Sachsenheim
Sachsenheim (German pronunciation: [ˈzaksn̩haɪm] ) is a town in the district of Ludwigsburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is situated 11 km northwest of Ludwigsburg.
Buildings
- The most important attraction is the water castle in Großsachsenheim. Built in the 14th century, burned down in 1542 and rebuilt in 1544. 1952 the castle was purchased by the city Großsachsenheim and is since 1962 the town hall.
- Evangelische Stadtkirche "St. Fabian and Sebastian "in Großsachsenheim, former fortified church
- Remains of the old city wall with tower
- Evangelische Stadtkirche Kleinsachsenheim, former fortified church, rebuilt in 1460 and 1619, reconstruction 1948-1950
- Town hall Kleinsachsenheim, half-timbered building, first mentioned in 1614
- Parish Church "St. George "Hohenhaslach from 1230. Valuable early Gothic frescos
- Village road Ochsenbach, half-timbered houses from the 16th to 18th centuries
- Protestant parish "Our Lady" Ochsenbach, built around 1290, Gothic frescoes of 1430
- Evangelical church "St. Remigius "Häfnerhaslach, Gothic choir with ribbed vaults, frescoes (around 1400)
- North of Ochsenbach is the telecommunication tower Cleebronn
Regular events
- Heimatfest in five-year intervals
- Krämer market in Hohenhaslach (always on 1 May)
- Summer at the castle (on the 3rd weekend in July)
- Sachsenheimer Summer Special (on the 3rd weekend of September)
- Christmas market in the exterior courtyard (always on 2nd Advent)
Economy and Infrastructure
Viticulture
The neighborhoods in Kirbachtal and Kleinsachsenheim has a long wine growing history. Approximately 250 hectares of the district area of the city consists of vineyards.
Transportation
Sachsenheim is located approximately 30 kilometers from the state capital Stuttgart.
- Car: Bundesautobahn 81 exit Ludwigsburg-Nord, continues on B 27 and L 1125 to Großsachsenheim
- Railway: Sachsenheim is connected to the rail network by the in Großsachsenheim located station Sachsenheim to the Württemberg Western Railway (Bietigheim-Bissingen-Bruchsal); the station serves the regional express-line Stuttgart-Bietigheim-Bissingen-Mühlacker-Heidelberg, the Regional Express-line Stuttgart-Bietigheim-Bissingen-Mühlacker-Pforzheim-Karlsruhe and the tram -lines S5 / S6 (Bietigheim-Bissingen-Mühlacker-Pforzheim-Karlsruhe-Wörth or Bietigheim-Bissingen-Mühlacker-Pforzheim-Wildbad)
Sons and daughters of the town
- Hermann von Sachsenheim (1365-1458), poet
- Eberhard David Hauber (1695-1765), born in Hohenhaslach, theologian
- Ferdinand Schnaidt (1840-1910), born in Hohenhaslach, bank manager, member of Reichstag and Landtag
- Thomas Knodel (born 1953), church musician
Other
The city Sachsenheim became known nationwide when it became public that the RAF-terrorists Christian Klar, Knut Folkerts and Günter Sonnenberg had set up several weeks in the residential and commercial complex opposite the train station. After the attack on Siegfried Buback the police found here the getaway car – a silver-gray Alfa Romeo Giulia.
See also
- Media related to Sachsenheim at Wikimedia Commons
References
- ^ Aktuelle Wahlergebnisse, Staatsanzeiger, accessed 13 September 2021.
- ^ "Bevölkerung nach Nationalität und Geschlecht am 31. Dezember 2022" [Population by nationality and sex as of December 31, 2022] (CSV) (in German). Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg. June 2023.