Mönchpfiffel-Nikolausrieth

Municipality in Thuringia, Germany
Location of Mönchpfiffel-Nikolausrieth within Kyffhäuserkreis district
ThuringiaAbtsbessingenAn der SchmückeAn der SchmückeArternBad FrankenhausenBellstedtBorxlebenClingenEbelebenEbelebenEtzlebenFreienbessingenGehofenGreußenGreußenHelbedündorfHolzsußraKalbsriethKyffhäuserlandMönchpfiffel-NikolausriethNiederbösaOberbösaOberheldrungenReinsdorfRockstedtRoßleben-WieheKyffhäuserlandKyffhäuserlandSondershausenKyffhäuserlandTopfstedtTrebraWasserthalebenWestgreußen
(2022–28) André Schlegel[1]Area
 • Total9.15 km2 (3.53 sq mi)Elevation
123 m (404 ft)Population
 (2022-12-31)[2]
 • Total302 • Density33/km2 (85/sq mi)Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET) • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)Postal codes
06556
Dialling codes03 46 52Vehicle registrationKYF

Mönchpfiffel-Nikolausrieth is a municipality on the river Helme in the district Kyffhäuserkreis, in Thuringia, Germany. The municipality was created in 1956 by the merging of the villages Monchpfiffel and Nikolausrieth.

History

In the tithing rolls of Hersfeld Abbey which date from between 881 and 899, Mönchpfiffel is listed as the tithable place Bablide in Friesenfeld.

Nikolausrieth in the area of the Golden Aue (Golden Meadow) was first mentioned in the year 1226 as Novale St. Nicolai in a document from Walkenried. J.M. Schamelius listed in his monastery directory of 1733 a convent as having been founded here in 1236 and as 'ruined' after the Reformation.

Mönchspfiffel is a historical monastery property which was a branch of the Cistercian Walkenried Abbey. From 1920 to 1945 it belonged to the free state Thuringia. After the war and until 1991 it was a Volkseigenes Gut and Landwirtschaftliche Produktionsgenossenschaft, a type of collectivized farm in East Germany. In 1995 it was sold to Raiffeisenbank-Agil Warengenossenschaft,[3] an agricultural cooperative.

A notable point is that each of the constituent villages were until 2008 in different church provinces of the Evangelical Church. Nikolausrieth belonged to church province of Saxony while Mönchpfiffel belonged to the Thuringian. Since 2009 the two belong to the merged Evangelical Church in Central Germany. The reason for this is that the river Helme was the former border between the Weimar exclave Allstedt and the Prussian province of Saxony.

Population

As of 31 December unless otherwise noted.

  • 1994 - 413
  • 1995 - 410
  • 1996 - 425
  • 1997 - 425
  • 1998 - 418
  • 1999 - 424
  • 2000 - 421
  • 2001 - 412
  • 2002 - 419
  • 2003 - 415
  • 2004 - 411
  • 2005 - 417
  • 2006 - 403
  • 2007 - 400
  • 2008 - 398
  • 2009 - 390
  • 2010 - 386
  • 2011 - 347
  • 2012 - 345
  • 2013 - 342
  • 2014 - 329
  • 2015 - 319
Source: Thüringian State Office of Statistics

Transport

The nearest train station is in Artern on the Sangerhausen–Erfurt railway. A bus connection to there as well as to Allstedt is run as bus line 515 by the Südharz Transport Company.

  • Cistercian Monastery Chapel in Mönchpfiffel
    Cistercian Monastery Chapel in Mönchpfiffel
  • Monastery Buildings in Mönchpfiffel
    Monastery Buildings in Mönchpfiffel
  • Village Chapel in Nikolausrieth
    Village Chapel in Nikolausrieth

References

  1. ^ Gewählte Bürgermeister - aktuelle Landesübersicht, Freistaat Thüringen, accessed 10 November 2022.
  2. ^ "Bevölkerung der Gemeinden, erfüllenden Gemeinden und Verwaltungsgemeinschaften in Thüringen Gebietsstand: 31.12.2022" (in German). Thüringer Landesamt für Statistik. June 2023.
  3. ^ "Klostergut Mönchpfiffel GMBH · Garten der Mönche". Archived from the original on 16 October 2012. Retrieved 10 October 2019.


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