Leisel


Leisel is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Birkenfeld, whose seat is in the like-named town.

Geography

Location

The municipality lies on the Leiselbach at the Idar Forest in the Hunsrück. The municipal area is 65% wooded.

Neighbouring municipalities

Leisel borders in the northeast on the municipality of Siesbach, in the southeast on the municipality of Wilzenberg-Hußweiler and in the southwest on the municipality of Schwollen.

History

In 1180, Leisel had its first documentary mention as Lucei in a document dealing with legal relationships in the Archbishopric of Trier, under whose sovereignty Leisel lay at that time. In 1328, Archbishop of Trier Baldwin acknowledged the Sponheim lordship over the Birkenfelder Land. The countercompony base in the municipality's coat of arms recalls this time, for the Counts of Sponheim bore arms that were chequy.
With regard to administration, Leisel belonged to the Pflege of Brombach. Together with other nearby places it formed a unified administrative region, both in ecclesiastical and secular matters. Together with the Pflege of Birkenfeld, this formed the Sponheim Amt of Birkenfeld, whose northeast border was for centuries the Siesbach.
The Amt administrators had their seat at Birkenfeld Castle, while the municipalities themselves were each led by a Reihe-Bürgermeister, who changed every year. Standing above them, mostly for several villages each, was a Gerichtsschöffe appointed by the Amtmann.
In 1437, Lussel, as it was then known, found itself under a condominium, ruled by both the Margraves of Baden and the Dukes of Palatinate-Zweibrücken of the House of Wittelsbach, who were the heirs to the Sponheims’ holdings once that noble house had died out. In 1776, the two rulers chose to divide their joint holdings between themselves, and Leussel or Leischer passed to Baden.
Only twenty years later, though, the political landscape changed drastically with the French Revolutionary Wars. France annexed the Rhine’s left bank in 1797. In 1801, Leisel became the seat of a mairie, which persisted until 1840, well after the end of French rule. It comprised the villages of Siesbach, Leisel, Schwollen, Hattgenstein, Rinzenberg, Hambach, Böschweiler and Heupweiler. The political alignment changed once again with Napoleon's downfall and the Congress of Vienna, which grouped Leisel into the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg, or rather Oldenburg's local exclave, the Principality of Birkenfeld; most of Oldenburg's territory was in what is now northwest Germany, with a coastline on the North Sea. Oldenburg sovereignty is commemorated in the road name Peterstraße in the Leisel Forest. Grand Duke Peter had it built so that he did not have to travel through the Kingdom of Prussia, with whom he had ongoing border disputes, whenever he visited the Birkenfelder Land.
Oldenburg still existed as a state even through Imperial and Weimar times, but Nazi Germany finally put an end to it in 1937 on the basis of the Greater Hamburg Act; the Birkenfeld exclave, along with Leisel, as it was now called, was incorporated into Prussia's Rhine Province.
After the Second World War, Leisel became part of the then newly founded state of Rhineland-Palatinate. In 1980, it celebrated its 800th anniversary of first documentary mention.

Politics

Municipal council

The council is made up of 12 council members, who were elected by majority vote at the municipal election held on 7 June 2009, and the honorary mayor as chairman.

Mayors

Leisel's mayor since 2009 has been Wolfgang Schüßler, and his deputies are Karl Heinz Bittig and Wolfgang Helm. His predecessors since the Second World War have been:
The German blazon reads: Über rot-silbern geschachtem Schildfuß in Grün ein silbernes Hirschgeweih mit Grind, darin eine goldene Krone.
The municipality's arms might in English heraldic language be described thus: Vert a stag's attires fixed to the scalp argent, between them a crown Or, in base countercompony gules and argent.
The countercompony base is a reference to the village's former allegiance to the “Hinder” County of Sponheim, Oberamt of Birkenfeld. The field tincture, vert symbolizes agriculture and forestry. The main charge, the stag's attires, stands for the wealth of wildlife in the municipal woodlands. The crown recalls the one found over the door at the old Badisches Amtshaus.
The arms have been borne since 31 May 1965.

Culture and sightseeing

Buildings

The following are listed buildings or sites in Rhineland-Palatinate’s Directory of Cultural Monuments:

Transport

To the northeast runs Bundesstraße 422. Serving nearby Kronweiler is a railway station on the Nahe Valley Railway.

Famous people