Geography
Location
The historic wine village of Kürnbach, known as the Black Riesling village in the Kraichgau hill country, is one of the few communities in Germany with a history of shared governance. It is located in the northwestern Stromberg-Heuchelberg Nature Park near Zabergäu in the valley Humsterbaches. The Humsterbach was dammed as a retention basin east of the village next to Schlosswiesensee. To the west, the landscape opens up to the typical cultivated hill country of Kraichgau, while to the east a large contiguous forest area of Stromberg-Heuchelberg nature park begins.Constituent communities
The municipality of Kürnbach includes the Aussiedlerhöfe Heiligenäcker and the estates of Humstermühle, Klostermühe, and Rohrmühle.History
Middle Ages
In the time of Charlemagne there already stood a wooden church in Kürnbach, which was later replaced by a Romanesque stone building. The oldest surviving reference to Kürnbach dates back to 1278. It is a goods list of the monastery of Weissenburg. The document indicates that Kürnbach was already in the possession of the Benedictine monastery. About 100 years later, the name of a noble family of Kürnbach appears for the first time. In 1543 Kürnbach got the market right.Condominium
The homeland poet Samuel Friedrich Sauter referred to Kürnbach as "... this market town of two states, divided into Hesse and Baden…". Thus the condominium Kürnbach offers a constitutional rarity. It belonged to two-thirds of the county Hesse and one-third to the Duchy of Württemberg and from 1810 to the Grand Duchy of Baden. The village was divided into 2 states but had no border. The nationality was assigned to each inhabited houses, which means that the Citizenship changed with the purchase of a particular house. Around 1300, two-thirds of Kürnbach became a fief of the Counts of Katzenlnbogen. Engelhard von Liebenstein pledged the other part of the village to the Duchy of Württemberg in 1320. In 1479, the Counts of Katzenlnbogen were inherited by the Landgraves of Hesse. Kürnbach now belonged to two-thirds of the county Hesse and one-third to the Duchy of Württemberg and thus formed a condominium. Individual cultivated land was assigned to one of the two dominions but could change these as well. Therefore, there were three different administrations, pertaining respectively to Hesse, Württemberg (later Baden) and the condominium. After the division of land, the Hessian proportion came to the county Hesse-Darmstadt. With the peace of Schönbrunn the Württemberg proportion came to the Grand Duchy of Baden. Kürnbach formed an enclave in Baden state territory and bordered the rest of theEmigration to America
In the middle of the 19th century, the rate of poverty was particularly high. In addition to bad harvest, there were many wine-losing years, which led to a wave of emigration to America. Next to economic reasons there were also political. The most famous Kürnbacher was John Adam Treutlen, who later became governor of Georgia. Other well-known emigrants are for example Blickensdörfer, Pfeiffer, has, Krämer and Weisert.20th century
The restoration of the village began 1965. From this time Kürnbach belonged completely first to the district office Bretten, then to the district Sinsheim, which was dissolved in 1973. Since then the place is assigned to the district of Karlsruhe.Religion
Since the Reformation Kürnbach is predominantly evangelical. In addition to the parish of the regional church there is also a Protestant-Methodist and a new Apostolic congregation. Roman Catholic faithful are cared by the community in Oberderdingen-Flehingen. Every religious community has its own church in the village.Population development
*1939 1,145 inhabitants *1950 1,665 inhabitants *1970 2,130 inhabitants *2010 2,277 inhabitants *2015 2,330 inhabitantsPolitics
Mayors
*1905–1919 Theodor Henninger *1919–1933 Karl Heinrich Hauser *1934–1945 Otto Hauffe *1945–1947 Karl Heinrich Hauser *1947–1964 August Büchele *1964–1984 Kurt Böckle *1984–2016 Karl-Heinz Hauser *2016-present Armin EbhartRegional council
After the local election of 2014 there are four voter communities represented in the municipal council. *FWV (35,3 %): four seats *Handel, Handwerk und Gewerbe (HHG) (25,1 %): three seats *Liste 4 (26,0 %): three seats *Liste 90 (13,7 %): two seatsBlazon
The municipality Kürnbach leads as a coat of arms a standing in red silver eagle claw.Partnerships
Since 1983 Kürnbach has a partnership with the communityEconomy and infrastructure
Education
Kürnbach has its own elementary school and two kindergartens.Culture and sights
Historic center
In the historic center there are numerous half-timbered buildings of different eras, such as the Hessen-Kelter, the Deutschherrenhaus, which was once a supply situation for the Teutonic Order, or the moated castle, which was built from a previous moated castle. In 1266 the castle was owned by the Lords of Liebenstein. From 1380 were knights of Balzhofen and after the knights of Sternenfels on castle Kürnbach. Until the mid-19th century the castle was a family property of the Grand Dukes of Hesse, then the property was privately owned. The castle is surrounded by greenery and at the former Upper Gate houses there is the old town hall and the old schoolhouse.Church
In Kürnbach stood around 800 a wooden church which was later replaced by a Romanesque stone building and is now known as the Protestant Michael's Church. It received the present look through the reconstruction (1721 – 1725) after the building was destroyed in the Thirty Years 'War. Among the art treasures of the church include the choir vault; the crucifix from the 16th century, which is created with sandstone; five-meter-high Renaissance tomb for Bernhard von Sternenfels and his wife Maria Agatha von Weitershausen and the organ, which was built in 1834 by the Heidelberg organ builder Wilhelm Jacob Overmann.Museums
The Historic Actien Museum, housed in a historic peasant estate near the Upper Gate, has been showing historic securities since 1976.Personalities
*Kurt Böckle (1922–1993); mayor from 1964 to 1984, honorary citizen to leave office *Friederike Louise Löffler (1744–1805); pharmacist's daughter and well-known cookbook author, born in Kürnbach, mother of Henriette Löffler, also known as a cookbook author *Friederike Hauffe (1801–1829); the "seer of Prevorst", lived from 1821 to 1826 in Kürnbach *References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kurnbach Karlsruhe (district)