Warth-Weiningen
Warth-Weiningen | |
---|---|
State : | Switzerland |
Canton : | Thurgau (TG) |
District : | Frauenfeld |
BFS no. : | 4621 |
Postal code : | 8532 |
Coordinates : | 707 425 / 271.27 thousand |
Height : | 445 m above sea level M. |
Height range : | 381–501 m above sea level M. |
Area : | 8.21 km² |
Residents: | 1346 (December 31, 2018) |
Population density : | 164 inhabitants per km² |
Website: | www.warth-weiningen.ch |
Location of the municipality | |
Warth-Weiningen , in Swiss German Wart-Wiininge , is a municipality in the Frauenfeld district in the canton of Thurgau in Switzerland .
In addition to the villages of Warth and Weiningen and the well-known Kartause Ittingen , the hamlets of Geissel, Nergeten and Weckingen also belong to the political community .
history
Weiningen was first mentioned in a document in 1219 as Winingin . The history of Warth is closely linked to the former Ittingen Monastery (1152–1848).
Today's municipality of Warth-Weiningen was created on January 1, 1995 through the merger of the two former local communities of Warth and Weiningen. For the union, Warth broke away from the municipality of Uesslingen and Weiningen from the municipality of Pfyn . Weiningen also moved from the former Steckborn district to the Frauenfeld district .
→ see also section history in article Warth TG
→ see also section history in article Weiningen TG
population
1850 | 1850 | 1900 | 1950 | 1990 | 2000 | 2010 | 2018 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Political community | 1131 | 1230 | 1341 | |||||
Warth parish | 225 | 238 | 183 | 219 | 506 | |||
Local community Weiningen | 305 | 316 | 336 | 343 | 490 |
Of the total of 1,341 inhabitants in the municipality of Warth-Weiningen in 2018, 149 or 11.1% were foreign nationals. 579 (43.2%) were Protestant Reformed and 364 (27.1%) were Roman Catholic.
coat of arms
Blazon : split from white with black rust and from black with yellow grape with a white stem and two white leaves.
The rust is the symbol of St. Laurentius, the church patron of Ittingen; the grape is talking to Weiningen. The colors black and white indicate that it belongs to the jurisdiction of the former Ittingen Charterhouse.
After the political community of Warth-Weiningen had been formed in 1995, the community assembly decided in 2002 to combine the coats of arms of the two former local communities into a new one.
economy
In 2016, Warth-Weiningen offered work to 446 people (converted to full-time positions). Of these, 12.3% were employed in agriculture and forestry, 26.2% in industry, trade and construction and 61.5% in the service sector.
Sights and pictures
→ see also the list of cultural assets in Warth-Weiningen
→ see also the Sights section in the article Warth TG
The Ittingen Charterhouse is listed in the inventory of Swiss sites worthy of protection .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Permanent and non-permanent resident population by year, canton, district, municipality, population type and gender (permanent resident population). In: bfs. admin.ch . Federal Statistical Office (FSO), August 31, 2019, accessed on December 22, 2019 .
- ↑ a b Thurgau in figures 2019 . On the website of the Statistical Office of the Canton of Thurgau (PDF file; 1.8 MB), accessed on April 28, 2020.
- ↑ Warth-Weiningen on ortsnames.ch (online database), accessed on February 15, 2020
- ↑ a b c population development of the municipalities. Canton Thurgau, 1850–2000 and resident population of the municipalities and change from the previous year. Canton of Thurgau, 1990–2018. On the website of the Statistical Office of the Canton of Thurgau (Excel tables; 0.1 MB each), accessed on April 28, 2020.
- ^ Erich Trösch: Warth (TG). In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland .
- ↑ Erich Trösch: Weiningen (TG). In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland .
- ↑ Localities and their resident population. Edition 2019 . On the website of the Statistical Office of the Canton of Thurgau (Excel table; 0.1 MB), accessed on April 28, 2020.
- ↑ a b c municipal coat of arms . On the website of the State Archives of the Canton of Thurgau, accessed on December 8, 2019