Hundersingen


title: "Hundersingen" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["sigmaringen-(district)", "archaeological-sites-in-germany"] topic_path: "philosophy" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hundersingen" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox German place"]

FieldValue
typeOrtsteil
nameHundersingen
MunicipalityHerbertingen
image_photoHundersingen St Martin.jpg
image_captionHundersingen St Martin
image_coa[[File:Wappen Hundersingen (Herbertingen).png]]
coordinates
stateBaden-Württemberg
regionTübingen
districtSigmaringen
elevation590
area9.68
population935
Stand2017
pop_ref
postal_code88518
area_code07586
licenceSIG
websitewww.herbertingen.net
::

|type = Ortsteil |name = Hundersingen |Municipality = Herbertingen |image_photo = Hundersingen St Martin.jpg |image_caption = Hundersingen St Martin |image_coa = [[File:Wappen Hundersingen (Herbertingen).png]] |coordinates = |image_plan = |state = Baden-Württemberg |region = Tübingen |district = Sigmaringen |elevation = 590 |area = 9.68 |population = 935 |Stand = 2017 |pop_ref = |postal_code = 88518 |area_code = 07586 |licence = SIG |website = www.herbertingen.net

Hundersingen is a village within the municipality of Herbertingen and is part of the administrative district of Sigmaringen in the state of Baden-Württemberg, Germany. As of 2017, it had a population of 935. Current municipal administrator is Reinhold Eisele. Hundersingen has a nursery school and a primary school.

Geography

Geographical location

The village of Hundersingen is situated on the steep molasse hillside towards the left bank of the Danube and on its adjacent plateau. On the plateau's edge the Roman Catholic parish church of St Martin can be seen from afar. At the bottom of the valley the development area reaches as far as the river banks.

Size of the area

The total area of the district Hundersingen amounts to 9.68 km2.

History

The name Hundersingen is derived from the term 'huntare', which was used to describe a small administrative area under a Frankish king. Located near Hundersingen, the prehistoric hillfort Heuneburg was a prestigious princely residence and a thriving centre of power in the Golden Age of the Celts from 600 to 400 B.C. In 1511 A.D., Count Andreas von Sonnenberg was slain by Felix von Werdenberg († 1530) near Hundersingen in retaliation for defamation. Today, there is a memorial at the site of the murder.

The village was incorporated into Herbertingen in 1975.

Coat of arms

The formerly independent municipality Hundersingen led its own coat of arms. Blazon: A (heraldic) left-rising silver dog , in blue, with red collar.

Culture and landmarks

The Heuneburg-Rundwanderweg is a circular educational trail that covers a distance of 8 kilometres. From its starting point, the Heuneburgmuseum in the village of Hundersingen, it traces the path of the most important archaeological sites of the early Celtic settlement centre on the upper course of the Danube and returns after approximately 2.5 to 3 hours to the trail head.

Starting at the museum, the hiking trail leads to the Lehenbühl, a burial mound from the first half of the sixth century. On this stretch sit the remains of the medieval castle Baumburg (Buwenburg), which might have originated from an Iron Age burial mound. From there the path leads to the open-air museum Heuneburg, a Celtic princely residence located about three kilometres north-east of Hundersingen.

The educational trail continues north towards a group of four big burial mounds at Gießübel/Talhau and towards the forest. Passing the Soppenweiher and the Wiedhauhütte, a small reservoir and a shack, the trail leads to the Hohmichele, one of the largest preserved burial mounds in Central Europe. It then continues past a Celtic Viereckschanze, a quadrangular Celtic enclosure typical for Southern Germany. Turning east the trail continues through woodland and then heads south over country lanes towards Hundersingen. All archaeological sites are clearly marked with detailed explanation plates.

Museum

The Heuneburgmuseum, in the former tithe barn of the monastery Heiligkreuztal, houses excavation finds from the Heuneburg and the Celtic princely graves.

Celtic burial site ''Bettelbühl Necropolis''

In 2005, a child's grave including numerous burial objects was discovered approximately two kilometres south of the Heuneburg. It dates back to ca. 590 B.C.. As part of a rescue excavation, archaeologists of the State Office for Monument Protection Baden-Württemberg found a woman's grave in 2010. For treatment and analysis purposes, the 3,6x4,5m oaken burial chamber - containing the corpus of finds - with its surrounding soil was brought into a former factory building in Ludwigsburg. Between September 2012 and February 2013, selected troves were exhibited at the Große Landesausstellung Die Welt der Kelten (″The Celts′ World″) at the Landesmuseum Württemberg.

Historic building

Notable resident

References

References

  1. [https://www.herbertingen.de/de/Unsere-Gemeinde/Ortsportrait/Zahlen-Fakten Zahlen & Fakten], Gemeinde Herbertingen, accessed 16 September 2021.
  2. Vgl. ''Herbertingen b) Hundersingen''. In: ''Das Land Baden-Württemberg. Amtliche Beschreibung nach Kreisen und Gemeinden. Band VII: Regierungsbezirk Tübingen''. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1978, {{ISBN. 3-17-004807-4. S. 859–862, here p. 860f.
  3. "Die Teilorte in Herbertingen - Ortsverwaltungen".
  4. Edwin Ernst Weber: ''Der „Dreiländerkreis“ Sigmaringen im geschichtlichen Überblick''.
  5. Edwin Ernst Weber: ''Bräuche und Traditionen im Landkreis Sigmaringen''. edited by Landkreis Sigmaringen, Stabsbereich Kultur und Archiv, 2007.
  6. (1983). "Historisches Gemeindeverzeichnis für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland : Namens-, Grenz- und Schlüsselnummernänderungen bei Gemeinden, Kreisen und Regierungsbezirken vom 27.5.1970 bis 31.12.1982". Kohlhammer.
  7. (22 April 2012). "Archaeological Walk".
  8. ''Von der Heuneburg nach Beuron''. pp. 60–64. In: ''Wanderbar ... die schönsten Routen. Erlebnis Kreis Sigmaringen''. [[Landratsamt Sigmaringen]], Druckerei Schönebeck, Meßkirch 2004.
  9. (22 April 2012). "Celtic Museum Heuneburg".
  10. ''Das schwäbische Troja''. In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 21 March 2012, p. 8.
  11. Hans Holzhaider: ''Keltenmetropole im Donautal''. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung, 6 December 2013. p. 16.
  12. (4 September 2012). "Die Welt der Kelten. Zentren der Macht – Kostbarkeiten der Kunst".
  13. (9 April 2014). "Kirche der Neuromanik in Hundersingen".

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sigmaringen-(district)archaeological-sites-in-germany