*** Welcome to piglix ***

Schinznach

Schinznach
Schinznach-Dorf 8527.JPG
Coat of arms of Schinznach
Coat of arms
Schinznach is located in Switzerland
Schinznach
Schinznach
Schinznach is located in Canton of Aargau
Schinznach
Schinznach
Coordinates: 47°27′N 8°9′E / 47.450°N 8.150°E / 47.450; 8.150Coordinates: 47°27′N 8°9′E / 47.450°N 8.150°E / 47.450; 8.150
Country Switzerland
Canton Aargau
District Brugg
Area
 • Total 12.23 km2 (4.72 sq mi)
Elevation 383 m (1,257 ft)
Population (Dec 2015)
 • Total 2,224
 • Density 180/km2 (470/sq mi)
Postal code 5107-08
SFOS number 4125
Surrounded by Holderbank, Linn, Oberflachs, Schinznach-Bad, Thalheim, Veltheim, Villnachern, Zeihen
Website www.schinznach-dorf.ch
SFSO statistics

Schinznach is a municipality in the district of Brugg in canton of Aargau in Switzerland. On 1 January 2014 the former municipalities of Oberflachs and Schinznach-Dorf merged to form the new municipality of Schinznach.

While various Roman era bricks and coins have been discovered, the first record of Oberflachs is in 1342 as Obreflaht. Beginning in the Middle Ages Kasteln Castle ruled over the village and held the local low court. Initially the high court was held by the bailiwick of Schenkenberg. However, in 1460 the high court was acquired by the city of Bern. By 1607 the village is identified as a semi-independent municipality. In 1732 the village came fully under Bern's authority when Bern bought the Kasteln Castle and acquired the low court.

Oberflachs was, like the whole Schenkenberger valley in the 18th Century, a very poor municipality. Grain and vineyard cultivation were the major economic sources in the 17th Century. However, in 1850 wine production collapsed because of phylloxera. The poverty and collapse of the wine industry forced many residents to emigrate overseas. Eventually treatments were developed for vineyards and they began to recover. By 1990 vineyards covered a total of 22 hectares in the municipality.

In 1960, the number of commuters exceeded the number of locals that worked in the municipality. However, the population continued to grow and in the 1970s several new housing districts were built. In 2005, agriculture provided 28% of the jobs in the community. A merger of Oberflachs with four municipalities failed in 2009 because Veltheim voters rejected the proposal.

Schinznach-Dorf was first mentioned in 1189 as Schincennach, however the region was occasionally inhabited as far back as the Mesolithic era. In addition to a Mesolithic shelter, a Neolithic settlement and two Roman villas indicate that the area was anciently inhabited. The city of Bern gained the rights to the low court in the village in 1460. Politically the villagers gradually gained rights from their Zwingherr and by 1547 they had a town charter. A village school opened in the 1600s. In 1654, a sulfur hot spring was discovered near the village and the town of Schinznach-Bad grew up around the spring. It retained the name even after the spring vanished in 1670 and then moved to the opposite side of the Aare river in 1691.


...
Wikipedia

...