Kratzenburg () is an Ortsgemeinde â a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality â in the Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis (district) in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde Hunsrück-Mittelrhein, whose seat is in Emmelshausen.
The municipality lies in the Hunsrück roughly 4 km north of Emmelshausen and also 4 km from the Rhine to the northeast at Boppard.
Kratzenburg is said to be one of the oldest municipalities in the Vorderhunsrück (âÂÂFurther HunsrückâÂÂ). In 975, it had its first documentary mention as Cratzenberh in a document from Otto II, Holy Roman Emperor, although this document might well be a mediaeval forgery. Kratzenburg appeared in connection with Saint Peter's Parish Church (Pfarrkirche St. Peter) at Boppard: â The village of Cratzenberh in the Gau of Trier, in SiccoâÂÂs county transfers to the parish church in the document three Königshufen.â Hufe was a word used in German to denote a rural settlement with farm and living buildings and the attendant cropland. A Königshufe (plural: Königshufen; literally âÂÂkingâÂÂs Hufe), however, was a Hufe four times the usual size.
The first document that can be dated with certainty in which Kratzenburg is mentioned comes from 1245. According to this, the village belonged to the Gallscheider Gericht (âÂÂGallscheid CourtâÂÂ) at Emmelshausen. In the 14th century, this court's whole zone of jurisdiction ended up in Electoral-Trier hands.
Beginning in 1794, Kratzenburg lay under French rule. In 1815 it was assigned to the Kingdom of Prussia at the Congress of Vienna. Since 1946, it has been part of the then newly founded state of Rhineland-Palatinate.
The village's namesake might have been a wooden Roman watchtower, also called âÂÂKatzâÂÂ. This tower supposedly once stood in the rural cadastral area now called âÂÂAuf der KatzâÂÂ. Crates comes from the Latin and means, roughly, âÂÂwood-boundâ or âÂÂbound together out of woodâÂÂ. In the course of the two Germanic sound shifts, the ending shifted to âÂÂtz. With the insertion of the syllable âÂÂenâ and the addition of the German placename ending âÂÂberg (originally âÂÂberh) arose something akin to the current name, although over the ages, this has shifted to âÂÂburg.
The council is made up of 8 council members, who were elected by majority vote at the municipal election held on 7 June 2009, and the honorary mayor as chairman.
Kratzenburg's mayor is Björn Seis.
The German blazon reads:
The municipality's arms might in English heraldic language be described thus: Per fess Or a fess gules, the whole surmounted by a sword palewise sable, the point to chief, and gules a bend argent charged with three swallows volant of the third.
The German blazon does not mention the field tincture for the lower field in the escutcheon, namely gules (red).
The part of the arms above the line of partition refers to the arms once borne by the Gallscheider Gericht (âÂÂGallscheid CourtâÂÂ) at Emmelshausen, while the charge surmounting (that is, overlying) the pattern recalls the old execution place in Kratzenburg, known as Henkerstein or Enkerstein. Below the line of partition are the arms once borne by the family Wilhelm von Schwalbach. The charge on the bend (diagonal stripe) â the three swallows â is canting for this family's name: âÂÂswallowâ is Schwalbe in German.
The following are listed buildings or sites in Rhineland-PalatinateâÂÂs Directory of Cultural Monuments: