Weinbach is made up of eight Ortsteile. The main centre is also called Weinbach, and the outlying centres are Blessenbach, Edelsberg, Elkerhausen, Freienfels, Fürfurt, Gräveneck and Kleinweinbach.
History
Fürfurt was mentioned in a document from sometime between 1148 and 1154, thus making it the first part of the community to have its first documentary mention. Elkerhausen’s first documentary mention came in 1191. The knightly family who lived there was heavily involved in a feud in the 14th century with the landlord, the Archbishop of Trier. The Elkerhauser Wasserburg was destroyed in 1352. About 1500, there arose a stronghouse out of which a new castle grew. Edelsberg had its first documentary mention in 1246, Blessenbach in 1267 and Weinbach in 1344. Freienfels Castle was built about 1300, presumably by the Diez family’s Weilnau branch. In 1327 it had its first documentary mention. Gräveneck Castle was built in 1395 by a knightly order under Nassau’s leadership to guard against the Knights of Elkerhausen. Today’s Evangelicalchurch in Weinbach arose in 1728; the forerunner church’s Early Gothic quire was incorporated into this newer church. The history of the greater community of Weinbach began in 1970 when the formerly self-administering communities of Weinbach, Blessenbach, Freienfels and Gräveneck amalgamated in the course of municipal restructuring in Hesse. In 1974, the communities of Elkerhausen, Fürfurt and Edelsberg were also merged into the greater community.
Weinbach has maintained a partnership arrangement with the Polish community of Debrzno, roughly 150 km southwest of Gdańsk in the Pomeranian Voivodeship, since 1992. Since 2005, another partnership has existed with the Czech community of Blatno, which lies roughly 50 km south of Chemnitz, right at the Reitzenhain border crossing above the town of Chomutov.
Culture and sightseeing
Buildings
Burg Elkerhausen
Burg Neu-Elkerhausen on the Lahn near Gräveneck
Burg Freienfels above the Weil in the outlying centre of Freienfels
Economy and infrastructure
Transport
Weinbach is linked to the long-distance road network by Bundesstraße 456. On the Lahntalbahn are stations in the centres of Gräveneck and Fürfurt. Until 1969, the centre of Freienfels was also linked to the rail network by the now abandoned Weiltalbahn.