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Niddatal

Niddatal

FieldValue
typeStadt
nameNiddatal
image_coaDEU Niddatal COA.svg
coordinates
image_planNiddatal in FB.svg
stateHesse
regionDarmstadt
districtWetteraukreis
elevation121
area40.25
postal_code61194
area_code06034
licenceFB
Gemeindeschlüssel06 4 40 017
divisions4 districts
websitewww.niddatal.de
mayorMichael Hahn
leader_term2020–26
partyCDU

Niddatal (, ) is a town in the Wetteraukreis district in Hesse, Germany. It is located on the river Nidda, 6 km southeast of Friedberg and 22 km northeast of Frankfurt am Main.

The town is divided into four districts: Assenheim, Ilbenstadt, Kaichen, Bönstadt.

History

Assenheim

Assenheim was first mentioned as a township in 1139. Assenheim Castle existed between the years 1170 – 1780. Its ruins are still visible today.

Ilbenstadt

Ilbenstadt's first mention as an Eluistat was in 818. At the time, Ilbenstadt consisted of two cloisters. Its Church St. Maria, Petrus und Paulus was elevated to Basilica Minor status in 1929 by Pope Pius XI.

Kaichen

A reconstructed Roman fountain near Niddatal-Kaichen.

Kaichen was founded by a Anshelmus de Cochene in 1231. Around 1400, Kaichen's first church was built and rebuilt in 1737 and a baptismal font was added. One of the most popular places in Kaichen is the Gericht zu Kaichen which was a court able to declare to a death penalty.

Bönstadt

Bönstadt first was the property of the counts of Falkenstein, and later of Isenburg-Büdingen, which made Bönstadt belong to Assenheim castle. Documentary, in former times Bönstadt had meant Benstad in 1184. In 1970, the townships of Assenheim, Ilbenstadt, Bönstadt and Kaichen merged to form modern-day Niddatal. As of January 2009, the town's population stands at 9,360. The area is characterised by agricultural activities, but in its former past, trade played a fundamental role in the local economy.

Politics

Local elections in Niddatal have yielded the following results:

Parties
CDU
SPD
GRÜNE
FWG
FDP
LINKE
Total
Turnout in %

Sights

Ilbenstadt

''Basilica Maria, St. Petrus und Paulus.''

Basilica Maria St. Petrus und Paulus was donated by St. Gottfried von Cappenberg in 1123. St. Cappenberg was interred there in 1127 and Pope Pius XI elevated the Church to Basilica Minor status in 1929. Due to secularization in 1803, its cloister was abrogated. After World War II, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Mainz repurchased the cloister from the state Hesse.

Today the church is a landmark of Ilbenstadt which is also visible because of the eternalisation on town emblem. Regionally, the church is also known as Dom der Wetterau (cathedral of Wetterau)

References

References

  1. (5 September 2022). "Ergebnisse der letzten Direktwahl aller hessischen Landkreise und Gemeinden". [[Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt]].
  2. [http://www.niddatal.de/index_main.php?unid=587&websiteid=normal Stadt Niddatal]. Niddatal.de. Retrieved on 5 January 2014.
  3. [http://www.niddatal.de/index_main.php?unid=591&websiteid=normal Stadt Niddatal]. Niddatal.de. Retrieved on 5 January 2014.
  4. [http://www.niddatal.de/index_main.php?unid=592&websiteid=normal Stadt Niddatal]. Niddatal.de. Retrieved on 5 January 2014.
  5. link. (1 February 2009 . Niddatal.de. Retrieved on 5 January 2014.)
  6. link. (14 June 2018 . Niddatal.de. Retrieved on 5 January 2014.)
  7. "Ilbenstadt, Basilika Maria, St. Petrus u. Paulus".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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