Hi,
i found information about
Oberlaudenbach.
Summary: As an settlement of 9 (or 11) "Huben" (I
think, its a piece of land) Ober-Laudenbach belonged to Laudenbach until 1808.
When in 1485 Laudenbach was sold to Worms, they forgot to write about the
"Hubens" in the treaty. When Laudenbach became part of "Amt" Ladenburg, the
owners of the hubens declared themselves being part of Lindenfels. 1802
Ladenburg became part of Baden and Lindenfels part of Hessen. The division
was perfect. From 1808 Oberlaudenbach was "entsteint" (something like
destoned - without bordermarkers) and independent.
I published the same map but in bigger scale on the
following link:
the scans are from the TK25 6318
Lindenfels.
What can we see?
As i understood, there is one enclave in
Baden-Württemberg, that belongs to Hessen (the letters "Ober-" are inside this
enclave). In this enclave is another, that belongs to Baden-Württemberg. Also
there is a second "simple" enclave, belonging to Baden-Württemberg, south of the
first.
I post a pure version of the scan and
another scan, where i added the border, as i understand it.
Innere Sicherheit im Land
Beinahe jeder von uns weiß die günstigen Verkehrsanbindungen an der
Bergstraße zu schätzen. Leider aber auch Einbrecher, die die Grenzsituation in
Laudenbach zu nutzen versuchen, um sich nach ihrer Tat möglichst unerkannt in
ein Gebiet mit anderer Polizeizuständigkeit absetzen zu können.
Das Ziel der
CDU ist klar: Alle Bürger sollen sich jederzeit und überall in Baden-Württemberg
sicher fühlen können.
Nearly everyone likes the good
traffic-connections at Bergstrassse (name of the Region). Also criminals, who
try to take profit from the Border-situation in Laudenbach to escape unseen to
an area with other police authorities. the aim of CDU is clear: all
citizens have the right for security any time and everywhere in
Baden-Württemberg.
no
comment...
bye,
chris