The first documented mention of Forchheim dates back to the year 762 a.D. when
Bishop Eddo of Strasbourg bequeathed the place to the Ettenheimmünster monastery. The name Forchheim comes from the Old High German (
Alemannic)
forcha and means pine. The ending
-heim is typical for settlements from the time of the
Kingdom of the Franks. The manorial rule remained with the Ettenheimmünster monastery for several hundred years; local rule was exercised by the respective district counts in Breisgau – first by the House of Zähringen, later by the Counts of Freiburg and the Counts Palatine of Tübingen with whom sovereignty fell to Further Austria in the 15th century (History on the sovereignty of the Austrians in the Vorderösterreich Museum in Endingen). In 1803 Forchheim became part of Baden. In 1843, 358 citizens, mostly craftsmen and their families, emigrated from the Kaiserstuhl area to Venezuela via Le Havre due to bad harvests, poverty and unemployment. They came primarily from Endingen am Kaiserstuhl, Wyhl and Oberbergen, but there were also 31 well-known people from Forchheim. After some turmoil, they found a new home in
Colonia Tovar, where they were able to preserve the local culture and the Alemannic dialect to this day. In 1952 Forchheim came to the newly formed state of Baden-Württemberg as a Baden municipality. Since Forchheim voluntarily reorganized its administration before the regional reform in Baden-Württemberg in the 1970s and merged with Endingen am Kaiserstuhl to form an administrative community, the town was able to maintain its political independence. The collaboration with Endingen am Kaiserstuhl ultimately resulted in the municipal administration association Nördlicher Kaiserstuhl, which also includes the communities of Bahlingen am Kaiserstuhl, Riegel am Kaiserstuhl, Sasbach am Kaiserstuhl and Wyhl am Kaiserstuhl. == Municipal council ==