Obertshausen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Obertshausen
Aerial view
Aerial view
Flag of Obertshausen
Flag
Coat of arms of Obertshausen
Coat of arms
Location of Obertshausen within Offenbach district
Obertshausen is located in Germany
Obertshausen
Obertshausen
Coordinates: 50°4′N 8°50′E / 50.067°N 8.833°E / 50.067; 8.833Coordinates: 50°4′N 8°50′E / 50.067°N 8.833°E / 50.067; 8.833
CountryGermany
StateHesse
Admin. regionDarmstadt
DistrictOffenbach
Subdivisions2 Stadtteile
Government
 • Mayor (2020–26) Manuel Friedrich[1] (Ind.)
Area
 • Total13.62 km2 (5.26 sq mi)
Elevation
113 m (371 ft)
Population
 (2020-12-31)[2]
 • Total24,977
 • Density1,800/km2 (4,700/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
63179
Dialling codes06104
Vehicle registrationOF
Websitewww.obertshausen.de

Obertshausen (German: [oː.bɛʁt͡s.ˈhaʊ̯.zn̩] (About this soundlisten)) is a town in the Offenbach district in the Regierungsbezirk of Darmstadt in the state of Hesse, Germany. It has around 24,000 inhabitants.

Geography[]

Obertshausen (centre of Hausen),
in the foreground Mühlheim-Lämmerspiel

Location[]

Obertshausen is one of 13 towns and municipalities in the Offenbach district. The town lies in the thickly wooded eastern part of the Rhine-Main lowland south of the Main and southeast of Frankfurt am Main and Offenbach am Main at an elevation of 112 m above sea level. Southwest of the town is found Darmstadt, the seat of the like-named Regierungsbezirk. To the northeast lies the town of Hanau (Main-Kinzig-Kreis). Obertshausen lies in the southern part of Hesse, not far from the Odenwald and the Spessart.

Municipal area's extent[]

The municipal area stretches over 13.7 km², of which 7.8 km² is woodland, open land and cropland

Neighbouring communities[]

Obertshausen borders in the northwest on the district-free city of Offenbach am Main with its outlying centres of Bieber and Tempelsee, in the north on the town of Mühlheim (centre of Lämmerspiel), in the northeast on the town of Hanau (Main-Kinzig-Kreis) with its outlying centres of Steinheim and Klein-Auheim, in the east on the community of Hainburg, in the southeast on the town of Rodgau (centre of Weiskirchen) and in the southwest on the town of Heusenstamm.

Constituent communities[]

Obertshausen's Stadtteile are Obertshausen and Hausen, each of which has roughly the same population.

History[]

In 865, Obertshausen had its first documentary mention under the name Oberdueshuson in a paper from the Benedictine monastery at Seligenstadt as one of the monastery's landholdings. In 1069, Heinrich IV donated to Saint Jacob's Monastery in Mainz some newly cleared land in the Wildbann Dreieich (a royal hunting forest). The land lay near the village of Hyson in the Maingau. At this time, the Lords of Hagenhausen-Eppstein exercised lordly rights (Hoheitsrechte) in Obertshausen and Hausen. In Obertshausen stood a moated castle shaped like a defensive tower, called the Burgk im Hayn (or Burg im Hayn in modern German spelling). The Lords of Hausen, a sideline of those of Hagenhausen, once had holdings here.

In the Middle Ages, feudal lords changed very often. The Lords of Eppstein, Ullrich von Hanau and Archbishop Conrad III of Mainz were some of the land's owners. In 1425, Hausen and Obertshausen, as part of the Amt of Steinheim, was sold by the Lords of Eppstein to Electoral Mainz. The Thirty Years' War and the Plague in 1636 took a heavy toll on the population.

In 1664, Archbishop Johann Philipp of Mainz sold his brother Philipp Erwin of Schönborn the two villages for 9,000 Gulden. In 1806, the Schönborn Amt of Heusenstamm with Hausen and Obertshausen was mediatized into the Principality of Isenburg, which was in turn mediatised ten years later. Both places then passed with the Isenburg Amt of Offenbach to the Grand Duchy of Hesse, and as of 1945, to the state of Hesse. From the Middle Ages until 1819, Obertshausen and Hausen belonged to the Biebermark, an area held in common with several other villages. In 1819, the Biebermark was divided among the member villages.

In 1896, the Offenbach-Dieburg railway opened with a railway station in Obertshausen.

In the course of municipal reform in Hesse, the two formerly self-administering communities of Obertshausen and Hausen were merged. At first, the new community was named Hausen. On 1 January 1978, however, it was named Obertshausen. The two centres are separated from each other by Bundesstraße 448. On 29 September 1979, the Hesse state government granted Obertshausen town rights.

Population development[]

In 1576 there were 10 households in Hausen and 27 in Obertshausen. In 1834, Hausen's population had risen to 444 and Obertshausen's to 554. These figures have risen to many times these old levels over the years since then. By 1939, the figures had become 2,034 and 2,444 respectively. On 30 June 2007, the town as a whole had 25,314 inhabitants, of whom 12,668 lived in Hausen and 12,646 in Obertshausen.

Inhabitants (each time as at 31 December)

  • 1998 – 24,522
  • 1999 – 24,577
  • 2000 – 24,658
  • 2001 – 24,676
  • 2002 – 24,521
  • 2003 – 24,484
  • 2004 – 24,532
  • 2005 – 25,434
  • 2006 – 24,210

Politics[]

Obertshausen Town Hall

Town council[]

The municipal election held on 26 March 2006 yielded the following results:

Parties and voter communities %
2006
Seats
2006
%
2001
Seats
2001
CDU Christian Democratic Union of Germany 49.9 18 51.8 19
SPD Social Democratic Party of Germany 19.3 7 25.6 10
GREENS Bündnis 90/Die Grünen 10.3 4 9.9 4
FDP Free Democratic Party 10.6 4 6.3 2
Bürger Bürger für Obertshausen 9.9 4 6.3 2
Total 100.0 37 100.0 37
Voter turnout in % 42.5 51.0

Mayor[]

Mayoral elections take place in Obertshausen every six years. The most recent mayors were:Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

Notable people[]

  •  [de] (1923–2000), paedagogue and politician (CDU), Member of the Bundestag
  • Sven Väth (born 1964), DJ and musician, pioneer of the German Techno scene

Honorary citizens[]

  • Hildegard Bühl
  • Peter Döbert (1907–1994)
  • Robert Flügel (1909–1990)
  • Kurt Formhals (1914–2009)
  • Heide Heß (1940)
  • Johann Karl Kämmerer (1870–1957)
  • Valentin Mahr (1908–1972)
  • Karl Mayer (1909–1995)
  • Ulrich Mayer
  • Robert Pappert (1930–2010)
  • Josef Pieroth (1885–1957)
  • Robert Roth (1929–2015)
  • Eric Christian Schreiber, Sr. (1921–2008)
  • Pfarrer Peter Valentin Schwahn (1889–1964)
  • Marie Friederike Vetter (1904–1995)
  • Leonhard Wilhelm (1883–1960)
  • Jakob Wolf (1899–1982)

References[]

  1. ^ Direkt gewählte (Ober-) Bürgermeister/-innen der hessischen Städte und Gemeinden, accessed 7 July 2021.
  2. ^ "Bevölkerung in Hessen am 31.12.2020 nach Gemeinden". Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt (in German). June 2021.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""