Burgstall Quakhaus
Burgstall Quakhaus | ||
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Alternative name (s): | Burgstall Oening, Quackhaus Castle | |
Creation time : | Medieval | |
Castle type : | Hilltop castle | |
Conservation status: | Burgstall, slightly elevated place without rising masonry | |
Place: | Oening - Berching | |
Geographical location | 49 ° 5 '37.1 " N , 11 ° 31' 17.1" E | |
Height: | 495 m above sea level NHN | |
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The Burgstall Quakhaus or Schloss Quackhaus refers to an abandoned hilltop castle in Oening , today a district of the Berching municipality in the Neumarkt district in the Upper Palatinate of Bavaria. The noble seat is said to have belonged to the Beilngries brand and was assigned more to Upper Bavaria. The Postal is located about 100 meters south-southwest of the parish church of St. Nicholas and west next to the schoolhouse on the southern outskirts in the former house no. 28. The building is from the Bavarian State Conservation Office under the monument number D-3-6935-0085 as ground monument entered.
description
The Burgstall is located on the edge of a mountain tongue directly above a steep slope that lies above a dry valley . Only a slightly raised place can be seen from the castle stables. The castle is referred to as the former seat of the Vestenbergers . Around 1830 walls could still be seen.
Name interpretation
It is difficult to trace the name back as it is hardly mentioned in a document. In books on the interpretation of place names for southern Germany, a quack house or quack house is referred to as the nestling's house, with Quack - meaning the youngest son of a family . A corresponding analogy would be to see the name as an early noble seat of the Vestenbergers or the youngest offspring of the family.
literature
- Sixtus Lampl : Monuments in Bavaria - ensembles, architectural monuments, archaeological site monuments: Volume III. Upper Palatinate. Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation (Ed.), Munich 1985.
- Armin Stroh : The prehistoric and early historical monuments of the Upper Palatinate. (Material booklets on Bavarian prehistory, series B, volume 3). Verlag Michael Lassleben, Kallmünz 1975, ISBN 3-7847-5030-3 , p. 190.
Web links
- Entry on Disappeared Oening Castle in the private database "All Castles".
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Gebrüder Grafen von Reisach (ed.): Pfalz-Neuburgische Provinzialblätter , Third Volume, Nördlingen / Nürnberg / Neuburg 1805, p. 560 (No. 16)
- ↑ Oening on the BayernAtlas , accessed on May 6, 2020.
- ^ Joseph Anton Eisenmann : Topo-graphical-statistical lexicon of Kingdoms of Bavaria . Erlangen 1832, p. 230, 347 , above ( digitized [accessed May 6, 2020]).
- ↑ comparison u. a. from Karl Kugler: Explanation of a thousand place names of the Altmülalp and its surroundings , Verlag der Krüll'schen Buchhandlung, Eichstätt 1873, No. 266 on p. 111