Dantersdorf

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Dantersdorf
City of Velburg
Coordinates: 49 ° 13 ′ 57 ″  N , 11 ° 42 ′ 10 ″  E
Height : 490 m
Residents : 65  (1987)
Incorporation : March 25, 1952

Dantersdorf is an officially named district of the city of Velburg in the Neumarkt district in Upper Palatinate in Bavaria .

Geographical location

The village is located on the Franconian Jura in the Upper Palatinate Jura at around 490 m above sea ​​level, around 2 km west of the center of Velburg and around 500 m from the border of the Hohenfels training area. Its south-eastern part extends partly on the slope of the Burzenberg (520 m above sea level). To the northeast rises - within the military training area - the Häberberg (625 m above sea level), to the north-west of the Hohlsteinberg (630 m above sea level) and to the south-west of the Sperlasberg (615 m above sea level).

traffic

Dantersdorf is on the NM 36 district road. A local connection road branches off near Velburg from the NM 43 district road in an easterly direction to Dantersdorf, and another from the state road 2220 in a north-easterly direction.

history

Dantersdorf was created in the course of the planned expansion of the Carolingian Franconian Empire to the east.

The village belonged to the ducal-Bavarian (from the 16th century Palatinate-Neuburgian ) rule Lutzmannstein , which was awarded to nobles. In a Wittelsbach Urbar of 1285 it is mentioned as "Tenteinsdorf". In 1326 the owners of the village were the A. Kemnath daughters . It was subject to the Velburg Nursing Authority. When the heirs of Friedrich Kemnather sold the rule to Duke Johann von Pfalz-Neumarkt in 1428 , Dantersdorf consisted of 2 estates, 5 Huben of the Obermünster Abbey in Regensburg and 1 "Hüblein".

At the end of the Old Kingdom , around 1800, Dantersdorf consisted of 11 properties. At that time, the Lutzmannstein reign was owned by the noble Gi (e) se family ; the Gisesche patrimonial second class, to which Dantersdorf was also subordinate, was abolished by Bavaria in 1848.

In the Kingdom of Bavaria (1806), the Geroldsee tax district was formed in the Parsberg district court around 1810 . This included Geroldsee, Dantersdorf, Krumpenwinn and (Ober- and Unter-) Schmidheim . With the second Bavarian community edict of 1818, it became a rural community, to which the wastes of Hölle and Gstetterthal were added in 1867 . It stayed that way until the middle of the 20th century.

In the course of the formation of a military training area for US and NATO troops, the municipality of Geroldsee was evacuated by October 1, 1951, with the exception of the district of Dantersdorf outside the military training area, and its residents were relocated; On January 25, 1952, the government of Upper Palatinate decided to place Dantersdorf on March 25, 1952, part of the city of Velburg. On October 6, 1958, the Bavarian State Ministry of the Interior ordered the liquidation of the remainder of the Geroldsee municipality.

Lived in Dantersdorf

  • 1836 66 inhabitants (13 houses),
  • 1867 73 (28 buildings, 1 chapel),
  • 1875 66 inhabitants (34 buildings; large livestock: 6 horses, 67 cattle),
  • 1900 75 inhabitants (14 residential buildings),
  • 1925 81 inhabitants (14 residential buildings),
  • 1937 63 inhabitants (only Catholics),
  • 1950 76 inhabitants (14 residential buildings),
  • 1987 65 inhabitants (14 residential buildings, 17 apartments).

Church conditions

Dantersdorf and its chapel have belonged to the Catholic parish of Velburg since ancient times. Around 1545, together with Pfalz-Neuburg, Velburg was subjected to the Reformation and in 1621 re-Catholicized . The Marienkapelle from 1662 on the northern outskirts, a square building with corner pilasters and roof turrets, is considered a monument.

See also List of Monuments in Velburg # Dantersdorf

literature

  • Manfred Jehle: Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Old Bavaria, volume 51: Parsberg , Munich 1981

Individual evidence

  1. Jehle, p. 6
  2. Jehle, pp. 273-275
  3. Jehle, p. 261
  4. ^ Jehke, pp. 276, 279
  5. Jehle, pp. 486, 526
  6. Jehle, pp. 532, 545
  7. Jehle, p. 449
  8. Jehle, pp. 519, 549
  9. Popp, Th. D. (ed.): Matrikel des Bissthumes Eichstätt , Eichstätt: Ph. Brönner, 1836, p. 80
  10. Joseph Heyberger: Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical local dictionary , Munich 1867, column 795
  11. Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria ... based on the results of the census of December 1, 1875 , Munich 1877, Col. 978
  12. Kgl. Statistical Bureau in Munich (edit.): List of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria ... [based on the results of the census of Dec. 1, 1900] , Munich 1904, column 900
  13. ^ Locations directory for the Free State of Bavaria according to the census of June 16, 1925 and the territorial status of January 1, 1928 , Munich 1928, column 908
  14. ^ Franz Xaver Buchner : The diocese of Eichstätt. Volume I, Eichstätt: Brönner & Däntler, 1937, p. 698
  15. ^ Official register of places for Bavaria edited on the basis of the census of September 13, 1950 , Munich 1952, column 779
  16. Official directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 25, 1987 , Munich 1991, p. 260
  17. Jehle, p. 221
  18. Buchner I, p. 690 f.
  19. ^ Sixtus Lampl and Otto Braasch: Monuments in Bavaria, Volume III: Upper Palatinate. Ensembles, architectural monuments, archaeological site monuments, Munich: R. Oldenbourg Verlag, 1986, p. 162