Selters (Taunus)


Selters is a community with 8,000 inhabitants north of Bad Camberg in Limburg-Weilburg district in Hesse, Germany.

Geography

Location

The greater part of the Selters municipal area with the centres of Niederselters, Eisenbach, Münster and Haintchen lies in the area of the Eastern Hintertaunus north of the Taunus' main ridge, at elevations from 170 to 500 m. In terms of natural environments, the main centre, Niederselters, also belongs to the southeastern part of the Limburg Basin. giving it a connection to the valley landscape of the Lahn. The fracture zone opening here into the basin from the south, the Idsteiner Senke, is locally known along the Emsbach, which empties into the Lahn, by the name Goldener Grund, a reference to the favourable climate and fruitful soil. The northern part of the community around Münster belongs geologically to the Lahn Basin, which is known for its mineral wealth from the Middle Devonian. Of special importance here was iron ore mining. The nearest towns are Bad Camberg and Limburg.

Neighbouring communities

Selters borders in the north on the communities of Villmar and Weilmünster, in the east on the community of Weilrod, in the south on the town of Bad Camberg, in the southwest on the community of Hünfelden, and in the west on the community of Brechen.

Constituent communities

Selters has four Ortsteile, given here with their population figures:
Ortsteil19102002Notes
Niederselters1,4553,222Community’s administrative seat, origin of Selterswasser, stop on the Main-Lahn-Bahn.
Eisenbach1,2083,258Spa
Münster9771,161
Haintchen567982Recreation resort, Baroque church

''Selterswasser''

A productive mineral spring is located in the centre of Niederselters, giving Selterswasser its name. The Selters spring was first mentioned in 772. In 1581, the city physician of Worms, Jakob Theodor Tabernaemontanus, dedicated ten pages to the Niederselters acidic spring in his spring chronicle Neuw Wasserschatz, thereby laying the groundwork for the spring’s fame and the subsequent development of a distinguished resort business.
Besides the rather unimportant taking of the waters, the Electorate of Trier ran a quickly growing water shipping business, sending the water in crocks from the Kannenbäckerland to Scandinavia, Russia, North America, Africa and even, as confirmed for the year 1791, as far as Batavia in the Dutch East Indies. From the placename “Selters” on the crocks then soon arose the name “Selters Water” as a brandname for mineral water of worldwide repute; the term "seltzer", referring generically to carbonated water, is derived from this brand. The Duchy of Nassau took over Niederselters as a welcome source of income and further expanded the export business. After the duchy was annexed by Prussia in 1866, the water’s name was changed to Königlich-Selters, and when the monarchy ended, the water was given yet another name, Staatsquelle Niederselters. The state of Hesse, as Prussia’s legal successor, sold the spring in 1970, whereafter it changed owners ever more quickly, and in 1999 the bottling at the fountain in Niederselters was shut down. Since 2001, the community of Selters has owned the spring.

Politics

Community council

The municipal election held on 26 March 2006 yielded the following results:

Economy and infrastructure

Transport

Selters is linked to the long-distance road network by the Bad Camberg interchange on the A 3 some 5 km away to the south. Furthermore, Bundesstraße 8 runs through Niederselters.
Niederselters station is located in the centre of Niederselters on the Main-Lahn Railway.

Education

For the community of Selters there is the Goldener Grund Mittelpunktschule in Niederselters, which houses primary school, Hauptschule and Realschule programmes. The outlying centre of Haintchen also has its own primary school. For secondary school there is the Taunusschule in Bad Camberg. Also, some students from Selters also attend school in Limburg an der Lahn.

Public institutions

The centre of the German branch of the Jehovah's Witnesses is found under the name Wachtturm Bibel- und Traktatgesellschaft der Zeugen Jehovas e.V. in the community of Selters in the Taunus. Since 1979, some 1,050 members of the religious group have been living and working in Niederselters in, among other places, s, translation offices, organizational and logistical departments and also workshops in the community that is somewhat like a religious order. Beginning with 2011, the German branch has been responsible for the work of Jehovah's Witnesses in Austria, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein and Switzerland.