Trüllikon

Trüllikon from east

Trüllikon is a municipality in the district of Andelfingen in the canton of Zurich in Switzerland.

Geography

The community extends across the Zürcher Weinland and has an area of 980 ha in the north Trüllikon borders the municipality Schlattmann (Canton Thurgau ), to the east by the municipalities Ossingen and Truttikon, to the south Kleinandelfingen and to the west by Mart Halen and Benken.

The community Trüllikon consists of three parts: Trüllikon, Rudolfingen and Wildensbuch.

Trüllikon (435 m asl): Here are the local government, post office, 2 restaurants, 1 hotel restaurant and a shop ( Volg ) to find. With about 600 inhabitants Trüllikon is the largest of the three villages of the municipality.

Rudolfingen (420 m asl) falls on mainly by the provided under the protection of the village with old timber-framed buildings.

Wildensbuch (ca. 487 m asl) is the highest part of the municipality. It is in essence still a traditional farming village.

All three districts formed until the abolition by the new cantonal constitution in 2010 each have their own civil parish.

Population

Economy

Traffic

Road Transport: Trüllikon has its own connection to the motorway A4, on which one in around 20 minutes, the city of Winterthur or 15 minutes reached the town of Schaffhausen.

Public transportation: The municipality does not have its own railway station, a post office car line runs from 6 bis 20 clock clock between the stations and Ossingen Mart Halen, resulting in a continuous half hour to Winterthur with change. From 20 clock until closing runs every hour a bus from the train station to Marthalen Rudolfingen and Trüllikon. Since December 12, 2004 Trüllikon is also connected to the CRVO - night network. Each in the nights Fri / Sat and Sat / Sun there is one connection from Schaffhausen and Winterthur to Trüllikon and Rudolfingen.

The village part Wildensbuch is also connected to the public transport network as of December 15, 2008.

Education

The village has a primary school for the lower and middle level. Students and high school students go to secondary school in Mart Halen or a high school in Winterthur.

History

Excavations at Hattlenbuck ( Trüllikon ) and Schlossberg ( Rudolfingen ) testify that the municipality was settled later than the Bronze Age. From the Roman era manor houses have been detected at Cholfirst and watchtowers along the Rhine. After the final retreat of the Romans in 454, the area was settled by the Alemanni.

The place name Trüllikon goes back to the settlement of the people of Trullo. Rudolfingen is the settlement of the people of Rudolf. Wildensbuch regarded as Frankish settlement, the name comes from the Buchenwald Willigis.

Dates from the year 858, the first documentary mention of the villages: the Rheinau monastery received from the Alemannic nobleman Wolvene property in Trullinchiva, Ruadolvinga and Willigisbuoh. While Trüllikon and Wildensbuch remained at Rheinau monastery, Rudolfingen was later sold to the Abbey of Reichenau and then at the monastery of St. Kadriorg, where Rudolfingen but until 1798 formed its own court rule. In Trüllikon the court rule came in 1662 to the family of Zurich Bürkli who had their residence in "The Castle ". With the takeover of the county Kyburg by the City of Zurich in 1452, the high jurisdiction over Trüllikon also went to Zurich.

The community Trüllikon belonged until 1798 at the non- Office of the bailiwick of Kyburg. During the Helvetic Republic and mediation time the division Trüllikons by the district Benken moved to the district of Winterthur and 1831 for District Andelfingen.

In addition to today's civil parishes Rudolfingen and Wildensbuch was also Truttikon the political community Trüllikon. 1878 became Truttikon but by popular vote again to the rank of an independent political community. Unchanged are the church area, still Trüllikon and Truttikon together form a Reformed congregation.

Civil parishes

In the political community Trüllikon Trüllikon, Rudolfingen and Wildensbuch have each maintained a separate civil parish.

The civil parishes entertain the hall way and the forest. In addition, each civil parish has its own water supply. The Vorsteherschaften each comprise three members (President, estate manager and actuary ). Every year there are 2-3 community meetings.

The civil parishes were gem before the end of 2009. Cantonal constitution of the canton of Zurich from 2006 but canceled.

Policy

The council consists of 5 members. Of which 2 SVP (Swiss People's Party), 3 non-party.

Coat of arms

Blazon

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