Dreis-Brück


Dreis-Brück is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Vulkaneifel district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Daun, whose seat is in the like-named town.

Geography

Location

The municipality lies in the Vulkaneifel, a part of the Eifel known for its volcanic history, geographical and geological features, and even ongoing activity today, including gases that sometimes well up from the earth.
The village centre in Dreis sits at an elevation of 477 m above sea level, while Brück's elevation, also at the village centre, is 520 m above sea level. The municipality stretches over 1 818 ha all together, 820 ha of which is wooded. Several peaks surround the dale in which the municipality's two centres lie, which is also crossed by six streams.

Constituent communities

Dreis-Brück's Ortsteile are, as its hyphenated name implies, Dreis and Brück.

History

The time in which Dreis was founded is shrouded in darkness. Its beginnings would seem to stretch back to Carolingian times. In 1143, Dreis had its first documentary mention. The placename “Dreis” is obviously derived from the Old High German word triusan. The name underwent many changes over the centuries. In the 16th century, besides Dreis, also Dreys and Dreyss were to be found. In the 17th century, alongside Dreyß, the forms Dreiß and Driest also cropped up, the last of which even appeared once as Dryesd in the 18th century. Spellings such as Dress, Dreyss or Dreys also are to be found.
Brück had its first documentary mention only in the 14th century.
The two then separate municipalities once belonged to the Counts of Manderscheid, who held the County of Kerpen, and eventually ended up with the Duchy of Arenberg after an hereditary division of holdings.
On 23 August 1945, shortly after the Second World War had ended, the war claimed three more victims locally. Three youths, Helmut Keul, Ernst Josef Probst and Werner Ullrich, went to the Dreis munitions depot to undertake the disarming of the weapons there, left over from the war. Their efforts resulted in a tremendous explosion that killed all three of them. A memorial cross now stands near the site.
In a written announcement from 28 August 1968, the Daun Amt and town administration stated “the proposal for a fourth law about administrative restructuring in Rhineland-Palatinate presented at the Landtag and already consulted in First Reading provides for the local area the amalgamation of, among others, the localities of … Dockweiler, Dreis and possibly also Brück”. The Dockweiler municipal administration was quite strongly interested in a merger of the municipalities of Dockweiler and Dreis, and possibly also Brück and Betteldorf, and its official plan reflected as much. The plan eventually failed after consensus could not be forged.
On 20 April 1969 the Mainz Ministry of the Interior published a decree about the formation of Verbandsgemeinden in the Regierungsbezirke of Koblenz and Trier. The Daun district administrator's office took the decree further within the district of Daun with the plan, among others, to assign the municipality of Brück to the Verbandsgemeinde of Kelberg. This move was rejected by both the citizenry and the municipal council.
On 19 May 1970, the Dreis municipal council decided between the two alternatives:
The citizens of Brück decided, with 99.33% in favour, to amalgamate themselves with Dreis, as long as the name Brück was retained.
On 20 December 1973 came the dissolution of the municipality of Brück, whereupon it was amalgamated with the municipality of Dreis with effect from 16 March 1974. In February 1974 the municipalities’ two councils had concluded a settlement and had decided on a merger.
On 15 August 1977, the Trier Regierungsbezirk administration granted the municipality of Dreis the new name Dreis-Brück. The name change came into force on 1 September 1977.

Politics

Municipal council

The council is made up of 12 council members, who were elected by majority vote at the municipal election held on 7 June 2009, and the honorary mayor as chairman.

Coat of arms

The municipality's arms might be described thus: Argent a fountain issuant from whose top two streams, one each to dexter and sinister and each splitting into three, all azure, issuant from base a bridge arched of three sable, in a chief gules three roses Or seeded of the fourth.
The arms were designed by Friedbert Wißkirchen.
The chief refers to the two centres’ history. They were held by the Counts of Manderscheid, who held the County of Kerpen, and eventually ended up with the Duchy of Arenberg after an hereditary division of holdings. The Dukes of Arenberg bore three roses in their seal. The tinctures Or and gules are those once borne by the Counts of Manderscheid. The arched bridge in base is a canting charge and stands for the name Brück, which closely resembles the German word for “bridge”: Brücke. The fountain also refers to part of the name – Drees – from the Old High German. Moreover, the fountain also refers to the municipality's status as the site of a state-recognized health spring, the “Vulkania Quelle” in Dreis.
The Trier Regierungsbezirk administration granted the municipality approval to bear arms in 1986.

Culture and sightseeing

Old house names

Many older houses in Dreis-Brück have names that have nothing to do with the owners who live in them today. The names come partly from former owners’ names or occupations, but some also draw their names from former uses to which each building was put. Further names also come from various events.

Buildings

Brück

Dreis-Brück is home to the well known crime fiction writer Jacques Berndorf. Even his alter ego, Siggi Baumeister, the fictional protagonist of his Eifel crime stories, lives in Dreis-Brück. Hence, many of these stories are set in the surrounding area.