Zähringen (Freiburg)

Zähringen is the northernmost suburb of Freiburg im Breisgau in Baden-Württemberg, Germany.

History

On September 30, 1008 Henry II issued a deed of donation with which he ceded his exclusive hunting rights (hunting privilege) in the Breisgau forests to the bishop of Basel.[1] Although the village must already have existed for quite some time, this is the very first official document in which it is mentioned.[2]

On January 1, 1906 Zähringen was incorporated into Freiburg.[3]

Reutebach

Reutebach is one of the names of the stream running through Zähringen. The word beginning Reute refers to cleared or deforested land and the ending Bach means stream. Other names of this stream are Altbach (old stream) and Dorfbach (village stream).[4]

Reutebach was also the name of a former village which seems to have been larger than Zähringen, as its church was the parish church for the villages Gundelfingen, Heuweiler, Wildtal and Zähringen.[5] Most of its former territory now belongs to Zähringen. Only the Reutebach farms (Reutebacher Höfe) belong to Gundelfingen.

Zähringen castle

Zähringen castle, the ancestral seat of the Zähringer, is located above Zähringen, within the boundary of Gundelfingen.

References

  1. Badish Pages: Wildbannurkunde Breisgau
  2. Regional Studies Online: Zähringen Castle
  3. Emil Gött School: School History
  4. Badish Pages: Reutebach
  5. Zähringen: History
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zähringen.

Coordinates: 48°01′26″N 7°51′48″E / 48.0239°N 7.8633°E / 48.0239; 7.8633

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, November 30, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.