Seligenstadt
About Seligenstadt
Seligenstadt is a town in the Offenbach district in the Regierungsbezirk of Darmstadt in Hesse, Germany. Seligenstadt is one of Germany's most seasoned towns and was at that point of extraordinary significance in Carolingian occasions. Seligenstadt is one of 13 towns and networks in the Offenbach district. The town lies on the stream Main's left bank about 25 km southeast of Frankfurt am Main, straightforwardly neighboring Bavaria.
Seligenstadt outskirts in the north on the network of Hainburg, in the east on the network of Karlstein, in the southeast on the network of Mainhausen, in the south on the town of Babenhausen Darmstadt-Dieburg and in the west on the town of Rodgau. Seligenstadt is situated in the Hanau-Seligenstadt Basin, a Cenozoic subsidence bowl between the nearby good countries of Spessart and Odenwald. Quaternary fluvial stores of the stream Main overlying Pliocene, lignite bearing successions and Miocene sands and marls structure the subsurface of the town. At some point about AD 100, amid the rule of Roman Emperor Trajan, a companion castrum was based on what is currently Seligenstadt's commercial center and parts of its old town.