Buildings The following are listed buildings or sites in
Rhineland-Palatinate’s Directory of Cultural Monuments: • Hauptstraße 2 – house,
Late Classicist sandstone-block building, about 1850 • Zur Feuchten Ecke 1 – former
school, town hall; Late Classicist sandstone-block building, about 1850 • In the forest – Saint Willigis’s Catholic Chapel (
St. Willigiskapelle), formerly “Go-To-Church” (
Geh-in-Kirche); quire of
Romanesque church, converted to
Early Gothic, which had been in ruins since the 17th century, but reconstructed in 1912
Saint Willigis’s Chapel The
Chapel was formerly known as the
Geh in Kirche or the
Getzbach/Götzbach Kirche. Archbishop and Chancellor Willigis from
Mainz saw on his inspectional and informational journeys through his rather vast and extensive region that there was already good and eager religious activity, yet there was also a certain lack of gathering places such as churches and other centres of worship to shore up and foster the consolidation of
Christian life, especially in outlying areas. On the river
Nahe at the bigger centres, the odd church could already be found, but of course, these were simply not enough to serve all believers. It is clear that wherever the former monastery could draw income, there rose, too, the first churches, as in
Meckenbach,
Hundsbach and
Bollenbach.
Disibodenberg Abbey, which had risen once again, and which is said to have been Willigis's favourite monastery, was richly furnished with estates, income and tithes. It was up to the canons to spread their influence out from this hub, and thus every thread of their dealings now ran from their monastic seat. In the wild and untamed outlands of the Soon, no income from the old monastic landholds was forthcoming that Willigis could have used. He therefore sought a suitable place, finding it within the limits of the old royal estate of Monzingen, near the village of Auen, owned by a cleric named Wizelin. From this
secular priest, Willigis bought an
oxgang of land, which he must have found very convenient. In the 1128 document that first mentions Auen, the text does not go into church buildings on the newly acquired lot. It does, however, make clear that there was such a sale. It can be assumed, indeed it is likely, that Willigis found that there were still buildings or ruins on the land from
Roman times and he thus had no great difficulty building a church. Furthermore, there were quarries right nearby. It is known today that these buildings that the archbishop would have found here would have been of Roman origin. Perhaps, too, in this outlying area, they had survived the upheavals of the intervening time and had not sustained any serious damage. New knowledge came to light at the time of the renovation in 1978-1979, which yielded rich, informative finds that left no doubt but that the existing foundations are partly of Roman origin. It seems clear that even Willigis would have had qualms about coming to this forsaken land to build a church when even by the 16th century, records were still being made about how dangerous it was there for clergymen on their way to services. Willigis, so the story goes, consecrated this church in which he had put such great hope and named it
Geh-in-Kirche (or
Gehinkirche, but either way, meaning “Go-To-Church”) as an everlasting reminder to attend church assiduously, wanting as he did to deepen the Soonwald people's understanding of Christian teaching (it should perhaps be pointed out that the verb form,
Geh, is in the
imperative mood). On the other hand, differing opinions have it that this name is not original, but rather that it came from the local dialect, somehow linked to the name
Getzbach or
Götzbach, as the local brook was called. Anyone from outside or who was otherwise unfamiliar with the area would not quite gather anything meaningful from either of those names when applied to a church, for a name ending in
—bach (“brook”), while it might suit a village or a homestead – and would certainly suit a brook – did not quite go with a church. Whatever the old name's genesis was, when the chapel was reconstructed early in the 20th century – by which time it had fallen into ruin – it was realized in 1913 that no church had ever been consecrated to Willigis (it is true, though, that although he is often called “Saint Willigis”, he has never actually been
canonized). So, the two Catholic dioceses concerned,
Trier and
Mainz, agreed to give the chapel its new name:
Willigis-Kapelle (Saint Willigis's Chapel), after its builder. The new name, if it can still be called “new” after more than a century, is of the three names mentioned here still not the most widely used, which goes to show that new names do not always quickly sweep old ones away. “Getzbach”, despite any confusion that it may have caused earlier, is still the preferred name for the chapel among locals (“
Ich gehe auf die Getzbach” – “I’m going to the Getzbach”). The new and thus far only church was the hub of a great spiritual guidance area that stretched far across the Soonwald, all the way to
Gehlweiler, taking in the centres of not only Auen and Gehlweiler but also
Daubach, Eckweiler (forsaken in the late 20th century), Pferdsfeld (likewise),
Winterburg,
Ippenschied,
Seesbach,
Kellenbach and further places that later vanished. Churchgoers had to walk for hours to reach the chapel for services. The dead were buried at the church, too. There was a lichway (a path along which the dead were taken to the church and/or graveyard) running from the Soon to the church. The church soon became too small and Willigis had another church built near Seesbach, the
Sementis-Kapelle. It had been assumed that the church stood alone, away from the village of Auen. However, given what was found during excavations for the
retention basin, which brought to light ample material, it is now believed that a few houses and buildings stood on the other side of the brook. This is also seen in the water supply for the
Kneipp wading basin that formerly served people over there. Many documents are on hand dealing with the chapel's history. A timeline has been constructed out of some of them here: • 1128 — Founding of the
Geh in Kirche • 1259 — Archbishop Gerhard reserves the right to appoint the parish priest • 1273 — Sir Philipp, called Paffe, forgoes tithes • 1339 — Foundation of the
Mass • 1400 — Willigis's building supposedly burns down; reconstructed with nave in the
Gothic style • 1501 — Synodic
Weistum • 1515 — Synodic court • 1552 — Last priest, Venter, departs (
Reformation); becomes first
Reformed pastor in Pferdsfeld, after selling everything off with the
Schultheiß of Auen • 1560 — Reformation is introduced • 1564 — Niklas von Schmittburg has the right to appoint the pastor and is “collator” • 1568 — Parish seat is moved to Eckweiler when the rectory burns down • 1602 — Complaint about the church building's bad condition • 1608 — Church is on the point of collapse • 1630 — Reconstruction or renovation • 1685 — Copies of the 1501
Weistum by Gehlweiler, which instigated secession In the graveyard, people from Eckweiler,
Daubach, Auen and the Soonwald were henceforth also buried. Now and then, a funeral sermon was still delivered in the ruin, as it was for Friedrich Wilhelm Utsch (“the Hunter from
Electoral Palatinate”), as was a yearly sermon. The church, however, kept on falling further into disrepair. People removing the stone for their own building projects also did not help. A listing from 1876 gives a clear indication of how heavy the damage to the church was, and slowly, efforts arose to reconstruct it once again. In a relatively short time, this was finally done and the church was consecrated on 15 September 1912. The building work proceeded without much care taken as to old relics, and certainly a certain amount of destruction of important things resulted. Now, though, there were once more weekly services, weddings, christenings and burials. Through both world wars, little importance was placed on maintaining the building, and so considerable disrepair began to show up once more. In 1977 and 1979, a general overhaul by the parish of Rehbach and
make-work measures were carried out. During this work, finds from early history were made, some of them important, including proof that the church stood on Roman foundations; even
Celtic material was unearthed. At the
Priorhof (
Bad Sobernheim’s town
museum) an exhibit of the most important finds is on loan. Lying buried at the little forest graveyard are Friedrich Wilhelm Utsch, called “the Hunter from Electoral Palatinate”, and his wife and two children.
Evangelical church The
Lapis Primarius (“Foundation Stone”)
Evangelical church has an end window by Röhrig/Bensberg
Clubs The following clubs are active in Auen: •
Feuerwehr —
fire brigade •
Landfrauen — countrywomen's club •
Verschönerungsverein — beautification club ==Economy and infrastructure==