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Hauptwil-Gottshaus

Hauptwil-Gottshaus
Hauptwil-Gottshaus village and St. Pelagiberg Church
Hauptwil-Gottshaus village and St. Pelagiberg Church
Coat of arms of Hauptwil-Gottshaus
Coat of arms
Hauptwil-Gottshaus is located in Switzerland
Hauptwil-Gottshaus
Hauptwil-Gottshaus
Hauptwil-Gottshaus is located in Canton of Thurgau
Hauptwil-Gottshaus
Hauptwil-Gottshaus
Coordinates: 47°28′N 9°17′E / 47.467°N 9.283°E / 47.467; 9.283Coordinates: 47°28′N 9°17′E / 47.467°N 9.283°E / 47.467; 9.283
Country Switzerland
Canton Thurgau
District Weinfelden
Area
 • Total 12.49 km2 (4.82 sq mi)
Elevation 550 m (1,800 ft)
Population (Dec 2015)
 • Total 1,915
 • Density 150/km2 (400/sq mi)
Postal code 9213
SFOS number 4486
Localities Eberswil, Gottshaus, Hauptwil, St. Pelagiberg, Stocken, Trön, Wilen
Surrounded by Bischofszell, Häggenschwil (SG), Muolen (SG), Waldkirch (SG), Zihlschlacht-Sitterdorf
Website www.hauptwil.ch
SFSO statistics

Hauptwil-Gottshaus is a municipality in Weinfelden District in the canton of Thurgau in Switzerland.

The municipality was created in 1996 by a merger of Hauptwil and Gottshaus.

The Wakker Prize was bestowed on Hauptwil in 1999 for the preservation of its architectural heritage.

Hauptwil was first mentioned in 1413 as Hoptwill. Gottshaus was first mentioned in the second half of the 13th Century.

By no later than 1377 Hauptwil was part of the fief granted by the Bishop of Constance and the Abbey of St. Gall to Welter von Blidegg of the Ryff family. In 1561 it went to the Freiherr von Hallwyl. Then, between 1664 and 1798 it was owned by the Gonzenbach family, who by 1600 already owned several properties and held the low justice right in Hauptwil.

The Catholic part of the population has always belonged to the parish of Bischofszell. Reformed services were held at the castle chapel by 1667 by the Gonzenbach family for the village. The Reformed chapel became a filial church to the parish church in Bischofszell in 1861. Then, in 1886 a Reformed church was built in the village. The Brunschweiler family, who owned a large factory in town, were active in the early 19th Century Evangelical Baptist movement, which they encouraged to grow in the town. In 1880 about 10% of the inhabitants belonged to this church, and currently there is still a Bund Freier Evangelischer Gemeinde (a type of free church) community in Hauptwil


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