Marktheidenfeld | |
Marktheidenfeld
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Location of the town of Marktheidenfeld within Main-Spessart district
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Coordinates | |
Administration | |
Country | Germany |
State | Bavaria |
Admin. region | Lower Franconia |
District | Main-Spessart |
Town subdivisions | 6 Stadtteile |
Mayor | Helga Schmidt-Neder (FWG) |
Basic statistics | |
Area | 37.54 km2 (14.49 sq mi) |
Elevation | 140-335 m |
Population | 10,839 (31 December 2010)[1] |
- Density | 289 /km2 (748 /sq mi) |
Other information | |
Time zone | CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) |
Licence plate | MSP |
Postal code | 97828 |
Area codes | 0 93 91 |
Website | www.marktheidenfeld.de |
Marktheidenfeld is a town in the Main-Spessart district in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia (Unterfranken) in Bavaria, Germany and the seat (but not a member) of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft (Administrative Community) of Marktheidenfeld.
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The town lies 24 km west of Würzburg at the Mainviereck (Main Square) on the eastern side of the Spessart (range), geologically on the seam between the Spessart red sandstone area and the Muschelkalk area of the Fränkische Platte (a flat, mostly agricultural region), which between the Main Square and the Maindreieck (Main Triangle) is known as the Marktheidenfelder Platte.
The town has the following Gemarkungen (traditional rural cadastral areas): Altfeld, Glasofen, Marienbrunn, Marktheidenfeld, Michelrieth, Oberwittbach, Zimmern.
Heidenfeld may have arisen during the Frankish taking of the land in the early 8th century. Already by 855 the place belonged to the Holzkirchen Monastery, which from this time belonged to the Fulda Abbey. The Counts of Wertheim, who were the monastery’s Vögte also managed in the late 13th century to secure the same office over Heidenfeld. In 1397, Marktheidenfeld was first described as a town. Between 1522 and 1530, the Reformation was introduced into the County of Wertheim, and thereby also into Marktheidenfeld. In 1612, after the Würzburg-Wertheim Feud (1599 to 1617), Heidenfeld was taken over as a Würzburg fief, and thus began the Counterreformation under the clergyman Johannes Molitor (1576–1639). From 1632 to 1634, after the Swedes’ victories in the Thirty Years' War, the town was once again Protestant, albeit for only a short time, for the town soon passed to the Princely Electorate (Hochstift) of Würzburg. In 1649, the name Marktheidenfeld made its first appearance, to distinguish the town from the Heidenfeld Monastery near Schweinfurt, which likewise belonged to Würzburg. The Amt of the Princely Electorate (Hochstift) of Würzburg was in Bavaria’s favour secularized in 1803, and then ceded in a border adjustment treaty in 1807 to the Grand Duchy of Würzburg, with which it passed in 1814 to Bavaria. In 1814, Marktheidenfeld became the seat of the Homburg district court, forerunner of the Marktheidenfeld Bezirksamt (a local authority), which in 1939 took the name Landratsamt (district head’s office). In 1948, Marktheidenfeld, which underwent a great upswing in population growth after the Second World War with the arrival of Heimatvertriebene, was raised to town. In 1972, the Marktheidenfeld district (Landkreis Marktheidenfeld) was abolished. Since the municipal reforms in Bavaria (1972–1976), the formerly self-administering communities of Altfeld, Glasofen, Marienbrunn, Michelrieth, Oberwittbach and Zimmern have belonged to Marktheidenfeld.
Marktheidenfeld’s Stadtteile are Glasofen (amalgamated in 1972), Zimmern (1974), Marienbrunn (1975), Altfeld, Michelrieth and Oberwittbach (all in 1978).
The town had some 530 inhabitants in 1542, roughly 730 to 800 in the late 16th century, 630 in 1633 and by the end of the Thirty Years' War, in 1648, possibly 500 to 550. In 1673 the figure had risen again to some 700, and about 1,100 people lived in Marktheidenfeld by 1720.
In 1920, after the First World War, 2,058 inhabitants lived in Marktheidenfeld, in 1925, this had shrunk slightly to 2,030, but had risen again to 2,232 in 1933. The population had further grown by 1938 to 2,687 inhabitants. After the Second World War, in 1946, there were 4,302 inhabitants. Within town limits, 8,364 inhabitants were counted in 1970, 9,421 in 1987 and in 2000 10,803.
On 1 July 2005, 9,034 inhabitants (76.5%) lived in the main town, and 2,773 (23.5%) in the six outlying centres. The total figure amounted to 11,807 inhabitants, of whom foreigners accounted for just under 8%.
Centre | Population |
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Marktheidenfeld (main town) | 8,803 |
Altfeld | 752 |
Glasofen | 435 |
Marienbrunn | 373 |
Michelrieth | 557 |
Oberwittbach | 144 |
Zimmern | 457 |
as at 1 January 2008
Since 1 May 2008, Helga Schmidt-Neder (Freie Wähler) has been the mayor.
Municipal taxes in 1999 amounted to €13,797,000 (converted), of which net business taxes amounted to €8,484,000.
Apportionment of the 24 seats (2008-2014 electoral period)
The town’s arms might be described thus: Argent, in base water azure, thereupon a bridge of stone gules masoned sable with three piers upon which segmented arches with keystones, in chief a mullet of the second.
The town’s first arms were conferred on 7 September 1883 and showed similar charges, the main differences being that the bridge – which is the local bridge across the Main – bore a golden uppercase cursive L with a silver crown on top on the middle spandrel, which was flanked each side by two digits of the yeardate 1846 (the bridge’s building date), that the arches were round rather than segmented and had no keystones, and that the mullet (star shape) was Or (golden) rather than azure (blue). The water was also “proper”, meaning that it was shown in natural colour. The current form of the coat of arms has been used since 1930, but was not actually conferred until 1965[2].
The river Main is a Federal Waterway (Bundeswasserstraße) of the first order for which the Aschaffenburg Water and Ship Transport Office (Wasser- und Schifffahrtsamt Aschaffenburg) is responsible.
The Federal Autobahn A 3 (Nuremberg-Frankfurt) runs east-west, cutting across Staatsstraßen (State Roads) 2299 and 2315 in the outlying centre of Altfeld, whereas Bundesstraße 8, running through the municipal area, serves as an Autobahn feeder road.
A well-developed bus network run by the Nahverkehrsgesellschaft Main-Spessart (“Main-Spessart Local Transport Company”) links the town and its environs. Within town runs a town bus.
In the outlying centre of Altfeld is a glider airfield.
There are also many others.
The Franck-Haus is a richly adorned townsman’s house from the Baroque period, built in 1745, and is one of the town’s most important sights.
The building master was the wine merchant and salesman Franz Valentin Franck (1702–1777). Since 1987, the house has been under the town’s ownership. From 1994 to 1998 it was renovated, for which the façade’s smalt-blue colour, which at the time the house was built was the dearest colour, was reconstituted. Today the house is used for exhibitions[3].
Permanent exhibits include the “world’s smallest library”, a collection of miniature books from Valentin Kaufmann’s legacy, the demonstration smithy, an old smith’s workshop built in the courtyard, and an information room on painter and artistic craftsman Hermann Gradl’s life and works.
Saint Lawrence’s Church (St.-Laurentius-Kirche) has time and again, for more than 700 years, undergone new building work. All together, four sections of building in Romanesque, Gothic, Baroque and Baroque Revival styles can be discerned. Each style was harmoniously worked into the old building.
Many art-history finds, such as the mediaeval frescoes in the quire and the two tomb slabs from the 16th century make the church something of a history book of the town.
The Alte Mainbrücke (“Old Main Bridge”), made out of red sandstone blocks, was built in the mid 19th century during King Ludwig I’s reign, and opened in 1845. More than 150 years later, the old arch bridge was followed by the Nordbrücke (“North Bridge”), a bowstring arch bridge with the unusual feature of hangers that cross each other.
Also worth seeing are the Old Town with its historic timber-frame houses, the Main Promenade, the marketplace with the Fischerbrunnen (fountain), and the Kreuzbergkapelle (chapel), consecrated in 1890. This stands on its namesake mountain, the Kreuzberg, and can be reached by a Way of the Cross.
From June to July, several events take place, such as the Altstadtfest (Old Town Festival) and the Caribbean Night.
Since 1999, the Marktheidenfeld Rowing Club has each year in July held the Red Dragon Cup (so called even in German), at which company and club teams take part in dragon boat races in which even costumes are awarded prizes.
On the first weekend in August, the charburners’ club stages its traditional charburners’ festival (Köhlerfest) in the outlying centre of Glasofen.
In August, the Marktheidenfeld Folk Festival, the Laurenzi-Messe, takes place for ten days. The event’s centrepiece is the Laurenzimarkt (market), which since 2007 has been on the bank of the Main. Furthermore, there are a midway, the traditional beer tent and a tent for commercial displays.
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