Atzesberg (Altenfelden municipality)

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Atzesberg ( Rotte )
locality
Atzesberg (Altenfelden municipality) (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Rohrbach  (RO), Upper Austria
Pole. local community Altenfelden   ( KG  Altenfelden )
Coordinates 48 ° 28 '12 "  N , 13 ° 57' 30"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 28 '12 "  N , 13 ° 57' 30"  Ef1
height 531  m above sea level A.
Residents of the village 40 (January 1, 2020)
surface 12.52 km²
Post Code 4121f1
Statistical identification
Locality code 10829
Counting district / district Altenfelden area (41304 001)
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; DORIS
f0
f0
40

BW

Atzesberg is a group of the Altenfelden community in Upper Austria ( Rohrbach district ). The village was inhabited by 49 people in 2001.

geography

Atzesberg is a hamlet in the municipality of Altenfelden and is located around 2 kilometers south-southwest of Altenfelden's market square. Atzesberg can be reached from the center of Altenfelden via Wildparkstraße or Falkenstein Landesstraße (L 584). Atzesberg is bordered in the south by the Stockingerbach, which flows into the Große Mühl . Atzesberg is also bordered in the north by a brook that drains into the Große Mühl. In the east, the Große Mühl delimits the Atzesberg area. Due to the surrounding waters, the village is surrounded by extensive forests. Neighboring places are Hörhag in the west, Mayrhof, Grub and Gumpersberg in the south (all part of the municipality of Kirchberg ob der Donau ), Weigelsdorf and Edholz in the east (both part of the municipality of Kleinzell in the Mühlkreis ) and Neundling and Blumau in the northeast. A total of 15 buildings were counted for Atzesberg in 2001, with 12 buildings having a main residence and 24 apartments or 19 households. The village essentially consists of the Rotte itself, the Altenfelden wildlife park to the south and a farm further south as well as a few houses near the village of Neundling .

History and population

Atzesberg was first mentioned in documents in 1231. In Atzesberg, 52 people lived in ten houses in 1869. By 1910 the population rose to 75 people, with the village still comprising ten buildings. The population remained stable until 1923, but 11 buildings were counted. For the first time at Atzesberg, however, a distinction was made between the actual hamlet with three houses and 18 inhabitants and the scattered settlement with eight buildings and 57 inhabitants. In 1951 a total of 55 people lived in Meierhof, spread over the hamlet with 34 inhabitants and six buildings and the scattered settlement with four houses and 21 inhabitants. Until recently, the population fluctuated around 50, with 58 in 1961, 43 in 1971, 59 in 1981, 49 in 1991 and 49 in 2001 in Atzesberg.

Buildings

In the area of ​​the Altenfelden wildlife park is the Köhlparzer- or Wildparkhof, which was built in the second half of the 19th century. The four-sided courtyard has a historicist facade with a niche figure that presumably represents St. Hubertus. In the courtyard of the square there is a two wide arcade on pillars in front of the utility wing. Cap vaults have also been preserved in the former stable. A single-storey pull-out house from the mid-19th century belongs to the courtyard. There is also a decorated broad pillar with renewed pictures from 1846 near the courtyard.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Statistics Austria (ed.): Ortverzeichnis 2001. Oberösterreich. Vienna 2005
  2. Peter Adam, Beate Auer, u. a: Dehio Handbook Upper Austria. Volume 1, Mühlviertel. Verlag Berger, Horn, Vienna 2003, p. 31
  3. kk Central Statistical Commission (Ed.): Spezialortsrepertorium von Oberösterreich. Edited on the basis of the results of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1916, p. 100
  4. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Directory of Austria. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of March 7, 1923. Vienna 1930, p. 19 Upper Austria
  5. ^ Austrian Central Statistical Office (ed.): Local directory of Austria. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of June 1, 1951. Vienna 1953, p. 93 Upper Austria.