Baldenheim


Baldenheim is a commune in the Bas-Rhin department in the Alsace region of north-eastern France.
The inhabitants of the commune are known as Baldenheimois or Baldenheimoises.
The commune has been awarded two flowers by the National Council of Towns and Villages in Bloom in the Competition of cities and villages in Bloom.

Geography

Baldenheim is located in the Canton of Marckolsheim and the Arrondissement of Sélestat-Erstein in the centre of the Alsace region on the alluvial plain of the Rhine, 45 km south of Strasbourg, 26 km north by north-east of Colmar and 8 km east of Sélestat. Access to the commune is by the D605 from Hessenheim in the south which passes through the village and continues north to Muttersholtz. The D209 comes from Schwobsheim in the east and passes through the village continuing west to join the D21 near the commune border. The D208 goes south-west from the village to Mussig.

Natural environment

The commune is at the centre of a flat alluvial plain and is part of the Ried Natural Region. The water table is only 1.50 metres below the surface on average. Water pierces the clay layer and gives rise to waterways. The Ill river flows relatively calmly across the plain. Like all the rivers in Vosges it is subject to an oceanic regime which is characterized by high winter waters and low summer waters, contrary to the Rhine. The last catastrophic flood occurred in May 1983. The climate is of semi-continental type with about 600 mm of rain per year. Temperature differences are particularly marked: summers can be very hot and the winters harsh.

Landscape

The commune outside the urban area has five distinct types of landscape:
About 80% of the utilized agricultural area is cultivated.
The Ill, the Blind and numerous streams flow north though the commune all eventually merging with the Ill which joins the Rhine at Plobsheim.

Neighbouring communes and villages

Toponymy

Bandenheim, 1182

History

There is a Merovingian and Carolingian Cemetery with a hundred graves which attest to the ancient occupation of the commune. Most of the tombs are shallow and contained no ornaments with disturbed skeletons indicating plundering long ago. Another group of burials are deeper and contained relatively rich ornaments. The village did not have a name at that time and adopted this onomatopoeia. But the name Baldenheim does appear in the 9th century.
The Protestant Reformation was introduced in 1576. A castle was built in 1740 and destroyed in 1821. The Simultaneau in 1843 provoked a violent conflict between the two religious communities. In the 19th century there was significant growth in weaving and there were 150 weavers in the commune. In the last third of the 19th century, the cooperative movement developed in the commune. A savings bank was founded in 1890 and a dairy cooperative operated until 1981.
In 1324 the village belonged to the Duchy of Württemberg. It had then given in fief to the Rathsamhausen zum Stein family. Upon the extinction of this noble family, Louis XIV gave it to the engineer of Chamlay, leaving it for him to pay tribute to the Duke of Württemberg who, at the death of the commander of Chamlay passed the fief to the family of Sandersleben-Coligny. Before the French Revolution it was owned by the Waldner Freundstein family whose castle was demolished in 1820. From the 19th century home weaving occupied a very important place in the local economy.
Baldenheim is known for its festival of "Pfingstpflitteri" which was held for the tenth time in 1999.

The Merovingian helmet

In July 1902 Oscar Pfiffer discovered some objects in his field at Lange Gasse. A more thorough search uncovered a ceremonial helmet and other Merovingian objects. A study published in 1907 by R. Henning made Baldenheim the eponymous site for this type of helmet with thirty examples identified at this time.
The Baldenheim Helmet is now on display at the Museum of Archaeology in Strasbourg.

Heraldry

Administration

List of Successive Mayors
FromToNamePartyPosition
20012020Willy Schwander

Demography

In 2010 the commune had 1,150 inhabitants. The evolution of the number of inhabitants is known from the population censuses conducted in the commune since 1793. From the 21st century, a census of communes with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants is held every five years, unlike larger communes that have a sample survey every year.

Economy

The ratio of active population to total population of the commune has grown above the cantonal average. There is also evidence that unemployment has decreased.
Fruit and vegetables, flowers and plants are cultivated in the commune and there are a dozen pig farmers.
The number of farms has decreased but orchards are still important and Baldenheim is known for its "white apples of Baldenheim".
The village enjoys a relatively high level of economic activity and expansion. There are 440 jobs available in the commune to over 1000 inhabitants.

Culture and heritage

Civil heritage

The commune has many buildings and structures that are registered as historical monuments:
;Other sites of interest
The commune has several religious buildings and sites that are registered as historical monuments:

Notable people linked to the commune