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Sulz am Neckar

Sulz am Neckar is a town in the district of Rottweil, in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is situated on the river Neckar, 22 km north of Rottweil, and 19 km southeast of Freudenstadt.

Sulz am Neckar
Free Baptist Church in Sulz am Neckar
Location of Sulz am Neckar within Rottweil district
DanubeFreudenstadt (district)Tuttlingen (district)OrtenaukreisSchwarzwald-Baar-KreisZollernalbkreisAichhaldenBösingenDeißlingenDietingenDornhanDunningenEschbronnEpfendorfFluorn-WinzelnHardtLauterbachOberndorf am NeckarRottweilRottweilSchenkenzellSchiltachSchrambergSulz am NeckarVillingendorfWellendingenVöhringenZimmern ob Rottweil
Sulz am Neckar
Sulz am Neckar
Coordinates: 48°21′46″N 8°37′54″E / 48.36278°N 8.63167°E / 48.36278; 8.63167Coordinates: 48°21′46″N 8°37′54″E / 48.36278°N 8.63167°E / 48.36278; 8.63167
CountryGermany
StateBaden-Württemberg
Admin. regionFreiburg
DistrictRottweil
Subdivisions9 Ortsteile
Government
 • Mayor (2022–30) Jens Keuchner[1]
Area
 • Total87.60 km2 (33.82 sq mi)
Elevation
443 m (1,453 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total12,560
 • Density140/km2 (370/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
72168–72172
Dialling codes07454
Vehicle registrationRW
Websitewww.sulz.de

Sulz am Neckar came in the possession of the Hohengeroldseck in AD 1242.

At Sulz a powerline for traction current crosses the Neckar Valley in a large span, which is mounted on two 61-metre-tall electricity pylons.

Geography

Geographical Location

The city is situated between Black Forest and Swabian Jura as well as between Stuttgart and Lake Constance at the Neckar at an altitude of 410 to 675 m. Sulz has with a size of 87,60 km² the largest municipal area in the Rottweil (district).

Urban structure

The city of Sulz is divided into the core city of Sulz with its two districts Sulz-Kastell and Sulz-Schillerhöhe as well as the nine districts Bergfelden, Dürrenmettstetten, Fischingen, Glatt, Holzhausen, Hopfau, Mühlheim, Renfrizhausen, Sigmarswangen

History

Early history

The first traces of settlement date back to the Celts period, evidenced by a series of burial mounds and a square enclosure.

A Roman military camps Fort Sulz was built around the year 74 AD on a hill south of the present-day town centre. Today, the Sulz-Kastell district with an industrial area is located there.

The first documented mention dates back to the year 790 as "villa publica Sulza". The town owes its name to its salt springs, which have shaped the town's history for centuries. The first owners of the saltworks were the Counts of Sulz in the 11th century. Probably from 1250 onwards, the Lords of Geroldseck ruled over the town and the salt works, while the Counts of Sulz were pushed back to marginal possessions; the process has not yet been fully explained. The domain of the counts of Sulz also included Loßburg and the valleys behind Schenkenzell.

The Lords of Geroldseck were also the builders of the Burg Albeck southwest of the city. In 1284 King Rudolf of Habsburg gave Sulz town privileges. Between 1301 and 1473 the town was the seat of the line of the Geroldseckers, who resided here, but despite some inheritances they experienced a steady economic decline in the 15th century and finally had to sell it to Württemberg under massive pressure in 1473.

The Lordship of the Geroldseckers after the expulsion of Duke Ulrich of Württemberg by the Swabian League in 1519 was only an interlude which ended in 1534 with the return of the duke. All that remained for the Geroldseckers was the title "von Geroldseck und Sulz". The city burned down almost completely within the city walls twice (1581 and 1794). It took two years to rebuild it; in the meantime it was plundered again and again by French soldiers.

The district Mühlheim was already mentioned in 772 as Muliheim in the Lorsch Codex. [3]

19th and 20th century

For a long time, Sulz in Württemberg was the only salt works in the state. When in 1803 the much more productive salt works on the Kocher became Württemberg, the town lost its economic status as a salt town, but remained the seat of the Oberamts Sulz, which in the early years of the Kingdom of Württemberg gained considerably in size in the course of the new administrative division of Württemberg. In 1867, the expansion of the Stuttgart-Hattingen railway line on the Horb to Talhausen section connected it to the network of the Royal Württemberg State Railways.

In 1938, during the administrative reform during the NS in Württemberg, the district of Sulz, which had emerged from the upper office of Sulz in 1934, was dissolved and became part of the district of Horb.

Towards the end of the Second World War, a subcamp of the Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp was established in Sulz am Neckar. In 1944, Gestapo men interrogated and tortured Polish forced labourers suspected of being associated with a resistance organisation in the former district court prison. At least seven of the detainees died in the process.[4]

After the Second World War the city fell into the French occupation zone and thus in 1947 came to the newly founded state Württemberg-Hohenzollern, which was absorbed into the state of Baden-Württemberg in 1952.

During the district reform Sulz became part of the district of Rottweil. With the dissolution of the district Südwürttemberg-Hohenzollern, which took place at the same time, Sulz became part of the region of Freiburg.

From 1963 to 1993 there was a Bundeswehr depot in Sulz.

In remembrance of the former importance of salt extraction from brine, the swimming pool has been filled with brine since the construction of the new open-air pool and is thus the only brine open-air pool in the area.

Incorporations

In the course of the Gemeindegebietsreform in Baden-Württemberg the following municipalities were incorporated into Sulz am Neckar:

  • January 1, 1972: Bergfelden, Hopfau and Mühlheim am Bach
  • March 1, 1972: Fischingen
  • January 1, 1974: Holzhausen, Renfrizhausen and Sigmarswangen
  • January 1, 1975: Dürrenmettstetten and Glatt[5]

Religions

Since the Reformation Sulz has been protestant. The Lutheran parish of Sulz has seven parishes, and the districts of Fischingen and Glatt also have their own Lutheran parish. All together belong to the evangelic deanery of Sulz. The town is also the seat of the Sulz church district of the Evangelical-Lutheran Church in Württemberg. The office of the school dean responsible for the Protestant church district Sulz a. N. is located in Freudenstadt. The Berneuchen Movement within the Protestant Church has its centre in the former Kirchberg convent.

The Roman Catholic Church first disappeared from Sulz during the Reformation upheavals of the 16th century. With the renewed influx of Catholics after the Second World War, however, a Catholic city parish was founded. The church St. Johannes Evangelist was built in 1950 according to the plans of the architect Hans Lütkemeier. The Catholic parish belongs to the deanery Rottweil.

In addition, the Volksmission entschiedener Christen, the Freie Baptisten Gemeinde Sulz, a New Apostolic Church, a congregation representing Jehovah's Witnesses and an Islam congregation exist.

Politics

City council

The municipal elections in Baden-Württemberg 2019 led to the result shown below, which resulted in the following distribution of the 22 (- 2) seats on the municipal council:

party / list votes +/- %p seats +/-
Free Voters Baden-Wuerttemberg, FWV 42,5 % + 1,4 100 ± 0
Christian Democratic Union of Germany, CDU 23,4 % − 8,1 5 − 2
Alliance 90/The Greens, GAL 20,1 % + 4,7 4 ± 0
Social Democratic Party of Germany ,SPD 10,7 % − 1,3 2 − 1
Alternative for Germany, AFD 03,3 % + 3,3 1 + 1

+/- : Difference to the municipal elections on 25 May 2014

Mayor

In November 2022 Jens Keuchner was elected mayor.[1]

Town twinning

The city of Sulz maintains a town twinning with

Economy and Infrastructure

Traffic

Sulz is located on the Stuttgart-Tuttlingen railway line and is Regional-Express- and Intercity-stop of the Line 87. There are hourly trains to Stuttgart and Rottweil, two hourly trains to Singen. Occasionally there are also direct connections to Konstanz and Villingen.

Sulz can be reached via Bundesautobahn 81 (WürzburgGottmadingen) and the Bundesstraße 14 (StockachWaidhaus). The city is 60 km away from Stuttgart and 100 km from Bodensee.

Sulz has an airfield for ultralight aviation. Furthermore there is the VHF omnidirectional range (VOR) Sulz (116.10 MHz).

Educational institutions

  • Albeck-Gymnasium
  • Lina-Hähnle-Realschule
  • Primary and secondary school with Werkrealschule
  • Elly-Heuss-Knapp school, commercial schools Sulz with commercial high school
  • Adult education centre

Leisure and sports facilities

  • Outdoor pool susolei (swimming pool filled with brine (salt water)

Culture and sightseeing

Sulz is Located on two scenic routes, the Hohenzollernstraße and the Römerstraße. They lead fast the following sights:

  • Stone Fountain Stock of the Market Square Fountain (1807) with decorated cast metal plates[6]
  • Epitaphs of the old cemetery laid out in 1542[7]
  • Bronze tomb of Anna von Hohengeroldseck born Gräfin von Lindow und Ruppin and her son Walter in the Sulzer Stadtkirche (1533)

Museums

  • Gustav Bauernfeind-Museum in the building Untere Hauptstraße 5
  • Cultural and museum centre in Glatt castle
  • Römerkeller-Museum in the area of the former Roman Fort Sulz
  • The studio of the art foundation Paul Kälberer in the district of Glatt contains an exhibition of paintings and graphics by Kälberer

Buildings

  • The castle of today's Ruin Albeck was built at the end of the 13th century by Baron von Geroldseck and was destroyed and set on fire on 30 December 1688 by a French patrol corps.
  • The Kirchberg convent is a former Dominican convent. Today it serves as a Protestant meeting and retreat house.
  • The Bernsteinschule, former academy of arts in the former convent of the Franciscan friars in Bernstein.
  • The 24 m high observation tower Mettstetten, built in 1998 is located not far west of the Sulzer district Dürrenmettstetten. Its viewing platform is located exactly at 700 m above sea level. [8]

People from Sulz am Neckar

 
Friedrich von Alberti
 
Carl August Wunderlich


Gallery

 
 
Sulz am Neckar
class=notpageimage|
Sulz am Neckar on Neckar River

References

  1. ^ a b Bürgermeisterwahl Sulz am Neckar 2022, Staatsanzeiger.
  2. ^ "Bevölkerung nach Nationalität und Geschlecht am 31. Dezember 2021" [Population by nationality and sex as of December 31, 2021] (CSV) (in German). Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg. June 2022.
  3. ^ Minst, Karl Josef. "Lorscher Codex (Volume 5), Urkunde 3272, 17 September 772 - Reg. 805". Heidelberger historische Bestände - digital. Universitätsbibliothek Heidelberg. p. 137. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  4. ^ Ingrid Bauz, Sigrid Brüggemann, Roland Maier (eds.): Die Geheime Staatspolizei in Württemberg und Hohenzollern. Stuttgart Schmetterling-Verlag, ISBN 3-89657-138-9, S. 349ff.
  5. ^ "Sulz am Neckar, City Development" (PDF). City of Sulz. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  6. ^ Armin Braun (2018). Kleindenkmal in den Städten und Gemeinden von A bis Z. Landkreis Rottweil, Bernhard Rüth, Armin Braun. verlag regionalkultur. p. 290. ISBN 978-3-89735-973-4.
  7. ^ Herwart Kopp, Josef Flaadt: The epitaphs on the cemetery wall in Sulz am Neckar, in: Bernhard Rüth, Armin Braun: Small monuments in the district of Rottweil , 2018, p. 100f
  8. ^ Website of Dürrenmettstetten - Leisure

sulz, neckar, town, district, rottweil, baden, württemberg, germany, situated, river, neckar, north, rottweil, southeast, freudenstadt, townfree, baptist, church, coat, armslocation, within, rottweil, districtshow, germanyshow, baden, württembergcoordinates, 3. Sulz am Neckar is a town in the district of Rottweil in Baden Wurttemberg Germany It is situated on the river Neckar 22 km north of Rottweil and 19 km southeast of Freudenstadt Sulz am NeckarTownFree Baptist Church in Sulz am NeckarCoat of armsLocation of Sulz am Neckar within Rottweil districtSulz am NeckarShow map of GermanySulz am NeckarShow map of Baden WurttembergCoordinates 48 21 46 N 8 37 54 E 48 36278 N 8 63167 E 48 36278 8 63167 Coordinates 48 21 46 N 8 37 54 E 48 36278 N 8 63167 E 48 36278 8 63167CountryGermanyStateBaden WurttembergAdmin regionFreiburgDistrictRottweilSubdivisions9 OrtsteileGovernment Mayor 2022 30 Jens Keuchner 1 Area Total87 60 km2 33 82 sq mi Elevation443 m 1 453 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total12 560 Density140 km2 370 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes72168 72172Dialling codes07454Vehicle registrationRWWebsitewww sulz deSulz am Neckar came in the possession of the Hohengeroldseck in AD 1242 At Sulz a powerline for traction current crosses the Neckar Valley in a large span which is mounted on two 61 metre tall electricity pylons Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Geographical Location 1 2 Urban structure 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 19th and 20th century 3 Incorporations 4 Religions 5 Politics 5 1 City council 5 2 Mayor 6 Town twinning 7 Economy and Infrastructure 7 1 Traffic 7 2 Educational institutions 7 3 Leisure and sports facilities 8 Culture and sightseeing 8 1 Museums 8 2 Buildings 9 People from Sulz am Neckar 10 Gallery 11 ReferencesGeography EditGeographical Location Edit The city is situated between Black Forest and Swabian Jura as well as between Stuttgart and Lake Constance at the Neckar at an altitude of 410 to 675 m Sulz has with a size of 87 60 km the largest municipal area in the Rottweil district Urban structure Edit The city of Sulz is divided into the core city of Sulz with its two districts Sulz Kastell and Sulz Schillerhohe as well as the nine districts Bergfelden Durrenmettstetten Fischingen Glatt Holzhausen Hopfau Muhlheim Renfrizhausen SigmarswangenHistory EditEarly history Edit The first traces of settlement date back to the Celts period evidenced by a series of burial mounds and a square enclosure A Roman military camps Fort Sulz was built around the year 74 AD on a hill south of the present day town centre Today the Sulz Kastell district with an industrial area is located there The first documented mention dates back to the year 790 as villa publica Sulza The town owes its name to its salt springs which have shaped the town s history for centuries The first owners of the saltworks were the Counts of Sulz in the 11th century Probably from 1250 onwards the Lords of Geroldseck ruled over the town and the salt works while the Counts of Sulz were pushed back to marginal possessions the process has not yet been fully explained The domain of the counts of Sulz also included Lossburg and the valleys behind Schenkenzell The Lords of Geroldseck were also the builders of the Burg Albeck southwest of the city In 1284 King Rudolf of Habsburg gave Sulz town privileges Between 1301 and 1473 the town was the seat of the line of the Geroldseckers who resided here but despite some inheritances they experienced a steady economic decline in the 15th century and finally had to sell it to Wurttemberg under massive pressure in 1473 The Lordship of the Geroldseckers after the expulsion of Duke Ulrich of Wurttemberg by the Swabian League in 1519 was only an interlude which ended in 1534 with the return of the duke All that remained for the Geroldseckers was the title von Geroldseck und Sulz The city burned down almost completely within the city walls twice 1581 and 1794 It took two years to rebuild it in the meantime it was plundered again and again by French soldiers The district Muhlheim was already mentioned in 772 as Muliheim in the Lorsch Codex 3 19th and 20th century Edit For a long time Sulz in Wurttemberg was the only salt works in the state When in 1803 the much more productive salt works on the Kocher became Wurttemberg the town lost its economic status as a salt town but remained the seat of the Oberamts Sulz which in the early years of the Kingdom of Wurttemberg gained considerably in size in the course of the new administrative division of Wurttemberg In 1867 the expansion of the Stuttgart Hattingen railway line on the Horb to Talhausen section connected it to the network of the Royal Wurttemberg State Railways In 1938 during the administrative reform during the NS in Wurttemberg the district of Sulz which had emerged from the upper office of Sulz in 1934 was dissolved and became part of the district of Horb Towards the end of the Second World War a subcamp of the Natzweiler Struthof concentration camp was established in Sulz am Neckar In 1944 Gestapo men interrogated and tortured Polish forced labourers suspected of being associated with a resistance organisation in the former district court prison At least seven of the detainees died in the process 4 After the Second World War the city fell into the French occupation zone and thus in 1947 came to the newly founded state Wurttemberg Hohenzollern which was absorbed into the state of Baden Wurttemberg in 1952 During the district reform Sulz became part of the district of Rottweil With the dissolution of the district Sudwurttemberg Hohenzollern which took place at the same time Sulz became part of the region of Freiburg From 1963 to 1993 there was a Bundeswehr depot in Sulz In remembrance of the former importance of salt extraction from brine the swimming pool has been filled with brine since the construction of the new open air pool and is thus the only brine open air pool in the area Incorporations EditIn the course of the Gemeindegebietsreform in Baden Wurttemberg the following municipalities were incorporated into Sulz am Neckar January 1 1972 Bergfelden Hopfau and Muhlheim am Bach March 1 1972 Fischingen January 1 1974 Holzhausen Renfrizhausen and Sigmarswangen January 1 1975 Durrenmettstetten and Glatt 5 Religions EditSince the Reformation Sulz has been protestant The Lutheran parish of Sulz has seven parishes and the districts of Fischingen and Glatt also have their own Lutheran parish All together belong to the evangelic deanery of Sulz The town is also the seat of the Sulz church district of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Wurttemberg The office of the school dean responsible for the Protestant church district Sulz a N is located in Freudenstadt The Berneuchen Movement within the Protestant Church has its centre in the former Kirchberg convent The Roman Catholic Church first disappeared from Sulz during the Reformation upheavals of the 16th century With the renewed influx of Catholics after the Second World War however a Catholic city parish was founded The church St Johannes Evangelist was built in 1950 according to the plans of the architect Hans Lutkemeier The Catholic parish belongs to the deanery Rottweil In addition the Volksmission entschiedener Christen the Freie Baptisten Gemeinde Sulz a New Apostolic Church a congregation representing Jehovah s Witnesses and an Islam congregation exist Politics EditCity council Edit The municipal elections in Baden Wurttemberg 2019 led to the result shown below which resulted in the following distribution of the 22 2 seats on the municipal council party list votes p seats Free Voters Baden Wuerttemberg FWV 42 5 1 4 100 0Christian Democratic Union of Germany CDU 23 4 8 1 5 2Alliance 90 The Greens GAL 20 1 4 7 4 0Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD 10 7 1 3 2 1Alternative for Germany AFD 0 3 3 3 3 1 1 Difference to the municipal elections on 25 May 2014 Mayor Edit In November 2022 Jens Keuchner was elected mayor 1 Town twinning EditThe city of Sulz maintains a town twinning with Montendre Departement Charente Maritime France Altenberg Saxony Economy and Infrastructure EditTraffic Edit Sulz is located on the Stuttgart Tuttlingen railway line and is Regional Express and Intercity stop of the Line 87 There are hourly trains to Stuttgart and Rottweil two hourly trains to Singen Occasionally there are also direct connections to Konstanz and Villingen Sulz can be reached via Bundesautobahn 81 Wurzburg Gottmadingen and the Bundesstrasse 14 Stockach Waidhaus The city is 60 km away from Stuttgart and 100 km from Bodensee Sulz has an airfield for ultralight aviation Furthermore there is the VHF omnidirectional range VOR Sulz 116 10 MHz Educational institutions Edit Albeck Gymnasium Lina Hahnle Realschule Primary and secondary school with Werkrealschule Elly Heuss Knapp school commercial schools Sulz with commercial high school Adult education centreLeisure and sports facilities Edit Outdoor pool susolei swimming pool filled with brine salt water Culture and sightseeing EditSulz is Located on two scenic routes the Hohenzollernstrasse and the Romerstrasse They lead fast the following sights Stone Fountain Stock of the Market Square Fountain 1807 with decorated cast metal plates 6 Epitaphs of the old cemetery laid out in 1542 7 Bronze tomb of Anna von Hohengeroldseck born Grafin von Lindow und Ruppin and her son Walter in the Sulzer Stadtkirche 1533 Museums Edit Gustav Bauernfeind Museum in the building Untere Hauptstrasse 5 Cultural and museum centre in Glatt castle Romerkeller Museum in the area of the former Roman Fort Sulz The studio of the art foundation Paul Kalberer in the district of Glatt contains an exhibition of paintings and graphics by KalbererBuildings Edit The castle of today s Ruin Albeck was built at the end of the 13th century by Baron von Geroldseck and was destroyed and set on fire on 30 December 1688 by a French patrol corps The Kirchberg convent is a former Dominican convent Today it serves as a Protestant meeting and retreat house The Bernsteinschule former academy of arts in the former convent of the Franciscan friars in Bernstein The 24 m high observation tower Mettstetten built in 1998 is located not far west of the Sulzer district Durrenmettstetten Its viewing platform is located exactly at 700 m above sea level 8 People from Sulz am Neckar Edit Friedrich von Alberti Carl August Wunderlich Friedrich August von Alberti 1795 1878 geologist Gustav Bauernfeind 1848 1904 painter Joseph Gottlieb Kolreuter 1733 1806 botanist professor of natural history Brigitte Peterhans b 1928 architect Richard Schmid 1899 1986 lawyer and politician SPD Landesminister in Baden Wurttemberg and member of the German resistance Salomon Schweigger 1551 1622 Lutheran theologian anthropologist orientalist and pilgrim Carl Reinhold August Wunderlich 1815 77 physician and pioneer psychiatrist Gallery Edit Romerkeller Epitaph on Magnus Friedrich Roos Water castle and rectory in Glatt Sulz am Neckarclass notpageimage Sulz am Neckar on Neckar RiverReferences Edit a b Burgermeisterwahl Sulz am Neckar 2022 Staatsanzeiger Bevolkerung nach Nationalitat und Geschlecht am 31 Dezember 2021 Population by nationality and sex as of December 31 2021 CSV in German Statistisches Landesamt Baden Wurttemberg June 2022 Minst Karl Josef Lorscher Codex Volume 5 Urkunde 3272 17 September 772 Reg 805 Heidelberger historische Bestande digital Universitatsbibliothek Heidelberg p 137 Retrieved 19 April 2018 Ingrid Bauz Sigrid Bruggemann Roland Maier eds Die Geheime Staatspolizei in Wurttemberg und Hohenzollern Stuttgart Schmetterling Verlag ISBN 3 89657 138 9 S 349ff Sulz am Neckar City Development PDF City of Sulz Retrieved 14 June 2020 Armin Braun 2018 Kleindenkmal in den Stadten und Gemeinden von A bis Z Landkreis Rottweil Bernhard Ruth Armin Braun verlag regionalkultur p 290 ISBN 978 3 89735 973 4 Herwart Kopp Josef Flaadt The epitaphs on the cemetery wall in Sulz am Neckar in Bernhard Ruth Armin Braun Small monuments in the district of Rottweil 2018 p 100f Website of Durrenmettstetten Leisure Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sulz am Neckar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sulz am Neckar amp oldid 1121457206, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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