Löhnberg

Löhnberg

Coat of arms
Löhnberg

Coordinates: 50°31′N 08°16′E / 50.517°N 8.267°E / 50.517; 8.267Coordinates: 50°31′N 08°16′E / 50.517°N 8.267°E / 50.517; 8.267
Country Germany
State Hesse
Admin. region Gießen
District Limburg-Weilburg
Government
  Mayor Dr. Frank Schmidt
Area
  Total 33.85 km2 (13.07 sq mi)
Population (2015-12-31)[1]
  Total 4,379
  Density 130/km2 (340/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 35792
Dialling codes 06471
Vehicle registration LM
Website www.gemeinde-loehnberg.de

Löhnberg is a community north of Weilburg in Limburg-Weilburg district in Hesse, Germany.

Geography

Location

Löhnberg lies between Wetzlar and the district seat of Limburg an der Lahn.

Neighbouring communities

Löhnberg borders in the north on the community of Greifenstein, in the east on the towns of Leun and Braunfels (all three in the Lahn-Dill-Kreis), in the south on the town of Weilburg, and in the west on the communities of Merenberg and Mengerskirchen (all three in Limburg-Weilburg).

Constituent communities

Löhnberg’s Ortsteile are Löhnberg (administrative seat), Niedershausen, Obershausen and Selters.

History

All three constituent communities had their first documentary mention in the late 13th or early 14th century, although in Selters’s case it is rather unclear as the village has the same name as both Selters in Rhineland-Palatinate and Selters in the Taunus. A document from 1317, however, can unequivocally be said to refer to Selters an der Lahn, now the Löhnberg constituent community, although it seems likely that the place might have been mentioned earlier. In 1324, the Laneburg, a castle belonging to Nassau, was first mentioned. It must have been built shortly before that. At that time, Löhnberg’s main centre was still called Heimau and was granted under this name town rights in 1321. However, the new town had its growth stunted because it lay so near Weilburg and also because it was pledged in 1344 to the Nassau line whose seat was there. The Laneburg had its own church by 1342 and as of 1355 a priest. In the Reformation, the community became Evangelical. In the late 16th century, the Laneburg was converted into a Renaissance palace and for a short time was a Nassau-Dillenburg residence. In 1900, the castle was gutted by fire.

The constituent community of Obershausen had its first documentary mention in 1310, and Niedershausen in 1296.

Within the framework of administrative reform in Hesse in the 1970s, the formerly autonomous communities of Löhnberg, Niedershausen, Obershausen and Selters an der Lahn, which had belonged to the old Oberlahnkreis, merged into a new collective community of Löhnberg.

Politics

Community 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 18.1 4 16.7 4
SPD Social Democratic Party of Germany 45.3 11 46.6 11
FW - BfB Freie Wähler -Bürger für Bürger- 36.6 8 36.7 8
Total 100.0 23 100.0 23
voter turnout in % 49.1 60.8

Town partnerships

Löhnberg maintains partnership arrangements with the following places:

Sightseeing

Museums

Buildings

Laneburg castle ruins are in Löhnberg, dating back to the 13th Century and significant to coin collectors for the hoard of old currency discovered during restoration work in the year 2000. Löhnberg also has an Protestant castle church from 1738 and the Catholic church of Saint Hedwig.

Economy and infrastructure

On the edge of Löhnberg nearest the village of Selters is the bottling plant for Selters mineral water, sourced from its well on site and sold both in Germany and abroad.

Transport

Regional railway station

Through the community runs Bundesstraße 49 (Limburg - Wetzlar).

Löhnberg has a railway station, part of the Lahn Valley Railway.

Education

In Löhnberg there is one primary school named Grundschule auf dem Falkenflug. The nearest secondary schools are in Weilburg.

Public institutions

Famous people

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Löhnberg.
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