In 1051, Hausen had its first documentary mention, although the village may be even older, for even then, it had a church. With this church, this village set on top of a cliff terrace overlooking a great bend in the Kyrbach was already earning considerable importance in the Middle Ages as the hub of a great parish, to which, among others, Laufersweiler, Woppenroth, Lindenschied, Oberkirn and Schwerbach belonged. While Laufersweiler split away from the parish quite early on, Woppenroth entered into parochial ties with Dickenschied beginning in 1976, after the 1969 administrative restructuring in Rhineland-Palatinate. Within the same framework, Lindenschied had its own parochial ties transferred from Hausen to Dickenschied. Both municipalities thus also switched from the Trier church district to the Simmern-Trarbach church district. The Hausen Evangelical parish now encompasses the villages of Hausen, Oberkirn and Schwerbach. The church, originally consecrated to Saint Remigius, still has its Romanesque quire tower with its four tapering floors. The aisleless three-sided structure behind it was built on only in 1747 after the mediaeval nave had fallen into disrepair. The historical village centre can be found tightly grouped about the church, but there is a newer centre in the village over on a slope. Running from there from the place where the dale broadens out is a farm lane leading to the outlying farmsteads and then on towards Gösenroth, which follows an old SchmidtburgRitter- und Pfaffenstraße, which likely was already used in Roman times, and which later served as one of the most important transport links between the castles on the Nahe and the Moselle. Besides agriculture, forestry and mills, of which the Hausener Bauernmühle on the Idarbach can still be seen, slatemining also held great importance right up to the mid 20th century. In the heavily wooded Kaschecktälchen between Hausen and Oberkirn, great waste heaps and various other relics from the Layen quarry can still be seen.
Politics
Municipal council
The council is made up of 6 council members, who were elected by majority vote at the municipal election held on 7 June 2009, and the honorary mayor as chairman.
The German blazon reads: In gespaltenem Schild vorne in Gold ein blaubewehrter und -gezungter roter Löwe, hinten in Rot ein silbernes Haus mit 2 schwarzen Fenstern und einer Tür. The municipality's arms might in English heraldic language be described thus: Per pale Or a lion rampant sinister gules armed and langued azure and gules a house argent masoned sable with two windows and one door of the same. The German blazon does not mention that the lion is supposed to be sinister. The lion on the dexter side is a reference to the village's former allegiance to the Waldgraves and Rhinegraves. The house on the sinister side is a cantingcharge for the municipality's name, Hausen, derived from the wordHaus. This is drawn from Hausen's official 18th-century seal, the original stamp for which is at the Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn.
Culture and sightseeing
Buildings
The following are listed buildings or sites in Rhineland-Palatinate’s Directory of Cultural Monuments:
Saint John’s Evangelical Parish Church, between Hauptstraße 33 and 35 – Romanesque east tower, nave with three-sided structure behind, 1747, Baroque Revival portal porches, 1913; characterizes village’s and landscape’s appearance
Across from Hauptstraße 26 – bakehouse with bare oven under a roof, late 19th century
The municipality has a village community centre known as the Alte Schule. It was built in 1928.
Established businesses
There are currently two inns in the village, “Zur Schönen Au” and “Zur Dorfschänke”. The Pintohof Kyrbachtal offers holidays on the farm with cabins and guided riding tours.