Bordering RD83, Hattstatt has an axis of effective service. The communal ban held various natural entities: the mountain, the wine industry and the plain: the landscape diversity characterizes the town which has a vertical drop of 600 m (200-826 m).
Hattstatt's history is intertwined with that of Upper Mundat Prince-Bishops of Strasbourg. The first mention of the village dates from 1129. For several centuries Hattstatt was the center of an important Lordship. The village was fortified. As the entire region, he suffered the ravages of the Thirty Years War. There are still vestiges of a door, ramparts and moats. In 1940 he was also bombarded by German artillery. Since the second half of the twentieth century, Hattstatt confirms its stamp village of vineyards, including the effort in restoring the picturesque houses.
Hattstatt The village has a rich built heritage. It can be divided into two distinct parts: the pole formed by the church Sainte-Colombe and the castle of the Lords of Hattstatt, and the village itself.