Breitenholz (Rastatt)

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The Breitenholz desert is an abandoned settlement between Rastatt and the Rheinau . The settlement, first mentioned in 1320, was dissolved in the urban area of ​​Rastatt in the 16th century.

The settlement belonged to the monks from Selz Monastery , whose rights extended to the Rastatt district. Around 1370 the margrave regulated the ownership structure and the payment of the Dehme , since the monks' pigs apparently ate more often in the margrave's forest .: ... The same Hoflute and those at Breitenholz are sitting, they don't have a row in Rastetter marck; she did it for her own sake. , ... is it, that he thinks, that he has enough of his own in the monastery welden, he may well stay there. But whoever it is, that he sin swin lisse lofen in our world, if you find them for the third time, he should give our lord dehemen, so someone else who is sin.

Translation and explanation:
The monks of Breitenholz and the other courtyards have no rights on the Rastatt property, but they take the same. The monks can fatten pigs with acorns on their pastures as they wish, but if the monks or their serfs find a pig on the property of the margrave for the third time, the monks have to pay the pig tithing to the margrave.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Badisches Archiv zur Vaterlandskunde: in all-round aspects, Volume 1, page 139, Franz Josef Mone
  2. Village Book No. 1 Sheet 2a / 6a