Steinheim is a town in Höxter district in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The middle centre of Steinheim forms the economic, cultural and social hub of the Steinheimer Börde, one of the main territories of the old Prince-Bishopric of Paderborn. This territory was known as Wethi-Weizengau in Saxon times. Particularly scenic are the foothills of the Eggegebirge.
Geography
Location
Steinheim lies roughly 15 km southeast of Detmold.
Constituent communities
The greater town of Steinheim consists of the main town of Steinheim and eight outlying villages:
The Town Hall, built in 1835, is a plain, two-storey plaster building in late Classicist forms.
The rectory, a two-storey half-timbered house with a half-hipped roof, was built in 1729.
The so-called Paradieshof was formerly the episcopal financial officer's seat. It was built in 1729 with a half-hipped roof. Renovated in 1995-96, the building has been used since that time as a kindergarten, daycare centre and shelter on the parental initiative Klabautermann e.V.
The nearby Rentmeisterhaus presents itself as a late Baroque heptaxial plaster building with middle risalit and Mansard roof. It was built in 1767. It still has its original front door.
In the town core after the renovations in the 1970s and 1980s, only a few older residential houses had been kept. As a rule, this usually meant plain half-timberedDielenhäuser almost all of which had been built after the devastating town fire in 1729. Especially well preserved is Rochusstraße 22, a half-timbered Dielenhaus from 1729.
Of the town wall, built beginning in 1280, one rather lengthy stretch has been preserved on the street "Hinter der Mauer".
Cultural events
Steinheim's Rosenmontagszug – a colourful parade – is the biggest and oldest in the East Westphalia-Lippe region. Also, the Steinheim shooting festival, held every year in early summer, enjoys great popularity.
At the municipal elections, the new mayor Carsten Torke was elected with an absolute majority, succeeding the old mayor Joachim Franzke.
Coat of arms
Steinheim's civic coat of arms might heraldically be described thus: In argent a wall with three crenellated towers, the middle tower higher than the two flanking, gules, in the wall below the middle tower a gate Or. Steinheim's oldest town seal, from the 15th century, shows the wall with the three towers, but not the gate. The wall and towers have figured on all seals since that time, but some seals showed the gate, and others did not. Arms were officially granted the town on 23 March 1908, and showed only the wall and towers, not the gate. On 22 March 1971, the town adopted a new coat of arms whose composition was roughly the same, but it included a narrow green chief. These arms soon yielded to the present arms when a disagreement arose over the new arms, with the council opposing the new blazon that included the green chief. The current arms were adopted on 3 July 1972.
Economy and infrastructure
Transport
Owing to Steinheim's advantageous location on the north-south-running East Westphalia Road, otherwise known as Federal Highway B252, connections to the B1 and Autobahnen A 2 and A 44 are right at hand. Steinheim can also be reached by rail throughout the day, with hourly trains from both Hanover and Paderborn.