Büttelei Hagenbach

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The Büttelei Hagenbach was a historical administrative district in the south of today's Palatinate in the Middle Ages and in the early modern period .

scope

The villages Hagenbach and Dreimühlen (Drimühlen) belonged to the Büttelei Hagenbach .

history

The "Büttelei" corresponded in its function to a small office .

In the two partitions of the Lichtenberg rule , which took place around 1330 and 1335, the Büttelei is mentioned as part of this rule . It is the part of the country of the "middle line", the descendants of Ludwig III. von Lichtenberg , assigned. A peculiarity is that although the Büttelei entirely, the village of Hagenbach only belonged to half of the Lichtenberg lordship and the Lichtenbergers in Dreimühlen possibly only had individual rights.

In 1396 the bailiff was part of the pledge that secured the dowry on the occasion of the marriage of Adelheid von Lichtenberg, daughter of Johann IV von Lichtenberg , with Johann von Finstingen . This pledge later came to Nassau-Saarbrücken and was only released again in 1544 under the successors of the Lichtenbergers, the Counts of Hanau-Lichtenberg .

literature

  • Fritz Eyer: The territory of the Lords of Lichtenberg 1202-1480. Investigations into the property, the rule and the politics of domestic power of a noble family from the Upper Rhine . In: Writings of the Erwin von Steinbach Foundation . 2nd edition, unchanged in the text, by an introduction extended reprint of the Strasbourg edition, Rhenus-Verlag, 1938. Volume 10 . Pfaehler, Bad Neustadt an der Saale 1985, ISBN 3-922923-31-3 (268 pages).

Remarks

  1. The place could not (yet) be identified. It is probably a desert (see: Eyer, p. 55, note 27).

Individual evidence

  1. Eyer, p. 240.
  2. Eyer, p. 79.
  3. Eyer, p. 79.
  4. Eyer, p. 103.
  5. Eyer, p. 103.