Waldalgesheim is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Mainz-Bingen district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is best known as the site of the Iron Age Waldalgesheim chariot burial.
The winegrowing centre belongs to the Rhein-Nahe, whose seat is in Bingen am Rhein, although that town is not within its bounds. Since 2003, Waldalgesheim has been part of the Rhine Gorge UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Geography
Location
Waldalgesheim lies on the southeast edge of the Hunsrück between
Koblenz and
Bad Kreuznach, south of the
Bingen Forest (
Binger Wald) and west of the river Nahe, some 6 km west of Bingen.
Neighbouring municipalities
Waldalgesheim’s neighbours are Weiler, Rümmelsheim and Stromberg, and towards Genheim
Waldlaubersheim, Roth and
Schweppenhausen.
Constituent communities
Genheim is Waldalgesheim’s only outlying
Ortsteil.
History
The village is mainly famous as the site of the Waldalgesheim chariot burial (), a 4th-century BC
Celts princely
chariot burial, discovered in 1869. The jewellery found in the burial has given its name to the "Waldalgesheim Style" of artifacts of the La Tène culture, a more fluid and confident style of decoration than early
Celtic art, with Greek and Etruscan influences. The objects from the burial site were dug up by the farmer who found them on his land. The site was not investigated by archaeologists, and has recently been covered by a housing development.
In 784, Waldalgesheim had its first documentary mention in the Lorsch codex as Alagastesheim.
On 7 November 1970, the formerly self-administering municipality of Genheim was amalgamated.
Politics
Municipal council
The council is made up of 21 council members, counting the part-time mayor, with seats apportioned thus:
(as at municipal election held on 13 June 2004)
Town partnerships
Culture and sightseeing
Buildings
There is a castlelike building complex at the “Dr. Geier” ore and
manganese pit, built between 1917 and 1919, as well as a miners’ village.
The municipality is known for its vineyards, and as the site of a late 4th-century BC chariot burial that defines a stage in the La Tène culture that is generally known as "Waldalgesheim style". The lack of weapons recovered from the tomb and the fine gold torc, bracelets and anklets, have led archaeologists to infer that the deceased was a woman. The finds from this elite burial, stumbled upon by a farmer in 1869, are preserved in the Rheinisches Landesmuseum, Bonn.
Sport
The local sport club
SV Alemannia Waldalgesheim was founded in 1910 and is made up of football,
tennis,
basketball, children’s gymnastics,
aerobics, mother-and-child gymnastics and
jazz dancing departments. The “flagship” department is the first-named one, whose first team in the 2007/08 season managed for the first time to advance from the
Verbandsliga to the
Oberliga Südwest.
Economy and infrastructure
Transport
The
Autobahn A 61 can be reached through the
Waldlaubersheim interchange, roughly 4 km away. Alternatively, lying roughly the same distance away is the
Stromberg interchange, also on the A 61.
Famous people
-
Stephan Lück (b. 9 January 1806 in Linz am Rhein, d. 3 November 1883 in Trier), theologian, Cathedral Music Director at Trier and publisher, worked from 1831 to 1835 as a clergyman in Waldalgesheim.
Other
A new concept was opened with the
Route der Industriekultur Rhein-Main (“Rhine-Main Industrial Culture Route”), along which industrial building works are to be brought together into an adventure route highlighting industrial culture in the Frankfurt Rhine Main Region, running the 160 km between
Miltenberg and Bingen by way of
Frankfurt[ Neue Wege zur alten Industriekultur auch nach Waldalgesheim . Frankfurter Rundschau from 27 Nov. 2006]
External links