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Schwäbischer Albverein

The Schwäbischer Albverein e. V (Swabian Jura Association) (SAV) is one of the oldest hiking clubs in Germany. Based in Stuttgart, the society was founded on August 13, 1888 in Plochingen, Baden-Württemberg. Its territory extends far beyond the Swabian Jura north to the Tauber river and south to the Lake Constance, including the former territory of Württemberg except for the part of the Black Forest previously part of Württemberg (Calw and Freudenstadt). It is enrolled in the register of associations of the district court of Stuttgart (VR 2430).

The number of members grew rapidly, from 519 in 1889 to about 20,000 in 1897, 44,000 in 1926, 60,000 in 1955, and 100,000 in 1971. Today it is the largest German and European hiking club.

The association is a member of the German Hiking Association (Deutscher Wanderverband) and of the European Ramblers' Association. Since 1994, the group is a recognized conservation association.

History edit

 
Valentin Salzmann memorial in Esslingen am Neckar

On August 13, 1888, at the invitation of Valentin Salzmann, the representatives of several beautification associations met in Plochingen with the aim of improving the work of the existing groups on the Albtrauf.[1] At the inaugural meeting on November 12, 1888 in Plochingen Salzmann presented the first draft of the by-laws of the Albverein, which was inaugurated shortly thereafter. The first committee meeting took place on April 22, 1889. At the first general meeting of the Association on May 5, 1889 Salzmann was unanimously elected chairman, Ernst Camerer secretary and deputy chairman, Gustav Ströhmfeld treasurer, and Eugen Nägele editor.[2][3]

Structure edit

The association is divided into 22 "districts" (Gaue). They are responsible for overseeing the local groups in their area. At present the association has 570 local groups. The main office is located in Stuttgart.

Goals edit

The association is not only dedicated to hiking, but above all to regional culture and all its riches. Its goal is to cultivate and preserve both the special and the everyday within its territory from the Taubergrund to Lake Constance and from the Black Forest to the Nördlinger Ries. These include the protection of nature and landscape as well as the care of language, music, dance and song. This results in rich hiking and events programs and many opportunities for recreation, relaxation and socializing.

An important goal is also the training of qualified hiking guides. For this purpose, the homeland and hiking academy Baden-Württemberg was founded in 2001. It is a joint project of the Swabian Albverein together with the Black Forest Association .

Offerings edit

With their extensive hiking and events programs the local groups offer many opportunities for recreation, relaxation and socializing. Being a member of the Swabian Albverein does not just mean joining in a group with a trained hiking guide who knows how to tell about the ways, nature and culture, landscape history and buildings. In addition, the numerous hikes, annual meetings and hikes under the stars provide an opportunity for sociable walking and celebrating together. In addition, the Association offers training for expert hiking guides, conservationists or youth workers, lessons in folk music, folk dancing, flag waving and more.

Observation towers edit

 
Schönbergturm near Pfullingen

The club operates a total of 29 observation towers on the Swabian Alb, but also in other areas of Baden-Württemberg, such as the Swabian-Franconian Forest and the Stromberg.[4]

Hostels edit

 
Franz Keller House hostel

The Association operates a total of 21 hostels with overnight accommodation, both on the Swabian Jura, and also in other areas of Baden-Württemberg. Most of them are staffed by local groups of volunteers on weekends and holidays; others are leased to a tenant.[5]

Neckarland and Hohenlohe plain edit

  • Weinsberg, vol. (216 m)
  • Sulzdorf, vol. (382 m)

Keuperberge - Stromberg-Heuchelberg , Swabian-Franconian Forest edit

  • Füllmenbacher Hof, vol. (305 m)
  • Juxkopfhütte, vol. (533 m)
  • Eschelhof, vol (492 m)

Eastern and Central Swabian Alb up to the line Echaz-Große Lauter edit

  • Franz Keller House, vol. (781 m)
  • Wasserberghaus, leased (700 m)
  • Burg Teck , leased (775 m)
  • Eninger Weide, leased (751 m)

Middle and southwestern Alb, west of the Echaz-Grosse Lauter line edit

  • Roßberghaus, leased (869 m)
  • Sternberg, vol. (844 m)
  • Nägelehaus, leased (956 m)
  • Fuchsfarm Youth Center, vol. (920 m)
  • House of Folk Art, (570 m)
  • Lochenhütte, vol. (963 m)
  • Nusplinger Hütte, vol. (890 m)

On or near the southern edge of the Swabian Alb and south of the Danube edit

  • Pfannentalhaus, leased (440 m)
  • Weidacher Hütte,, vol. (632 m)
  • Farrenstall, vol. (685 m)
  • Castle Derneck , vol. (655 m)
  • Wanderheim Friedberg , vol. (614 m)
  • Rauher Stein, leased (786 m)

Trails edit

The Association maintains a network of hiking trails with a total length of over 20,000 kilometres (12,000 mi). In addition to numerous local hiking trails, there are also ten main hiking trails that can take days or weeks to traverse:

  • Hauptwanderweg 1, the Schwäbische-Alb-Nordrand-Weg, Donauwörth - Tuttlingen, length 365 kilometres (227 mi)
  • Hauptwanderweg 2, the Swabian-Alb-Südrand-Weg, Donauwörth-Tuttlingen, length 256 kilometres (159 mi)
  • Hauptwanderweg 3, the Main-Neckar-Rhein-Weg, Wertheim-Lörrach, length 540 kilometres (340 mi) (support services available between Villingen-Schwenningen and Lörrach provided by the Schwarzwaldverein)
  • Hauptwanderweg 4, the Main-Donau-Bodensee-Weg, Würzburg-Friedrichshafen, length 420 kilometres (260 mi)
  • Hauptwanderweg 5, the Schwarzwald-Schwäbische-Alb-Allgäu-Weg, Pforzheim-Schwarzer Grat, length 320 kilometres (200 mi)
  • Hauptwanderweg 6, the Limes-Wanderweg, Miltenberg - Wilburgstetten, length 245 kilometres (152 mi)
  • Hauptwanderweg 7, the Schwäbische-Alb-Oberschwaben-Weg, Lorch-Friedrichshafen, length 240 km
  • Hauptwanderweg 8, the Frankenweg, Pforzheim-Rothenburg ob der Tauber, length 220 kilometres (140 mi)
  • Hauptwanderweg 9, the Heuberg-Allgäu-Weg, Spaichingen-Schwarzer Grat,, length 185 kilometres (115 mi)
  • Hauptwanderweg 10, the Stromberg-Schwäbischer-Wald-Weg, Pforzheim-Lorch, length 170 kilometres (110 mi)

In addition, the Swabian Jura Association maintains the following long-distance trails:

  • Georg-Fahrbach-Weg, Criesbach-Stuttgart-Uhlbach, length 130 kilometres (81 mi)
  • Württemberg wine trail, Aub-Esslingen am Neckar, length 470 kilometres (290 mi)

Song edit

On official occasions and celebrations of the club is the Albvereinslied sung: "Nun steckt dies Zeichen an den Hut, ihr Albvereinsgenossen“. The lyrics were written by founding member Eugen Nägele and were published in June 1890 in the "Blättern des Schwäbischen Albvereinsn". The song is sung to the melody of the Frankenlied by Valentin Eduard Becker.

Schwäbischer Albverein Press edit

The publishing house of the Schwäbischer Albverein has published literature on the Swabian Jura and adjoining regions since 1893, in addition to hiking guides and maps, they also publish material on history, geology, flora and fauna, nature conservation, folk art, songs and dialect. Besides individual titles, the Press currently publishes the series Natur – Heimat – Wandern, published since 1977 as well as hiking maps in the scale 1: 35,000 since 2003, and since 2017 also in the scale 1: 25,000. In addition, the association is also involved in cooperation on titles with other publishers, including hiking and leisure maps of the State Office for Geoinformation and Land Development Baden-Württemberg and the Swabian Heimatkalender. The Press is a member of the Börsenverein des Deutschen Buchhandels and the Landesverband Baden-Württemberg des Börsenvereins.

Journal of the Schwäbischer Albverein edit

The Blätter des Schwäbischen Albvereins, since their first issue on 12 May 1889, has published information about the activities of the association and provided a forum for material on local and national history. Albverein members receive the magazine for free, but it can also be subscribed to by non-members. Issues of the journal appear quarterly in an edition of 70,000 copies. In a digital archive, all issues from 1889 to today are available free of charge.

Schwäbische Albvereinsjugend edit

The Schwäbische Albvereinsjugend (Swabian Albverein Youth) is a member of the Deutsche Wanderjugend, and is the youth organization of the association. It was founded in 1926 and has over 13,000 members and about 150 local children's and youth groups.

Like the main club, the Albvereinsjugend is divided into districts and local groups. The highest body is the Jugendvertreterversammlung (youth representatives' meeting), which meets three times a year. A full-time office in Stuttgart oversees the activities of the members in the territory of the association

The Albvereinsjugend offers open youth work, and further education and recreation at club level and in the local groups.

Four mission statements shape the identity of the Albvereinsjugend: traveling together, nature and environmental protection, social and democratic action, between tradition and modernity.

The central journal Stufe appears four times a year. The club's youth center Fuchsfarm is located on the Raichberg near Albstadt-Onstmettingen on the Swabian Jura, where since 1965 regular camps for young people are organized. In 2006, the Albvereinsjugend presented the board game Quer durch BaWü (cross through Baden-Württemberg) with various excursion and hiking destinations around the club area.

Culture edit

Folk dance and culture archive is in a hostel in Balingen. In the Haus der Volkskunst, the traditional Himmelbett is used as a hotel bed.[6][7]

References edit

  1. ^ "Gründung des Schw. Albvereins". Schwäbischer Albverein Ortsgruppe Ensingen (in German). Retrieved Jan 23, 2019.
  2. ^ "Zur Geschichte des Schwäbischen Albvereins". Schwäbischer Albverein Ortsgruppe Oberkochen (in German). Retrieved Jan 23, 2019.
  3. ^ "Gedenken an Vereinsgründer Salzmann". Blätter des Schwäbischen Albvereins (in German). 6: 31. 2008.
  4. ^ "Aussichtstürme". Schwäbischer Albverein (in German). Retrieved Jan 24, 2019.
  5. ^ "Wanderheime". Schwäbischer Albverein. Retrieved Jan 25, 2019.
  6. ^ "Möbel aus Frommern". www.schwaben-kultur.de. Retrieved 2021-04-03.
  7. ^ "Möbel aus Frommern". www.schwaben-kultur.de. Retrieved 2021-04-03.

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German January 2019 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 151 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Schwabischer Albverein see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated de Schwabischer Albverein to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Schwabischer Albverein e V Swabian Jura Association SAV is one of the oldest hiking clubs in Germany Based in Stuttgart the society was founded on August 13 1888 in Plochingen Baden Wurttemberg Its territory extends far beyond the Swabian Jura north to the Tauber river and south to the Lake Constance including the former territory of Wurttemberg except for the part of the Black Forest previously part of Wurttemberg Calw and Freudenstadt It is enrolled in the register of associations of the district court of Stuttgart VR 2430 The number of members grew rapidly from 519 in 1889 to about 20 000 in 1897 44 000 in 1926 60 000 in 1955 and 100 000 in 1971 Today it is the largest German and European hiking club The association is a member of the German Hiking Association Deutscher Wanderverband and of the European Ramblers Association Since 1994 the group is a recognized conservation association Contents 1 History 2 Structure 3 Goals 4 Offerings 5 Observation towers 6 Hostels 6 1 Neckarland and Hohenlohe plain 6 2 Keuperberge Stromberg Heuchelberg Swabian Franconian Forest 6 3 Eastern and Central Swabian Alb up to the line Echaz Grosse Lauter 6 4 Middle and southwestern Alb west of the Echaz Grosse Lauter line 6 5 On or near the southern edge of the Swabian Alb and south of the Danube 7 Trails 8 Song 9 Schwabischer Albverein Press 10 Journal of the Schwabischer Albverein 11 Schwabische Albvereinsjugend 12 Culture 13 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp Valentin Salzmann memorial in Esslingen am Neckar On August 13 1888 at the invitation of Valentin Salzmann the representatives of several beautification associations met in Plochingen with the aim of improving the work of the existing groups on the Albtrauf 1 At the inaugural meeting on November 12 1888 in Plochingen Salzmann presented the first draft of the by laws of the Albverein which was inaugurated shortly thereafter The first committee meeting took place on April 22 1889 At the first general meeting of the Association on May 5 1889 Salzmann was unanimously elected chairman Ernst Camerer secretary and deputy chairman Gustav Strohmfeld treasurer and Eugen Nagele editor 2 3 Structure editThe association is divided into 22 districts Gaue They are responsible for overseeing the local groups in their area At present the association has 570 local groups The main office is located in Stuttgart Goals editThe association is not only dedicated to hiking but above all to regional culture and all its riches Its goal is to cultivate and preserve both the special and the everyday within its territory from the Taubergrund to Lake Constance and from the Black Forest to the Nordlinger Ries These include the protection of nature and landscape as well as the care of language music dance and song This results in rich hiking and events programs and many opportunities for recreation relaxation and socializing An important goal is also the training of qualified hiking guides For this purpose the homeland and hiking academy Baden Wurttemberg was founded in 2001 It is a joint project of the Swabian Albverein together with the Black Forest Association Offerings editWith their extensive hiking and events programs the local groups offer many opportunities for recreation relaxation and socializing Being a member of the Swabian Albverein does not just mean joining in a group with a trained hiking guide who knows how to tell about the ways nature and culture landscape history and buildings In addition the numerous hikes annual meetings and hikes under the stars provide an opportunity for sociable walking and celebrating together In addition the Association offers training for expert hiking guides conservationists or youth workers lessons in folk music folk dancing flag waving and more Observation towers edit nbsp Schonbergturm near Pfullingen The club operates a total of 29 observation towers on the Swabian Alb but also in other areas of Baden Wurttemberg such as the Swabian Franconian Forest and the Stromberg 4 Augstberg tower near Trochtelfingen Steinhilben Burgerturm in Neuenstein Baden Wurttemberg Burg Teck at Owen Baden Wurttemberg Burgbergturm at Oberspeltach in Frankenhardt Eselsburgturm near Vaihingen Ensingen Gansnestturm near Fridingen on the Danube Hagbergturm near Gschwend Baden Wurttemberg Heraldstatt tower at Heroldstatt Hohe Warte at St Johann Hursch tower at Romerstein Zainingen Jubilaumsturm in Plochingen Juxkopfturm at Spiegelberg Jux Katharinenlindenturm near Esslingen am Neckar Kernenturm near Fellbach Lembergturm near Gosheim Lichtel Landturm near Creglingen Lupfenturm near Talheim Raichbergturm at Albstadt Onstmettingen Romersteinturm at Romerstein Donnstetten Rossbergturm at Reutlingen Gonningen Schonbergturm near Pfullingen Schwarzer Grat Turm at Isny im Allgau Steinknickleturm at Wustenrot Neuhutten Sternbergturm near Gomadingen Uhlbergturm near Filderstadt Plattenhardt Three observation towers in Gutsbezirk Munsingen Volkmarsbergturm near Oberkochen Waldgreutturm at Romerstein Zainingen Zwei Eichen tower Two oak tower at PliezhausenHostels edit nbsp Franz Keller House hostel The Association operates a total of 21 hostels with overnight accommodation both on the Swabian Jura and also in other areas of Baden Wurttemberg Most of them are staffed by local groups of volunteers on weekends and holidays others are leased to a tenant 5 Neckarland and Hohenlohe plain edit Weinsberg vol 216 m Sulzdorf vol 382 m Keuperberge Stromberg Heuchelberg Swabian Franconian Forest edit Fullmenbacher Hof vol 305 m Juxkopfhutte vol 533 m Eschelhof vol 492 m Eastern and Central Swabian Alb up to the line Echaz Grosse Lauter edit Franz Keller House vol 781 m Wasserberghaus leased 700 m Burg Teck leased 775 m Eninger Weide leased 751 m Middle and southwestern Alb west of the Echaz Grosse Lauter line edit Rossberghaus leased 869 m Sternberg vol 844 m Nagelehaus leased 956 m Fuchsfarm Youth Center vol 920 m House of Folk Art 570 m Lochenhutte vol 963 m Nusplinger Hutte vol 890 m On or near the southern edge of the Swabian Alb and south of the Danube edit Pfannentalhaus leased 440 m Weidacher Hutte vol 632 m Farrenstall vol 685 m Castle Derneck vol 655 m Wanderheim Friedberg vol 614 m Rauher Stein leased 786 m Trails editThe Association maintains a network of hiking trails with a total length of over 20 000 kilometres 12 000 mi In addition to numerous local hiking trails there are also ten main hiking trails that can take days or weeks to traverse Hauptwanderweg 1 the Schwabische Alb Nordrand Weg Donauworth Tuttlingen length 365 kilometres 227 mi Hauptwanderweg 2 the Swabian Alb Sudrand Weg Donauworth Tuttlingen length 256 kilometres 159 mi Hauptwanderweg 3 the Main Neckar Rhein Weg Wertheim Lorrach length 540 kilometres 340 mi support services available between Villingen Schwenningen and Lorrach provided by the Schwarzwaldverein Hauptwanderweg 4 the Main Donau Bodensee Weg Wurzburg Friedrichshafen length 420 kilometres 260 mi Hauptwanderweg 5 the Schwarzwald Schwabische Alb Allgau Weg Pforzheim Schwarzer Grat length 320 kilometres 200 mi Hauptwanderweg 6 the Limes Wanderweg Miltenberg Wilburgstetten length 245 kilometres 152 mi Hauptwanderweg 7 the Schwabische Alb Oberschwaben Weg Lorch Friedrichshafen length 240 km Hauptwanderweg 8 the Frankenweg Pforzheim Rothenburg ob der Tauber length 220 kilometres 140 mi Hauptwanderweg 9 the Heuberg Allgau Weg Spaichingen Schwarzer Grat length 185 kilometres 115 mi Hauptwanderweg 10 the Stromberg Schwabischer Wald Weg Pforzheim Lorch length 170 kilometres 110 mi In addition the Swabian Jura Association maintains the following long distance trails Georg Fahrbach Weg Criesbach Stuttgart Uhlbach length 130 kilometres 81 mi Wurttemberg wine trail Aub Esslingen am Neckar length 470 kilometres 290 mi Song editOn official occasions and celebrations of the club is the Albvereinslied sung Nun steckt dies Zeichen an den Hut ihr Albvereinsgenossen The lyrics were written by founding member Eugen Nagele and were published in June 1890 in the Blattern des Schwabischen Albvereinsn The song is sung to the melody of the Frankenlied by Valentin Eduard Becker Schwabischer Albverein Press editThe publishing house of the Schwabischer Albverein has published literature on the Swabian Jura and adjoining regions since 1893 in addition to hiking guides and maps they also publish material on history geology flora and fauna nature conservation folk art songs and dialect Besides individual titles the Press currently publishes the series Natur Heimat Wandern published since 1977 as well as hiking maps in the scale 1 35 000 since 2003 and since 2017 also in the scale 1 25 000 In addition the association is also involved in cooperation on titles with other publishers including hiking and leisure maps of the State Office for Geoinformation and Land Development Baden Wurttemberg and the Swabian Heimatkalender The Press is a member of the Borsenverein des Deutschen Buchhandels and the Landesverband Baden Wurttemberg des Borsenvereins Journal of the Schwabischer Albverein editThe Blatter des Schwabischen Albvereins since their first issue on 12 May 1889 has published information about the activities of the association and provided a forum for material on local and national history Albverein members receive the magazine for free but it can also be subscribed to by non members Issues of the journal appear quarterly in an edition of 70 000 copies In a digital archive all issues from 1889 to today are available free of charge Schwabische Albvereinsjugend editThe Schwabische Albvereinsjugend Swabian Albverein Youth is a member of the Deutsche Wanderjugend and is the youth organization of the association It was founded in 1926 and has over 13 000 members and about 150 local children s and youth groups Like the main club the Albvereinsjugend is divided into districts and local groups The highest body is the Jugendvertreterversammlung youth representatives meeting which meets three times a year A full time office in Stuttgart oversees the activities of the members in the territory of the associationThe Albvereinsjugend offers open youth work and further education and recreation at club level and in the local groups Four mission statements shape the identity of the Albvereinsjugend traveling together nature and environmental protection social and democratic action between tradition and modernity The central journal Stufe appears four times a year The club s youth center Fuchsfarm is located on the Raichberg near Albstadt Onstmettingen on the Swabian Jura where since 1965 regular camps for young people are organized In 2006 the Albvereinsjugend presented the board game Quer durch BaWu cross through Baden Wurttemberg with various excursion and hiking destinations around the club area Culture editFolk dance and culture archive is in a hostel in Balingen In the Haus der Volkskunst the traditional Himmelbett is used as a hotel bed 6 7 References edit Grundung des Schw Albvereins Schwabischer Albverein Ortsgruppe Ensingen in German Retrieved Jan 23 2019 Zur Geschichte des Schwabischen Albvereins Schwabischer Albverein Ortsgruppe Oberkochen in German Retrieved Jan 23 2019 Gedenken an Vereinsgrunder Salzmann Blatter des Schwabischen Albvereins in German 6 31 2008 Aussichtsturme Schwabischer Albverein in German Retrieved Jan 24 2019 Wanderheime Schwabischer Albverein Retrieved Jan 25 2019 Mobel aus Frommern www schwaben kultur de Retrieved 2021 04 03 Mobel aus Frommern www schwaben kultur de Retrieved 2021 04 03 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Schwabischer Albverein amp oldid 1015777824, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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