Schwanheim (Frankfurt am Main) explained

Schwanheim
Type:Quarter
City:Frankfurt am Main
Image Coa:Wappen Frankfurt-Schwanheim02.svg
Coordinates:50.0869°N 8.5819°W
Image Plan:Frankfurt Stadtteil Schwanheim.svg
Plantext:Location of Schwanheim (red) and the Ortsbezirk West (light red) within Frankfurt am Main
State:Hesse
Region:Darmstadt
District:urban
Area:17.727
Population:20576
Population As Of:2020-12-31
Pop Ref:[1]
Postal Code:60528, 60529
Area Code:069
Licence:F
Website:www.schwanheim.de

Schwanheim is a quarter of Frankfurt am Main, Germany. It is part of the Ortsbezirk West and is subdivided into the Stadtbezirke Schwanheim, Goldstein-Ost and Goldstein-West.

History

Medieval Period — Early Modern Period

Schwanheim was evangelized during the early Christianization period by Irish-Scottish wandering monks. The Franconian apostle Kilian is said to have rested and preached at a flood-free ridge in the Schwanheimer Unterfeld around the year 680. The old parish church of St. Martin im Feld, which was mentioned in a document from 880, was one of the few churches on the right bank of the Rhine at the time. The church's catchment area presumably extended beyond the boundaries of the long-stretched original district of Schwanheim, which went in the west from the Mönchhof near Raunheim via Klaraberg, Kelsterbach, the Goldstein, Niederrad, and Sachsenhausen to Oberrad. However, the decline of the church began 50 years before Luther posted his theses in Wittenberg. From 1468, the people of Schwanheim celebrated their church consecration festival to the patron Saint Mauritius on the Sunday in Mauritius (September 22nd). The final end of the Martinskirche was sealed with the effects of the Reformation of 1517, which also had an impact in the local Maingau. The branch chapel of St. Mauritius with a cemetery near the old village of Schwanheim was raised to the status of a parish church and expanded between 1557 and 1562. The Martinskirche in the field was without function and fell into disrepair. It served as a quarry during the Thirty Years' War, and when the "new" church was built in the village a good hundred years later (1687), 72 wagons of stone were obtained from this ruin for the foundations of this third Schwanheim church building. From now on, Schwanheim remained true to the name Mauritius.[2]

19th Century — 21st Century

In the 19th century, Schwanheim experienced slow development from a farming village to a workers' settlement, influenced by the chemical industry in nearby areas and economic ties with Frankfurt. The village received a closer connection to the in 1889, making the previous halt on the Hessian Ludwigsbahn almost obsolete. The medical care in the village was also improved at the instigation of local seniors and the Catholic parish. Schwanheim became part of Prussia in 1866 after the war, along with the Nassau territory and Frankfurt.

In the 20th century, the construction of the first main bridge between Schwanheim and Griesheim began in 1905, and it was opened in 1907. French troops occupied a bridgehead on the right bank of the Rhine in 1918, including Schwanheim. The Allied occupation of the Rhineland lasted until 1930. Schwanheim was incorporated into the Frankfurt city area in 1928, with a population of 5,850 inhabitants and 1,793 hectares.

Construction of the Goldstein settlement began in the spring of 1932, and the Griesheim barrage was built between 1929 and 1932 as a replacement for two older needle weirs. The Schwanheim Bridge was blown up by German Wehrmacht engineers on March 26, 1945, shortly before US troops marched in. A temporary bridge was erected in 1947 and demolished in 1963 after the new Schwanheimer bridge was inaugurated. In 2005, the district celebrated its 1125th anniversary. On January 1, 2019, district 53 3 Goldstein-Ost was assigned to the Niederrad district and renamed 37 3 Niederrad-West, with the border between Schwanheim and Niederrad now running along the A5.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Frankfurt Statsitik Aktuell 07/2021. Stadt Frankfurt am Main. July 2021.
  2. Kobelt, W. (1909). The won, field and path names of the district of Schwanheim (Main). Annals of the Association for Nassau Archeology and Historical Research, XXXIX
  3. Eisenbahndirektion Mainz (ed.). (1852-1920). Official Journal of the Royal Prussian and Grand Ducal Hessian Railway Directorate in Mainz. Mainz, Germany: Eisenbahndirektion Mainz.