Friolzheim

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Friolzheim is a municipality of the Enz district in Baden-Württemberg, Germany. The Friolzheimer Riese telecommunications tower was located here.

History

The village of Friolzheim gradually became a possession of the Template:Ill in the 15th century, but then sold the village to Hirsau Abbey. Friolzheim remained a possession of the monastery until it was dissolved in 1807 following German mediatization. Under the Kingdom of Württemberg, Friolzheim was first assigned to Template:Ill in 1807, then to Template:Ill on 26 April 1808. Following the Template:Ill, Friolzheim was assigned to the Enz district.[1]

Geography

The municipality (Gemeinde) of Friolzheim covers Script error: No such module "convert". of the Enz district of Baden-Württemberg, a state of the Federal Republic of Germany. Friolzheim is physically located at the edge of the Black Forest and the Template:Ill. Most of the municipal area lies in the Heckengäu, a region characterized by karstified and forested muschelkalk hills covered with thin layers of soil.[1]

A portion of the Federally-protected Template:Ill natural reserve is located in the southeast of the municipality.[1]

Coat of arms

Friolzheim's municipal coat of arms is divided vertically between an image of a stag in gold upon a field of blue on the right, and five bars – three gold and two blue – on the left. The bars on the left are from the coat of arms of the Template:Ill, while the stag is a reference to Hirsau Abbey. This pattern was drafted and accepted on the suggestion of the Template:Ill in 1937, as Friolzheim had had no coat of arms until then. It was officially approved by the Federal Ministry of the Interior on 11 December 1957.[1]

References

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