Horrweiler | ||
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Coordinates: 49°53′54″N 7°57′47″E / 49.89833°N 7.96306°ECoordinates: 49°53′54″N 7°57′47″E / 49.89833°N 7.96306°E | ||
Country | Germany | |
State | Rhineland-Palatinate | |
District | Mainz-Bingen | |
Municipal assoc. | Sprendlingen-Gensingen | |
Government | ||
• Mayor | Alfred Linnemann (SPD) | |
Area | ||
• Total | 4.39 km2 (1.69 sq mi) | |
Elevation | 135 m (443 ft) | |
Population (2015-12-31) | ||
• Total | 734 | |
• Density | 170/km2 (430/sq mi) | |
Time zone | CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) | |
Postal codes | 55457 | |
Dialling codes | 06727 | |
Vehicle registration | MZ | |
Website | www.horrweiler.de |
Horrweiler is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Mainz-Bingen district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.
Horrweiler lies in Rhenish Hesse between Mainz and Bad Kreuznach. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Sprendlingen-Gensingen, whose seat is in Sprendlingen.
In the 12th century, Horrweiler was Salian, and then passed into Electorate of the Palatinate ownership and was annexed to the Amt of Stromberg as a subfief, with which it remained until the French Revolution. The tithes and patronage rights over the church were originally held by the Counts of Leiningen, who further conferred them upon members of the lower nobility. Owing to frequent conflicts, ever more mediation was needed. From 1518 to 1802, Saint Peter’s Monastery in Mainz held tithing rights in Horrweiler with the original right to place the local priest. In the wake of the Reformation, Saint Peter’s Monastery and the Reformed minister in Horrweiler ended up sharing the tithes (at ⅔ and ⅓ respectively). In pronouncements handed down in 1410 and 1552, Horrweiler was counted among the villages that had to bear the cost of maintaining Bingen’s town wall and defending it in wartime, for which the villagers enjoyed special rights in the town of Bingen. Rhenish Hesse was assigned to the French Department of Mont-Tonnerre (Donnersberg) in 1793. Horrweiler passed to the canton of Ober-Ingelheim. Under the terms of the Congress of Vienna, the area passed in 1816 to the Grand Duchy of Hesse and came to be known as Rheinhessen (Rhenish Hesse) to distinguish it from the state’s other regions, but also because it had its own special legal status, for example because of the lingering effects of the French Code civil. Rhenish Hesse’s days as part of Hesse ended with the onset of military occupation by the French in 1945 and with the founding of the state of Rhineland-Palatinate.