Wobble on the couple

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Wobble on the couple
Community of Geltendorf
Coordinates: 48 ° 10 ′ 0 ″  N , 10 ° 58 ′ 26 ″  E
Height : 568 m
Residents : 130  (2006)
Postal code : 82269
Area code : 08206
Church of St. Pankratius
Church of St. Pankratius

Wabern an der Paar is a district of the Upper Bavarian municipality of Geltendorf in the Landsberg district . It is located about 18 kilometers northeast of Landsberg am Lech and belongs to the Walleshausen district of Geltendorf . The place is on the brook Paar , which flows into the Danube .

history

Wabern was first mentioned in a document around 1190. Initially it consisted of a so-called moated castle , which belonged to an Andechs ministerial family, and a few farmsteads . From 1657 the Wessobrunn monastery owned the “Waberer”.

In more recent, local history, the place made a name for itself when it won several times the competition " Our village should be more beautiful " (since 1997: "Our village has a future"), which is partly advertised throughout Bavaria . In 2006 Wabern had about 130 inhabitants and about 36 households.

Architectural monuments

See: List of architectural monuments in Wabern

  • Catholic branch church of St. Pankratius

Soil monuments

See: List of ground monuments in Geltendorf

traffic

Rail transport

The single-track Ammerseebahn runs east of Wabern from Mering via Geltendorf and Dießen to Weilheim . Until 1962 the single-track stop Wabern (Paar) , which consisted of a side platform on the continuous main track, was located on it.

The Ammerseebahn was opened on June 30, 1898 by the Royal Bavarian State Railways . The single-track Wabern stop was built on it, which , in addition to Wabern, also connected the town of Dünzelbach and the southern part of Egling to the Ammerseebahn. Wabern was only served by the simple passenger trains, express and express trains ran through the stop without stopping. A corrugated iron hut initially served as the reception building , which was replaced a little later by a wooden building. Later this was demolished and a stone building was erected. Until 1960, the stop was also used for loading animals, for which a mobile wooden ramp was used, as there was no loading track. For the summer timetable of 1962, the stop was abandoned due to insufficient passenger numbers and the side platform was dismantled. The stone station building was demolished in the mid-1980s. Today there are no more relics of the breakpoint.

Bus transport

Wabern is connected to the Landsberger Verkehrsgemeinschaft (LVG). The LVG bus line 60 runs daily through Wabern from Heinrichshofen via Egling , Wabern, Walleshausen , Kaltenberg , Weil and Penzing to Landsberg am Lech .

Personalities

literature

  • Karl Gattinger, Grietje Suhr: Landsberg am Lech, city and district (= Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation [Hrsg.]: Monuments in Bavaria . Volume I.14 ). Verlag Friedrich Pustet, Regensburg 2014, ISBN 978-3-7917-2449-2 , p. 247-248 .

Web links

Commons : Wabern an der Paar  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Pankraz Fried: 800 years of Wabern 1190–1990 . 1990.
  2. ^ Documents of the Landsberg and Schongau regional courts In: Historischer Atlas von Bayern . 1971.
  3. ^ Andreas Janikowski: The Ammerseebahn. Traffic development in western Upper Bavaria . Transpress, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-344-71033-8 , pp. 13-14 .
  4. ^ Andreas Janikowski: The Ammerseebahn. Traffic development in western Upper Bavaria . Transpress, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-344-71033-8 , pp. 41 .
  5. ^ Description of the Wabern station on Ammerseebahn.de
  6. Line network of the Landsberger Verkehrsgemeinschaft on lvg-bus.de, accessed on January 15, 2016.