- Senden to the north - Weißenhorn to the east - Bellenberg to the south - Illerrieden, Baden-Württemberg, to the west The settlement of Vöhringen may have developed by the 5th or 6th century, when the Alamanni migrating from the Danube settled the Swabian river valleys.
Veringen, as it is called in several 12th-century documents, underwent several changes of overlordship in the 15th century and finally became Bavarian in 1756 under Elector Max Joseph of Bavaria, earlier than the neighbouring settlements.
Vöhringen was decisively changed by industrialisation beginning in 1864, when factory owner Philipp Jakob Wieland bought the local mill, its attached workshop and the water power to run them.
[3] The Wolfgang-Eychmüller-Haus, opened in 1993 and named for the former chairman of the Board of Wieland Works and honorary citizen of Vöhringen, is the social and cultural centre of the town and the surrounding region.
Clubs, associations and artistically and culturally creative people of all kinds make active and frequent use of the spaces which it offers.
Its main hall, seating approximately 600, is a venue suited to numerous events including meetings, concerts, theatrical performances and also weddings and other celebrations.