Düttingsfeld

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Düttingsfeld
Coordinates: 49 ° 52 ′ 14 "  N , 10 ° 23 ′ 26"  E
Height : 280 m
Residents : 42  (1987)
Incorporated into: Oberschwarzach
Postal code : 97516
Area code : 09382

Düttingsfeld is a hamlet on the outskirts of the Oberschwarzach district of Mutzenroth in the Lower Franconian district of Schweinfurt .

Geographical location

Düttingsfeld is located in the north-west of the Oberschwarzach municipality. Further north is the Oberschwarzach district of Wiebelsberg , while Mutzenroth is in the northeast. The southeast is taken by Oberschwarzach. The district of Kitzingen begins in the south , the district of Bimbach von Prichsenstadt is closest to Düttingsfeld. The district of Schallfeld , a district of Lülsfeld, begins to the west .

history

The place was mentioned for the first time relatively late in 1438. At that time the village was called "Dudelsfeld", which can be interpreted as the "field of Dudilo", a nobleman. Perhaps the place was founded in the course of colonization by the Frankish Carolingians as a clearing settlement in the 7th or 8th century. During the Middle Ages, many subjects of the Fuchs family from nearby Bimbach were settled there.

Until 1971, Düttingsfeld was part of the independent municipality of Mutzenroth in the Gerolzhofen district , before the place was added to Oberschwarzach on January 1, 1971 as part of the regional reform of the municipality.

Culture and sights

St. Wendelinus Monument

In Düttingsfeld there is only one monument that is registered by the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation. It is about the Catholic branch chapel St. Wendelinus. The building was erected in the 19th century in the neo-Gothic style and provided with the characteristic ridge tower . A rococo altar bears a figure of Wendelin . In 1966 the church was redesigned when the Schweinfurt artist Ludwig Boßle made the bronze doors of the church.

legend

The whole pride of the Düttingsfelder in the Middle Ages and in the early modern period was their productive community forest between Mutzenroth and Handthal . During a great war, a famine broke out in the village and the Düttingsfelder had to sell the forest to the richer Mutzenroths. They took advantage of the emergency situation of their neighbors and only took the forest for seven loaves of bread and one loaf of cheese. If the Düttingsfelder had given up on the cheese, the purchase could have been reversed.

A document dated July 31, 1714 clarifies the true circumstances of the purchase. In total, Mutzenroth had to pay 400 guilders in Franconia in four annual installments to the Düttingsfeldern.

literature

  • Karl Treutwein : From Abtswind to Zeilitzheim. History, sights, traditions . Volkach 4 1987.

Individual evidence

  1. KarlTreutwein: From Abtswind to Zeilitzheim . P. 61.
  2. ^ Karl Treutwein: From Abtswind to Zeilitzheim . P. 62.
  3. ^ Karl Treutwein: From Abtswind to Zeilitzheim . P. 61.
  4. KarlTreutwein: From Abtswind to Zeilitzheim . P. 62.