Beurenhof

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Beurenhof around 1980 from a bird's eye view

The Beurenhof , which belongs to the local community Treis-Karden in the Rhineland-Palatinate district of Cochem-Zell and is located on the Beurenkern , is one of the five courtyards belonging to the Treis district, which also includes a half-timbered chapel from the 17th or 18th century, which is a listed building.

history

The Beurenhof was mentioned for the first time in a lease from the Karden St. Castor monastery from 1234. This is the earliest mention of a Treis-Karden farm that still exists today. Originally probably the property of the Frei von Treis , part of the court was later a fiefdom of the Dompropstei Trier, with which the families von Eltz, von dem Geisbusch, Schönhals von Albrechtsrode, von Arenthal and Greiffenclau zu Vollrads were enfeoffed until the 19th century.

Margaretha Frei von Treis donated part of the farm between 1262 and 1275 to the Maria Engelport monastery , which shared a common courtier with the aristocratic owners.

Courtiers and bourgeois owners

The Zilles-Kläsges family around 1930 in front of their home

The first courtiers (tenants) were the Seitz families (documented in 1601), Fohrmann, Esch (from 1647) and Bleser (from approx. 1662 to 1805).

As part of the secularization that took place during the so-called French era , the tenant Michael Bleser bought the various farm shares from 1805. Between the 1820s and 1860s, the Brachtendorf, Mais, Halfen and Wellems families followed as owners for a few years each. The Ring and Zilles-Kläsges-Pies families that followed towards the end of the 19th century are still based at the Beurenhof today.

literature

  • Norbert J. Pies and Klaus Layendecker: The Beuren farm on the Treiser Berge. In: Communications of the West German Society for Family Studies 1985 Volume 32 Issue 2 pp. 35–40.
  • Norbert J. Pies: The Beuren and Kreuzert farms in the municipality of Treis-Karden. Frechen 1988. ISBN 3-927049-01-8 .
  • Norbert J. Pies: The Beuren and Kreuzert farms in the municipality of Treis-Karden. Additions - supplements - corrections. 1. Delivery. Frechen 1988. ISBN 3-927049-03-4 .
  • Norbert J. Pies: Why were the Treiser castles a bone of contention between the emperor, count palatine and archbishop? In: Von Häckedetz and Stiftshere. History and stories of Treis-Karden Volume 3. Treis-Karden 2006 pp. 67–82 ISBN 3-927049-42-5 .
  • Markus Sausen: The Huss called Wildenburg - The history of the Treiser Wildburg. In: Von Häckedetz and Stiftshere. History and stories of Treis-Karden Volume 7. Treis-Karden 2016 pp. 160–205.

Individual evidence

  1. State Main Archive Koblenz Stock 99 No. 480.

Coordinates: 50 ° 8 ′ 2.8 ″  N , 7 ° 17 ′ 14.9 ″  E