Office Fladungen

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The Fladungen office was an office of the Würzburg bishopric .

function

In the early modern period , offices were a level between the municipalities and the sovereignty . The functions of administration and jurisdiction were not separated here. The office was headed by a bailiff who was appointed by the rulers. The Fladungen office was also the central office , i.e. the district of the high court.

history

The starting point for exercising power in the area was the Hildenburg. This came in 1230 from Count Otto von Henneberg to the Hochstift Würzburg.

The statistics of the Hochstift Würzburg from 1699 name 859 subjects in the 1st city and 11 villages. The following were deducted from the office as annual income for the bishopric: Appraisal : 130 Reichstaler, 3 Batzen, excise and ungeld : 370 fl and smoke pound : 873 pounds.

After the transition to Electoral Palatinate Bavaria in 1802, the office was dissolved and the places were mainly assigned to the Fladungen district court .

scope

At the end of the HRR , the office consisted of the town of Fladungen , Hildenburg and the towns of Brüchs , Ginolfs , Hausen , Heufurt , Leubach , Nordheim , Oberelsbach , Oberfladungen , Roth , Rüdenschrecken and Unterelsbach .

cent

The cents included the official locations and Frankenheim , Haubenstein , Hoflar , Malpers , Oberwaldbehrungen , Sondheim , Stetten , Urspringen , Weisbach and Wermers .

The main dish was held in bourgeois matters in the inn and as a neck dish under a linden tree at the lower gate. The pillory is opposite the office building . The place of execution had been at the Untertor since 1590. In 1812 the gallows stones and the court yard were sold.

Office building

Office building

The prince-bishopric of Würzburg was built in 1628 next to the parish church.

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Hans-Joachim Zimmermann: Courts and execution sites in Hochstiftisch-Würzburg administrative and rural sites, Diss. 1976, p. 128