Auenheim (French pronunciation:[auənaim]; Alsatian: Auenem) is a former commune in the Bas-Rhin department in the Grand Est region of north-eastern France. On 1 January 2019, it was merged into the new commune Rountzenheim-Auenheim.[2]
Part of Rountzenheim-Auenheim in Grand Est, France
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1km2 (0.386sqmi or 247 acres) and river estuaries.
The inhabitants of the commune are known as Auenheimois or Auenheimoises.[3]
Geography
Auenheim is located some 15km east of Haguenau and 13km north-east of Bischwiller. Access to the commune is by the road D468 from Rœschwoog in the north-east which passes through the north of the commune and the village before continuing to Stattmatten in the south. The D463 branches off the D468 in the north of the commune and goes west to Rountzenheim. The TER Strasbourg-Lauterbourg railway passes through the village and there is a station in the commune which, however, appears to be disused. There is a belt of forest through the centre of the commune (the Biergrund) and a large forest in the south-east of the commune (the Unterwald) with substantial urbanisation in the north-west of the commune with the rest farmland.[4]
The Moder river comes from the south and passes through the south-west then the centre of the commune before forming half of the eastern border and continuing east to join the Rhine at Neuhaeusel. There is also a large reservoir in the north of the commune.[4]
According to the Cassini Map of 1750Auen- was spelt Augenheim which in modern German would mean "of the eye" + -heim meaning "hamlet or village".
The suffix -heim indicates a Frankish origin since before the first creation of villages by the Alemanni. -heim signified a "hamlet" or a group of houses in French from which came the Alemannic hüs from which comes haus which is "house" in German.
In 1359 the village was called Oweheim and in 1596 it was Awenheim.
Heraldry
Arms of Auenheim
Blazon:
Argent, a Roman letter M surmounted by a crossette paty and between three crossettes at dexter, sinister and base all in Sable.
Administration
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (April 2021)
Blockhouse 2Auenheim Blockhouse NorthAuenheim Blockhouse South
Auenheim Blockhouse north
An isolated infantry Blockhouse, simple flank built in 1932. It housed an officer, a non-commissioned officer and 20 enlisted men.
Floor dimensions: 25x15 metres;
Height: 7.50 metres;
Thickness of structural work: 2 metres;
Exposed concrete slab: 2.25 m thick walls;
Rear walls: 1 m thick.
Armament: one 37 mm cannon, 3 Reibel machine guns, 5 FM, 2 50mm mortars, grenade launcher chutes.
History: From 1939 to 1940 the blockhouse was held by a detachment of the 68th Fortress Infantry Regiment who resisted German pressure until 1 July 1940, 6 days after the Armistice came into effect (25 June 1940).
Auenheim Blockhouse south
An isolated infantry Blockhouse, simple flank built in 1932. It housed an officer, a non-commissioned officer and 20 enlisted men.
Floor dimensions: 25x15 metres;
Height: 7.50 metres;
Thickness of structural work: 2 metres;
Exposed concrete slab: 2.25 m thick walls;
Rear walls: 1 m thick.
Armament: one 37 mm Cannon, 3 Reibel machine guns, 5 FM, 2 50mm mortars, grenade launcher chutes.
History: From 1939 to 1940 the blockhouse was held by a detachment of the 68th Fortress Infantry Regiment who resisted German pressure until 1 July 1940, 6 days after the Armistice came into effect (25 June 1940).
Henri Loux, born at Auenheim in 1873 and died at Strasbourg in 1907. An illustrator of the countryside and village scenes on a range of tableware called "Obernai".
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