Bärmannsried

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bärmannsried is a district of the Lower Bavarian market Teisnach in the Regen district with 119 inhabitants (as of June 30, 2011).

geography

The village is located in a small basin between the mountains Berliner Kreuz (683 m), Vormittagsberg (650 m) and Kühberg (610 m), approx. 1.2 km from the Teisnach district of Kaikenried and 4.4 km from Teisnach. The village can only be reached by a local road to Kaikenried. A path leads north of Bärmannsried into the untouched valley of the Black Rain , which is also known as "Bavarian Canada". Neighboring villages are Kaikenried, Oed , Aschersdorf , Hofstatt and Altenmais .

history

Bärmannsried, formerly also written as Bermannsried or Permannsried, was first mentioned in a document on March 12, 1359 during a barter between Albrecht Nussberger and his father-in-law Altmann von Degenberg. Bärmannsried belonged to the Linden nursing court, which owned a farm in the village. In 1752 there were 4 properties in Bärmannsried. In 1818 the municipalities of Kaikenried, to which Bärmannsried belonged, Sohl and Teisnach were merged to form the municipality of Teisnach. In 1875 there were 52 residents in 9 properties. In 1951 Bärmannsried received electricity and in 1990 it was connected to the municipal sewage treatment plant and the water supply. In 2008 the Kraus family's large farm burned down completely. The owner Josef Kraus suffered serious injuries while trying to save the animals and had to be flown to the hospital. Some helpers also suffered from smoke inhalation. Except for seven cattle, all animals in the barn were rescued. The local village community has been putting up a maypole on the village square since 2013 after it was stolen from Kaikenried.

Legend

A legend has been told among the inhabitants for a long time. Allegedly, after the death of an old woman from Bärmannsried, her body was supposed to be carried with a coffin over an old forest path to the Teisnach cemetery. But during the transport, the pallbearers had to wade through a moor not far from the Kühberg summit. Suddenly they sank in, they dropped the heavy coffin into the swamp and ran away. When you came back to this place later, the moor had already swallowed the coffin. It is said that the old woman's bones still stand out of the swamp. As a reminder, a chapel was built not far from the alleged place where the coffin sank, which is often visited by hikers.

Web links

Coordinates: 49 ° 1 '  N , 13 ° 2'  E