Nürtingen

Nürtingen

Coat of arms
Nürtingen

Coordinates: 48°38′N 9°20′E / 48.633°N 9.333°E / 48.633; 9.333Coordinates: 48°38′N 9°20′E / 48.633°N 9.333°E / 48.633; 9.333
Country Germany
State Baden-Württemberg
Admin. region Stuttgart
District Esslingen
Government
  Mayor Otmar Heirich (SPD)
Area
  Total 46.9 km2 (18.1 sq mi)
Population (2015-12-31)[1]
  Total 40,535
  Density 860/km2 (2,200/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 72601–72622
Dialling codes 07022
Vehicle registration ES
Website nuertingen.de

Nürtingen ( listen ; Swabian: Nirdeng) is a town in the district of Esslingen in Baden-Württemberg in southern Germany. It is located on the river Neckar.

Districts

Hardt

Hardt (929 inhabitants, as of 2012) is the smallest district of Nürtingen. Hardt was first mentioned in 1366 in documents.

Neckarhausen

Neckarhausen (3,768 inhabitants, as of 2012) is about 2  km from Nürtingen. Neckarhausen was first mentioned in the year 1284. The site is largely dominated by the church and the town hall.

Raidwangen

Raidwangen (2,115 inhabitants, as of 2014) is about 3  km southwest of Nürtingen and about 1  km from the Neckar. Raidwangen was first mentioned in 1236 in documents.

Reudern

Reudern (2,707 inhabitants, as of 2012) is located on a hill approximately 3   km east of Nürtingen and was first mentioned in the year 1338.

Zizishausen

Zizishausen (3,222 inhabitants, as of 2012) is to the left and right of the Neckar and borders to the north directly to the core city of Nürtingen. Zizishausen was first mentioned in 1296.

Oberensingen

Oberensingen (4,060 inhabitants, 2006) closes immediately northwest of the central city of Nürtingen. The first mention dates back to 1344.

Roßdorf

Roßdorf lies south of Nürtingen. The district was created in the early 1960s as a model construction project for modern urban planning on the drawing board. Today Roßdorf has around 4,500 inhabitants.

History

The following events occurred, by year:

Nürtingen power plant

20.th century

During Nazi Germany there were in the range of today's urban area 17 forced labor camps and accommodations with "Eastern workers", prisoners of war and "foreign workers", which had to work in the local companies, such as Maschinenfabrik Gebrüder Heller. [2] At the present location of the secondary schools was the Mühlwiesenlager with "Eastern workers". Eleven names of victims of the "euthanasia" murders are known, they were killed in Grafeneck or Hadamar. [3] They also caused that all in so-called "mixed marriages" living men were brought to concentration camps and murdered there.[4][5]

A in Nürtingen born Sinti-child, Anton Köhler, was with most of his siblings brought in 1944 from the Catholic orphanage St. Josephpflege in Mulfingen to Auschwitz-Birkenau and killed after his parents had been murdered.[6]

Nürtingen Rathaus Town hall


Nürtingen Ochsenbrunnen Ox fountain

Education

Nürtingen is home to Nürtingen-Geislingen University of Applied Science, also known as the Hochschule für Wirtschaft und Umwelt Nürtingen-Geislingen. The school hosts undergraduate and graduate programs in business administration, finance, real estate, and landscape architecture. Programs are taught in English and German, with a Master of Science in International Finance being taught through its growing European School of Finance, which partners with the German Institute for Corporate Finance, the European Derivatives Institute, the Deutsche Börse, and the Eurex exchange.

Nürtingen St. Laurentius West side

Mayors since 1819

Notable people

Robert Wiedersheim 1874

Local council

The local council in Nürtingen has 32 members. Till 2014 local counsil had 39 members. The elections Baden-Württemberg 2014 had the following results.[7] The Lord Mayor is the president of the council and has one vote.

parties %
2014
Sitze
2014
%
2009
Sitze
2009
CDU Christian Democratic Union of Germany 21,15 7 23,9 10
NL/GRÜNE Nürtingen list/Alliance '90/The Greens 16,85 5 19,53 8
FW Free voters 15,94 5 14,43 6
SPD Social Democratic Party of Germany 13,50 4 14,18 5
NT14 NT 14 11,21 4
LB/FDP Liberal citizens/Free Democratic Party 8,67 3 7,99 3
AB Aktive Bürger 7,80 2
FWVO Free voters Nürtingen-Oberensingen 4,88 2 5,82 2
JB Young citizens Nürtingen 11,32 4
REP The Republicans (Germany) 2,47 1
gesamt 100,0 32 100,0 39
Wahlbeteiligung 47,62 % 49,75 %

Twinnings

Nürtingen is twinned with:

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nürtingen.

Notes

  1. "Gemeinden in Deutschland nach Fläche, Bevölkerung und Postleitzahl am 30.09.2016". Statistisches Bundesamt (in German). 2016.
  2. Steffen Seischab (2011): "Ausländische Zwangsarbeiter", in: Reinhard Tietzen (Hrsg.): Nürtingen 1918–1950. Nürtingen/Frickenhausen: Sindlinger-Burchartz 2011, S. 301 und 317
  3. Anne Schaude: "Euthanasie"-Morde an Nürtingern, in: Nürtinger Opfer nationalsozialistischer Verfolgung. Webseite der Gedenkinitiative für die Opfer und Leidtragenden des Nationalsozialismus in Nürtingen: ns-opfer-nt.jimdo.com, abgerufen am 5. November 2013
  4. Manuel Werner: Weitere Ermordete. Sich erinnern heißt wachsam bleiben, in: Nürtinger Opfer nationalsozialistischer Verfolgung. Website der Gedenkinitiative für die Opfer und Leidtragenden des Nationalsozialismus in Nürtingen: ns-opfer-nt.jimdo.com, abgerufen am 5. November 2013
  5. Manuel Werner: "Die Erinnerung braucht uns, und die Zukunft auch!". Rede von Manuel Werner bei der Übergabe des „Eis der Heckschnärre“, in: Nürtinger STATTzeitung
  6. Manuel Werner (2013): In Nürtingen geboren – in Auschwitz ermordet: Anton Köhler, in: Nürtinger Opfer nationalsozialistischer Verfolgung. Website der Gedenkinitiative für die Opfer und Leidtragenden des Nationalsozialismus in Nürtingen: ns-opfer-nt.jimdo.com, abgerufen am 5. November 2013
  7. Election information of Communal Computer Center Stuttgart
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.