Ingenheim
Ingenheim (French pronunciation: [iŋ(ɡ)ənaim] ; Alsatian: Íngne) is a commune in the Bas-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France.[3] The nameThe earliest surviving record dates from 739 and names the village Ingenhaim. The first two syllables may comes from the Germanic given/Christian name, "Ingo". "Heim" occurs frequently in place names in countries where the local language is or has been a dialect of German: it is from the same root as the English word "home" and may refer to a grouping of houses or to a farmstead. HistoryBetween 1802 and 1853 the village was the centre for a consistory for Protestant communities in the surrounding settlements of Dettwiller, Ernolsheim-lès-Saverne, Schwindratzheim, Alteckendorf, Waltenheim-sur-Zorn and Duntzenheim. It lost out to Schwindratzheim after 1852 when the parish replaced the consistory as the defining organisational unit for protestant churches in France. LandmarksThe Protestant church, completed in 1911. See alsoReferences
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