The area has been continuously settled since the
Stone Age. The first recorded mention of Binsdorf dates to 834, and Geislingen was officially documented in 1188. In 1764,
Carl von Ulm zu Erbach issued the
Decretum für das Amt Beeder Herrschaften Werenwag und Callenberg ("Decree for the Office of the Two Lordships of Werenwag and Callenberg"), addressing poverty and supporting textile production. Under Württemberg rule, an alley of fruit trees was planted as an
easement, with orchards managed by
William I of Württemberg and the
Moravian Church providing free fruit. By 1863, the orchards produced a variety of apples and pears, including traditional regional cultivars such as
Luiken,
Winterling, and
Fleiner apples; baking pears, sugar pears, and green pears; as well as heritage varieties like the
Goldparmäne, rose apples, and leather-skinned apples. Other locally named types included "little bell" and "little cask" pears (
Glöcklesbirnen,
Fäßlesbirnen), broadlings (
Breitlinge), and Bergamot pears. In 1941, a protest occurred in Geislingen against the Nazi Party. In 1990, a fruit tree arboretum was established in Erlaheim. == Economy ==