Agenbach settlement

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Agenbach settlement (location component f0)
Agenbachsiedlung (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Innsbruck-Land  (IL), Tyrol
Judicial district innsbruck
Pole. local community Ampass
Locality Ampass
Coordinates (K) 47 ° 15 '51 "  N , 11 ° 28' 8"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 15 '51 "  N , 11 ° 28' 8"  E
height 614  m above sea level A.
Post Code 6070 Ampass
Statistical identification
Counting district / district Ampass (70303 000)
image
Address area Agenbachsiedlung on the right, separated from Ampasser Straße in the middle. In the background Groebental.
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; TIRIS ;
(K) Coordinate not official
f0
f0

The Agenbach settlement is located in the south-eastern low mountain range not far from Innsbruck in Tyrol and belongs to the municipality of Ampass in the Innsbruck-Land district .

geography

Original homesteads Agenbach on L283

The settlement is located southeast of Innsbruck, directly east of the center of Ampass, above the Inn. It lies at an altitude of around 610  m above sea level. A.

The location includes most of Ampass. The actual address area Agenbachsiedlung, which is located on the eastern slope of the Mensplateau, is only part of it. Other associated streets are the Winkelweg, Gartenweg, Feilsweg, Mühlenweg, Gröbentalweg and the beginning of the Römerstraße. The latter also connects Agenbach with the village center in the west.

Here the Gröbentalbach flows out of the small Gröbental into the Herztalbach from Ampass and the Ampasser Straße ( L283 ) flows into the L38.

Neighboring places:
Industrial zone Hall-Thaur (Gem.  ThaurHall iT )
Inn
Neighboring communities Houses

History, culture and infrastructure

The wooded ridge from the Ampasser Kirchbühel is a well-developed lateral moraine where the Wipptal glacier joins the Inn glacier .

Agenbach was originally the name of the small farm on the road from Häuser up to Ampass. This property was first documented as early as 1147/50 as "in Intal in Ampach iuxta fluvium Enum" in the records of the Admont Monastery .

This Römerstraße (L 38 Ellbögener Straße ) is actually one, a byway of the Brennerstraße from the Wipptal via Lans - Aldrans directly to Hall (Salzstraße) . On the terrace corridor below (Im Winkel) , between Mensboden and Sonnenbichl , ancient litter finds could be collected: Ampass and Sonnenbühel are secured as pre-Roman and Roman settlement areas. These are small bronze and gold finds, some from the late Latène period , some from the early and middle imperial period , including fibulae .

The farmers - Seppeler (Römerstraße 4), Schöberl (Römerstraße 5), Peterer (Römerstraße 7) and the Hof Römerstraße 6 - are noted as characteristic Einhöfe in the Tyrolean art cadastre, as is the Marienbrunnen and the Dorfbrunnen .

The actual address area Agenbachsiedlung comprises a good 30 houses and was created in the 1970s.

proof

  1. Heimo Schier: Contribution to the Quaternary geology of the Inn valley between Aldrans and Ampass. In: Geo.Alp , Vol. 9, 2012, especially Figure 2: Lateral moraine north of the Agenbach settlement in the municipality of Ampass , p. 76 ( entire article p. 74–81, pdf , uibk.ac.at, p. 3 there) .
  2. Third country survey 1864/1887, layer in TIRIS: Historische Kartenwerke Tirol ; Aerial photo of Innsbruck 1940 in laser and aerial photo atlas Tyrol
  3. Martin Bitschnau , Hannes Obermair : Tiroler Urkundenbuch, II. Department: The documents on the history of the Inn, Eisack and Pustertal valleys. Volume 2: 1140-1200 . Universitätsverlag Wagner, Innsbruck 2012, ISBN 978-3-7030-0485-8 , p. 51-52, no. 430 .
  4. Dorothea Mair: Grenzgebiet und Zentrum: A synopsis of selected finds from the Roman Empire to the early Middle Ages as well as excerpts from the excavations in the Widumfeld in 1999 and 2000. Findtopographie KG Ampass (online article on uibk.ac.at); to the article Border area and center: Finds from the Roman Empire to the early Middle Ages. In: Gerald Grabherr, Barbara Kainrath (Hrsg.): Archäologische Topographie der Siedlungskammer Ampass (= Innsbrucker classical archaeological university publications 4). Innsbruck 2009, pp. 245-500.