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Wimmenau
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Wimmenau |
| native name | Wìmmenau |
| commune status | Commune |
| image coat of arms | Blason Wimmenau 67.svg |
| image | Eglise Wimmenau3.JPG |
| caption | Église Saint-André (Church of Saint Andrew), erected in 1681. |
| coordinates | |
| arrondissement | Saverne |
| canton | Ingwiller |
| intercommunality | Hanau-La Petite Pierre |
| mayor | Gilbert Sand |
| term | 2020–2026 |
| elevation m | 205 |
| elevation min m | 197 |
| elevation max m | 413 |
| area km2 | 20.76 |
| population | |
| population date | |
| population footnotes | |
| INSEE | 67535 |
| postal code | 67290 |
| website |
|image coat of arms = Blason Wimmenau 67.svg
Wimmenau ( or ) is a commune in the Bas-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.
History
Wimmenau is located at the crossroads of an ancient Celtic road from Haguenau to Sarre-Union and an ancient Roman road from Strasbourg to Saarbrücken. It was mentioned for the first time in 836 (as Wimmenawe). In 1365, during the Hundred Years War, a hill near the village was used by English soldiers to monitor the Sparsbach and Moder Valleys and named "Englishberg".
The village was levelled during the Thirty Years War (1618–1648), except for the bell-tower of the Church of Saint Andrew, and was resettled by Swiss immigrants from the Bern area in the mid-seventeenth century. As with most of the Alsace region, Wimmenau came under the rule of France in 1680. The lack of farmland led to the emigration of many of the commune's inhabitants to the United States and Argentina during the nineteenth century. Alsace became part of the German Empire through the Treaty of Frankfurt in 1871, but was returned to France by the Treaty of Versailles in 1919. The town came under German administration again during World War II until it was liberated by American troops on 5–6 December 1944.
The town contains two national heritage sites (monuments historique). The Church of Saint Andrew (Église Saint-André), also known as the Protestant Church (Église protestante), was designated as a monument historique in 1995. Its bell-tower and chancel dates to the 12th century and was equipped with a ribbed vault in the 15th century. The church's nave—main building—was rebuilt after 1681 and expanded in 1878. A house built in 1669 (with additions in 1718) by the Scherer brothers—Swiss immigrants—with an adjacent oil mill dating to 1837 was added in 1984. The Scherer house, oil mill, and a few additional outbuildings form a complex which house historical artifacts related to rural life in the area.
Geography
The commune lies along the Moder River; other waterways in the commune are the Rothbach and Rosteig Streams. It is entirely within the Northern Vosges Regional Nature Park. It lies between 197 and 413 m elevation; the average elevation is 205 m.
Climate
Wimmenau experiences an average of 1635 hours of sunshine a year (the average for France is 1900 hours).
Population
|1968 |860 |1975 |864 |1982 |900 |1990 |1012 |1999 |1050 |2007 |1130 |2012 |1133 |2017 |1081
Inhabitants are known as Wimmenauviens (males) or * Wimmenauviennes* (females). The hamlet of Kohlhuette is divided between the communes of Wimmenau and Wingen-sur-Moder.
| Sex | 0-14 | 15-29 | 30-44 | 45-59 | 60-74 | 75-89 | 90+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Males (percentage) | 16.9 | 13.0 | 19.6 | 23.7 | 18.8 | 7.7 | 0.2 |
| Females (percentage) | 14.2 | 11.7 | 19.5 | 24.8 | 18.0 | 11.4 | 0.4 |
Transport
Wimmenau lies along route D919—named Route Principale (Main Road) while passing through the town—connects the town of Wimmenau with Wingen-sur-Moder to the northwest and Ingwiller to the southeast. Route D12 connects the town of Wimmenau with the hamlet of Kohlhuette. Route D157 connects the town of Wimmenau with Reipertswiller.
The town of Wimmenau lies along the Mommenheim-Sarreguemines rail line, which connects the cities of Strasbourg, France to Saarbrücken, Germany. The rail line was built during German rule by the General Division of the Imperial Railways in Alsace-Lorraine; the section through Wimmenau opened 1 May 1895. TER Grand Est, a Train Express Régional operated by SNCF, operates on this line. There is no railway station in Wimmenau; TER Grand Est serves Wimmenau with bus service connecting to rail service at Wingen-sur-Moder and Ingwiller.
Notable residents
Politician Philippe Richert grew up in Wimmenau. He has served as senator for Bas-Rhin (1992–2010) and is the current president of the Alsace Regional Council (2010–present).
Notes
References
References
- (9 August 2021). "Répertoire national des élus: les maires".
- "Localisation et prononciation des noms de lieux d'Alsace commençant par T, U, V, W ou Z". elsasser.free.fr.
- "Histoire, Lieux et Monuments". Commune of Wimmenau.
- (1897). "L'Alsace au dix-septième siècle : au point de vue géographique, historique, administratif, économique, social, intellectuel et religieux. (Tome I)". Bibliothèque de l'École des Hautes Études.
- {{Base Mérimée. IA67006889
- {{Base Mérimée. IA67006893
- "Maison Suisse à Wimmenau et Conservatoire du patrimoine rural des Vosges du Nord".
- "Wimmenau".
- [https://www.insee.fr/fr/statistiques/4515315?geo=COM-67535 Évolution et structure de la population en 2017], INSEE
- "Plan Wimmenau".
- "Voie 1 de la igne de Mommenheim à Sarreguemines".
- "GARE SNCF de " SARREGUEMINES "".
- "Fiche horaire 28".
- (26 March 2010). "Philippe Richert, celui qui sauva l'honneur de la majorité UMP aux régionales". LePoint.fr.
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