Bubendorf (municipality of Mooskirchen)

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Bubendorf ( Rotte )
village
Bubendorf (municipality of Mooskirchen) (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Voitsberg  (VO), Styria
Judicial district Voitsberg
Pole. local community Mooskirchen   ( KG  Stögersdorf )
Coordinates 46 ° 59 '17 "  N , 15 ° 15' 6"  E Coordinates: 46 ° 59 '17 "  N , 15 ° 15' 6"  E
height 354  m above sea level A.
Residents of the village 58 (January 1, 2020)
Post Code 8562 Mooskirchen
Primariesf0 + 43 / (0) 3137f1
Statistical identification
Locality code 16183
Counting district / district Stögersdorf (61615)
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; GIS-Stmk
58

BW

Bubendorf is a village and Rotte in western Styria in the market town of Mooskirchen in the Voitsberg district , Styria .

Place name and geography

The name is derived from a village, which was named either after the status of its inhabitants from the Middle High German poube for servant , unmarried or after a man named Poupo or Buobo .

Bubendorf is located in the northwest of the market town of Mooskirchen, west of the main town of Mooskirchen, in the northwestern part of the cadastral municipality of Stögersdorf , on the southern bank of the Kainach , between the Lassnitz in the west and the Knopperbach in the east. A connecting road between Mooskirchen and Krottendorf-Gaisfeld and the formerly important connecting road to Sankt Johann-Köppling runs through the village .

history

Bubendorf emerged as a Bavarian settlement in the 10th or 11th century and consisted of farms with adjacent broad stripes . The first documentary mention of the place took place in 1268/69 as Puebendorf in the Rationarium Styriae . Further mentions followed in 1311 as Puebendorf and 1392 as Puebendorff and finally in 1529/30 in the Stockurbar as Bubendorff . Until 1392 the inhabitants belonged to the manor of the Seckau Abbey and for the years 1311 and 1312 a suppan named Wulfinch is documented. In 1392, Hans Gradner exchanged at least five hubs near Bubendorf with the Seckau Abbey . The Gößler mill, named in 1570, had existed since the Middle Ages.

The inhabitants of Bubendorf belonged to various manors until 1848, for example to the Ungeramt of the Groß-Söding rule , to the Peter-Tietrich office until 1747 and then to the court office of the Ligist , Stainz , Oberthal and Winterhof rule . The mining rights at Bubendorf and the local tithe rights belonged to the Neudorf office of the Lankowitz rule . Further tithe rights were held by the Deutschlandsberg rulership and, to a lesser extent, by the Greißenegg and Winterhof rulers . For the period around 1755 it is known that the Eggenberg rule had a beaver fief in Bubendorf, which belonged to the Gösting rule in the 15th and 16th centuries . In 1496, the March feed in Bubendorf belonged to the Lankowitz rule before it was later delivered to the March feed office in Graz .

The Gößlermühle burned down on September 29, 1801, but was rebuilt. In the course of the Crimean War , parts of the 8th Cavalry Battalion Archduke Wilhelm and the 6th Field Artillery Regiment under the direction of Mathias Orlich and Lieutenant Soboll were housed in Bubendorf. After there were complaints that the morality of the place was suffering, the troops withdrew again in July 1855. From May 4th to 6th, 1865 there was a flood, during which the Kainach changed its river bed and the Gößlermühle was so badly damaged that it was unusable. In February 1921, Bubendorf was electrified and was supplied with electricity by the Mooskirchen electrical works of the Alpine electricity company. In 1937 Bubendorf was connected to the STEWEAG power grid .

Economy and Infrastructure

Bubendorf is dominated by agriculture, with agriculture playing an important role. There was a mill in town until the 19th century.

Sights and buildings

In Bubendorf there is the Lazarus Cross, a wayside cross which today serves as a station for the consecration of meat at Easter .

literature

  • Walter Brunner (Ed.): History and topography of the Voitsberg district . tape 2 . Steiermärkisches Landesarchiv, Graz 2011, p. 27-28 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Walter Brunner (Ed.): History and topography of the Voitsberg district . tape 2 . Steiermärkisches Landesarchiv, Graz 2011, p. 27 .
  2. ^ A b c d Walter Brunner (Ed.): History and topography of the Voitsberg district . tape 2 . Steiermärkisches Landesarchiv, Graz 2011, p. 28 .
  3. ^ Walter Brunner (ed.): History and topography of the Voitsberg district . tape 2 . Steiermärkisches Landesarchiv, Graz 2011, p. 27-28 .
  4. ↑ Village chapels, wayside crosses - sacred buildings in our community. In: www.mooskirchen.at. Accessed January 31, 2019 .