Obdach

Obdach

Obdach

Place in Styria, Austria


Obdach (German: [ˈɔbˌdax]) is a municipality in the district of Murtal in Styria, Austria.

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Geography

The municipality covers an area of 159.24 km² and is located in the valley of the Granitzenbach north of the Obdach Saddle the transition from the Upper Murtal to the Lavanttal. The municipal area extends from the valley to the west to the Seetal Alps with the highest peak, the Zirbitzkogel (2396 m).

Neighbourhoods and outlying communities

The municipal area includes the following 18 villages (Population 01-01-2021):[3]

  • Amering (418)
  • Bärnthal (20)
  • Granitzen (149)
  • Großprethal (110)
  • Kathal in Obdachegg (123)
  • Katschwald (69)
  • Kienberg (95)
  • Kleinprethal (70)
  • Lavantegg (184)
  • Mönchegg (171)
  • Obdach (1529)
  • Obdachegg (240)
  • Rötsch (198)
  • Sankt Anna-Feriensiedlung (26)
  • Sankt Georgen in Obdachegg (71)
  • Warbach (134)
  • Winterleiten (124)
  • Zanitzen (16)

The municipality consists of six cadastral municipalities (area as of 2015):[4]

  • Granitzen (3.764,53 ha)
  • Kienberg (2.043,69 ha)
  • Lavantegg (4.713,68 ha)
  • Obdach (514,87 ha)
  • Obdachegg (2.091,64 ha)
  • Prethal (2780,01 ha)

The village is located in the judicial district of Judenburg.

History

Obdach was first mentioned in a document in 1190 as "Obdah". The name goes back to the Old High German obadah (protective roof). It is likely that there was a refreshment stop on the land lot for travelers on their way to Carinthia.[5] In 1324 Obdach was elevated to a market and also had a high court. Obdach was a regionally important trading center on the road over the Obdach Saddle.

Population development

97.6% of the population held Austrian citizenship. The Roman Catholic Church accounted for 91.3 % of the population, the Protestant Church for 1.1 % and Islam for 1.8 %, and 4.7 % had no religious affiliation (as of 2001).

The municipality experienced population growth in the second half of the 20th century. The decrease in the number of inhabitants since 2000 affects especially the youth. The number of people under fifteen years old decreased by 40 percent from 2001 to 2019, and at the same time the percentage of people over 65 years old grew by 34 percent.[8][9][10]

Culture and sights

  • Catholic parish church Obdach St. Aegydius
  • Hospital church: owned by the burghers, from the 1st half of the 15th century.
  • Square Tower

Natural sights

  • Granitzenbach, which is a natural monument in its upper reaches

Economy and infrastructure

According to the 2001 workplace census, there were 99 workplaces with 873 employees in the municipality, as well as 519 out-commuters and 463 in-commuters. There were 91 agricultural and forestry holdings (32 of which were full-time), which together farmed 3,114 ha (1999).

The most important industrial enterprise is the ALKO machine factory (mainly lawn mowers) with about 250 employees.

Traffic

Traffic access is provided by the Obdacher Straße B 78, which connects the Carinthian Lavanttal with the Murtal. In Obdach is a station of the Lavanttalbahn. Passenger service between Zeltweg and Bad St. Leonhard was discontinued in 2010.[11]

Education

In Obdach there is a kindergarten, an elementary school and a new secondary school.[12]

Politics

The municipal council has 21 members.

  • With the 2015 municipal elections in Styria, the municipal council had the following distribution: 14 ÖVP, 6 SPÖ and 1 FPÖ.[13]
  • With the municipal elections in Styria 2020, the municipal council has the following distribution: 14 ÖVP and 7 SPÖ.[14]

Mayor

  • until 2014 Peter Köstenberger (ÖVP)
  • since 2015 Peter Bacher (ÖVP)

Partner municipalities

  • Kötz in Bavaria has been Obdach's partner community since 1990.

Coat of arms

Due to the merging of municipalities, the coat of arms lost its official validity on January 1, 2015. The re-award was effective as of January 1, 2016.[15]

The new blazon (coat of arms description) reads:

"In blue shield over green shield base between two silver towers with three battlements each and a black openwork round arched window on the ground floor set a silver ashlar, two-story wall with openwork round gate with raised portcullis and two black openwork high rectangular windows on each floor; above the gate a tower with three black pierced round arched windows and golden, below wavy closed hood together with black pierced round arched window, pommel and pennant flying off to the left."

Personalities

Honorary citizen of the municipality

  •    1881: Johann Freiherr von Vernier-Rougemont (District Governor of Judenburg 1876–1883)
  •    1928: ÖR Josef Grogger (Mayor of Obdach 1917–1919)
  •    1936: Eduard Schützenauer (physician)
  •    1973: Wolfgang Köle (1919–2018), (physician)
  •    1973: Heinrich Köle (1920–2015), (physician)
  •    1974: Johann Bammer (1922–2017), (provincial councilor)
  •    1974: Alois Kober (1908–1996), (entrepreneur)
  •    1982: Ernst Schwartz
  •    1984: ÖR Franz Zellnig (Mayor of Obdach 1970–1984)
  •    1986: Hans Gross (1930–1992), (Deputy Governor of the Province of Obdach)
  •    1998: Herbert Kober (*1933), (entrepreneur)
  •    1998: Kurt Kober (entrepreneur)
  •    1998: Willy Kober (entrepreneur)

Sons and daughters of the community

  •    Rudolf Falb, 1838–1903 (researcher)
  •    Viktorin Weyer, 1866–1939 (Benedictine abbot of Sankt Lambrecht)
  •    Ernest Kaltenegger, born 1949 (politician of the KPÖ)
  •    Peter Rieser, born 1950 (politician of the ÖVP)

Trivia

Until 2014, Obdach was the municipality with the highest "municipal office density": in addition to the Obdach office building, the municipal offices of Sankt Anna am Lavantegg and Sankt Wolfgang-Kienberg were also located on properties in the cadastral municipality of Obdach.

Literature

  • Gernot Fournier, Reiner Puschnig: Das Obdacherland und seine Geschichte (English: The Obdach region and its history). Obdach 1990.

References

  1. "Dauersiedlungsraum der Gemeinden Politischen Bezirke und Bundesländer - Gebietsstand 1.1.2018". Statistics Austria. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  2. "Bevölkerung am 1.1.2021 nach Ortschaften (Gebietsstand 1.1.2021)". Statistik Austria (xls). 2021-01-01. Retrieved 2021-10-17.
  3. "Katastralgemeinden 2020". Amt der Steiermärkischen Landesregierung (Excel file). Retrieved 2021-10-17.
  4. Frhr. Lochner von Hüttenbach, Fritz (2008). Zum Namengut des Frühmittelalters in der Steiermark (PDF). p. 55.
  5. Allgemeines Landesgesetz- und Regierungsblatt für das Kronland Steiermark, 21. Stück, 7. Oktober 1850, Nr. 378.
  6. Announcement of the Styrian Provincial Government of 21 November 2013 on the unification of the market town of Obdach and the municipalities of Amering, Sankt Anna am Lavantegg and Sankt Wolfgang-Kienberg, all in the political district of Murtal. Styrian Provincial Law Gazette of December 6, 2013. no. 149, 35th item. ZDB-ID 705127-x. S. 680-681.
  7. "Ein Blick auf die Gemeinde Obdach: Bevölkerungsentwicklung etc" (PDF). STATISTIK AUSTRIA. Retrieved 2021-10-17.
  8. "Bevölkerungsstand und -struktur" (PDF). STATISTIK AUSTRIA. 2021-01-01. Retrieved 2021-10-17.
  9. "Ein Blick auf die Gemeinde Obdach: Wohnbevölkerung etc" (PDF). STATISTIK AUSTRIA. 2021-01-01. Retrieved 2021-10-17.
  10. Populorum, Dr Michael Alexander (2018-06-10). "Lavanttalbahn Zeltweg Obdach Wolfsberg St. Paul Lavanttal Lavamünd Unterdrauburg Dravograd Wöllern Velence Cilli Celje Eisenbahn". www.dokumentationszentrum-eisenbahnforschung.org (in German). Retrieved 2021-10-30.
  11. "Marktgemeinde Obdach | Bildungseinrichtungen". marktgemeinde-obdach.at. Retrieved 2021-10-30.
  12. "Wahlen". egov.stmk.gv.at. Retrieved 2021-11-12.
  13. "Wahlen". egov.stmk.gv.at. Retrieved 2021-11-12.
  14. "RIS Dokument". www.ris.bka.gv.at. Retrieved 2021-11-29.




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