Rottal-Inn

Rottal-Inn is a Landkreis (district) in the southeastern part of Bavaria, Germany. Neighboring districts are (from the south clockwise) Altötting, Mühldorf, Landshut, Dingolfing-Landau and Passau. To the southeast is the Austrian state Upper Austria (Braunau).

Rottal-Inn
Coat of arms
CountryGermany
StateBavaria
Adm. regionLower Bavaria
Founded1972
CapitalPfarrkirchen
Area
  Total1,280 km2 (490 sq mi)
Population
 (31 December 2018)[1]
  Total120,659
  Density94/km2 (240/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Vehicle registrationPAN, EG, VIB, GRI
Websitehttp://www.rottal-inn.de

Geography

The main rivers in the district are the Inn and its tributary, the Rott.

History

The district was created in 1972 by merging the two previous districts Pfarrkirchen and Eggenfelden and parts of the districts Griesbach and Vilsbiburg.


Coat of arms

The coat of arms combines the symbols of the two previous districts. Dexter in chief is a panther as the symbol of Eggenfelden, derived from the coat of arms of the Counts of Spanheim, who ruled the area until the 13th century. Sinister in base a horse as the symbol of Pfarrkirchen, as the area is famous for the horse-breeding tradition. The bendlet sinister Azure between them symbolizes the two rivers in the district, the Inn and the Rott.

Towns and municipalities

Towns and municipalities in Landkreis Rottal-Inn
cities Verwaltungsgemeinschaften municipalities
  1. Eggenfelden
  2. Pfarrkirchen
  3. Simbach am Inn

Markt(market towns)

  1. Arnstorf
  2. Bad Birnbach¹
  3. Gangkofen
  4. Massing¹
  5. Tann¹
  6. Triftern
  7. Wurmannsquick

¹ administered within a
Verwaltungsgemeinschaft

  1. Bad Birnbach
  2. Ering
  3. Falkenberg
  4. Massing
  5. Tann
  1. Bayerbach
  2. Dietersburg
  3. Egglham
  4. Ering
  5. Falkenberg
  6. Geratskirchen1
  7. Hebertsfelden
  8. Johanniskirchen
  9. Julbach
  10. Kirchdorf am Inn
  11. Malgersdorf
  12. Mitterskirchen
  13. Postmünster
  14. Reut
  15. Rimbach1
  16. Roßbach
  17. Schönau
  18. Stubenberg1
  19. Unterdietfurt
  20. Wittibreut
  21. Zeilarn

¹ administered within a
Verwaltungsgemeinschaft

gollark: It *is* only 180 lines of code for the actual fractal bit, and Rust has good image manipulation libraries, doesn't it, actually?#
gollark: If I wasn't bad at programming and/or Rust I would totally port this to Rust.
gollark: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/FractalArt
gollark: Holographic narwhals.
gollark: It is not. You are wrong.

References

  1. "Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes". Bayerisches Landesamt für Statistik und Datenverarbeitung (in German). July 2019.

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