Engstingen

Engstingen

Acidic well (Sauerbrunnen) in Kleinengstingen

Coat of arms
Engstingen

Coordinates: 48°23′13″N 09°17′08″E / 48.38694°N 9.28556°E / 48.38694; 9.28556Coordinates: 48°23′13″N 09°17′08″E / 48.38694°N 9.28556°E / 48.38694; 9.28556
Country Germany
State Baden-Württemberg
Admin. region Tübingen
District Reutlingen
Government
  Mayor Klaus-Peter Kleiner (Ind.)
Area
  Total 31.51 km2 (12.17 sq mi)
Population (2015-12-31)[1]
  Total 5,213
  Density 170/km2 (430/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 72829
Dialling codes 07129, 07385
Vehicle registration RT
Website www.engstingen.de

Engstingen is a municipality in the Tübingen administrative region (Regierungsbezirk) in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It lies in the Swabian Jura (plateau), about 15 km south of Reutlingen.

It was formed on January 1, 1975 from the former independent municipalities of Großengstingen, Kleinengstingen and Kohlstetten.

Engstingen is located on the northern edge of the Swabian Jura, in 680–750 meters altitude on the Alb plateau near the Alb edge in the valley of Ur-Lauter, about 15 km south of the town Reutlingen.

Municipality

According to the municipal reform on January 1, 1975, the three previously independent municipalities Großengstingen, Kleinengstingen and Kohlstetten and the industrial park Gewerbepark Haid were combined to Engstingen. The village of Großengstingen and the houses at Großengstingen railway station and Haid belonged previously to the former municipality Großengstingen. The former municipalities Kleinengstingen and Kohlstetten each included only these villages respectively.[2]

Großengstingen and Kleinengstingen are lying together, surrounded by a ring of wooded hilltops. The municipality Kohlstetten is about 3.5 kilometers northeast and Haid about four kilometers south. The deepest point of denunciation with 673 m is located on the railway line at the border to the municipality of Offenhausen, the highest point of 820 m on the Judenstein on the border to the municipality of Meidelstetten.

The following towns and municipalities, which all belong to the district of Reutlingen, share borders with the municipality Engstingen: Lichtenstein, St. Johann, Sonnenbühl, Gomadingen, Trochtelfingen and Hohenstein. The municipality Engstingen teamed-up with the municipality Hohenstein to an Joint Management Community (Verwaltungsgemeinschaft).

Geology

Alb plateau near Haid

The Alb plateau was created when the disk of the White Jurassic was raised before about 50 million years ago. There were many cracks and fissures in the limestone rock, so that rainwater seeps very quickly and so the Alb is quite low in water. Thus, it is surprising that a mineral spring exists in the municipality of Kleinengstingen.

History

Common

The earliest permanent settlement traces are from the Hallstatt culture(Tumulus in the area of Haid). The area belonged from the first to the third century to the Roman Empire (Agri Decumates).

During the Thirty Years' War all three subsites suffered from great population losses, and subsequently Swiss and other foreign families migrated into this area.

Großengstingen

The earliest document of the name of the place names "Anegistingin", dated 24 January 783 in a deed of Lorsch Abbey. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Chur acquired some properties at the beginning of the 10th century. 1439 the name Großengstingen appeared for the first time. A rarely used name was Churengstingen.

The right for free hunting was abolished in 1709 and partially re-introduced from 1713 to 1806 out of courtesy of the duke.[3] 1709 wird die Freie Pirsch abgeschafft und von 1713 bis 1806 als herzogliches Gnadenjagen teilweise wieder eingeführt.[4]

On October 31, 1717 Chur sold Engstingen to the Zwiefalten Abbey. From there it was transferred to the Protestant Württemberg on 30 April 1750. Großengstingen became part of Oberamt Reutlingen 1806 and became a district (Landkreis) from 1938.

From 1963 to 1993, the Rocket artillery battalion 250 of the Bundeswehr was stationed in the Eberhard Finck barracks in Großengstingen.

Kleinengstingen

North west of Kleinengstingen is an Alemannic row grave field. The oldest known mention of "Clain Engstingen" dates from 1482. The place was sometimes called "Freiengstingen" in the 13th century during the reign of the barons of Engstingen (liber de Anegestingen). However, it was probably already then under the reign of Württemberg. The local reign was finally transferred in 1454 to Württemberg, annexing it to the Amt Pfullingen. From then, it was sometimes mentioned as "Unterengstingen". In 1806 Kleinengstingen came to Oberamt Reutlingen and in 1938 it became a district.

Kohlstetten

The oldest known mention of the name Cholsteten (from the German words for cabbage or more likely for charcoal) can be found in a document of the Weißenau Abbey of 1161. The place came in 1230 from the Earl of Achalm to the House of Urach and from there 1265 to Württemberg. The place was very badly damaged in the Thirty Years' War, only the church survived the era relatively unscathed. Kohlstetten was part of the Oberamt Urach (Unteramt or parish Gächingen) within Württemberg. In 1808, it came to the Oberamt Münsingen and became 1938 a district. In 1973, it became part of the district of Reutlingen.

Haid

The German Empire under the dictatorship of the Nazis established the ammunition factory Muna Haid in a wooded area about four kilometers south of Großengstingen. During World War II a small forced laborers and POW camp was connected to the ammunition factory, into which 200 to 300 men and women were mainly deported from France, Russia and Poland. They were either used directly in the ammunition factory or used for agricultural work in the surrounding villages.[5]

Between February and April 1945, Muna Haid was repeatedly bombed by Allied air forces and severely damaged. The Wehrmacht itself blasted the intact remains of the ammunition bunkers shortly before the end of the war and the Nazi dictatorship, so that it would not fall into the hands of the advancing Allied troops. After the war, the site was rehabilitated, after the Federal Republic of Germany was founded in 1949. Initially a sanatorium, then in 1953 a camp for refugees was established, mainly German expellees from the former eastern territories of the German Reich.

The Bundeswehr built some barracks 1957 in the area, which were initially called Haid Barracks and in 1965 renamed to Eberhard Finckh Barracks. Until their closure at the end of 1993, there was also an American unit (84th Field Artillery Detachment) stationed next to the Rocket Artillery 250. They had the oversight and control over the nuclear warheads that were stored in the special ammunition depot Golf in the Eberhard Finck barracks at the road to Meidelstetten. The area around the barracks and the nuclear weapons base was in the 1980s the location of various protest demonstrations of the peace movement, which demonstrated with regional Easter marches with up to 5,000 participants and some multi-week sit-ins against the military presence on the ground.

Since the mid 1990s, the now civilian land is jointly used as a business park by the surrounding communities Engstingen, Hohenstein and Trochtelfingen.

Population Development

Year Population
1823 1.281
1864 1.760
1871¹ 1.842
1880¹ 1.908
1890¹ 1.868
1900¹ 1.957
1910¹ 1.913
1925¹ 2.025
Year Population
1933¹ 2.114
1939¹ 2.169
1950¹ 2.415
1956¹ 2.956
1961¹ 3.707
1965 4.118
1970¹ 4.280
1975 4.679
Year Population
1980 4.458
1985 4.403
1987¹ 4.038
1990 4.291
1995 4.871
2000 5.285
2005 5.519
2010 5.306

¹ Census result, other numbers for each year

Mayors

The mayor is elected for a term of eight years. The previous tenure of Klaus-Peter Kleiner ended by resignation 2013; Small died in the night of 5 to 6 October 2013. Current mayor is Mario Storz since 2013.

Previous mayors of districts

Großengstingen

  • around 1557: Mich(a)el Gerstenecker[6][7]
  • 1885-1919: Claudius Wälder
  • 1919-1945: Oskar Gauch
  • 1946-1949: Theodor Leippert
  • 1949-1963: Martin Staneker
  • 1963-1975: Kurt Stemmer

Kleinengstingen

  • 1864-1894: Johann Georg Stooß
  • 1895-1904: Christian Stooß
  • 1904-1920: Christian Baisch
  • 1920-1937: Ernst Stooß
  • 1937-1946: Ernst Glück
  • 1946-1954: Wilhelm Mohl
  • 1955-1975: Adam Baisch

Kohlstetten

  • 1892-1894: Andreas Failenschmid
  • 1894-1915: August Glück
  • 1915-1917: Johann Martin Vöhringer
  • 1917-1927: Jakob Reitter
  • 1927-1945: John Glück
  • 1946-1960: Gottlob Nau
  • 1960-1975: Christian Spohn

Engstingen (after the municipal reform)

  • 1975-1983: Kurt Stemmer
  • 1983-2013: Klaus-Peter Kleiner
  • from 2013: Mario Storz

Coat of arms

Current coat of arms


Engstingen

Since 19 January 1978, the coat of arms show a white, ascending Capricorn on a black background, the symbol of the Prince Bishop of Chur in (Switzerland), who possessed the dominion Großengstingen until 1717. A and about the deer antler on a gold background, which documented the ownership by the house of Württemberg in earlier times.

Previous coats of arms


Großengstingen

Kleinengstingen

Kohlstetten

Twinning

Engstingen is twinned with the Swiss town of Chur in the canton of Grisons, not least because of the common historical past.

Religions

Großengstingen (Diocese of Chur) remained Catholic, while Kleinengstingen and Kohlstetten (both Württemberg) have been reformed to become Protestant (Evangelical Pietist) due to their different relations during the Reformation.

Kleinengstingen belonged initially to the parish of St. Martin in Großengstingen, which was first mentioned in 1275. The Martin Church was built in the Rococo style by Zwiefalten Abbey 1717-1719. The parish includes today also the Catholics of Kleinengstingen and Kohlstetten.

The parish church in Kohlstetten was incorporated in 1496 by the convent Offenhausen and has changed since the Reformation to a Protestant parish. Due to the Reformation came Kleinengstingen of the still Catholic parish to parish Großengstingen Kohlstetten. The present church was built in 1760 and in 1787 expanded.

A Protestant church was built in Kleinengstingen in 1770.

Now the municipality of Engstingen belongs both to the Catholic Church Administration deanery Reutlingen-Zwiefalten of the diocese of Rottenburg-Stuttgart and to church district Bad Urach-Münsingen of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Württemberg.

Music

Engstingen forms a musical focus point on the Alb with the Sängerbund founded in 1854 Kohlstetten, the Liederkranz Großengstingen of 1858, the Swabian Alb musicians first mentioned on 6 October 1867, the Köhlermusikanten established on 6 March 1953 and the brass band, the mixed choir Kleinengstingen and the church choir St. Martin Großengstingen.

Museums

Maico MC 500-4 of 1957 in the Automobile Museum Engstingen

The Automobile Museum Engstingen displays historic cars and motorcycles from the postwar period. The scooter and small car meeting Here takes place here every year on 3 October 3.

Buildings

St Martin's Church in Großengstingen
Blasius Church in Kleinengstingen

Around 1580 the only mineral spring on the Alb plateau was discovered in the center of Kleinengstingen and feeds the Sauerbrunnen (acidic well).

1275 a Catholic parish church of St. Martin was first mentioned. The year 1606 is carved into the baptismal font of the baroque church which was finished in 1719 by the builder Franz Beer of Bleichten. The Wendelin chapel in Großengstingen was built in 1750. The church was built in 1770/71 partially above a smaller previous church. Its name comes from Blasius, who was bishop in Sebaste (Armenia) in 316 and died a martyr. For a village church, the Rococo style plant ornaments on dais, pulpit and the ceiling are unusually elaborate and valuable. The organ in the Romantic style from 1862 is listed as cultural heritage.

The Protestant Marienkirche in Kohlstetten in its present form of 1787 has frescoes dating back to 1500. They show an incompletely preserved Marie cycle and various depictions of saints and Old Württemberg coats of arms. The frescoes were rediscovered in 1956/57 and restored during a church renovation.

The Lichtenstein Castle is in the neighboring community Lichtenstein.

Regular events

Associations

Economy and infrastructure

On the grounds of the former Eberhard Finck barracks municipalities Engstingen, Hohenstein and Trochtelfingen who founded in 1994 the industrial park Haid.

Transport

Roads

The federal Highways, which runs in the north/south direction B 312 and B 313 forks in Engstingen. The B 312 starts at the Bundesautobahn 8 at Stuttgart Airport and runs via Kleinengstingen, Riedlingen and Biberach to Memmingen. The B 313 branches at Plochingen off the B 10 and runs via Großengstingen and Sigmaringen to Stockach.

In east/west direction the national road L 230 branches off from the B 27 in Gomaringen and runs via Kohlstetten to Münsingen near the Autobahn A 8 at Merklingen.

Railways

Kleinengstingen railway station

The Royal Württemberg State Railways built the Reutlingen–Schelklingen railway by extending the route form Reutlingen to Honau in 1893 by the cog railway Honau-Lichtenstein and then with a conventional railway track from Kleinengstingen via Kohlstetten to Münsingen and in 1901 further to Schelklingen. Two Standardized railway stations of Type IIa were built at Kleinengstingen and Kohlstetten.[8] With the opening of the route Gammertingen-Kleinengstingen by the Hohenzollerische Landesbahn, Kleinengstingen became a node in 1901 until the Echaz Valley route was decommissioned 1969.

The commune is in the comb 224 of the Verkehrsverbund Neckar-Alb-Donau (NALDO).

Education

Großengstingen has as a community center, the primary, secondary and high school Freibühlschule, Kleinengstingen has a primary school with the Steinbühlschule and Großengstingen hosts a Waldorf School.

Honorary citizens

Attractions

Literature

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Engstingen.

References

  1. "Gemeinden in Deutschland nach Fläche, Bevölkerung und Postleitzahl am 30.09.2016". Statistisches Bundesamt (in German). 2016.
  2. Das Land Baden-Württemberg. Amtliche Beschreibung nach Kreisen und Gemeinden. Volume VII: Regierungsbezirk Tübingen. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1978, ISBN 3-17-004807-4. pp. 29–30
  3. Walter Stettner, Jan Thorbecke Sigmaringen, ed. (in German), Ebingen - Die Geschichte einer württembergischen Stadt 1986, pp. 102
  4. Gottlob Hummel, Genossenschaftsdruckerei, ed. (in German), Die Geschichte der Stadt Ebingen 1923, pp. 36
  5. Ein großes Stillschweigen. In: Reutlinger General-Anzeiger, 2 January 2010, p. 22. – Über eine Forschungsarbeit zu Erinnerungen der Engstinger Bevölkerung an die Zwangsarbeiter in der Muna Haid.
  6. Also known as Gersteneckher, Eck(her) d.A., Schultheiß
  7. Bestand A 44 U 7137 on Landesarchiv-BW.de
  8. Klee, Wolfgang (1996). Württemberg-Report: württembergische Eisenbahngeschichte. Fürstenfeldbruck: Merker. ISBN 3-922404-96-0.
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