Bergnershof

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Bergnershof
City of Treuchtlingen
Coordinates: 48 ° 56 ′ 48 ″  N , 10 ° 56 ′ 35 ″  E
Height : 486 m above sea level NN
Residents : (2014)
Postal code : 91757
Area code : 09142
Bergnershof, embedded in the landscape
Bergnershof up close
Bergnershof, old lime tree avenue

Bergnershof is a district of the town of Treuchtlingen in the central Franconian district of Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen in Bavaria .

location

The wasteland is northeast of Dietfurt near Treuchtlingen on the Jura height. It can be reached via the Sommerhausstraße which begins in Dietfurt. Another access option is the district road WUG 11 leading from Pappenheim in the direction of Osterdorf , which joins the federal road 2 .

Place name interpretation

The place name means "to the court of Berenger".

history

In the 12th century, the aristocratic landlords of the area began to advance into the forests and establish clearing settlements or to expand their existing properties by means of new breaches. This is likely to have been the origin of Bergnershof. According to Pappenheimer Urbar of 1214, the two farms of "Bergershoue" belonged to the Pappenheim rule. In 1300, the fief "Perngershouen" paid interest to the St. Walburg monastery in Eichstätt. In 1411 Heinrich von Pappenheim sold the "Päringershof" to the Wirich von Treuchtlingen "for many years of use". In 1427 the people of Pappenheim had to pledge the hamlet. In 1586, Marshal Veit Hipolyt von Pappenheim bought Bergnershof back from Leonhard Funk. Ecclesiastically, the farm belonged to the district of the Protestant community of Dietfurt. The high court gallows of the Pappenheim rulers stood near the Bergnershof ; Remnants of what was probably a medieval round wall are still present.

In the new Kingdom of Bavaria , Bergnershof was added to the Dietfurt tax district in 1808, which became the Dietfurt rural community when the community was formed in 1818 . This was incorporated into Treuchtlingen on May 1, 1978 as part of the regional reform .

The farm with its manor and administrator's house, a two-storey saddle roof building, probably from the 17th / 18th centuries. Century, which was renewed in 1856, was owned by the Counts of Pappenheim until the 1970s. In 1984 it was reported that the "now restored farm" was dominated by grain and sugar beet cultivation.

After 17 people lived in two buildings in 1824, the number of inhabitants soared to 30 in the immediate post-war years, which were characterized by flight and displacement (so in 1950 in four buildings). In 2012, six people lived in Bergnershof.

See also

List of architectural monuments in Treuchtlingen

literature

  • Erich Strassner: rural and urban district of Weißenburg i. Bay. Series of Historical Place Name Book of Bavaria. Middle Franconia, Vol. 2 . Munich: Commission for bayer. State history 1966.
  • Hanns Hubert Hofmann: Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Franconia. Row I, Issue 8, Gunzenhausen-Weißenburg. Munich 1960.
  • Treuchtlingen home book. 1984.

Individual evidence

  1. Heimatbuch Treuchtlingen, p. 128; Strassner, p. 5
  2. Strassner, 23 *, p. 5
  3. Hofmann, p. 107
  4. a b Heimatbuch Treuchtlingen, p. 128
  5. Hofmann, p. 245 f.
  6. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer GmbH, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 731 .
  7. Hofmann, p. 245
  8. Müller's Large German Local Book 2012 . Munich 2012, p. 127

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