- Source: Selters (Lahn)
Selters is a village in the district Limburg-Weilburg, Hesse, Germany. It is situated at the Taunus side of the river Lahn and belongs to the municipality Löhnberg. The village has a total population of 319.
The village is famous for its natural springs of carbonated mineral water, which is sold as Selters water.
Location
Löhnberg-Selters lies near Wiesbaden in direction to the Taunus mountains, near the river Lahn, and between Wetzlar and Limburg in the state of Hesse.
History and etymology
The ancient Romans (who occupied Germany between 50 B.C. and 475 AD) called the places where water emerged from underground Aqua Saltare (Latin for 'dancing water'). This name was applied to the town and then borrowed into German as Selters. Franks formally settled in the area as early as 500 AD, and was mentioned by writing for the first time in 1317 as Selters an der Lahn.
The Laneberg castle, built in the capital of the Löhnberg region, was constructed by John, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg between 1321 and 1324. The castle ruins are unusual in surviving, as most buildings burned down in a fire in 1538.
Selters later received a parish in 1694, led by pastor Johann Bosen. Being made out of wood, the church was later damaged during another fire in 1706, leading pastor J. G. Haybach to build a new church, which began construction in 1731 by carpenter J. A. Klöckner.
In 1815, the town straddled the border of the Duchy of Nassau and the Kingdom of Prussia. The town was part of the Wetzlar district in Prussia and bordered Braunfels in the neighboring Rhine Province until 1932, when borders in Germany were redrawn.
In 1974, municipal reform in Hesse required that Selters join the Löhnberg municipality.
For the most part, the population of Selters has stagnated throughout early modern history. In 1824, Selters an der Lahn had a population of 136 people, and grew to 235 inhabitants by 1880. The population has only grown by ~35% in the past 140 years.
The name Selters is the etymology for the modern word Seltzer.
= Administrative timeline:
=Before 1806: Holy Roman Empire, Principality of Nassau-Weilburg, Amt Weilburg
1806-1849: Duchy of Nassau, Amt Weilburg
1849-1854: German Confederation, Duchy of Nassau, Hadamar District Office
1854-1867: German Confederation, Duchy of Nassau Amt Weilburg
1867-1871: North German Confederation, Kingdom of Prussia, Hesse-Nassau, Wiesbaden, Oberlahn district
1871-1918: German Empire, Kingdom of Prussia, Province of Hesse-Nassau, Wiesbaden, Oberlahn district
1918-1944: German Empire, Free State of Prussia, Province of Hesse-Nassau, Wiesbaden, Oberlahn district
1944-1945: German Empire, Free State of Prussia, Province of Nassau, Oberlahn district
1945-1946: American occupation zone, Greater Hesse, Wiesbaden administrative district, Oberlahn district
1946-1949: American occupation zone, Hesse, Wiesbaden administrative district, Oberlahn district
1949-1968: Federal Republic of Germany, Hesse, Wiesbaden, Oberlahn district
1968-1974: Federal Republic of Germany, Hesse, Darmstadt, Oberlahn district
1974-1981: Federal Republic of Germany, Hesse, Darmstadt, Limburg-Weilburg, Löhnberg municipality
1981–present: Federal Republic of Germany, Hesse, Giessen, Limburg-Weilburg, Löhnberg municipality
Culture
Selters is under the jurisdiction of the Limburg-Weilburg fire department, with a local branch in Löhnberg.
The village celebrates its local kermis in August. The local parish has a congregation of 187 people (60% of the total population). It also celebrates an annual Traditionelles Kartoffelfest (Potato festival) in November with various local foods and cuisines available.
Sources
Ina-Maria Greverus: Das hessische Dorf. Insel Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1982, ISBN 3-458-04782-0
References
External links
Löhnberg-Selters Website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daftar kota di Jerman
- Selters (Lahn)
- Selters (Taunus)
- Selters (disambiguation)
- Lahn
- Seltzer (disambiguation)
- Löhnberg
- Niederselters
- Westerwaldkreis
- Selters, Rhineland-Palatinate
- Niederselters station