Guldental
Guldental is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Bad Kreuznach district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde Langenlonsheim-Stromberg, whose seat is in Langenlonsheim. With a population of some 2,900 inhabitants, Guldental is the biggest rural winegrowing community on the Nahe.
Geography
Location
Guldental lies in the Naheland – the land lining each side of the Nahe – among the southern foothills of the Hunsrück, on the Guldenbach.Neighbouring municipalities
Clockwise from the north, Guldental's neighbours are the municipality of Langenlonsheim, the municipality of Bretzenheim, the town of Bad Kreuznach, the municipality of Hargesheim, the municipality of Gutenberg and the municipality of Windesheim.Constituent communities
Guldental's Ortsteile are Heddesheim and Waldhilbersheim. Also belonging to Guldental are the outlying homesteads of Breitenfelserhof and Ackermühle.History
As early as 1163, the landhold of Hetdenesheim had its first documentary mention and already by 700 years ago it was one of the greater villages in what is now the Bad Kreuznach district. Under Revolutionary/Napoleonic French rule, Heddesheim was grouped into the Mairie of Langenlonsheim in 1800. The village, now constituent community of Guldental, Waldhilbersheim is likewise very old. Beginning as long ago as 1200, it began to crop up in documents. In 1800, however, it was grouped into the Mairie of Windesheim, and in 1939 into the Amt of Langenlonsheim. Today's Ortsgemeinde of Guldental was formed in the course of administrative restructuring in Rhineland-Palatinate on 7 June 1969 through the merger of the hitherto self-administering municipalities of Heddesheim with its outlying centre of Breitenfelser Hof and Waldhilbersheim. Guldental thus became the biggest winegrowing community on the Nahe, with 417 ha of land given over to vineyards. The vineyards to the south run for 6 km along the Guldenbach. Winegrowing in this area is witnessed quite early on.Jewish history
Until the 1930s, there was a small Jewish community in Waldhilbersheim to which Jews in Heddesheim – and thus in both villages that now make up Guldental – also belonged. It had come to be established at least as far back as the 18th century. In 1808, Waldhilbersheim counted 29 Jewish inhabitants. Living here about 1858 were 50 Jews in Waldhilbersheim and another 40 in Heddesheim, but thereafter the numbers began to shrink with emigration and depopulation. This small community also included the Jewish inhabitants in Laubenheim until 1895, when they became tied to the community in Langenlonsheim. By 1925, the Jewish population in Waldhilbersheim and Heddesheim had sunk to 8 and 29 respectively. In the mid 1920s, the head of the Jewish community was August Schneider. In the way of institutions, the Jewish community had a small synagogue, a religious school and a graveyard. To supply the community's religious needs, a "worship official" was hired, at least temporarily, to do the jobs of religious teacher, prayer leader and shochet. According to the GedenkbuchOpfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945 and Yad Vashem, of all Jews who either were born in Waldhilbersheim or Heddesheim or lived there for a long time, 50 died under Nazi rule :- From Waldhilbersheim:
- Walter Aron
- Moritz Grünewald
- Hilde Hallgarten née Simon
- Erna Marcus née Aron
- Berta Schneider née Abraham
- Rosa Schneider
- Thekla Wolf née Schneider
- From Heddesheim:
- Frieda Ansbacher née Stern
- Max Ansbacher
- Else Ansbacher
- Willy Ansbacher
- Leopold Bähr
- Walter Benjamin
- Adelheid Brunner née Reinstein
- Isidor Flörsheim
- Ida Grünfeld née Benjamin
- Jakob Grünwald
- Berthold Halm
- Friederike Heilbron née Stern
- Erna Kahn née Stern
- Moritz Kahn
- Ida Kiefer née Wolf
- Flora Meyer née Stern
- Sally Meyer
- Betty Moses née Stern
- Willy Moses
- Martha Müller née Benjamin
- Dorothe Schneider
- Johanna Schneider
- Sally Schwab
- Helene Schwarz née Benjamin
- Bertha Stern née Hirschfeld
- Auguste Stern née Lindauer
- Emil Stern
- David Stern
- Heinrich Stern
- Herbert Stern
- Lina Stern née Kahn
- Lothar Stern
- Markus Stern
- Moses Stern
- Sally Stern
- Rosa Strauß née Stern
- Ella Wolf
- Franz Wolf
- Lotte Wolf
- Moses Wolf
- Selma Wolf née Benjamin
- Walter Josef Wolf
- Amalie Zack née Schneider
The synagogue itself was a simple aisleless building with round and round-arch windows. Corner lesenes and an ascending frieze were the outward decorative elements. On Kristallnacht, the synagogue was wrecked and plundered. In the process, all the fittings and the ritual objects, the pump organ, the stove, lamps and other useful things were stolen or destroyed by the Nazis. In January 1939, the building was sold and thereafter it was used as a storage building or a garage. On the street side, a gate was broken through, and the windows were walled up. Since 1994, the building has been under monumental protection. Its address in Waldhilbersheim is Naheweinstraße 83.
Religion
As at 30 September 2013, there are 2,460 full-time residents in Guldental, and of those, 768 are Evangelical, 1,272 are Catholic, 1 belongs to the Free Evangelical Church,1 is Greek Orthodox,
4 are Lutheran, 53 belong to other religious groups and 361 either have no religion or will not reveal their religious affiliation.
Politics
Municipal council
The council is made up of 20 council members, who were elected by proportional representation at the municipal election held on 7 June 2009, and the honorary mayor as chairman. The municipal election held on 7 June 2009 yielded the following results:Mayor
Guldental's mayor is Alfons Lorsbach, and his deputies are Peter Schermuly, Elke Demele and Kurt Römer.Coat of arms
The municipality's arms might be described thus: Per fess Or a saltire humetty sable and gules three wings argent.The municipal arms are put together from two coats of arms, the ones formerly borne by the two villages of Heddesheim and Waldhilbersheim before they were merged as part of administrative restructuring in Rhineland-Palatinate. The charge in the upper field is Saint Andrew's Cross, a saltire whose arms do not reach the field's outer edges. This was drawn from Waldhilbersheim's former arms. In the lower field stands a threefold charge, bird's wings. These were drawn from Heddesheim's former arms. The approval for the new, merged municipality of Guldental to bear these arms was granted some time after the actual 1969 merger, in 1971, by the now defunct Regierungsbezirk administration in Koblenz.
Town partnerships
Guldental fosters partnerships with the following places:This relationship is not a formalized partnership, amounting to more of a "friendship".
Culture and sightseeing
Buildings
The following are listed buildings or sites in Rhineland-Palatinate's Directory of Cultural Monuments:'' and museum
Heddesheim
- Evangelical church, Kirchstraße 1 – Romanesque quire tower, 12th or 13th century, Gothic alterations, Baroque spire, 1709; Late Gothic nave, 15th century
- Saint James the Greater's Catholic Parish Church, Hauptstraße 8 – Late Gothic Revival brick aisleless church, 1894, Cathedral Master builder Max Meckel
- Hauptstraße – Renaissance well, village coat of arms, marked 1584
- Hauptstraße 9 – estate complex along the street; Baroque timber-frame house, partly solid, possibly from the earlier half of the 18th century
- Hauptstraße 14 – former school; Late Classicist brick building, 1895/1896
- Kirchstraße 12 – Baroque timber-frame house, partly solid, earlier half of the 18th century
- Naheweinstraße 48 – house, Late Classicist building with half-hip roof, third fourth of the 19th century
- Pfarriusstraße 12 – Baroque timber-frame house, 18th century
- Breitenfelserhof 4/5/6 – three-part row of small houses with a barn, early 19th century
- Remnants of the Notgotteskapelle, on der Kreisstraße 48 – cavelike niche in the red sandstone crag, in origin possibly mediaeval
Waldhilbersheim
- Saint Martin's Catholic Parish Church, Große Kirchgasse – aisleless church, 1774/1775, lengthened in 1923; in the churchyard wall gravestones, 18th and 19th centuries; on the quire a Late Baroque Crucifix, marked 1779; three priests' grave crosses, marked 1888, 1920 and 1927; warriors' memorial 1914-1918, Saint Martin relief, 1920s; graveyard cross, sandstone, about 1900; former church portal of the Baroque Catholic church, 1762
- Brückenstraße 1 – Classicist timber-frame house, plastered, earlier half of the 19th century, door leaf marked 1900
- At Brunnenplatz 1 – armorial stone, marked 1577
- Brunnenplatz 5 – former town hall and schoolhouse; Classicist plastered building, about 1850/1860, fountain
- Brunnenplatz 7 – timber-frame dwelling, two-part Baroque timber-frame house, plastered, possibly about 1700; characterizes square's appearance
- Im Baumgarten 2 – estate complex; Baroque timber-frame house, partly solid, 17th century
- Naheweinstraße 83 – former synagogue; brick building with round-arch windows, 1910
- Windesheimer Straße/corner of Flurweg – wayside chapel, 19th century
- Jewish graveyard, in the forest "Auf dem Engelroth" – area with some 49 gravestones, 1840 to 1937
Jewish graveyard
Clubs
Guldental has a great number of clubs. Currently active in the municipality are the following:- Angelsportverein Guldental e.V. — angling club
- Bauern- und Winzerverband Guldental — farmers' and winegrowers' association
- Chor kreuz und quer — choir
- Dorfladen Guldental w.V. — village shop
- EPG- Europäische Pfadfinderschaft St.Georg — scouting
- Evangelische Frauenhilfe Guldental — Evangelical women's aid
- Förderverein der Grundschule Guldental e.V. — primary school promotional association
- Freizeitreiter Guldenbachtal e.V. — "leisure riders"
- Fremdenverkehrs- und Verschönerungsverein Guldental — tourism and beautification club
- Freunde der fröhlichen Runde — "friends of the merry tour"
- Guldentaler Frauenstammtisch e.V. — women's Stammtisch
- Karateakademie G-Dojo Guldental e.V. — martial arts
- Karnevalverein Sunneblum 1928 Guldental e.V. — Shrovetide Carnival club
- Katholische Frauengemeinschaft "St. Jakobus" Guldental — Catholic women's association
- Katholische Frauengemeinschaft "St. Martin" Guldental — Catholic women's association
- Katholischer Kirchenchor "St. Jakobus" Guldental — Catholic church choir
- Katholischer Kirchenchor "St. Martin" Guldental — Catholic church choir
- Landfrauenverein Guldental — countrywomen's club
- Männergesangverein "Gute Laune" 1927 Guldental e.V. — men's singing club
- Männergesangverein 1923 Guldental e.V. — men's singing club
- Musikverein Guldental e.V. — music club
- Ortsvereinsring Guldental — association of clubs
- Sportgemeinschaft Guldental 07 — sporting association
- Theatergruppe Guldental 2005 e.V. — theatre
- TV 1909 Guldental e.V. — gymnastic club
- VdK Ortsverband Guldental — social advocacy group
- VSC "Spike" Guldental — volleyball club
- Winzerkapelle Guldental e.V. — "winemakers' orchestra"
Museums
- Feldbahn-Museum Guldental with 36 Feldbahnen and actual running
- Heimat- und Weinbaumuseum — local history and winegrowing museum
Economy and infrastructure
Transport
Guldental lies within the Rhein-Nahe-Nahverkehrsverbund, a local public transport association whose fares therefore apply. Within the municipality is a railway station, Heddesheim on the Cross-Hunsrück Railway, although currently it has only goods service. The nearest place with passenger rail service is Langenlonsheim on the Alsenz Valley Railway lying some 5 km east of Guldental. In Bad Kreuznach, some 8 km south of Guldental, this line crosses the Nahe Valley Railway. Running daily at least every two hours to Bad Kreuznach is bus route 240, run by Omnibusverkehr Rhein-Nahe. The nearest Autobahn interchange is Waldlaubersheim on the A 61, some 5 km north of Guldental.Winegrowing
Guldental is characterized to a considerable extent by winegrowing, and with 377 ha of vineyard planted it is second only to Bad Kreuznach among the Nahe wine region's biggest winegrowing centres.Famous people
Honorary citizens
- Jakob Maurer, since 6 January 2002
- Günter Lukas, since 6 January 2002
- Josef Sonnet, since 21 January 2007
Sons and daughters of the town
- Guldental claims Michael von Obentraut as one of its own, pointing out that although Castle Stromburg near Stromberg may have been the Family Obentraut's seat, the family also had holdings in Heddesheim, among them a fortified house where Michael was actually born. Michael von Obentraut, upon whom history has bestowed the honorific Deutscher Michel, is thus said to have brought Heddesheim legendary renown through his exploits in the Thirty Years' War.
- Gustav Pfarrius, called the Sänger des Nahetals, came into the world in 1800 in Heddesheim. Besides his many homeland poems he also wrote for the first printed guide book for the Nahe country.
Famous people associated with the municipality
- Manuel Friedrich began his football career at SG Guldental 07.
- Johann Lafer, cook
- Julia Klöckner, Member of the Landtag
Sundry