Andermannsdorf
Andermannsdorf
Municipality Hohenthann
Coordinates: 48 ° 41 ′ 31 ″ N , 12 ° 6 ′ 18 ″ E
|
||
---|---|---|
Height : | 430 m above sea level NN | |
Residents : | 399 (Dec. 31, 2010) | |
Incorporation : | May 1, 1978 | |
Postal code : | 84098 | |
Area code : | 08784 | |
Location of Andermannsdorf in Bavaria |
||
Parish Church of St. Andrew
|
Andermannsdorf is a district of the municipality of Hohenthann in the Lower Bavarian district of Landshut .
geography
Andermannsdorf lies in the upper valley of the Kleine Laber and stretches on both sides of this stream. The place is located in the Hallertau , about four kilometers northeast of Hohenthann.
history
The archpriest Andarbod's possessions were reported as early as 822, and this is to be regarded as the first documented mention of Andermannsdorf. In the first centuries the Hofmark belonged to the Anderwoltsdorfer in the Kirchberg nursing court , and later to various other lords.
Andermannsdorf first appeared as a parish in 1347; the right of patronage lay with the Landshut Castle Chapel. Originally, however, Gatzkofen, a good one kilometer south-west, with the little church of St. Martin, whose history goes back a long way, was the parish seat of Andermannsdorf. In 1830, long after the parish seat was moved to Andermannsdorf, the village consisted of 22 houses.
The Andermannsdorf community was established in 1818 and was initially assigned to the Pfaffenberg district court ; from 1838 it belonged to the newly established district court Rottenburg and from 1862 to the district office of Rottenburg, before it became the district of Rottenburg . On January 1, 1949, the dissolved municipality of Kirchberg was accepted , and on May 1, 1978, it was incorporated into the Hohenthann municipality as part of the regional reform. Most recently, the Andermannsdorf community consisted of the following districts: Andermannsdorf, Eberstall, Gambachreuth, Gatzkofen, Kirchberg, Laber, Schmidhof and Zieglstadl.
In addition, Andermannsdorf was a school location until a few decades ago. It is unclear when the first school was built there; the existence of a school can be proven from 1769.
Attractions
- Parish church St. Andreas in Andermannsdorf (late Romanesque building of the 13th century, extended in 1687, with furnishings)
- Chapel of St. Martin in Gatzkofen (late Gothic building from 1519, with furnishings; other sacred buildings may have existed there before that, as Gatzkofen was the parish seat for Andermannsdorf)
societies
- Altar boys Andermannsdorf
- Burgschützen boar stable
- KDFB Andermannsdorf
- Andermannsdorf volunteer fire department
- KLJB Andermannsdorf
- Warrior and Soldier Association Andermannsdorf
- Laabertaler Stockschützen Andermannsdorf
- Traditional costume association Rahstorf
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Andermannsdorf . Regiowiki Niederbayern & Altötting. Retrieved June 18, 2013.