Baienfurt
Geography
Geographical Location
Baienfurt is part of the settlement area of Middle Schussental, which extends from Eschach, a southern district of Ravensburg, through the two cities of Ravensburg and Weingarten to Baienfurt and Baindt in the north. It is located a few kilometers west of the Altdorfer Wald on the banks of the Schussen, a northern tributary of Lake Constance or the Rhine, and is traversed by the Wolfegger Ach, a tributary of the Schussen.
Neighboring Municipalities
Starting from the north, Baienfurt borders Fronreute, Baindt, Bergatreute, Schlier, Weingarten, and Berg.
Administrative Divisions
In addition to the main town, Baienfurt includes the districts and residential areas of Niederbiegen, Köpfingen, Kickach, Baumgarten, and Briach, as well as the residential area of Neubriach.
Protected Areas
Baienfurt has a minimal share in the north of the Annaberg nature reserve and an equally minimal share in the southernmost part of the Laurental and Rößlerweiher landscape protection area.
In addition, parts of the FFH areas Schussenbecken with Tobelwälder south of Blitzenreute and Altdorfer Wald are located in Baienfurt.
History
Through archaeological findings, Celtic settlement traces in the municipal area are evidenced. There is a burial mound from the Hallstatt period. In the area of the present-day districts of Rain and Kickach, there were Roman estates.
The settlement of Baienfurt probably emerged in the 9th century. The name Baienfurt, also written as Baier, Beierfurt, or Paigerfurt in early documents, derives from a ford across the Wolfegger Ach. Baien is derived from baie, beige (= opening), while other sources mention an origin from Bai (= sedge).
Likely before 1090 under Welf IV, the Lords of Waldburg received the village as a fief. In 1143, the village of Binningen is first mentioned in documents as the property of the Weingarten Abbey, and Kickach is mentioned for the first time in 1148. In 1278, a chapel dedicated to St. Blaise was erected in Briach. In 1525, Baienfurt and its surroundings were a scene of the German Peasants' War. The lords of Waldburg held the lordship until 1587 when, in a settlement of the Vorarlbergian Swabian district with its seat in the neighboring Altdorf (today Weingarten), they transferred the sovereignty. Baienfurt became the administrative center of the district, with property ownership shared between the district, as well as the Weingarten and Baindt abbeys. In 1806, Baienfurt became part of the Kingdom of Württemberg with the Vorarlbergian district (district of Ravensburg, Um-Altdorf office).
In 1826, the village was merged with other parts of the former Um-Altdorf office and the settlement around the Baindt Abbey to form the municipality of Baindt, with Baienfurt as its administrative seat. However, the persistent efforts of the Baienfurters for independence succeeded 22 years later when, on 20 September 1848, the municipality was appointed as an independent administrative district.
In 1850, Baienfurt was connected to the network of Württemberg railways with the neighboring Niederbiegen railway station on the Württemberg Southern Railway.
With the establishment of a paper mill from 1870 onwards, the village, which had been predominantly rural until then, became an industrial location and has since grown steadily.
In 1934, the Vorarlberg district was renamed Ravensburg district, and in 1938, as part of the administrative reform during the Nazi era in Württemberg, it was transferred to the Ravensburg district. After World War II, Baienfurt, along with the Ravensburg district, fell into the French occupation zone and thus became part of the newly founded state of Württemberg-Hohenzollern, which merged in 1952 as the South Württemberg-Hohenzollern administrative region into the state of Baden-Württemberg.
From 1970 to 1977, a modern town center with a town hall, community hall, marketplace, and indoor swimming pool was built. A proposed merger of the municipality with Ravensburg, Weingarten, and Baindt as part of the municipal reform in 1975 did not materialize due to lack of approval from the population in the Schussental.
Population Development | ||||||||||||||
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Year | 1849 | 1888 | 1910 | 1939 | 1959 | 1987 | 1991 | 1995 | 1999 | 2005 | 2010 | 2015 | ||
Population | 800 | 1200 | 1750 | 2900 | 4100 | 7000 | 6620 | 6883 | 7200 | 7293 | 7194 | 7138 |
Politics
Municipal Council
The municipal council election on 26 May 2019 resulted in the outcome depicted in the adjacent diagram.