The first European farmers cleared the forest in the present-day Herxheim region about 7,000 years ago during the
Neolithic Age and founded a settlement. The hamlet was originally enclosed with a double ring of elongated pits. The
Alemanni first settled the area in the third century followed by
Franconian settlers in the sixth century. The Franks often named their new home after their leader so it is assumed a Franconian leader name Hari or Heri who settled here with his clan. After the
Treaties of Nijmegen in 1678/79, Herxheim and all the communities south of the
Queich fell to the Sun
King Louis XIV of France. Thus Herxheim was part of the French state of
Bas-Rhin until 1815. After
Napoleon's second defeat in 1815, the
Second Treaty of Paris reassigned the areas north of the
Lauter to the
Kingdom of Bavaria. After
World War II, Herxheim became part of the newly formed state of
Rhineland-Palatinate within the
French occupation zone, thus ending the Bavarian era. Herxheim was included in a new district known as Landau-Bad Bergzabern which was formed in 1969 by merging the districts Landau and Bergzabern. In 1978, Landau-Bad Bergzabern was renamed to Südliche Weinstraße. The district is named after the first touristic route built in Germany in the 1930s, the
German Wine Route (Deutsche Weinstraße). == Festivities ==