Leobersdorf

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Emblem Location
Emblem of Leobersdorf Location map
Basic Facts (Stand 2004)
Bundesland: Lower Austria
County: Baden
Area: 12,34 km²
Population: 4.151 (2001)
Population density: 336 inhabitants/km²
Buildings: 1030 (1991)
Elevation: 267 above MSO
Postal code: 2544
City Prefix: 02256
Coordinates: N 16° 13' 0, E 47° 55' 0
Car license plate: BN
Politics
Mayor: Anton Bosch (LZL)
Ruling Party: LZL

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Early settlements

First indices of settlement in the area date back to 3000 BC.

Around 350 BC celtic settlers found Noricum. From their word Tristis, which means rushing or dangerous, derived the name for the river Triesting which flows through Leobersdorf.

About 15 a.d. Noricum was taken peacefully by the Romans. Most probably they built a watchtower where now the church is standing.

[edit] Name

Leobersdorf was first named in the Bayrische Traditionsbücher (Bavarian Traditionbooks) as Liubetsendorf around 1165 / 1174. This name possibly derives from the old-slavic name Ljubac or the celtic word Lewer or Loben, which means Border- or Gravehill.

The name changed over time. In 1311 it was Lewbesdorf, 1350 Leubesdorf and finally, 1588, Leobersdorf.

[edit] Famous people

Ing. Viktor Kaplan worked at the Leobersdorfer Maschinenfabrik from 1901 to 1903 and developed his idea of the Kaplan turbine there.

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 47°55′N 16°13′E

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