Nohn

Nohn

Coat of arms
Nohn

Coordinates: 50°19′49″N 6°47′12″E / 50.33028°N 6.78667°ECoordinates: 50°19′49″N 6°47′12″E / 50.33028°N 6.78667°E
Country Germany
State Rhineland-Palatinate
District Vulkaneifel
Municipal assoc. Hillesheim
Government
  Mayor Alfons Maas (CDU)
Area
  Total 11.07 km2 (4.27 sq mi)
Population (2012-12-31)[1]
  Total 431
  Density 39/km2 (100/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 54578
Dialling codes 02696
Vehicle registration DAU

Nohn is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Hillesheim, whose seat is in the like-named town.

Geography

Location

The municipality lies both in the Vulkaneifel, a part of the Eifel known for its volcanic history, geographical and geological features and even ongoing activity today, and in the Kalkeifel, another part of the Eifel characterized by limestone (Kalkstein in German). The municipality lies right on the boundary with North Rhine-Westphalia and at the common point of three districts, Ahrweiler, Euskirchen and Vulkaneifel (until 31 December 2006 called Daun).

The nearest major centres within a 20 km radius of Nohn are Adenau, Blankenheim, Daun, Gerolstein, Hillesheim, Kelberg and Jünkerath.

History

The name “Nohn” is held to derive from the Latin phrase ad nonum lapidem, meaning “at the ninth stone”, that is to say, at the ninth milestone on the old Roman road between Trier and Cologne. This, however, cannot be taken as serious historical information, for in Roman times, Nohn had not yet arisen. Nohn had its first documentary mention about 970 as the location of a chapel.

In feudal times, Nohn belonged to the Electoral-Trier Amt of Daun. The knightly seat at Nohn was held for several centuries by the Lords of Hillesheim. The municipality’s and the church’s patron saint is Saint Martin. This gives a clue as to a long church tradition in the village. As early as 970, a chapel in Nohn was named.[2]

Until 30 September 1932, the municipality belonged to the Adenau district. This district, however, was abolished in the course of administrative reform. From 1 October 1932 to 6 November 1970, Nohn was part of the Ahrweiler district, and since 7 November 1970 it has belonged to the Daun district, whose name was changed on 1 January 2007 to Vulkaneifel.

Politics

Municipal council

The council is made up of 8 council members, who were elected by majority vote at the municipal election held on 7 June 2009, and the honorary mayor as chairman.[3]

Mayor

Nohn’s mayor is Alfons Maas (CDU).

Coat of arms

The municipality’s arms might be described thus: Per fess, Or a demi-eagle bicapitate displayed sable armed and langued gules, and azure a sword bendwise point to chief argent, hilted of the first.

The two-headed eagle in the upper part of the escutcheon refers to a relationship between the municipality and St. Maximin’s Abbey in Trier. The Kapelle Noyn (“Nohn Chapel”) supposedly once belonged to the Abbey, according to a falsified, but presumably factually correct, document from 970. There is a further clue to a relationship between the two in a reference from 1759 that names the Abbey as the body with tithing rights to the village. The lower half of the arms is charged with a sword, Saint Martin’s attribute, thus representing the municipality’s and the church’s patron saint.

Culture and sightseeing

The Nohner

The Nohner is a motorcycle built as part of a limited series in the early 1920s by the Brothers Hoffmann in Nohn. The one on display on the premises of the firm Hoffmann-Reisen is the only one of these vehicles still in existence. It is driven by a British Villiers engine.

In 2005 and 2006, the Nohner was driven in the fourth and fifth Bad Münstereifel Ernst Neumann-Neander Memorial Roadtrip.

Buildings

Saint Martin’s Parish Church

The Nohn parish church was built by Brother Nick from Solothurn as an aisleless church in 1781. The tower has its beginnings in the 16th century. The church is consecrated to Saint Martin of Tours. The Romanesque Revival building has a high altar from the earlier half of the 17th century that, although altered a number of times, is still in very much its original condition. The confessionals and the pulpit come from the 18th century. The Baroque organ was built in in 1868. It had already been built in 1720 and used elsewhere, though. Before coming to Nohn, it had been at Saint Mathias’s Abbey.

In the abutting graveyard stands a Crucifixion Bildstock from 1741. The church’s entrance door, flanked by lions, bears a warriors’ memorial to the dead of the First World War.[4]

Other listed buildings and structures in the municipality include the following:

Tourism

The municipality lies at the northeastern edge of the Hillesheim holiday region in the Vulkaneifel European Geopark, but is also surrounded by the Blankenheim an der Ahrquelle, Hocheifel-Nürburgring and Kelberg holiday regions. Given its favourable central location, Nohn is an ideal starting point for outings in all these holiday regions or to other points of interest in the Eifel.

Through the municipality runs the “Geo-Path” of the Verbandsgemeinde of Hillesheim, a local hiking loop as well as one of the Eifelverein’s hiking trails. Through the nearby Ahbach valley run the well known Eifel-Krimi-Wanderweg (“Eifel Crime Fiction Hiking Trail”), the Eifelsteig and the two cycle paths Kalkeifel-Radweg and Mineralquellen-Route, the latter’s name referring to mineral springs.

Nearby points of interest

Worth seeing are a natural monument lying in the Üxheim-Ahütte municipal area, the Dreimühlen Waterfall, which draws its name from the nearby ruin of Dreimühlen, a basalt deposit on the Nohner Bach, the limekiln in the Üxheim-Niederehe municipal area (on the road from Nohn to Stroheich), the limestone crags in the Ahbach valley and the ruin of Neublankenheim near Üxheim-Ahütte.

Cycle paths in the area are the Ahrtal-Radweg, the Kalkeifel-Radweg and the mountain bike path for cross-country riders that leads around the Nürburgring.

Economy and infrastructure

Transport

It is only a few kilometres over Landesstraße (State Road) 10 or 167 to Bundesstraße 258 (Aachen-Koblenz), over Landesstraße 68 to Bundesstraße 421 (Belgian border-Hunsrück) or Landesstraße 70 to Bundesstraße 410 (Luxembourgish border-Mayen).

After A 1 is completed between the Blankenheim and Gerolstein interchanges, the municipality will be reachable through the Adenau interchange.

Businesses

In the village centre is a small supermarket with a butcher’s shop. Not far from the village square is a small beverage dealer’s shop. Also, there are two auto workshops/dealerships as well as an electrician’s business. On the village’s outskirts (towards Adenau) are a woodworking business, a street improvement business and a bus company with a filling station.

Several times each week, Nohn is visited by vending trucks selling baked goods and foods.

References

External links