Altenhausen (Schwäbisch Hall)

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Altenhausen
Coordinates: 49 ° 7 ′ 15 "  N , 9 ° 47 ′ 34"  E
Height : approx. 392 m above sea level NHN
Coat of arms Unmuß von Altenhausen; Haller Chronik after Georg Widman and Johann Herolt, Hs. Around 1600
Coat of arms Unmuß von Altenhausen; J. Siebmacher- The renewed and augmented Teutsche Wappenbuch ..., first part, Nuremberg (Paulus Fürst) 1657, bar 115, see also Volume 5, bar 254

Altenhausen is a part of the Schwäbisch Hall district of Tüngental .

history

Locality

The hamlet is occupied in 1248 as "Old Husen" and was comburgischer possession. In 1972 the place was incorporated into Schwäbisch Hall together with the other hamlets belonging to Tüngental , Veinau , Otterbach , Ramsbach and Wolpertsdorf .

Noble

From 1228 to 1361 this nobility was known as Unmuss von Altenhausen or Unmuß von Altenhausen. They were limpurgic servants and patricians from Schwäbisch Hall.

Castle

In the 13./14. In the 18th century, the castle of the Altenhausen family was occupied. In Schwäbisch Hall , Unmuß von Altenhausen owned a courtyard, in which there was a house chapel donated in 1322 and in its place the Gothic hall church of St. Maria am Schuppach was built from 1464 to 1467 . The foundation was preceded by the destruction of Altenhausen Castle by the Schwäbisch Hallers. A brother of Unmuß von Altenhausen rebuilt the castle. The Burgstadel with lake was passed on from the von Bachenstein family to the Spital zu Hall in 1481 . The castle hill was preserved along with the wide moat that forms a square.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Herta Beutter, Armin Panther (ed.): Impressions from Hohenlohe. Views from Schwäbisch Hall and its surroundings by Johann Friedrich Reik (1836 - 1904). (On the occasion of the exhibition "Impressions from Hohenlohe. Views from Schwäbisch Hall and its surroundings by Johann Friedrich Reik (1836 - 1904)" from July 3 to September 26, 1999 in the Hällisch-Fränkisches Museum in Schwäbisch Hall. Black and white photogr. by Roland Bauer). Umschau / Braus, Heidelberg 1999, p. 180f. ISBN 3-8295-6322-1 , p. 40 [St. Maria am Schuppach]
  2. ^ Eugen Gradmann : The art and antiquity monuments of the city and the Oberamt Schwäbisch-Hall . Paul Neff Verlag, Esslingen a. N. 1907, OCLC 31518382 ( archive.org ). P. 56 Demolished pilgrimage chapel dedicated to St. Maria in Schuppachgasse and p. 88 Hall. Schuppachkirche (canceled)