Antiquity Archaeological finds bear witness to
prehistoric human habitation in the environs. Within almost every neighbouring municipality’s limits, untouched prehistoric graves have been unearthed, while in Konken itself, it is suspected that there are such graves in the Hohe Warte area. Richer have been finds in Konken from
Gallo-Roman times. Building work in 1966 brought to light the remnants of a
villa rustica when its foundations were dug up.
Artefacts were unearthed there as well, such as coins and ceramics, as well as a
terra sigillata plate with the stamped inscription
VERECUNDUS. Some of these finds were given to the
museum in
Speyer while others ended up in private ownership. There have also been finds from several other estates.
Middle Ages Konken is without a doubt one of the oldest places in the so-called
Remigiusland. In the 9th-century holding and taxation register kept by the
Abbey of Saint-Remi in
Reims, the
Polyptique, one can read:
Census de Conchis. Uno anno XX solidos et VIIII denarios et obulum. In festo Sancti Martini iiii liberas et iii solidos; de sartis iii solidos. Medio martio v solidos de capitalicio. Ad natale Domini x solidos; de oblationibus pullos xxv; cum unoquoque x ova … de mappagiis xxv modios et dimidium de avena, de siligine xii modios et dimidium. While this in itself is a rather dull recitation of taxes levied on the village, it does offer a window on Konken’s early past. Translated from the
Mediaeval Latin, it comes out as follows:Revenues from Konken: in one year 20
solidi and 8
denarii and a small donation. At
Saint Martin’s festival 4 pounds and 3 solidi; from the workers 3 solidi, in mid-March 5 solidi in capital. On the Lord’s birthday 10 solidi; in chickens 25; at the same time also 10 eggs … furthermore 25 and a half bushels of
oats, in
legumes 12 and a half bushels. It is unclear, however, which standard of “
bushel” was being used. Nevertheless, what is indeed clear is that when the figures given here for Konken are compared against those for the eighteen other
Remigiusland places listed in this
Polyptique, Konken comes out as one of the wealthiest places in the whole region. The name’s pre-Germanic origins might lead one to the assumption that there was continuous settlement in what is now Konken beginning in Gallo-Roman times. The name “Konken”, though, furnishes no such proof. Theoretically, it could be a settlement from Gallo-Roman times, but what is likelier is that it arose in
Frankish times, and simply has a pre-Germanic name drawn from a name still borne at that time by a local waterway. According to this view, Konken would have arisen as a
Germanic village in its seashell-shaped dale whose pre-Germanic name was still known. Be that as it may, the village is still surely one of the oldest places in the countryside around
Kusel. The time when the village actually arose, however, cannot be ascertained through documents. It is believed that a village grew up bit by bit around a
chapel. It was throughout the
Middle Ages as seat of an
Unteramt and as the hub of a parish always a place of greater importance than many. In 1112, Count Gerlach I, a scion of the Counts of the
Nahegau, founded the new
County of Veldenz and also exercised the
Schutzvogtei (roughly “lord protectorship”) over the
Remigiusland. In 1124,
Archbishop Adalbert of Mainz confirmed to Abbot Odo of the Abbey of Saint-Remi in Reims the Church of Kusel with its three affiliated churches in Konken,
Altenglan and
Pfeffelbach. In 1270, Heinrich von Geroldseck founded the Younger Line of Veldenz. In a 1326 document, Count Georg of Veldenz obliged the “
Amt of Konken” to pay the knight Sir Harnisch of
Bitsch a yearly amount of 100
Heller. That the
Amt of
Concken also had to pay the knight Sir Johann of Randeck, one of Count of Veldenz Heinrich II’s
Burgmannen, 15 pounds in Heller is something that comes to light in a 1339 document. At that time, the count’s young wife, Agnes, was granted the
Amt of Konken as a
morning gift. All five
Schultheißen (head officials in the
Unterämter) in the
Remigiusland appear in a 1385 document from Counts Heinrich III and Friedrich II of Veldenz, among them one named as “Clays in Concken”. In 1444, the County of Veldenz met its end when Count Friedrich III of Veldenz died without a male heir. His daughter
Anna wed
King Ruprecht’s son
Count Palatine Stephan. By uniting his own Palatine holdings with the now otherwise heirless County of Veldenz – his wife had inherited the county, but not her father’s title – and by redeeming the hitherto pledged County of Zweibrücken, Stephan founded a new County Palatine, as whose comital residence he chose the town of
Zweibrücken: the County Palatine – later Duchy – of
Palatinate-Zweibrücken. Beginning in the
Middle Ages, Konken was a
market centre. From all over the region came the dealers and farmers to the
Martinimarkt (“
Saint Martin’s Day Market”). Later a
Sommermarkt (“Summer Market”) was also held. By the mid 18th century, marketgoers could reach the market on one of the district’s few paved roads.
Modern times Konken now shared the Duchy’s history until this new state itself came to an end in the time of the
French Revolution. Surviving from 1556 is a
Weistum from the village (a
Weistum –
cognate with
English wisdom – was a legal pronouncement issued by men learned in law in the
Middle Ages and early modern times) which deals mainly with how high the taxes were that had to be paid. Like all the Kusel region’s villages, Konken, too, suffered greatly from the
Plague and the
Thirty Years' War, the latter being particularly frightful in the Konken area. According to an
Oberamt of Lichtenberg ecclesiastical organizational protocol, in 1609 – nine years before the war – there were 127 inhabitants living in Konken, all of whose names were recorded. As a rule, no village in the region had anywhere near 100 inhabitants. The village’s importance could also be seen in the taxes assessed for it, which were notably higher than for the neighbouring villages. During the Thirty Years' War, though, all the inhabitants left the village. Most were likely killed, particularly given the 1635
massacre by
Croatian troops from the
Imperial army, and in the end, Konken, along with its church, was burnt down. After the war ended in 1648, newcomers mainly from
Switzerland and the
Tyrol bolstered the now almost annihilated pre-war population, although some of the
refugees came back, too. By 1675, Konken once again had nine families and roughly 36 inhabitants. Then, towards the end of the 17th century came the plundering by
French King
Louis XIV’s troops, which further reduced the population. From that time onwards, however, steady expansion with strong population growth set in, and already by the 18th century, some villagers were
leaving to seek their fortunes abroad.
Recent times In the time of
Napoleonic
French rule from 1801 to 1814, the village was the seat of a
mairie (“mayoralty”) in the
Department of
Sarre, the
Arrondissement of Birkenfeld and the
Canton of Kusel. The
Congress of Vienna grouped the region in 1816 with the
Kingdom of Bavaria. In this Bavarian time that followed, beginning in 1818, Konken became the seat of a
Bürgermeisterei (“mayoralty”) within the
Baierischer Rheinkreis (“Bavarian Rhine District”), the
Landkommissariat (later
Bezirksamt, then
Landkreis) of Kusel and the Canton of Kusel. Later, the cantons only had a very minor meaning. In the course of administrative restructuring in
Rhineland-Palatinate in 1968, the mayoralty of Konken was dissolved on 1 January 1972. Since then, Konken has formed an
Ortsgemeinde within the
Verbandsgemeinde of Kusel. In 1999, Konken celebrated what was at the time believed to be the 875th anniversary of its first documentary mention (1124), at which time a comprehensive village chronicle was also published.
Population development Konken was originally said to be purely a farming village, but in the late 18th century, the share of the population held by workers was rising steadily, and by the
First World War, they were in the majority. Going by religious affiliation,
Evangelical Christians predominate even today. There was a
Jewish community in the village quite early on. Comparatively, even today a great portion of the population earns its livelihood at
agriculture, although as a whole, the inhabitants work at the most varied of occupations, and many must seek jobs elsewhere. Between 1825 and 1961, the population figures doubled, whereas the growth curve flattened significantly in the 20th century. The following table shows population development over the centuries for Konken, with some figures broken down by religious denomination:
Municipality’s name It is highly likely that the name Konken is of
Celtic origin, although it clearly did not arise from a pre-Germanic settlement. The name appeared as early as the 9th century in the
Polyptique kept by the Abbey of Saint-Remi in Reims in the form
Conchis, and again in an 1124 document as
Chonchis. Other forms that cropped up in later records are
Concham (1152),
Concka (1270),
Kuncke (1298),
Conken (1304),
Kuncha (1328),
Kuncken (1377) and Konken (1824). The word originally meant “seashell”, which may well have been a reference to the broad, seashell-shaped dale in which the village lies. Local historians, however, have derived the name from the
Latin conca, with its similar meaning of
oyster,
scallop or more broadly
mollusk, apparently also a reference to the local geography. A seashell also stands as a
charge in the municipality’s
coat of arms. ==Religion==