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Plieningen

Coordinates: 48°42′3.6″N 9°12′38.52″E / 48.701000°N 9.2107000°E / 48.701000; 9.2107000
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(Redirected from Steckfeld)

Plieningen
Town hall
Town hall
Coat of arms of Plieningen
Location within Stuttgart
Plieningen is located in Germany
Plieningen
Plieningen
Plieningen is located in Baden-Württemberg
Plieningen
Plieningen
Coordinates: 48°42′3.6″N 9°12′38.52″E / 48.701000°N 9.2107000°E / 48.701000; 9.2107000
CountryGermany
StateBaden-Württemberg
Admin. regionStuttgart
DistrictStuttgart
CityStuttgart
FoundedApril 1, 1942
SubdivisionsAsemwald, Chausseefeld, Hohenheim, Plieningen, Steckfeld
Government
 • BezirksvorsteherinAndrea Lindel[1] (CDU)
Area
 • Total13.07 km2 (5.05 sq mi)
Elevation
370 m (1,210 ft)
Population
 (2020-12-31)[2]
 • Total13,325
 • Density1,000/km2 (2,600/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
70599
Dialling codes0711
Vehicle registrationS
Websitestuttgart.de/item/show/14194/1

Plieningen is the southernmost borough (Stadtbezirk) of Stuttgart in the state of Baden-Württemberg. Plieningen is located about 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) from the city center of Stuttgart on the Filder Plain. Schloss Hohenheim, part of the Stuttgart Airport, and the parking garage for the Stuttgart Trade Fair are located here.

Geography

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Plieningen has five boroughs (Stadtteile) that altogether make up Plieningen's area of 1,307 hectares (13.07 km2).[3]

Municipalities

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No. Stadtteil Population (2011) area
571 Asemwald 1,525 14.2 hectares (0.142 km2)
552 Chausseefeld 1,165 6.9 hectares (0.069 km2)
581 Hohenheim 575 156.3 hectares (1.563 km2)
551 Plieningen 12,512 1,103.9 hectares (11.039 km2)
561 Steckfeld 2,147 26.2 hectares (0.262 km2)

History

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The first settlers in the area appear to have been the Romans, as a Roman column depicting Jupiter was found buried under a farm along the Körsch River. The old military roads (Steinernes Kreuz (German: Stone cross)) were first built by Roman hands.

In AD 600, the first crude iteration of the Church of Saint Martin was constructed here from wood. In the 12th century, one Hugo of Plieningen took the cross and joined the Fourth Crusade, and the device he chose for himself was three white roses on a field of blue, today Plieningen's coat of arms. Starting in the 12th and 13th centuries, the House of Plieningen ruled the town from their nearby castle. The oldest commercial operation of the Plieningens is the Upper Seemühle, which dates back to the 12th century in the Körschtal (German: Körsch valley).

In 1747, the Old Town Hall at Mönchhof was constructed. Later, in 1770, Duke Charles Eugene of Württemberg constructed Schloss Hohenheim from an old moated castle. On April 1, 1942, Plieningen and Birkach were accepted into Stuttgart as districts and neighborhoods.

When the districts of Stuttgart were divided in 1956, Plieningen was divided into three boroughs: Plieningen, Hohenheim, and Steckfeld. In 2001, all five boroughs of Plieningen were established.

Attractions

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Politics

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The District Advisory Board of Plieningen operate on the basis of the population of the municipalities of 12 ordinaries and as many alternates. These are the results of the last local elections in 2014:

Transportation

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Two country roads connect Plieningen to Bundesautobahn 8 (Karlsruhe-Munich), Bundesstraße 27 (Stuttgart-Tübingen), Stuttgart Airport, and the Stuttgart Trade Fair.

Plieningen is the final stop on the U3 line on the Stuttgart Stadtbahn (Plieningen – MöhringenVaihingen). It operates on former Stuttgart-Möhringen Stuttgart-Hohenheim line and was opened in 1888 by the Filderbahn Society.

Sports

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Turnverein Plieningen 1873, founded in 1873, has about 1300 members including about 900 in the gymnastics department.[5]

Notable residents

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Plieningen, circa 2011. Note Saint Martin's Church in the center

Citations

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  1. ^ "Bezirksvorsteherein Andrea Lindel" (in German). City of Stuttgart.
  2. ^ "Aktuelle Einwohnerzahlen nach Stadtbezirken und Stadtteilen". Landeshauptstadt Stuttgart. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  3. ^ "Datenkompass Stuttgart Auszug: Stadtbezirk Plieningen" (PDF). District of Stuttgart.
  4. ^ "Das neue Heimatmuseum Plieningen". stadtmuseum-stuttgart.de. Stadtmuseum Stuttgart.
  5. ^ Bürkle, Simone (April 7, 2012). "Children and health in focus". Stuttgarter Nachrichten. Retrieved September 9, 2012.

References

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  • Lunke, Oerny B. (2013). Plieningen, Hohenheim, Birkach. Bebildert mit GPS Standortangaben : Plieningen, Hohenheim, Birkach, Ridenberg. Ortsbeschreibung aus Kirchenbüchern und Oberamtsbeschreibungen Pf. Mezger 1903. Stuttgart, Germany: Atelier Lunke TY Culture. ISBN 978-3-931074-14-2.
  • Lunke, Oerny B. (2013). Röslesland 2: "Historische Ortsansichten 1" – Foto Plieningen, Hohenheim, Birkach. Bebildert mit GPS Standortangaben : Historische Aufnahmen. Stuttgart, Germany: Atelier Lunke TY Culture. ISBN 978-3-931074-15-9.
  • Lunke, Oerny B. (2014). Röslesland 3: Bildband "Historisch Mobil" – Plieningen, Hohenheim, Birkach. Autos, Kutsche, Motorräder, Fahrräder teils mit GPS Standortangaben : Plieningen, Hohenheim, Birkach, Riedenberg, Historische Fahrzeuge. Stuttgart: Atelier Lunke TY Culture. ISBN 978-3-931074-16-6.
  • Lunke, Oerny B. (2014). Röslesland 4: Bildband "Heimat und Familien 1" – Plieningen, Hohenheim, Birkach. Historisch alte Familienaufnahmen 1850–1930 sowie Stammbäume. Stuttgart, Germany: Atelier Lunke TY Culture. ISBN 978-3-931074-17-3.
  • Lunke, Oerny B. (2014). Röslesland 5: Bildband "Luftbildaufnahmen Röslesland" – Plieningen, Hohenheim, Birkach. Historisch Aufnahmen im vergleich zu Heute, mit Doppelseitigen Panorama Luftbildaufnahmen, 70 Fotos und Grafiken, die ältesten von 1918. Stuttgart, Germany: Atelier Lunke TY Culture. ISBN 978-3-931074-18-0.
  • Breymayer, Reinhard (1985). Der endlich gefundene Autor einer Vorlage von Schillers "Taucher": Christian Gottlieb Göz (1746–1803), Pfarrer in Plieningen und Hohenheim, Freund von Philipp Matthäus Hahn?. Stuttgart, Germany. pp. 54–96. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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