Denzlingen


Denzlingen is a municipality in the district of Emmendingen, in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is situated north of Freiburg.

Geography

Denzlingen is located in the Upper Rhine Valley at the edge of the Black Forest between the river Elz in the north and the Glotter which runs through the southern part of the town. The Glotter Valley is to the east, and the Elz Valley to the northeast. The westernmost foothills of the Black Forest and the town of Freiamt lie to the north. From northwest to southwest the Upper Rhine Valley allows a clear view of the Kaiserstuhl hills and of the Vosges Mountains on the French side of the Rhine. The Mauracher Berg is a small mountain in the north of the township with some interesting geological features.

Neighboring municipalities

Clockwise, starting in the north, Denzlingen is surrounded by Emmendingen, Sexau and Waldkirch in the district of Emmendingen, Glottertal, Heuweiler and Gundelfingen in the district Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald, and Vörstetten in the district of Emmendingen.

History

Denzlingen was already settled during the time of the Roman Empire. It was named after the Alemannic tribal chief Denzilo who lived here in the 5th century. The first explicit mention of the town dates back to the year 984. Medieval Denzlingen consisted of two separate settlements, Niederdorf and Oberdorf, both on the Glotter and alongside an old road from Riegel to the Glottertal. The two settlements eventually grew together into one stretched-out town, which led to the sobriquet of Langendenzlingen, meaning "Long Denzlingen".
The town was destroyed during the Thirty Years' War. The Thirty Years' War veteran Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen described the battle between Imperial and Swedish troops at Denzlingen in the novel Simplicius Simplicissimus.
The town has grown rapidly since the 19th century, especially after being connected to the Baden railroad system in 1845.

Religion

As a former part of the Margraviate Baden, Denzlingen was predominantly Protestant. Today, 34% of the residents are Protestant. As most of the people moving to Denzlingen were Roman Catholics, the balance shifted, and today 42% of the inhabitants are Catholic. The first Catholic church after the Reformation was consecrated in 1888. Today, the Catholic community meets in St. James Church, which was built in the years 1975 and 1976. Other religious denominations account for about 1% of the population, while 23% remain nondenominational.

Population

As of 31 December of each year; source:

Political situation

Civil parish

The last elections led to the following allocation of seats:
CDU24.6%-0.75 seats-1
SPD17.4%-2.34 seats±0
FDP/DVP15.5%-1.33 seats-1
Die Grünen21.1%+4.75 seats+1
FWG14.3%+2.32 seats-1
Independent Citizens/ÖDP7.1%n.a.2 seatsn.a

FWG now contains Bürgeraktion Pro Storch which held 2 seats and had 9.8% of the votes in 2009; the calculations in the table are based only on the FWG result from 2009.

Mayor

After the death of mayor Lothar Fischer in April 2009, Markus Hollemann was elected as his successor on 19 June 2009.

Coat of arms

The coat of arms of Denzlingen is Or a bend gules impaling Azure a plowshare argent. The town's seal shows the same, and dates to 1458.

Twin cities

Denzlingen is twinned with four European cities: