Also belonging to Hundsbach are the outlying homesteads of Forsthaus Hundsbach and Lochmühle.
Climate
Yearly precipitation in Hundsbach amounts to 590 mm, which is very low, falling into the lowest fourth of the precipitation chart for all Germany. Only at 19% of the German Weather Service's weather stations are even lower figures recorded. The driest month is February. The most rainfall comes in May. In that month, precipitation is 1.6 times what it is in February. Precipitation varies only slightly and is spread quite evenly over the year. At only 1% of the weather stations are lower seasonal :File:HUNDSBACH nieder.svg|swings recorded.
History
Hundsbach is found on an old Roman road that led from the Rhine Valley to Metz. The village, mentioned in old records as Hundisbach had for a while in the Middle Ages two centres, Oberhundsbach and Niederhundsbach. By 1611, however, Hundsbach had been given up, and this even before the ravages of the Thirty Years' War. Hundsbach belonged to the County of Veldenz, and as of 1386 to the Waldgraves. From 1816 to 1866 it belonged to the Oberamt of Meisenheim in the Landgraviate of Hesse-Homburg, passing with this state in 1866 to the Kingdom of Prussia. Late in the Second World War, Hundsbach was almost utterly destroyed.
Hundsbach had a Jewish community in the 19th century. It arose in the 18th century. In the 19th century, the number of Jewish inhabitants developed as follows: in 1808, 40 Jewish inhabitants; in 1867, 22 ; in 1895, 21. About 1870, known Jewish family heads were Moses Haas, Ludwig Winer, Abraham Leiser and Jakob Adler, who were all merchants whose existence is confirmed in this year by their registration at the Sobernheim Amt court as the Jewish graveyard's owners. All together, documents are still available from the registry office and the municipal books witnessing 18 Jewish families in Hundsbach in the earlier half of the 19th century :
David Heymann with wife Eva née Wolf and eight children
Samuel Heymann, widower
David Leiser with wife Veronika née Max and two children
Abraham Leiser with wife Judith and six children
Jacob Marx with wife Klara née Seligmann and three children
Veronika née Daniel, widow of David Seligmann and two children
Isaak Haas and first wife Esther as well as second wife Sara and together from both marriages five children
Gumpel Frenckel and four children
Nathan Schiff with wife Sara née Leiser and three children; Sara Leiser married Moises Wiener in a second marriage
Joseph Leyser with wife Philippina Schwarzschild from Gaugrehweiler and eight children
Wolfgang Heymann and first wife Johannetta née Feist, second wife Henriette née Wolf and third wife Fanny née Strauß and together from all marriages eleven children
Moises Wiener with wife Sara née Leiser
Marcus Leiser with wife Eva née Böhm and two children
Aaron Haas and first wife Rosetta née Haas, second wife Sara née Stern and together from both marriages four children
Marx Leyser with wife Theresia née Herz and one son
Ludwig Leyser with wife Theresia née Lahn and five children
Ludwig Wiener with wife Karolina née Levi and five children
Moses Haas with wife Johanetta née Rothschild from Ulmet and three children
In the way of institutions, there were a synagogue, a Jewish school, a mikveh and a graveyard. To provide for the community's religious needs, a schoolteacher was hired for a time, who also busied himself as the hazzan. The community belonged to the Rabbinate of Meisenheim. The Jews living in Becherbach bei Kirn, Bärweiler, Schweinschied, Löllbach and Hoppstädten formed outlying parts of this Jewish community. In 1807, the following Jewish families were living in these villages : in Bärweiler Loeb Jacob, Lasar Levy, Moyses Jacob and Seuve Gurnberg; in Schweinschied Joseph Nathan, Jacob Salomon, Susel Salomon, Isaac Abraham and Jacob Aaron; in Löllbach Herz Nathan, Jacob Wolff and Daniel Cahen. In 1867, there were 18 Jewish inhabitants in Becherbach bei Kirn, 13 in Bärweiler, 8 in Schweinschied, 6 in Löllbach and 4 in Hoppstädten. Löllbach also had its own Jewish graveyard. About 1924, four more families belonged to the Jewish community in Hundsbach. Still living then in Hundsbach were ten Jewish inhabitants. Some of them left the village in the years after 1933, the year when Adolf Hitler and the Nazisseized power in Germany, though, some of the Jews moved away or emigrated in the face of the boycotting of their businesses, the progressive stripping of their rights and repression, all brought about by the Nazis. According to Yad Vashem’s lists and information from the work Gedenkbuch - Opfer der Verfolgung der Juden unter der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945, the following members of Hundsbach's Jewish community fell victim to the Holocaust :
Bertha Bär née Frenkel
Rosa Frenkel
Erna Leiser
There were also two others from Schweinschied, who had since moved to Frankfurt:
Lina Adler
Martha Becker née Adler
Religion
As at 30 September 2013, there are 390 full-time residents in Hundsbach, and of those, 308 are Evangelical, 53 are Catholic, and 29 either have no religion or will not reveal their religious affiliation.
Politics
Municipal council
The council is made up of 8 council members, who were elected by majority vote at the municipal election held on 8 June 2009, and the honorary mayor as chairman.
The German blazon reads: In rotem, durch goldenen Wellenbalken geteilten Schild, oben am goldenen Schaft eine dreiläntzige, silberne Sturmfahne, unten drei silberne schrägrechtsgestellte Gürtelschnallen. The municipality's arms might in English heraldic language be described thus: Gules a closet wavy Or issuant from which to dexter a staff of the same bearing a standard with three streamers flying to sinister argent, below the closet three arming buckles bottony in bend of the last.
Culture and sightseeing
Buildings
The following are listed buildings or sites in Rhineland-Palatinate’s Directory of Cultural Monuments:
Evangelical church, Hauptstraße 7 – Romanesque Revival sandstone-block building, 1867, after 1945 reconstruction; retaining wall, sandstone-block; warriors’ memorial 1914-1918
Hauptstraße 3 – former school; Late Classicist building with hip roof, mid 19th century
Hauptstraße 12 – former inn; in the style of a complex with a single roof ridge with a dance hall, marked 1830, timber-frame addition
Untergasse 4 – former Evangelical rectory; Late Classicist plastered building, late 19th century
Near Untergasse 9 – former synagogue; sandstone-block building with Rundbogenstil motifs, 1880
Jewish graveyard “Am Judenkirchhof” – area with some 50 gravestones from the 18th and 19th centuries
Former synagogue
At first, the Jewish community likely had to make do with a simple prayer room that had been set up in one of the Jewish houses. No later than 1866, though, there was a synagogue on Untergasse. This is known from a report from that year about a fire there, which damaged the building. In 1880, another fire broke out at the property next door causing such great damage that a new building had to be built. On 26 August 1881, the new synagogue building was consecrated. The village chronicle reported the celebration, in which “the district chairman, among others, took part… the representatives of the municipality of Hundsbach and the district rabbi, who gave an uplifting speech in the house, which was filled by the crowd.” How long regular services were held at the synagogue is unknown. Possibly as early as the turn of the 20th century, and no later than the time of the First World War, Jews from Hundsbach were attending services in Sien. On 7 July 1930, the synagogue, with its yard and school, was sold to a farmer named Frenger, who used the building for storage. On Kristallnacht, Brownshirts from Meisenheim supposedly destroyed the synagogue, but there is oral history in Hundsbach that holds that the destruction was actually undertaken by private citizens from the village itself. It could be that the SA had been made aware that for eight years, the building had no longer been under Jewish ownership. After 1945, the building was used as the local Raiffeisen storehouse. In 1987, the building was placed under monumental protection. In the 1990s, the building was restored and was tended by those charged with the care of monuments. Since then, it has been used as a house.
Jewish graveyard
The Jewish graveyard in Hundsbach was laid out in the late 17th or early 18th century and is among the district's oldest. The gravestones can be found towards the graveyard's lower end; many are heavily weathered. The graveyard has an area of 1 159 m². It is easily visible on a hill roughly one kilometre east of Hundsbach, some 400 m from the road that leads from Kirn to Meisenheim. Coming from Hundsbach, it can be made out on the heights to the right of the road and can be reached along a farm lane.
Economy and infrastructure
Transport
Running through Hundsbach is Landesstraße 182, which links to Bundesstraße 420 at Meisenheim to the southeast. In the other direction, the road leads to Becherbach bei Kirn and then Kirn itself, where it links with Bundesstraße 41. Landesstraße 182 also has a junction with Landesstraße 374 just before Becherbach bei Kirn, which leads to Bundesstraße 270 at Sien. Serving Kirn is a railway station on the Nahe Valley Railway.