heckmann (1930–1999), writer, essayist, editor; 1984–1996 President of the German Academy for Language and Poetry
- Martin Stöhr (1932–2019), Protestant theologian, university professor, academy director and peace activist; lived in Bad Vilbel
- Klaus Minkel (* 1948), lawyer, CDU politician (former First City Councilor of Bad Vilbel and former Wetterau member of the Bundestag); lives in Bad Vilbel
- Amir "Kurono" Yarahi (* 1995), German Youtuber, voice actor; grew up in Bad Vilbel
- Jürgen Sparwasser (* 1948) scored the winning goal of the GDR selection in the only game against the German national team during the 1974 World Cup. In 1988 he fled the GDR. After his escape from the GDR he was a. a. from 1988 to 1990 assistant coach at the Bundesliga club Eintracht Frankfurt.
literature
- Marcus Gräser : The unstoppable rapprochement (Vilbel and Frankfurt, periphery and big city in the 19th and 20th centuries). In: Die Wetterau (Ed .: Michael Keller, Herfried Münkler), Verlag Sparkasse Wetterau, ISBN 3-924103-06-2 .
- Willi Giegerich: Bad Vilbel - landscape, history and culture . Kramer Verlag, Frankfurt 1986, ISBN 3-7829-0315-3 .
- Berta Ritscher: History of the Vilbeler Jews . Bad Vilbel Association for History and Homeland Care, Bad Vilbel 1998, ISBN 3-00-002406-9 .
- Utta Müller-Handl: Thoughts often run back - Hessian refugee women remember . Historical Commission Nassau (Volume 3, pages on Bad Vilbel 142–179), Wiesbaden 1993, ISBN 3-922244-91-2 .
- Ernst Johannes Schrade: 25 years of Heilsberg settlement . Documentation self-published by the Heilsberg settlement community, Bad Vilbel 1973.
- Bad Vilbeler Verein f. History and homeland maintenance (Ed.): Bad Vilbeler Heimatblätter / Heimatkundliche Mitteilungen (periodicals)
- Rudolf Knappe: Medieval castles in Hessen. 800 castles, castle ruins and fortifications. 3. Edition. Wartberg-Verlag, Gudensberg-Gleichen 2000, ISBN 3-86134-228-6 , pp. 343-344.
- Hans Georg Ruppel (edit.): Historical place directory for the area of the former Grand Duchy and People's State of Hesse with evidence of district and court affiliation from 1820 until the changes in the course of the municipal territorial reform = Darmstädter Archivschriften 2. 1976, p. 205.
- Heinz Wionski: Cultural monuments in Hessen. Wetteraukreis II, Volume 2, Friedberg to Wöllstadt = monument topography Federal Republic of Germany . Publisher: State Office for Monument Preservation Hessen , Braunschweig / Wiesbaden 1999, ISBN 3-528-06227-4 , pp. 222–260.
Others
The asteroid (340980) Bad Vilbel , which was discovered in 2007 at the Bergen-Enkheim observatory, is named after the city of Bad Vilbel .
Web links
- Official website of the city of Bad Vilbel
- Official and extensive cultural website of the city of Bad Vilbel
- Bad Vilbel, Wetterau district. Historical local dictionary for Hessen. In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
- Literature about Bad Vilbel in the Hessian Bibliography
- Link catalog on Bad Vilbel at curlie.org (formerly DMOZ )
- Literature from and about Bad Vilbel in the catalog of the German National Library
Individual evidence
- ↑ Hessian State Statistical Office: Population status on December 31, 2019 (districts and urban districts as well as municipalities, population figures based on the 2011 census) ( help ).
- ↑ D. Baatz In: D. Baatz, FR Herrmann (Ed.): The Romans in Hessen. P. 241 f., Fig. 140, 167 a. 168.
- ↑ Domicile for the Roman mosaic - a historical highlight as a replica made of 400,000 stones is to become a tourist attraction . In: Bad Vilbeler Anzeiger , March 1, 2007. Archived from the original on July 18, 2012. Retrieved on May 12, 2011.
- ↑ Bad Vilbel: Lively work of art made of small mosaic stones . In: Frankfurter Allgemeine , May 25, 2007. Archived from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved on May 12, 2011.
- ↑ The Roman mosaic . Kultur-bad-vilbel.de. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
- ^ Uta Löwenstein: County Hanau . In: Knights, Counts and Prince - Secular Dominions in the Hessian Area approx. 900–1806 = Handbook of Hessian History 3 = Publications of the Historical Commission for Hesse 63. Marburg 2014. ISBN 978-3-942225-17-5 , p. 196 -230 (207).
- ^ Friedrich Philipp Usener: Contributions to the history of knight castles and mountain castles in the area around Frankfurt am Main , Frankfurt, 1852, p. 104; (Digital scan)
- ↑ Arthur B. Schmidt: The historical foundations of civil law in the Grand Duchy of Hesse . Curt von Münchow, Giessen 1893, p. 106, as well as the enclosed map.
- ↑ Granting of the right to use the name "Stadt Bad Vilbel" on June 11, 1948 . In: The Hessian Minister of the Interior (ed.): State Gazette for the State of Hesse. 1948 no. 26 , p. 261 , point 294 ( online at the information system of the Hessian state parliament [PDF; 2.7 MB ]).
- ^ Municipal reform in Hesse: mergers and integrations of municipalities from June 21, 1971 . In: The Hessian Minister of the Interior (ed.): State Gazette for the State of Hesse. 1971 No. 28 , p. 1117 , item 988; Paragraph 19. ( Online at the information system of the Hessian State Parliament [PDF; 5.0 MB ]).
- ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory 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. 360 f .
- ↑ Number after: Thomas Klein: Outline of German Administrative History 1815-1845 . Row A: Prussia. Volume 11: Hessen-Nassau including predecessor states. Marburg 1979, p. 109.
- ↑ December 31st; Source since 1998: Hessian State Statistical Office , otherwise: Bad Vilbel, Wetteraukreis. Historical local dictionary for Hessen. (As of July 24, 2015). In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
- ^ Result of the municipal election on March 6, 2016. Hessian State Statistical Office, accessed in April 2016 .
- ^ Hessian State Statistical Office: Result of the municipal elections on March 27, 2011
- ^ Hessian State Statistical Office: Result of the municipal elections on March 26, 2006
- ^ Well and Bath Museum Bad Vilbel - Rhein-Main-Wiki - The online lexicon for Rhein-Main . Rhein-main-wiki.de. December 1, 2001. Archived from the original on January 26, 2010. Retrieved on May 12, 2011.
- ↑ Heimatmuseum - Kultur Bad Vilbel . Kultur-bad-vilbel.de. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
- ↑ Quellen- und Festspielstadt participates in city cycling 2018 - in September 2018 it is time to collect kilometers . City of Bad Vilbel, December 18, 2017, accessed December 7, 2018 .
- ^ "European School RheinMain". www.es-rm.eu, accessed on October 8, 2011 .