Bad Hindelang
Encyclopedia
Bad Hindelang is a municipality
Municipalities of Germany
Municipalities are the lowest level of territorial division in Germany. This may be the fourth level of territorial division in Germany, apart from those states which include Regierungsbezirke , where municipalities then become the fifth level.-Overview:With more than 3,400,000 inhabitants, the...

 in the district of Oberallgäu
Oberallgäu
Oberallgäu is a district in Bavaria, Germany. It is bounded by the districts of Unterallgäu and Ostallgäu, the Austrian states Tyrol and Vorarlberg, the district of Lindau, and the state of Baden-Württemberg...

 in Bavaria
Bavaria
Bavaria, formally the Free State of Bavaria is a state of Germany, located in the southeast of Germany. With an area of , it is the largest state by area, forming almost 20% of the total land area of Germany...

 in Germany. As of 2008 it has a population of 4,915. Its sulphur spring was used for cures in the 19th century and today the municipality is a major health resort.

Geography

The main town of Bad Hindelang lies at an altitude of 825 metres above sea level. The municipality includes the following areas, Bad Hindelang, Vorderhindelang, Bad Oberdorf, Hinterstein, Oberjoch and Unterjoch.

Landscape

The Town Hall is a former hunting lodge, built in 1660 by Prince-Bishop of Augsburg Sigismund Franz, Archduke of Tyrol. It was used as a summer residence by the prince bishops of Augsburg until 1805. After the secularization of the palace went over to the State, it then fell into sprivate ownership as a guest house and Schoolhouse, until it was finally became the town hall of the municipality. It still has an early Baroque Rococo fireplace.

The Church of St. Jodokus in Bad Oberdorf was built in 1937-38 by Thomas Wechs to replace the old church but the present church contains several valuable pieces including a 1493 Byzantine style depiction of Madonna and Child and a 1519 carving on the altar by Jörg Lederer. There is a Gothic life-size depiction of Christ on a donkey on Palm Sunday
Palm Sunday
Palm Sunday is a Christian moveable feast that falls on the Sunday before Easter. The feast commemorates Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem, an event mentioned in all four Canonical Gospels. ....

. Other panel paintings and statues of saints complete the facilities of the church.

The Evangelical church is located on the banks of the Ostrach River and was established in 1628. The first wooden chapel was dedicated to St. Michael, but was destroyed by a storm on 18 January 1739. In 1748, a stone building was subsequently completed. On 30 October 1748 it was consecrated the chapel as Trinity Chapel. The altar of Jörg Lederer was one located in this chapel but was moved to St. Jodokus church in 1937.

Bad Oberdorf contains the Friedenshistorisches Museum and the Hinterstein Carriage Museum which has numerous displays related to carriages and wax models. It also contains the Upper Mill estate which dates back to 1433 and is now run as a museum and hotel. It contains a number of items related to Bad Hindelang's cultural heritage and old costumes of the millers etc. Also of note is the Dreikugelhaus in Bad Hindelang, built in 1671. The original owner was the salt merchant Thomas Scholl.

Mayors

  • 1900-1919: Josef Anton Blanz
  • 1920-1933: Michael Haas
  • 1933-1939: Anton Schmid
  • 1939-1945: Karl Blanz
  • 1945-1947: Max Zillibiller, CSU
    Christian Social Union of Bavaria
    The Christian Social Union in Bavaria is a Christian democratic and conservative political party in Germany. It operates only in the state of Bavaria, while its sister party, the Christian Democratic Union , operates in the other 15 states of Germany...

  • 1947-1948: Xaver Blenk
  • 1948-1960: Alois Haug
  • 1960-1984: Georg Scholl, CSU
    Christian Social Union of Bavaria
    The Christian Social Union in Bavaria is a Christian democratic and conservative political party in Germany. It operates only in the state of Bavaria, while its sister party, the Christian Democratic Union , operates in the other 15 states of Germany...

  • 1984-2008: Roman Haug, Freie Wähler
  • 2008–present: Adalbert Martin, CSU
    Christian Social Union of Bavaria
    The Christian Social Union in Bavaria is a Christian democratic and conservative political party in Germany. It operates only in the state of Bavaria, while its sister party, the Christian Democratic Union , operates in the other 15 states of Germany...


Notable people

  • Franz Xaver Eberhard (1767–1836)
  • Richard Mahn (* 1866 Leipzig, † 1951 Hindelang)
  • Fritz von Kamptz (* 16. February 1866 Glogau, † 15. Februar 1938 Hindelang)
  • Charley Peklo (* 23. August 1880 Taus, † 6. November 1959 Immenstadt),
  • Walter Jacob (* 21. Oktober 1893 Altenburg/Thüringen, † 13. Juli 1964 Hindelang)
  • Sepp Rist (1900–1980)
  • Maria Antonie (Toni) Gaßner-Wechs (1900–1956)
  • Maria Blanz (1912–1995)
  • Christian Modersohn (* 13. Oktober 1916)
  • Kilian Lipp (* 1953 im Ortsteil Vorderhindelang)
  • Willi Tannheimer (* 1940 im Ortsteil Hinterstein)
  • Hubert Blanz (* 21. Februar 1969)
  • Christoph Finkel (* 1971),
  • Aurélie Blanz (* 1973)
  • Ulrich Lipp (* 10. August 1957 in Vorderhindelang)
  • Karl Hafner (1894–1971)
  • Michael Bredl (1916–1999)
  • Clemens Wenzeslaus (1739–1812)
  • Pamela Behr, (* 1956)
  • Philipp Neri Chrismann (* 1751 in Hindelang, † 1810 Hedingen bei Sigmaringen),
  • Luitpold von Bayern (1821–1912)
  • Thomas Wechs (1893–1970)
  • Hans-Peter Lanig
    Hans-Peter Lanig
    Hans-Peter Lanig is a German alpine skier who competed for the Unified Team of Germany in the 1956 Winter Olympics and in the 1960 Winter Olympics.He was born in Bad Hindelang...

  • Anton Morent (1924–2006)
  • Horst Zuse
    Horst Zuse
    Horst Zuse is a professor of Computer Science at the Technical University of Berlin and the son of the noted computer scientist Konrad Zuse.He first studied electrical engineering...

     (* 1945)


Literature

  • Wolfgang B. Kleiner/Martin Kluger (Augsburg): Bad Hindelang im Allgäu. Bayerns zauberhafter Süden. context medien und verlag, Augsburg 2009, ISBN 978-3-939645-21-4

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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