Brennbichl (Samerberg)

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Weiler Brennbichl at the northern foot of the Heuberg , seen from the west
Weiler Brennbichl seen from the south, to the left of the center of the picture on the horizon on the ridge the silhouette of the branch church of Steinkirchen

Brennbichl is part of the municipality of Samerberg in the district of Rosenheim , administrative district of Upper Bavaria .

Geographical location

The municipal parts of Samerberg are spatially scattered east of the Inn on a hilly plateau about seven kilometers long at an altitude of about 600 to 750 m above sea level. NHN between Nussdorf in the Inntal in the southwest and Frasdorf on the A8 Munich - Salzburg motorway in the northeast. The hamlet of Brennbichl near Roßholzen is located on the southern edge of the Samerberg residential area on a hill at the northern foot of the Heuberg on the border with Nussdorf, southwest of Grainbach and east of Nussdorf.

history

In a deed of donation from the 12th century, Brennbichl, which was called Brennbühel in the 19th century , appears under the place name Frimpuole and is referred to as Gut (Praedium) . Arnold de Grounpach, who lived in Grounpach , today's Grainbach , with his wife Bertha, who was a ministerial of Duke Konrad von Dachau , bequeathed the estate to the Herrenchiemsee monastery around 1135 . In 1150 he also donated a small estate to the monastery, which also included a mill, which was probably located on the Achenbach flowing from Grainbach in the direction of Achenmühle .

The hamlet of Brennbichl is now an agricultural small town. There is a larger farm there and a few smaller houses next to it.

Brennbichl used to belong to Roßholzen . In 1969, a referendum was carried out in Roßholzen, Grainbach , Steinkirchen and Törwang to decide whether the four previously independent communities should be merged into a single community with an administrative seat in Törwang. 88% of the voters decided in favor of this project, and on January 1, 1970, the new municipality of Samerberg was formed by amalgamating Grainbach, Roßholzen, Steinkirchen and Törwang. Since then, Brennbichl has been part of Samerberg's municipality.

Demographics

Population figures in the 19th century
year population Remarks
1817 six in a house
1824 six a family, in a house, counted in the administrative year 1823/24 of the Isarkkreis
1861 five two buildings
1871 five on December 1, 1871, three buildings

traffic

The hamlet of Brennbichl is located on a paved, winding spur road that branches off the country road that leads from the hamlet of Holzmann past the restaurant 'Jägerhäusl' in a southerly direction to the hamlet of Mühlthal and from there to Nussdorf am Inn . The turn-off, on a hill below the Heuberg leads, is located at the position of lying on the road small water power plant with reservoirs . From Brennbichl the cul-de-sac leads a little further uphill to Gritschen . The road to Nussdorf is closed to public motor vehicle traffic after about one kilometer as seen from Holzmann. The distance from Brennbichl down the valley to Roßholzen is about five kilometers by road.

Attractions

literature

  • Sebastian Dachauer : Chronicle of Brannenburg and the nearest places in the area (continued). In: Upper Bavarian Archive for Fatherland History (Historischer Verein von Oberbayern, ed.), Volume 4, Munich 1843, Section 9: Contributions to the Chronicle of the Parish Rordorf , pp. 244–270, especially pp. 254–260 ( online ).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Martin von Deutinger: Tabular description of the Diocese of Freysing according to the order of the Decanate , Munich 1820, p. 489 ( online ), counted at the end of 1817 in the Deanery Söllhuben
  2. ^ A b Sebastian Dachauer : Chronicle of Brannenburg and the nearest places in the area . Section 9: Contributions to the chronicle of the parish Rordorf . In: Upper Bavarian Archive for Patriotic History (Historischer Verein von Oberbayern, ed.), Volume 4, Munich 1843, pp. 258-259 ( online)
  3. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 561 .
  4. Adolph von Schaden : Alphabetical directory of all the cities, markets, villages, hamlets, wastelands, etc. located in the Isar district (as an appendix to the topographical = statistical handbook for the Isar district of the Kingdom of Baiern, e-copy ), Munich 1825, p. 343 ( online )
  5. Adolph von Schaden : Topographisch = Statistical Handbook for the Isar Circle of the Kingdom of Bavaria , printed and published at the expense of the Königl. Government of the Isarkkreis, Munich 1825 ( online ).
  6. Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical local dictionary . Adapted from official sources by J. Heyberger, Chr. Schmitt and von Wachter. Munich 1867, Sp. 239 ( online ).
  7. Royal. Bavarian Statistical Bureau: Complete register of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria - with an alpabetic general register of places containing the population according to the results of the census of December 1, 1875 , Munich 1877, column 251 ( online ).
  8. Hildegard Osterhammer and Franz Osterhammer: Field monuments on the Samerberg , published by the municipality of Samerberg and the parish of Törwang, 2nd edition, Samerberg 2018, pp. 162–164.

Coordinates: 47 ° 45 '  N , 12 ° 12'  E