Pfaffstätten

Pfaffstätten is a town in the district of Baden in Lower Austria in Austria.

Pfaffstätten
Coat of arms
Pfaffstätten
Location within Austria
Coordinates: 48°1′N 16°16′E
CountryAustria
StateLower Austria
DistrictBaden
Government
  MayorChristoph Kainz
Area
  Total7.81 km2 (3.02 sq mi)
Elevation
218 m (715 ft)
Population
 (2018-01-01)[2]
  Total3,551
  Density450/km2 (1,200/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
2511
Area code02252
Websitewww.pfaffstaetten.at

Population

Historical population
YearPop.±%
19712,603    
19812,449−5.9%
19912,461+0.5%
20013,031+23.2%
20113,411+12.5%

Sights

At the heart of the town is the Lilienfelderhof, a so-called monastic grange, owned by Lilienfeld Abbey but leased to the Kartause Gaming Private Foundation for 99 years, until 2105. Traditionally dated to 1209, the estate has played a central role in the history of Pfaffstätten and in the lives of its inhabitants, many of whom attended kindergarten there, found short- or long-term employment there, or were married in the estate's church.

gollark: It probably wouldn't actually do much to terrorists/child predators/whatever unless they continued to use them despite this, which would be stupid, but would compromise everyone else's security and increase government power substantially.
gollark: What seems to actually be desired is to mandate backdoors in all the popular end to end encrypted chat things, which *is* probably possible, but which would be very bad.
gollark: I entirely disagree with this, not least because cryptography is basically everywhere now so they can't stop people end-to-end-encrypting things themselves.
gollark: Generally it goes something along the lines of "end-to-end encryption bad, because we can't spy on it, which we totally need to do because something something terrorism children".
gollark: It gets brought up periodically, or whenever anything bad happens.

References


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