Ramersdorf-Perlach is a borough of Munich . It is located south-east of the city center and is the most populous of Munich's boroughs with a population of about 116,000. It consists of the five districts Ramersdorf, Balanstraße West, Altperlach, Neuperlach and Waldperlach.
19-933: Ramersdorf-Perlach consists of the two former municipalities Ramersdorf (incorporated on 1 January 1864) and Perlach (incorporated on 1 January 1930) as well as the two districts Waldperlach and Neuperlach located in the former municipal area of Perlach. The former Perlach districts of Michaeliburg and Fasangarten now largely belong to the boroughs of Trudering-Riem and Obergiesing-Fasangarten , respectively. The district has eleven primary schools, nine secondary schools (three Mittelschulen, four Realschulen, two Gymnasiums), two special schools, one orientation school, two vocational schools, nine Kinderkrippen (children under three), 43 Kindergärten (nursery schools), 21 afternoon childcare facilities, eight recreational homes, 72 parks or green spaces (151 hectares), 44 playgrounds, four district sports facilities, two district libraries, one indoor and one outdoor swimming pool. As part of
38-603: A provost . The canons remained until the secularization of the Bavarian monasteries in 1803. Saint Conrad of Parzham , O.F.M. Cap. , (1818–1894) served as porter at the Friary of St. Ann in the city of Altötting for 40 years. This small town is famous for the Gnadenkapelle ( Chapel of Grace ), one of the most-visited shrines in Germany. This is a tiny octagonal chapel which keeps
57-479: A member of the Wittelsbach Bavarian royal family . The tradition of Bavaria calls for the heart of the deceased king to be placed in an urn and kept at the chapel at Altötting. The heart of King Ludwig II of Bavaria , the builder of Neuschwanstein castle , lies in this chapel, along with those of his grandfathers and father. Other architectural highlights in the town are the twin-towered Stiftskirche ,
76-640: A venerated statue of the Virgin Mary . According to the legend, in 1489, a 3-year-old local boy who had drowned in the river was revived when his grieving mother placed him in front of a wooden statue of the Virgin Mary at the high altar. News of the miracle quickly spread, and the chapel was immediately extended by the erection of a nave and a covered walkway. In the Treasure Vault of the Holy Chapel of Altötting
95-439: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Neuperlach Neuperlach ( Central Bavarian : Neiperlach ) is a borough in the southeast of the Bavarian capital, Munich and is part of the city district no. 16, Ramersdorf-Perlach . It was built starting in 1967 east of the former village of Perlach on the ground of the former Perlacher Haid. Neuperlach is located east of the boroughs Ramersdorf and Perlach, south of
114-536: Is a town in Bavaria , capital of the district Altötting of Germany . For 500 years it has been the scene of religious pilgrimages by Catholics in honor of Mary, including a visit by Pope John Paul II in 1980 and one by Pope Benedict XVI in 2006. During the Carolingian period, there was a royal palace here. Nearby, King Carloman erected a Benedictine monastery in 876, with Werinolf as first abbot, and also built
133-583: Is the Golden Horse, or "Goldenes Rössli", a 62 cm-high altarpiece made of gold and gilded silver, with golden figures coated with different coloured enamel. It depicts the Virgin Mary with the Christ Child, and, as children, John the Baptist, John the evangelist and St. Catherine. In the foreground is King Charles VI of France . This masterpiece of the goldsmith's craft was a gift from Isabeau , Queen of France,
152-598: The Balanstraße West district. Rumoltesdorf was first mentioned in documents between 1006 and 1022 in a Freising document transcript. However, the suffix -dorf suggests that a settlement may have already existed in the second half of the 9th century, especially since individual members of the Rumoltes family have been attested in documents since the 8th century. From the 13th to the 16th century, various ministerial dynasties and patrician families are mentioned as owners of
171-613: The Mustersiedlung Ramersdorf (model housing estate for Nazi Germany ). The St. Mary's Church marks the old centre of the village, which is now rather squeezed in between the Middle Ring and the access road to the Munich-Salzburg motorway. The Ramersdorf church has been documented since the beginning of the 11th century and, along with Altötting , is probably one of the oldest pilgrimage sites in Bavaria . Pilgrimages to
190-646: The abbey church in honour of the Apostle St. Philip . In 907 King Louis the Child gave the abbey in commendam to Burchard, the Bishop of Passau (903-915), (probably identical with Burchard, second and last abbot). In 910 the Hungarians ransacked and burnt the church and abbey. In 1228 Duke Louis I, Duke of Bavaria rebuilt these buildings and, after they were sanctified, placed them in charge of twelve Canons Regular , headed by
209-481: The city districts no. 14 ( Berg am Laim ) and no. 15 ( Trudering-Riem ), west of the borough Waldperlach and north of Unterbiberg (which is part of the municipality of Neubiberg ). The borough encompasses multiplehousing estates, including several high-rise estates, and is one of Germany's biggest satellite towns . In the center of Neuperlach, the large pep shopping mall is located, one of the most profitable shopping centers in Germany. The Hachinger Bach runs through
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#1732855926354228-765: The district borders, plus eleven bus or tram lines). The district committee consists of 45 members. Ramersdorf-Perlach is home to one of Munich's oldest churches, the St. Mary's Church in Ramersdorf which was mentioned for the first time in 1315. Two further old churches in the settlement of Perlach are the St. Michael's church and the St. Paul's church which is the oldest Protestant church in Munich. Several large companies such as for example Allianz , Siemens AG , Wacker Chemie or BSH Home Appliances have headquarters or operate development centers in
247-629: The district of Neuperlach. The editorial office of the teenage magazine Bravo is also based in Neuperlach, as well as one of Munich's largest shopping malls, the pep . The public park Ostpark , Munich's largest waterpark Michaelibad and the cemetery Neuer Südfriedhof are located in Ramersdorf-Perlach. The small river Hachinger Bach enters Munich in Perlach. The museum of the Munich public transport company MVG ist located at Ständlerstraße in
266-522: The farms; some of these properties were also given to the church as endowments until they passed back into secular ownership during the Secularisation in Bavaria in 1803. From 1818 until its incorporation into Munich in 1864, Ramersdorf was a separate municipality. A far-reaching transformation of the district took place during the rule of National Socialism through the large-scale road construction and with
285-708: The high-quality furnishings, including the precious cross particle and the Ramersdorf image of grace, and not least the late Gothic carved altar attributed to Erasmus Grasser , attest to the high artistic and cultural-historical value of the Ramersdorf church." (Karin Hösch) Based on the documents, several district initiatives and organisations decided in 2005 to celebrate Ramersdorf's thousandth anniversary in 2006. [REDACTED] Media related to Ramersdorf-Perlach at Wikimedia Commons 48°06′10″N 11°37′30″E / 48.1028°N 11.6250°E / 48.1028; 11.6250 This Munich location article
304-507: The image of the Virgin Mary probably began at the beginning of the 14th century, and in this century a particle of the cross also came into the possession of the church. In the 15th and 16th centuries the church was rebuilt and in the 17th century extensive Baroqueisations were carried out. The present tower dates from the end of the 18th century. At the beginning of the 19th century, many votive panels and other representations that paid homage to an exuberant cult of saints were demolished "in
323-521: The name of the Enlightenment". After the foundation of a parish of its own in 1907 ( Maria Ramersdorf had until then been a daughter church of St. Michael Perlach), extensive restorations were undertaken, which, however, at the same time led to the discovery of older components of the church, for example from the Gothic period . Appreciation: "Both the records of the building and pilgrimage history as well as
342-888: The urban area orientation of the Münchner Volkshochschule , a branch of the Munich Adult Education Centre was set up in Neuperlach-Süd. On the district's border with Giesing, the University of Television and Film Munich was located until 2011. There are 75 stops of the Münchner Verkehrsgesellschaft (including five stops of the Munich U-Bahn and two of the Munich S-Bahn within the district, as well as three underground and two S-Bahn stations on
361-508: The western part of Neuperlach from north to south. The stream also passes through the western part of the Ostpark . 48°06′00″N 11°39′00″E / 48.1000°N 11.6500°E / 48.1000; 11.6500 This Bavaria location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Alt%C3%B6tting Altötting ( German: [altˈʔœtɪŋ] , Bavarian : [ɔidˈɛːde̝ŋ] ; Oidäding )
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