First traces of a settlement here derive from vessels found dating back to 3500-1800 BC. Germanic tribes settled here during the early Roman period known as the "neckarsuebische". The town is first mentioned in the year 767 AD as Chirichheim in the
Lorsch Codex. It belonged to the Kurpfalz and formed the heart of an administrative unit called Zent. The early medieval village was composed of three fields, where related settlements were combined by the formation of a central church of representatives of the "fraenisch" kingdom. Hence the name Kirchheim. The village was largely destroyed in the
Thirty Years' War. Reconstruction efforts were subsequently thwarted when the village was once again burned during the
Palatine war of succession. Kirchheim repopulated slowly, with 350 people in 1766 and 2,000 in 1861. The building of a station on the
Rhine Valley Railway in 1865 brought industry to the village. In 1920 Kirchheim was annexed to Heidelberg, at which point building boomed and the population swelled to 8,000. Today, Kirchheim has five buslines and one tramline. With a population of 16,469 (2021), it is the second most populous district of Heidelberg. ==Neighboring towns==