Finds of the
Neolithic era and during the
Roman period show an early settlement of this area. The town was first mentioned in writing in the
Lorsch codex of 766. Bertilo, Lord of Schwaigern, is first mentioned in 1120. The construction of a church is proved in the 13th century. Bertilo's descendants took on the name "Lords of Neipperg" in 1241, after their castle of Neipperg near
Brackenheim. In 1407 they also acquired the Lordship of Klingenberg near
Heilbronn. In 1702, Schwaigern became the residence of the Lords of Neipperg, who were elevated to the rank of counts in 1726. In 1766, the
County of Neipperg became an
Imperial State of the
Holy Roman Empire, mediatised to the
Kingdom of Württemberg in 1806. The last ruling count,
Adam Albert von Neipperg, married
Napoleon's widow
Marie Louise. The village received the right to hold a market in 1486. After 1630 the
Black Death killed a large proportion of the inhabitants. In 1690, during the
War of the Grand Alliance, the then
Schwaigern Castle was burned down. In 1806, the town came to
Württemberg by
mediatization and
Reichsdeputationshauptschluss. The castle was rebuilt until 1839 and is still today owned by the comital family of Neipperg. Several fires destroyed large areas of the medieval town centre in the 19th and 20th centuries. In 1971/1972 Massenbach, Stetten am Heuchelberg and Niederhofen were incorporated.
Religions The Lords of Neipperg became Protestants around 1530. Therefore, each of Schwaigern, Stetten am Heuchelberg and Niederhofen is a Protestant parish. Massenbach and Massenbachhausen have a common Protestant parish. In 1717,
Wilhelm Reinhard von Neipperg, the first count and an Imperial field marshal in the Habsburg service, returned to the Catholic Church. The Catholic parish
St. Martinus Schwaigern is responsible for Schwaigern, Stetten, Niederhofen and Neipperg (part of Brackenheim). The Catholic parish
St. Kilian Massenbachhausen is responsible for Massenbachhausen and Massenbach. Also the
New Apostolic Church has a parish in Schwaigern. The
Young People's Society of Christian Endeavour has local groups in Schwaigern, Stetten and Niederhofen. In Massenbach there is a local group of the
YMCA.
Districts • Massenbach: Massenbach was first mentioned in writing in 773. In the
Thirty Years' War the castle was destroyed and rebuilt in 1760. • Stetten am Heuchelberg: Stetten was mentioned in 1140 and came to Württemberg in 1571. • Niederhofen: Niederhofen is the youngest district, since it was first mentioned in 1332. But it already came to Württemberg in 1360. ==Politics==