Misplaced Pages

Aubing-Lochhausen-Langwied

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Bundesautobahn 96 (translates from German as Federal Motorway 96 , short form Autobahn 96 , abbreviated as BAB 96 or A 96 ) is a motorway in southern Germany , leading from the Austrian border ( A14 ) near Lindau ( Lake Constance ) through Memmingen , Landsberg am Lech to Munich . Two European routes lead through the autobahn: E 43 and E 54 .

#186813

15-506: Aubing-Lochhausen-Langwied ( Central Bavarian : Aubing-Lochhausn-Langwied ) is the 22nd borough of the German city of Munich . The districts Aubing , Lochhausen and Langwied were incorporated together in 1942, thus forming the largest borough of the city at 3,400 hectares, yet having the lowest density of population with 37,352 residents as of 2002. This large borough still accommodates many vast agricultural and forest areas that together with

30-584: A fjord for wading through of the Langwieder brook. In 1818 the Langwied municipality was formed with Lochhausen and Gröbenzell . On 1 April 1942 the municipality was incorporated into the city of Munich by treaty from 29 August/2 September 1941. Northern parts of Langwied formed the Gröbenzell municipality in 1952 along with other parts of municipalities. The area in and directly around Aubing, Lochhausen and Langwied

45-741: A subgroup of Bavarian dialects in large parts of Austria and the German state of Bavaria along the Danube river, on the northern side of the Eastern Alps . They are spoken in the ' Old Bavarian ' regions of Upper Bavaria (with Munich (see Munich German)), Lower Bavaria and in the adjacent parts of the Upper Palatinate region around Regensburg , in Upper and Lower Austria , in Vienna (see Viennese German ), in

60-569: Is connected to by the following junctions: A 99 A 8 By Munich S-Bahn , the district is bound by the S4, S5, S6 and S8 lines, at the stops and stations of Langwied , Lochhausen , Leienfelsstraße , Aubing , Westkreuz and Neuaubing of the MVV . Numerous bus lines further connect the district. Since the opening of the section of the A 99 as a connection between the München-Lochhausen junction and

75-523: The A 96 München-Lindau route in February 2006 which resulted in the tunneling of large parts of Aubing, at 1,935m long Aubing has the largest automobile tunnel in Bavaria. (As of 31 December, Inhabitants with principal residence.) 48°09′30″N 11°25′10″E  /  48.15833°N 11.41944°E  / 48.15833; 11.41944 Central Bavarian Central or Middle Bavarian form

90-561: The Aubinger Lohe and the Langwieder lake district , fulfill the balance of nature in the area and offer recreational facilities to all of western Munich. A large area between Aubing/Neuaubing and Germering on Munich ground of the Freiham district, east of Gut Freiham is currently under development. Aubing was first documented in 1010 AD as Ubingen. This name was most likely derived from

105-559: The Bavarian stem duchy with the later Duchy of Austria . That means that the distinct languages of Vienna and Munich are very different from each other, but the dialects of any two neighbouring towns in between will be quite similar. However, due to influences of the corresponding political centres, discontinuous change is nowadays noticeable along the national border between Austria and Germany . Generally, Viennese has some characteristics differentiating it from other Bavarian dialects due to

120-440: The Langwied municipality. On 1 April 1942 this municipality then became part attached to the city of Munich. The old village centre is formed around the parish church of St. Michael . Langwied was first document in 1269/1271 as "Lanquat". The name Langwied means am langen Wald (althochdeutsch: daz witu = wood, forest). The ending "quat" used up to the 15th century could come from waten (the verb "to wade"), and could allude to

135-513: The Munich coat of arms. Alt-Aubing has many clubs and associations, one of which is the Burschenverein Aubing (Aubing Gentleman's Club) that sets up the maypole in the village centre every three years. Many figures are carved into the wood of the maypole. Lochhausen was first documented in 948/955 AD as Lohhusa. The name means house or houses in the forest. In 1818 Lochhausen became part of

150-430: The border between Bavaria and Austria . In all subgroups, hard consonants such as p, t, k are softened to become b, d, g . Bundesautobahn 96 It was first planned to build a direct connection between Munich and Lindau before World War II , south of Ammersee . During the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, a section from Munich to Oberpfaffenhofen and Germering was built. A 25 km (16 mi) part of

165-663: The districts Aubing, Freiham and Moosschwaige. On 1 April 1942 the Aubing municipality was connected to Munich, but without a treaty of incorporation. Aubing is divided by the Munich-Buchloe railway line in Alt-Aubing and Neu-Aubing. Alt-Aubing reflects the origins of Aubing with buildings that still stand today. The old village centre is built around the gothic/baroque parish church St. Quirin with its approximately one-thousand-year-old romanesque tower built in 1480. Neuaubing arose at

SECTION 10

#1732909546187

180-548: The influence of languages spoken by people moving to Vienna from many areas of Austria-Hungary during the 19th century. A characteristic of Central Bavarian is the vocalization of l and r after e or i . E.g. the standard German viel becomes either vui (in Western Central Bavarian) or vüü (in Eastern Central Bavarian). The border between the western and eastern subgroups roughly coincides with

195-451: The name Ubo of the Bavarii , however no such person with that name is actually known of. The longer story which most school children are told, is of "Founder Ubo, who settled here with his cart" is just as well established as the neighbouring borough of Pasing 's founding story, in that its name stemmed from "Paoso". Neither are accurate. In 1818 the municipality of Aubing was established, with

210-463: The start of the 20th century as settlement for railwaymen and workers. The Aubing coat of arms goes back to a local aristocratic family from the 12th to the 14th century. It was first mentioned in a document of a known Hartmann of Aubing on 1 May 1334. The layout goes back to Otto Hupp . This was assessment was approved of on 23 February 1933. The coat of arms shows 3 leaves on a silver background. Today like all other Munich districts, Aubing carries

225-516: The state of Salzburg , as well as in the northern and eastern parts of Styria and Burgenland . Before 1945 and the expulsions of the Germans , it was also spoken in Hungary and southern Bohemia and Moravia. It also influenced Austrian German . There are noticeable differences in the language within the group, but changes occur along a west-east dialect continuum on both sides of the historic border of

#186813