Bogenhof

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Bogenhof
City of Velburg
Coordinates: 49 ° 15 ′ 59 "  N , 11 ° 38 ′ 13"  E
Height : 520 m
Residents : (1987)
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Postal code : 92355
Area code : 09182

Bogenhof is an officially named district of the city of Velburg in the Neumarkt district in Upper Palatinate in Bavaria .

Place name

The place name can be interpreted as "to the courtyard at the arch, at the bend".

Geographical location

Bogenhof is located in the Upper Palatinate Jura of the Franconian Alb about 2 km northeast of Deusmauer in the Bogenhofer Höhe corridor at 520 m above sea ​​level .

traffic

Bogenhof can be reached via a local road that branches off from the NM 25 district road and continues to the Velburg district of Richthof .

history

The wasteland in the Bavarian-ducal, from 1505 Palatinate-Neuburg and later Bavarian-electoral rule of Helfenberg , each given to aristocrats, is recorded on an official board of the rule in 1588. At the end of the Old Kingdom , around 1800, the subject Kellermann sat on the property .

In the Kingdom of Bavaria (1806), the Deusmauer tax district was formed in the Parsberg district court around 1810 , to which, in addition to Deusmauer, the deserted Bogenhof and Wasenmeisterhütte belonged. With the municipality edict of May 15, 1818 it was the Rural Municipality Deusmauer that from the village Deusmauer and deserts Bogenhof and Fallmeisterei existed. Lived in the solitude of Bogenhof

  • 1836 16 inhabitants (2 houses),
  • 1867 9 inhabitants (4 buildings),
  • 1875 12 inhabitants (6 buildings; 6 head of cattle of large livestock),
  • 1900 7 inhabitants (1 residential building),
  • 1925 13 inhabitants (1 residential building),
  • 1938 10 inhabitants (7 Catholics, 3 Protestants),
  • 1950 14 inhabitants (2 residential buildings).
  • In 1987 the district consisted of a residential building that was uninhabited.

In the course of the Bavarian regional reform on January 1, 1972, the municipality of Deusmauer and thus also the Bogenhof was incorporated into the city of Velburg.

Today Gut Bogenhof is used as a Christmas tree plantation.

Church conditions

The Bogenhof belonged to the Catholic parish Oberwiesenacker in the Eichstätter diocesan area from time immemorial . The parish became Lutheran under Pfalz-Neuburg in 1552. Recatholization took place in 1626. All subjects had to change their faith, including the residents of the Bogenhof. At the Bogenhof there is a listed Lady Chapel from the 18th century.

Say of driving away sparrows

A traveling game shooter who spent the night in the Bogenhof drove the sparrows away in gratitude; therefore, no sparrows have been found there since time immemorial.

literature

  • Franz Xaver Buchner : The diocese of Eichstätt. Volume II, Eichstätt: Brönner & Däntler, 1938
  • Manfred Jehle: Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Old Bavaria, volume 51: Parsberg , Munich 1981

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Collective sheet of the historical association Eichstätt 38 (1923), p. 11
  2. Jehle, p. 334
  3. Jehle, p. 493
  4. Jehle, p. 532
  5. Jehle, pp. 541, 548
  6. Th. D. Popp (ed.): Matrikel des Bissthumes Eichstätt , Eichstätt: Ph. Brönner, 1836, p. 102
  7. Joseph Heyberger: Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical local dictionary , Munich 1867, Col. 794
  8. Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria ... based on the results of the census of December 1, 1875 , Munich 1877, Col. 977
  9. Kgl. Statistical Bureau in Munich (edit.): List of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria ... [based on the results of the census of December 1, 1900] , Munich 1904, column 899
  10. ^ Locations directory for the Free State of Bavaria according to the census of June 16, 1925 and the territorial status of January 1, 1928 , Munich 1928, column 907
  11. Buchner II, p. 309
  12. ^ Official register of places for Bavaria, edited on the basis of the census of September 13, 1950 , Munich 1952, Col. 778
  13. Official directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 25, 1987 , Munich 1991, p. 260
  14. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 547 .
  15. Buchner II, p. 301 f.
  16. ^ Sixtus Lampl and Otto Braasch: Monuments in Bavaria, Volume III: Upper Palatinate. Ensembles, architectural monuments, archaeological site monuments, Munich: R. Oldenbourg Verlag, 1986, p. 162
  17. ^ Franz Schönwerth: Customs and Legends from the Upper Palatinate . 2nd edition, Berlin 2017, p. 640