Planken (German pronunciation: [ˈplaŋkn̩] ⓘ; dialectal: Planka) is a municipality in Oberland, Liechtenstein. It has four exclaves, two enclaves and a population of 473. Thus it is the least populous municipality of Liechtenstein.

History

The Romanic population from Schaan and Vaduz had already cleared the area of the village before the Walser migrated there in the 13th century and started clearing the upper parts of the municipality. The first documented naming was in the year 1361. The village was looted twice, first by the Swiss in 1499 when they campaigned against Frastanz (Battle of Frastanz)[citation needed] and in 1799 by the French when they ousted the Austrian forces during the Napoleonic Wars.

In 1868 the village was connected to the rest of Liechtenstein via road, making it reachable for bigger carriages. After a great conflagration in 1869 an exodus hit the village; in 1901 just 56 inhabitants remained. The situation improved due to a land reform from 1961 to 1981 and an enlargement of infrastructure.

Politics

Planken is locally administered by the mayor and a 6-person municipal council, elected every four years since 1975. The incumbent mayor is Rainer Beck, since 2007.

List of mayors (1864–present)

List of mayors (1864–present)
NameTermPartyRef(s)
Ferdinand Negele1864–1867
Franz Josef Marxer1867–1870
Franz Martin Gantner1870–1873
Ferdinand Negele1873–1876
Gebhard Gantner1876–1882
Andreas Jehle1882–1885
Gebhard Gantner1885–1888
Peter Beck1888–1891
Gebhard Gantner1891–1894
Josef Negele1894–1897
Gebhard Gantner1897–1900
Josef Negele1900–1909
Lorenz Gantner1909–1912
Josef Negele1912–1915
Josef Negele1915–1921
Ferdinand Beck1921–1936FBP
Gustav Jehle1936–1969
Anton Nägele1969–1983
Eugen Beck1983–1999
Gaston Jehle1999–2007
Rainer Beck2007–VU

Last election

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Progressive Citizens' Party74556.7040
Patriotic Union56943.302+1
Free List00.000-1
Total1,314100.0060
Valid votes21992.41
Invalid votes114.64
Blank votes72.95
Total votes237100.00
Registered voters/turnout26489.77
Source:

Geography

It is located on the western slope of Drei Schwestern. The center of the main village is on 786m a.s.l.. Additionally the plateau of Oberplanken belongs to the municipality. It borders on Gamprin's exclave Nendler Berg, the Vaduz' exclave Dachsegg and Eschen in the North, on the Austrian municipality of Frastanz in the East and on Schaan in the South and in the West.

The exclave Plankner Garselli is a former alp in the Samina valley. The Plankner Neugrütt is a cliffy forest north of the village, separated from it by a stripe of 20m of land and surrounded by an exclave of Schaan with the same name. The other two exclaves are in the Rhine Valley: Wes is a small meadow and Riet-Äscher is a marsh, both are surrounded by territory of Schaan.

Furthermore, there are two enclaves consisting of woods: Rüttistein, which belongs to Vaduz, and Schaan's Brunnenegg.

Alps

There are four alps in the municipality:

AlpEtymologyOwnerTotal areaPasture areaSource
GafaduraOld Romansh: cavradüra (clearing)Municipality ofPlanken90ha24ha
Alpzinkatapering part of the alp
RüttiMentioned 1607 as Reiti (clearing)22ha
Plankner GarselliOld Romansh: clusella (small gully)?187ha-

The alp Gafadura on the western slope of Drei Schwestern was settled by Walser, alike Saroja, from Triesenberg and inhabited until the 15th century. In 1579 the owners of Gafadura, Gaflonen (today: Alpzinka) and Garselli handed their former cooperative alps over to the municipality. It was first given to single farmers until 1875 when it became a communal farming project until 1960. Since then its use is limited to cattle farming and the forestry industry. The Gafadura chalet was built 1926 as a princely hunting lodge and taken over by the Liechtensteiner Alpenverein in 1968.

Alpzinka was first mentioned in 1428 and was probably settled until the mid-15th century. Since then this area belonging to Gafadura was used for agriculture.

Rütti, formerly also known as "Maiasäss" was used as a Maiensäss[de] for Gafadura.

Plankner Garselli is located in the western Samina Valley. The use of this steep and dry alp was not intensive since the 19th century and was limited to cattle. The agricultural activity ceased between 1880 and 1890. Since 2000 it is part of the Natural Forest Reserve Garselli/Zigerberg.

Sights

Its most notable structure is the eighteenth-century St. Josef Chapel[de], which belongs to the parish of Schaan. It is supposed to have been built in 1761 and in 1861 a tower was added that contains a bell from 1724. 1929 Prince Franz I founded the chapel's three baroque revival altars. It was then redesigned in 1955 under the supervision of architect Felix Schmid of Rapperswil.

Notable people

Gallery

  • View of the valley from the Planken hillside
  • Village church
  • View with fog

External links

  • Media related to Planken at Wikimedia Commons