Müllendorf

  • SPÖ: 11
  • ÖVP: 5
  • BI Template: Election chart / Maintenance / Name: 3

Garbage village is a municipality with 1353 inhabitants (as of 1 January 2013 ) in the district of Eisenstadt-Umgebung in Burgenland.

The Hungarian name of the village is Szárazvám.

  • 4.1 Town twinning

Geography

Garbage village located in the northern Burgenland close to Eisenstadt, capital city. The community is a hillside community and spreads over the southern slopes of the Leitha Mountains on the garbage villages Valley to the North and Westausläufen of Föllig from. Garbage village is the only place in the community.

History

Before Christ's birth, the area was part of the Celtic kingdom of Noricum and belonged to the area of the Celtic hillfort castle on the Schwarzenbacher Castle Hill.

Later, under the Romans today's garbage village was then in the province of Pannonia.

Garbage village was first mentioned in 1271. In the Middle Ages it was a tollbooth.

The place was like the rest of Burgenland to 1920/21 Hungary ( German West Hungary). Since 1898, had to be used because of Magyarization the government in Budapest the Hungarian name Szárazvám. After the end of World War II German West Hungary was awarded in the Treaties of St. Germain and Trianon in 1919 Austria after tough negotiations. The place belongs since 1921 to the newly founded State of Burgenland (see also history of Burgenland ).

Population

Demographics

Policy

Mayor Werner hoof of the SPÖ.

The distribution of seats (19 seats) in the municipal council is SPÖ 11, ÖVP 5 and BI 3 mandates.

Twinning

A partnership is with the market town of Sankt Veit im Pongau.

Culture and sights

In Mülldorf a John Nepomuk Chapel is from the 18th century. The neo-Gothic parish church was built in 1904 /05.

Economy and infrastructure

In the municipality there are important chalk deposits, 17 million years, the youngest in Europe, the Mühlendorfer chalk factory and a PET recycling plant.

Personalities

  • Franz Tschögl (1914-1981), politician and farmer
  • Franz Ringhoffer I. (1744-1827), entrepreneur and founding father of the ring Hoffer works
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