Thatwang

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Thatwang
Coordinates: 49 ° 8 ′ 43 "  N , 11 ° 39 ′ 37"  E
Residents : 453  (Dec. 31, 2019)
Incorporation : May 1, 1978
Postal code : 92358
Area code : 09497
Parish Church of the Virgin Mary in Daßwang
Organ of the parish church of the Virgin Mary recording in Daßwang
Gasthof zur Post in Daßwang

Daßwang is a district of Seubersdorf in the Upper Palatinate , a municipality in the Neumarkt district in the Upper Palatinate Jura in the Upper Palatinate . The place has 453 inhabitants.

history

There are traces of Bronze Age settlement around Daßwang.

The origin of the place goes back to a church connection with the original parish of Darshofen . The ending -wang indicates a damp meadow, an area with agricultural use. This area once belonged to the Konigshof Darshofen located on the Schwarzen Laber . It may have been the pasture of Tass (il) o . Later a settlement with a church was built here.

Mentioned for the first time in 1116 when Hachacha and Huburgis , the daughters of Burkhart von Wolfertshofen , bequeathed their inheritance to the Weihenstephan monastery in Tazzenwang in order to be able to enter the monastery with this donation.

In 1145 Durinhart von Pyrbaum and his wife Juditha also renounced their estate in Daßwang and their farm in Winn , as a gift to the Weihenstephan Monastery to take their two daughters there.

In a document from 1312, Duke Wilhelm confirmed that the monastery had legal ownership of these farms. In the 12th and 13th centuries, the noble free von Lupburg , along with the lords von Laaber, exercised village jurisdiction in Daßwang and owned the bailiwick of the parish and church property.

In 1222 the noble Chuonrad de Luipurch, Konrad V von Lupburg, gave the Scheyern Monastery , where his uncle Abbot Konrad I lived, a servant from Daßwang named Richinzam . In the year 1300 Taeswanch was still under the rule of the Lupburgers, but a. the Tafern (the so-called. Cross inn 1900), together with rights in fee to the Polanter and Kemnather output.

The place Tezzwang was probably badly affected in 1336 due to a feud of its local wealthy and the dispute was only settled by the Augustinian order of Nuremberg in the amount of 20 pounds of Heller.

In the 14th century, the Parsberg knights tried to continue to exercise their official authority in Daßwang, although in 1353 their territory was only established as far as the field near Daßwang outside Schönlohe during a court hearing .

With the introduction of the Reformation in Pfalz-Neuburg in 1543, Daßwang became Protestant. It remained that way until 1618.

The territorial power disputes dragged on for centuries, especially since the Bavarian dukes provided the Lords of Parsberg with some goods in Daßwang as fiefdoms and Daßwang increasingly developed into a strategically important point in the postal system. From 1765 the Regensburg-Nuremberg postal route ran according to the electoral principle Decree no longer about Laaber and Parsberg, but about Hemau and Daßwang.

After the necessary extension to the so-called Heinlhof , the " Kayserliche Reichspostanstalt Taßwang" in the Principality of Palatinate-Neuburg was opened on July 1, 1765 based on the Thurn und Taxis certificate of appointment issued on April 1, 1765.

In 1783 a traveling auditor of the post office from Nuremberg confirmed a very well run post holder , samst Tafern for the passengers, Götz Johannes, imperial post holder there, and his successor, Götz Johann, eldest son.

1775 explicitly mentioned in a document as available to the post office keeper:

"4 half-covered wagons and 2 without Kalleschen, 2 post carts, 11 very good horses, 3 post servants, 2 runners"

Furthermore, excerpt from the audit report regarding roads and distances:

  • From Tasswang to Willenhofen 1 1/2 hours
  • From Tasswang to Hemau 4 hours, road Chaussee, but mountainous
  • From Tasswang to Batzhausen 2 hours
  • From Tasswang to Deinig 4 hours, road Chaussee and well
  • From Tasswang to Painten 6 hours
  • 8 hours from Tasswang to Kelheim

In August 1796, Daßwang was involved in the battle of Deining during the First Coalition War between the French and Austrians . When the French General Bernadotte wanted to move on to Regensburg with his troops after two days in Neumarkt , he met the troops of General Nauendorf near Deining , who at first still had respect for the French superiority and therefore retired to Daßwang. On August 21, 1796, Nauendorf attacked the French with infantry and cavalry near Daßwang and pursued them to Batzhausen.

Modern times

The church was rebuilt around 1935. The gothic tower of the church was to be preserved during the new building, but collapsed on Trinity Sunday in 1935. The organ of the Catholic parish church "Mariäaufnahme" was created in 1935 by the well-known Regensburg organ builder Eduard Hirnschrodt .

On May 1, 1978 Daßwang was incorporated into Seubersdorf.

Web links

Commons : Daßwang  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Residents' registration office, Seubersdorf municipality . Website of the Seubersdorf community idOPf. Retrieved February 27, 2020.
  2. Daßwang - Worth knowing . Website www.dasswang.info accessed on March 12, 2015.
  3. ^ Konrad Schmid: Chronik Seubersdorf, home history of all districts of the community MZ-Druck, Regensburg 1993, pp. 186-200
  4. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer GmbH, Stuttgart and Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 649 and 650 .