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Dietzenbach

Dietzenbach is the seat of Offenbach district in the Regierungsbezirk of Darmstadt in Hesse, Germany and lies roughly 12 km southeast of Frankfurt am Main on the waterstream Bieber. Before the Second World War, the current town was a farming village with not quite 4,000 inhabitants. However, after the war, there was a considerable upswing in the population due to refugees settling in the community. From the 1970s onwards, Dietzenbach's population rose rapidly, reaching some 33,000 by 2006. Just under a third of the inhabitants have roots in more than a hundred nations outside Germany. Agricultural buildings are nowadays seldom seen in Dietzenbach.

Dietzenbach
Dietzenbach
Location of Dietzenbach within Offenbach district
Neu-IsenburgDreieichLangenEgelsbachRödermarkDietzenbachHeusenstammMühlheim am MainRodgauObertshausenHainburgSeligenstadtMainhausenDarmstadtDarmstadt-DieburgDarmstadt-DieburgBavariaMain-Kinzig-KreisOffenbach am MainGroß-Gerau (district)Frankfurt
Dietzenbach
Dietzenbach
Coordinates: 50°01′N 8°47′E / 50.017°N 8.783°E / 50.017; 8.783Coordinates: 50°01′N 8°47′E / 50.017°N 8.783°E / 50.017; 8.783
CountryGermany
StateHesse
Admin. regionDarmstadt
DistrictOffenbach
Subdivisions4 Stadtteile
Government
 • Mayor (2021–27) Dieter Lang[1] (SPD)
Area
 • Total21.67 km2 (8.37 sq mi)
Elevation
135 m (443 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total34,517
 • Density1,600/km2 (4,100/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
63128
Dialling codes06074
Vehicle registrationOF
Websitewww.dietzenbach.de
The town of Dietzenbach, seen from the Wingertsberg
The lookout tower on the Wingertsberg
timber-frame houses in the Old Town

In 2001, Dietzenbach hosted the 41st Hessentag state festival.

Geography

Climate

Lying in the Upper Rhine Plain, the climate of the Offenbach (district) is temperate and influenced through southwestern trade winds. The temperature differences during the year are less. In Dietzenbach, the average temperature of the warmest month is 26 °C, in the central valleys they are three degrees Celsius higher. The partly over 40 meters deep quarries, which are typical for the Kreis Offenbacher pinewood forests and forest lakes, creating an own microclimate, which are snowless during the whole year. Looking back on the history of Dietzenbach, this is exactly the reason why its hills are just perfect for growing vineyards, even in planting tropical plants. There is a lightly marked rainy period over the whole year.

The amount of precipitation during the year is throughout the whole region very variable. More than 33.6 inches of rainfalls are there in the forests of Mühlheim, while in the surroundings of Rödermark averages are of 50.4 inches. Between late summer and early fall season, the occurrence of storms in the region is higher than during the rest of the year. In this time there can be danger through tornadoes or downbursts. On 18 August 2019 a tornado or downburst caused severe damage to the city.

Neighbouring communities

Dietzenbach borders in the north on the town of Heusenstamm, in the east on the town of Rodgau, in the south on the town of Rödermark and in the west on the town of Dreieich.

Constituent communities

The town of Dietzenbach is made up of a number of Stadtteile, although not all places listed here have this official designation.

Steinberg

Steinberg is a constituent community. Parts of the north industrial area are found here, as well as daycare centres (Kindertagesstätten) 3,5 and 11, the Siedlerstraße Seniors’ Centre and four schools: Astrid-Lindgren-Schule (primary school), Regenbogenschule (primary school), Helen-Keller-Schule (special school) and Heinrich-Mann-Schule (coöperative comprehensive school with Gymnasium upper level). Furthermore, there is a sporting ground on Limesstraße. In the centre is the Steinberg Shopping Centre. Just under 12,000 people live in Steinberg.

Neue Stadtmitte

Between Steinberg and the old town centre, a new building area has sprung up over the years, in whose centre the town administration and Dietzenbach's community centre have settled. It is known as the Neue Stadtmitte – the New Town Centre.

Before this, the most prominent feature was a shopping centre with a big supermarket, filling station and carpark, which the locals over time came to see as an eyesore for its rather unappealing 1970s architecture and the company's neglect of the building.

Sales dealings kept delaying any new development. Finally, in late 2005, agreements between the town and the Dutch Ten Brinke Group were signed.

After the old toom Markt closed in mid-2005, the whole building complex was torn down in autumn 2006 to make way for a new shopping centre. The foundation stone was laid on 4 December 2006, and on 29 November 2007, the shopping centre opened, and was given the name Rathaus-Center.

The Ten Brinke Group, the €37,500,000 project's investor, built a 230 m-long and 101 m broad building in which are found, on 8 000 m² a toom Markt, and on 4 000 m² a Media-Markt. The rest of the 21 000 m² is shared among C&A (1 600 m²), Deichmann (two units of 500 m² each), the clothing chain Ernsting's Family (200 m²), other shops and various catering businesses.

Hexenberg

Hexenberg, whose name is German for “Witches’ Mountain”, is a constituent community. It is named after the highest elevation in Offenbach district. The buildings are mostly relatively low one-family and multiple-family dwellings as well as a few smaller shops in the middle of the community.

Wingertsberg

Wingertsberg (called der Wingertsberg in German) is not a constituent community as such, but rather a residential neighbourhood lying on a slope across from the Old Town. At the upper end of the neighbourhood are found, besides a sporting ground, a restaurant with a viewing terrace and the lookout tower built for the Hessentag state festival, from which it is possible to see Frankfurt.

Altstadt

In Dietzenbach's Old Town, many timber-frame houses have been preserved. Besides these, the Old Town is where the local history museum, the town library and the police station are to be found.

Spessartviertel (formerly Starkenburgring)

This constituent community, which borders right on the Old Town, is a neighbourhood built up with nothing but highrises. Originally planned as an upscale neighbourhood, social problems and the crime arising therefrom have brought the town and the surrounding area greater challenges than ever. Today, roughly 90% of the inhabitants have an immigration background. Most come from Turkey, Morocco, Afghanistan, Pakistan or various African countries.

History

Dietzenbach had its first documentary mention about 1210 in a donation document to the Patershausen monastery as Dicenbah.[3] The later forsaken settlements of Ippingshausen and Richolshausen lay within what are now Dietzenbach's limits in the Early Middle Ages.

In 1545, the Counts of Hanau, who had been Dietzenbach's lords for a few centuries, introduced Protestantism. When the Counts of Hanau died out in 1736, the Landgraves Hesse-Darmstadt and of Hesse-Kassel fought over who had the right to be Dietzenbach's lords.

The Amt of Schaafheim, with Dietzenbach, which lay within it, passed in 1773 to Hesse-Darmstadt. With the partition of the Rödermark in 1818, the community acquired its forest. In 1821, the Amt of Schaafheim was dissolved and Dietzenbach passed to the Landratsbezirk of Langen. However, by 1832 Dietzenbach had already been assigned to the district of Offenbach.

In 1898, the railway through Offenbach, Bieber and Heusenstamm to Dietzenbach was dedicated and the railway station was built, which is now once again in use, after many years of seeing no passenger service at all, by the Rhine-Main S-Bahn. The line underwent an extensive modernization for S-Bahn operation.

A British air raid in 1941 caused great damage in the community.

Dietzenbach was granted town rights in 1971. Since 2002, Dietzenbach has also been administrative seat of the district of Offenbach. However, it was only officially allowed to use the designation Kreisstadt (“District Seat”) beginning in March 2003 as the result of a dispute with the neighbouring town of Rodgau, which had demanded this status on the grounds that it had a greater population.

Population development

Year Inhabitants
2009 33,224
2007 34,773
2005 34,794
1997 33,015
1983 25,500
1970 12,449
1961 6,303
1950 4,711
1939 3,695
1834 3,695

In 1834, Dietzenbach had 3,695 inhabitants. One hundred and five years later, in 1939, it was 3,695. After the Second World War ended, 4,711 people lived in the community in 1950. In 1961, this had risen to 6,303. After extensive new development had been undertaken in the 1960s, the town's population in 1970 was 12,449. In 1983 it was 25,500 and in 1997 33,015, 30% of whom held citizenship other than German. According to census data Dietzenbach and Raunheim had the highest shares of Muslim migrants in Germany in 2011.[4] According to one analysis, about a third of Dietzenbach's inhabitants were Muslim migrants in 2013.[5]

Politics

Mayors

  • Christian Ebert, 1948–1958
  • Hermann Kocks, 1958–1976
  • Friedrich Keller (SPD), 1976–1988
  • Frank Kaufmann (temporary) (Greens), 1988–1989
  • Jürgen Heyer (SPD), 1989–2001
  • Stephan Gieseler (CDU), 2001–2009
  • Dietmar Kolmer (temporary) (CDU), 2009
  • Jürgen Rogg (independent), 2009–2021
  • Dr. Dieter Lang (SPD), 2021

Town council

The elections in March 2016 showed the following results:[6]

  • CDU = 11 seats
  • SPD = 10 seats
  • GRÜNE (The Greens) = 5 seats
  • FDP = 3 seats
  • LINKE (The Left) = 2 seats
  • AfD = 7 seats
  • FW (Free voters) = 1 seat
  • WIR = 5 seats
  • DL (Dietzenbach list) = 1 seat

Foreigners’ advisory council

Dietzenbach has an Ausländerbeirat – a foreigners’ advisory council – made up of 19 persons representing various nationalities with people from Turkey, Morocco, Italy, Pakistan, Afghanistan, India, Chile and Croatia. As with town council itself, there is a foreigners’ advisory council session, which takes place a fortnight before the town council session.

Coat of arms and flag

The town's arms might be described as a cobalt blue stream surrounded by two bunches of grapes on either side. The grapes refer to the town's wineries which came to an end in the 18th century but were revived in the 1960s on the Wingertsberg. The wavy blue stream refers to the town's name, interpreted as being from the Old High German for “babbling brook” or “Brook of Dietz” (compare here 775 Jahre Dietzenbach, published by Dietzenbach town executive). The town's current arms were determined by its community councillors in 1957 and approved by the then Hessian Interior Minister Schneider.

The town's flag consists of two narrower blue bands framing the broader yellow band in the middle, upon which appear the town's arms.

Transport

Since late 2003, Dietzenbach is connected as the end-station with the suburban metropolitan network Frankfurt. Dietzenbach, Dietzenbach-Mitte and Dietzenbach-Steinberg stations have been served by the S-Bahn Line 2 (S2), which runs on the NiedernhausenHofheimFrankfurtOffenbach – Dietzenbach route. Dietzenbach moreover has at its disposal its own town bus network with a central bus station at the Dietzenbach Mitte S-Bahn station. Bus lines which cross Dietzenbach are the town lines OF-56 and 57, the county lines OF95, 96, 97 and 99 as well as night line n71. Bundesstraße 459, the Autobahnen A 3 and A 661 can be reached in a few minutes through the Offenbach interchange.

Culture

Festival

Each year in Dietzenbach, the following festivals offer a chance to pursue social contacts:

  • Apfelblütenfest is being held in April.
  • Fest ohne Grenzen (“Festival Without Borders”), held at the Hessentagspark
  • Fest der Biere (“Festival of Beers”), held at the Harmonieplatz, lasts five days
  • Weinfest in the New Town Centre, runs ten days
  • Nacht der Lichter(“Night of the Lights”)with "Museumsnacht" and "Heimatfest" held in the Old Town Centre
  • Trinkbornfest in the Old Town on the first weekend in September
  • Dietzenbacher Kelterfest about the "Äbbelwoi" and the making of it
  • Kerb or Kirchweih, always held on the last weekend in October. It stretches along Landwehrstraße from Harmonieplatz to the Dietrich-Bonhoeffer-Schule (school). The revived tradition of the Kerbborsche – a group of young men who perform part of the ceremony – is an important part of the kermis.

Markets

So do the markets of the Town

  • Altstadtmarkt (Old City Centre Market) where the old, traditionell Art is shown together with the modern, young Artists
  • Kreativmarkt (creative Market) is a market for Creatives and Hobby Artists of the whole Rhein-Main-Area
  • Weihnachtsmarkt (Christmas Market) on the first weekend in Advent

Places to Pray and to Believe

  • The Earth
  • Catholic parish of “Sankt Martin”
  • Catholic church of “Hildegardis-Haus”
  • Evangelical parish of “Martin-Luther”
  • Evangelical Free Church (Pentecostal parish) of “Jesus-Gemeinde”
  • Evangelical parish of “Rut”
  • Evangelical “Christuskirchengemeinde”
  • Free and Independent Life in Love
  • Jehovah's Witnesses in Germany, K.d.ö.R.
  • DitiB Fatih Moschee e. V. (Turkish mosque)
  • Tawhid Mosche e.V. (Moroccan mosque)
  • Baitul Hadi (House of Leading to the Right Way, Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat Deutschland e.V.)

Sport clubs

  • SG Dietzenbach (longtime team handball Bundesliga participant)
  • TG Dietzenbach (on the Wingertsberg: gymnastics, dancing, fitness, tennis, association football, team handball)
  • SC Steinberg
  • FC Dietzenbach 1971 e.V

Radio station

Dietzenbach features an own radio station called "Radio Dietzenbach" with a 24/7 service.[7]

Notable people

Twin towns – sister cities

Dietzenbach is twinned with:[8]

References

  1. ^ "Ergebnisse der letzten Direktwahl aller hessischen Landkreise und Gemeinden" (XLS) (in German). Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt. 5 September 2022.
  2. ^ "Die Bevölkerung der hessischen Gemeinden am 31. Dezember 2021" (PDF) (in German). Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt. June 2022.
  3. ^ "HStAD Fonds A 1 No 181/1". Archival information system Hessen. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
  4. ^ "Kartenseite: Muslime in den Gemeinden mit mindestens 10000 Einwohnern beim Zensus 2011" (PDF). kartenseite.wordpress.com. 5 April 2017. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  5. ^ "Kreis Offenbach: Bestandsaufnahme über die Integrationsarbeit in Dietzenbach" (PDF). kreis-offenbach.de. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  6. ^ "Startseite".
  7. ^ radio-dietzenbach
  8. ^ "Partnerstädte". dietzenbach.de (in German). Dietzenbach. Retrieved 2021-02-11.

External links

  • Town's official webpage (in German)
  • Dietzenbach at Curlie (in German)

dietzenbach, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 2022, l. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Dietzenbach news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Dietzenbach is the seat of Offenbach district in the Regierungsbezirk of Darmstadt in Hesse Germany and lies roughly 12 km southeast of Frankfurt am Main on the waterstream Bieber Before the Second World War the current town was a farming village with not quite 4 000 inhabitants However after the war there was a considerable upswing in the population due to refugees settling in the community From the 1970s onwards Dietzenbach s population rose rapidly reaching some 33 000 by 2006 Just under a third of the inhabitants have roots in more than a hundred nations outside Germany Agricultural buildings are nowadays seldom seen in Dietzenbach DietzenbachTownDietzenbachCoat of armsLocation of Dietzenbach within Offenbach districtDietzenbachShow map of GermanyDietzenbachShow map of HesseCoordinates 50 01 N 8 47 E 50 017 N 8 783 E 50 017 8 783 Coordinates 50 01 N 8 47 E 50 017 N 8 783 E 50 017 8 783CountryGermanyStateHesseAdmin regionDarmstadtDistrictOffenbachSubdivisions4 StadtteileGovernment Mayor 2021 27 Dieter Lang 1 SPD Area Total21 67 km2 8 37 sq mi Elevation135 m 443 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total34 517 Density1 600 km2 4 100 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes63128Dialling codes06074Vehicle registrationOFWebsitewww dietzenbach deThe town of Dietzenbach seen from the Wingertsberg The lookout tower on the Wingertsberg timber frame houses in the Old Town In 2001 Dietzenbach hosted the 41st Hessentag state festival Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Climate 1 2 Neighbouring communities 1 3 Constituent communities 1 3 1 Steinberg 1 3 2 Neue Stadtmitte 1 3 3 Hexenberg 1 3 4 Wingertsberg 1 3 5 Altstadt 1 3 6 Spessartviertel formerly Starkenburgring 2 History 3 Population development 4 Politics 4 1 Mayors 4 2 Town council 4 3 Foreigners advisory council 4 4 Coat of arms and flag 5 Transport 6 Culture 6 1 Festival 6 2 Markets 6 3 Places to Pray and to Believe 6 4 Sport clubs 6 5 Radio station 7 Notable people 8 Twin towns sister cities 9 References 10 External linksGeography EditClimate Edit Lying in the Upper Rhine Plain the climate of the Offenbach district is temperate and influenced through southwestern trade winds The temperature differences during the year are less In Dietzenbach the average temperature of the warmest month is 26 C in the central valleys they are three degrees Celsius higher The partly over 40 meters deep quarries which are typical for the Kreis Offenbacher pinewood forests and forest lakes creating an own microclimate which are snowless during the whole year Looking back on the history of Dietzenbach this is exactly the reason why its hills are just perfect for growing vineyards even in planting tropical plants There is a lightly marked rainy period over the whole year The amount of precipitation during the year is throughout the whole region very variable More than 33 6 inches of rainfalls are there in the forests of Muhlheim while in the surroundings of Rodermark averages are of 50 4 inches Between late summer and early fall season the occurrence of storms in the region is higher than during the rest of the year In this time there can be danger through tornadoes or downbursts On 18 August 2019 a tornado or downburst caused severe damage to the city Neighbouring communities Edit Dietzenbach borders in the north on the town of Heusenstamm in the east on the town of Rodgau in the south on the town of Rodermark and in the west on the town of Dreieich Constituent communities Edit The town of Dietzenbach is made up of a number of Stadtteile although not all places listed here have this official designation Steinberg Edit Steinberg is a constituent community Parts of the north industrial area are found here as well as daycare centres Kindertagesstatten 3 5 and 11 the Siedlerstrasse Seniors Centre and four schools Astrid Lindgren Schule primary school Regenbogenschule primary school Helen Keller Schule special school and Heinrich Mann Schule cooperative comprehensive school with Gymnasium upper level Furthermore there is a sporting ground on Limesstrasse In the centre is the Steinberg Shopping Centre Just under 12 000 people live in Steinberg Neue Stadtmitte Edit Between Steinberg and the old town centre a new building area has sprung up over the years in whose centre the town administration and Dietzenbach s community centre have settled It is known as the Neue Stadtmitte the New Town Centre Before this the most prominent feature was a shopping centre with a big supermarket filling station and carpark which the locals over time came to see as an eyesore for its rather unappealing 1970s architecture and the company s neglect of the building Sales dealings kept delaying any new development Finally in late 2005 agreements between the town and the Dutch Ten Brinke Group were signed After the old toom Markt closed in mid 2005 the whole building complex was torn down in autumn 2006 to make way for a new shopping centre The foundation stone was laid on 4 December 2006 and on 29 November 2007 the shopping centre opened and was given the name Rathaus Center The Ten Brinke Group the 37 500 000 project s investor built a 230 m long and 101 m broad building in which are found on 8 000 m a toom Markt and on 4 000 m a Media Markt The rest of the 21 000 m is shared among C amp A 1 600 m Deichmann two units of 500 m each the clothing chain Ernsting s Family 200 m other shops and various catering businesses Hexenberg Edit Hexenberg whose name is German for Witches Mountain is a constituent community It is named after the highest elevation in Offenbach district The buildings are mostly relatively low one family and multiple family dwellings as well as a few smaller shops in the middle of the community Wingertsberg Edit Wingertsberg called der Wingertsberg in German is not a constituent community as such but rather a residential neighbourhood lying on a slope across from the Old Town At the upper end of the neighbourhood are found besides a sporting ground a restaurant with a viewing terrace and the lookout tower built for the Hessentag state festival from which it is possible to see Frankfurt Altstadt Edit In Dietzenbach s Old Town many timber frame houses have been preserved Besides these the Old Town is where the local history museum the town library and the police station are to be found Spessartviertel formerly Starkenburgring Edit This constituent community which borders right on the Old Town is a neighbourhood built up with nothing but highrises Originally planned as an upscale neighbourhood social problems and the crime arising therefrom have brought the town and the surrounding area greater challenges than ever Today roughly 90 of the inhabitants have an immigration background Most come from Turkey Morocco Afghanistan Pakistan or various African countries History EditDietzenbach had its first documentary mention about 1210 in a donation document to the Patershausen monastery as Dicenbah 3 The later forsaken settlements of Ippingshausen and Richolshausen lay within what are now Dietzenbach s limits in the Early Middle Ages In 1545 the Counts of Hanau who had been Dietzenbach s lords for a few centuries introduced Protestantism When the Counts of Hanau died out in 1736 the Landgraves Hesse Darmstadt and of Hesse Kassel fought over who had the right to be Dietzenbach s lords The Amt of Schaafheim with Dietzenbach which lay within it passed in 1773 to Hesse Darmstadt With the partition of the Rodermark in 1818 the community acquired its forest In 1821 the Amt of Schaafheim was dissolved and Dietzenbach passed to the Landratsbezirk of Langen However by 1832 Dietzenbach had already been assigned to the district of Offenbach In 1898 the railway through Offenbach Bieber and Heusenstamm to Dietzenbach was dedicated and the railway station was built which is now once again in use after many years of seeing no passenger service at all by the Rhine Main S Bahn The line underwent an extensive modernization for S Bahn operation A British air raid in 1941 caused great damage in the community Dietzenbach was granted town rights in 1971 Since 2002 Dietzenbach has also been administrative seat of the district of Offenbach However it was only officially allowed to use the designation Kreisstadt District Seat beginning in March 2003 as the result of a dispute with the neighbouring town of Rodgau which had demanded this status on the grounds that it had a greater population Population development EditYear Inhabitants2009 33 2242007 34 7732005 34 7941997 33 0151983 25 5001970 12 4491961 6 3031950 4 7111939 3 6951834 3 695In 1834 Dietzenbach had 3 695 inhabitants One hundred and five years later in 1939 it was 3 695 After the Second World War ended 4 711 people lived in the community in 1950 In 1961 this had risen to 6 303 After extensive new development had been undertaken in the 1960s the town s population in 1970 was 12 449 In 1983 it was 25 500 and in 1997 33 015 30 of whom held citizenship other than German According to census data Dietzenbach and Raunheim had the highest shares of Muslim migrants in Germany in 2011 4 According to one analysis about a third of Dietzenbach s inhabitants were Muslim migrants in 2013 5 Politics EditMayors Edit Christian Ebert 1948 1958 Hermann Kocks 1958 1976 Friedrich Keller SPD 1976 1988 Frank Kaufmann temporary Greens 1988 1989 Jurgen Heyer SPD 1989 2001 Stephan Gieseler CDU 2001 2009 Dietmar Kolmer temporary CDU 2009 Jurgen Rogg independent 2009 2021 Dr Dieter Lang SPD 2021Town council Edit The elections in March 2016 showed the following results 6 CDU 11 seats SPD 10 seats GRUNE The Greens 5 seats FDP 3 seats LINKE The Left 2 seats AfD 7 seats FW Free voters 1 seat WIR 5 seats DL Dietzenbach list 1 seatForeigners advisory council Edit Dietzenbach has an Auslanderbeirat a foreigners advisory council made up of 19 persons representing various nationalities with people from Turkey Morocco Italy Pakistan Afghanistan India Chile and Croatia As with town council itself there is a foreigners advisory council session which takes place a fortnight before the town council session Coat of arms and flag Edit The town s arms might be described as a cobalt blue stream surrounded by two bunches of grapes on either side The grapes refer to the town s wineries which came to an end in the 18th century but were revived in the 1960s on the Wingertsberg The wavy blue stream refers to the town s name interpreted as being from the Old High German for babbling brook or Brook of Dietz compare here 775 Jahre Dietzenbach published by Dietzenbach town executive The town s current arms were determined by its community councillors in 1957 and approved by the then Hessian Interior Minister Schneider The town s flag consists of two narrower blue bands framing the broader yellow band in the middle upon which appear the town s arms Transport Edit Dietzenbach station Since late 2003 Dietzenbach is connected as the end station with the suburban metropolitan network Frankfurt Dietzenbach Dietzenbach Mitte and Dietzenbach Steinberg stations have been served by the S Bahn Line 2 S2 which runs on the Niedernhausen Hofheim Frankfurt Offenbach Dietzenbach route Dietzenbach moreover has at its disposal its own town bus network with a central bus station at the Dietzenbach Mitte S Bahn station Bus lines which cross Dietzenbach are the town lines OF 56 and 57 the county lines OF95 96 97 and 99 as well as night line n71 Bundesstrasse 459 the Autobahnen A 3 and A 661 can be reached in a few minutes through the Offenbach interchange Culture EditFestival Edit Each year in Dietzenbach the following festivals offer a chance to pursue social contacts Apfelblutenfest is being held in April Fest ohne Grenzen Festival Without Borders held at the Hessentagspark Fest der Biere Festival of Beers held at the Harmonieplatz lasts five days Weinfest in the New Town Centre runs ten days Nacht der Lichter Night of the Lights with Museumsnacht and Heimatfest held in the Old Town Centre Trinkbornfest in the Old Town on the first weekend in September Dietzenbacher Kelterfest about the Abbelwoi and the making of it Kerb or Kirchweih always held on the last weekend in October It stretches along Landwehrstrasse from Harmonieplatz to the Dietrich Bonhoeffer Schule school The revived tradition of the Kerbborsche a group of young men who perform part of the ceremony is an important part of the kermis Markets Edit So do the markets of the Town Altstadtmarkt Old City Centre Market where the old traditionell Art is shown together with the modern young Artists Kreativmarkt creative Market is a market for Creatives and Hobby Artists of the whole Rhein Main Area Weihnachtsmarkt Christmas Market on the first weekend in AdventPlaces to Pray and to Believe Edit The Earth Catholic parish of Sankt Martin Catholic church of Hildegardis Haus Evangelical parish of Martin Luther Evangelical Free Church Pentecostal parish of Jesus Gemeinde Evangelical parish of Rut Evangelical Christuskirchengemeinde Catholic parish church of St Martin Evangelical ChristuskircheFree and Independent Life in Love Jehovah s Witnesses in Germany K d o R DitiB Fatih Moschee e V Turkish mosque Tawhid Mosche e V Moroccan mosque Baitul Hadi House of Leading to the Right Way Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat Deutschland e V Sport clubs Edit SG Dietzenbach longtime team handball Bundesliga participant TG Dietzenbach on the Wingertsberg gymnastics dancing fitness tennis association football team handball SC Steinberg FC Dietzenbach 1971 e VRadio station Edit Dietzenbach features an own radio station called Radio Dietzenbach with a 24 7 service 7 Notable people EditCornelia Hanisch born 1952 Olympic fencing champion Monika Staab born 1959 football player and coach Gotz Otto born 1967 actorTwin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Dietzenbach is twinned with 8 Velizy Villacoublay France 1976 Masaya Nicaragua 1985 Rakovnik Czech Republic 1986 Neuhaus am Rennweg Germany 1990 Oconomowoc Wisconsin United States 2008 Kastsyukovichy Belarus 2009 Kunming China 2020 References Edit Ergebnisse der letzten Direktwahl aller hessischen Landkreise und Gemeinden XLS in German Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt 5 September 2022 Die Bevolkerung der hessischen Gemeinden am 31 Dezember 2021 PDF in German Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt June 2022 HStAD Fonds A 1 No 181 1 Archival information system Hessen Retrieved 19 December 2020 Kartenseite Muslime in den Gemeinden mit mindestens 10000 Einwohnern beim Zensus 2011 PDF kartenseite wordpress com 5 April 2017 Retrieved 27 April 2017 Kreis Offenbach Bestandsaufnahme uber die Integrationsarbeit in Dietzenbach PDF kreis offenbach de Retrieved 27 April 2017 Startseite radio dietzenbach Partnerstadte dietzenbach de in German Dietzenbach Retrieved 2021 02 11 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dietzenbach Town s official webpage in German Dietzenbach at Curlie in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dietzenbach amp oldid 1121271380, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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