Horb am Neckar
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Horb am Neckar | |
Horb-Betra in snow. | |
Coat of arms | Location |
Administration | |
Country | Germany |
---|---|
State | Baden-Württemberg |
Admin. region | Karlsruhe |
District | Freudenstadt |
Lord Mayor | Michael Theurer |
Basic statistics | |
Area | 119.84 km² (46.3 sq mi) |
Elevation | 437 m (1434 ft) |
Population | 26,136 (31/12/2006) |
- Density | 218 /km² (565 /sq mi) |
Other information | |
Time zone | CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) |
Licence plate | FDS |
Postal code | 72160 |
Area codes | 07451, 07482, 07483, 07486 |
Website | www.horb.de |
Horb am Neckar is a town in the south west of the German state of Baden-Württemberg. It is located on the Neckar river, between Offenburg to the west (about 56 km away) and Tübingen to the east (about 29 km away). It has around 25,000 inhabitants, of whom about 6,000 live in the main town of Horb, and the remainder in 18 associated villages and districts which form part of the same municipality. If the entire municipality is counted, it is the largest town in the District of Freudenstadt.
Since 1 January 1981 Horb am Neckar has had the status of a Große Kreisstadt. It operates a combined administration with the neighbouring communities of Empfingen and Eutingen im Gäu.
Contents |
[edit] Geography
Horb lies on the eastern margin of the northern part of the Black Forest just above the confluence of the river Grabenbach with the Neckar. The well-preserved old town, with an ancient castle and castle gardens and a typical market place where the town hall is still located, lies on a ridge overlooking the Neckar. The modern town and its outskirts stretch up the valleys of both rivers.
[edit] Constituent communities
In addition to the main town of Horb, the municipality includes a number of communities which are recognised within the terms of the 1970s Baden-Württemberg local government reform, that is they have an elected council and council chairman. These are Ahldorf, Altheim, Betra, Bildechingen, Bittelbronn, Dettensee, Dettingen, Dettlingen, Dießen, Grünmettstetten, Ihlingen, Isenburg, Mühlen, Mühringen, Nordstetten, Rexingen and Talheim, the last of which is made up of the formerly independent parishes of Obertalheim and Untertalheim. These are referred to formally (e.g. for postal purposes) as Horb-Ahldorf, Horb-Altheim, etc. There are also other districts with distinct names, such as Hohenberg and Haugenstein, but no formally recognised boundaries, and numerous isolated hamlets with handfuls of inhabitants, such as Fronholzhof, Frundeckhof, Heidgrundhof, Hohenfichtehof, Markstallhof, Auchtert-Höfe, Breitenbaum-Höfe, Josefshof, Käppleshof, Kegelhof, Isenburger Höfe, Buchhöfe, Kreuzhöfe, Plattenhöfe, Ziegelhof, Heidehöfe, Kapellenhöfe, and Röteberg, not to mention even smaller settlements such as Neckarhausen or Priorberg.
[edit] Neighbouring municipalities
The following towns and communities border on Horb am Neckar, listing them in clockwise order starting in the east: Starzach (in Landkreis Tübingen), Haigerloch (Zollernalbkreis), Empfingen (Landkreis Freudenstadt), Sulz am Neckar (Landkreis Rottweil), Glatten, Schopfloch and Waldachtal (all in Landkreis Freudenstadt), and finally Haiterbach and Nagold, both in Landkreis Calw).
[edit] History
Horb was first documented as horv or horva, meaning swamp in Old High German, at 1090.
It is unclear when the city first got Town privileges.
In 1981 Horb became a Große Kreisstadt (major district town) due to an appliction of the city council when Horb reached a population figure of over 20,000 at 1979
Please help improve this section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. |
[edit] Main sights
- The annual Renaissance fair "Maximilian-Ritterspiele" (Maximilian-Jousting) in Horb which takes place in the middle of June
- Then annual Rock festival "Mini-Rock-Festival" taking place in late August since 2005 organised voluntary by adolescents
Please help improve this section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. |
[edit] People
- 1447, Veit Stoß, died 22 September 1533 in Nürnberg, sculptor, painter and engraver
- 1720, 13 August, Martin Gerbert, died 13 May 1793, Fürstabt von St. Blasien
- 1806, 29 December, Kaspar Kaltenmoser, died 8 March 1867 in München, Genre works
- 1812, 28 February, Berthold Auerbach, died 8 February 1882 in Cannes, writer
- 1816, 5 March, Johann Nepomuk Meintel, died 14 December 1872 in Horb, sculptor and painter
- 1829, 21 January, Dr. Paul Leopold Haffner, died 2 November 1899 in Mainz, bishop of Mainz
- 1852, 14 April, Maximilian Delphinius Berlitz, died 1921 in New York, founder of the Berlitz Language Schools
- 1883, 12 August, Lorenz Bock, died 4 August 1948, state president of Württemberg-Hohenzollern
- 1935, 31 January, Norbert Schneider, jurist und politician of the CDU
- 1949, 4 March, Winfried Wolf, member of the Bundestag for the PDS at 1994–2002, today spokesman of the initiative "Bürgerbahn statt Börsenbahn"
[edit] Twin towns
- Haslemere, United Kingdom, since 1991
- Salins-les-Bains, France, since 1991
- San Justo Desvern, Spain, since 1999
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