The Ober-Flörsheim local history museum is located in a representative commandery building of the Teutonic Order from the middle of the 18th century. Today it also serves as a village community centre. Ober-Flörsheim was home to the southernmost branch of this Roman Catholic religious order until 1797, when all of its property was confiscated when France took over the left bank of the Rhine and later sold to private individuals. The local history museum's exhibition shows how closely the history of the village is linked to the Teutonic Order, which controlled the fortunes of the Ober-Flörsheim branch from 1237 to 1797. The collections of the Ober-Flörsheim local history museum also include implements and tools from agriculture, viticulture, household and crafts. One focus is on the Rhine-Hessian pottery trade, which once provided wages and bread in twenty villages in the area and has since died out (Text: Museumsportal-rlp). Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
