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Lauterhofen market
Coordinates: 49 ° 23 ′ 14 "  N , 11 ° 29 ′ 30"  E
Height : 538 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 92  (2015) 
Incorporation : May 1, 1978
Postal code : 92283
Area code : 09189
From the original hunting lodge Deinschwang, which was destroyed in 1633, there are only a few remains in the current building.
From the original hunting lodge Deinschwang, which was destroyed in 1633, there are only a few remains in the current building.
The Catholic branch church St. Martin in Deinschwang

Deinschwang is a district of the market Lauterhofen in the Upper Palatinate district of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate .

geography

The parish village is located about nine kilometers north-northwest of Lauterhofen and is at an altitude of 538  m above sea level. NHN .

history

The place name suggests an emergence around the year 800. As Taginoswank , derived from the personal name Tagini , the settlement was on an old Merovingian and Franconian trade and military route that led from Regensburg via Lauterhofen to Forchheim . The first St. Martin's Church was built during this time, after the patron saint of the Franks and Charlemagne .

Field captain Seyfried Schweppermann died in 1337 at Castle Deinschwang. Emperor Ludwig the Bavarian had enfeoffed him with several castles, including Deinschwang, because of his bravery.

At the beginning of the 15th century the place and the Romanesque stone church were destroyed by robber knights from the Nuremberg area. Ulrich der Stromer von der Rosen , a wealthy Nuremberg merchant, had the St. Martin church rebuilt in Gothic style.

In 1467, the abbot of Kastl was given the right to use and guarantee some of the land leasable to the monastery of Kastl near Teynßwank = Deinschwang by a certificate from the district judge at the Amberg district court . At that time the place belonged to the Haimburg office .

After the castle Your exuberance after several changes of ownership in Landshut War of Succession was robbed (1504/05) on 4 July 1504 by the Nuremberg mercenaries led by Endres (Andreas) Tucher and burned which made Viztum the Upper Palatinate and Palatine Frederick II. In 1527 at their Site build a hunting lodge. In 1633, during the Thirty Years' War , the town and castle Deinschwang was destroyed by Swedish troops.

As a result of the administrative reforms carried out in the Kingdom of Bavaria at the beginning of the 19th century , the place became an independent rural community, which also included the villages of Ballertshofen and Mettenhofen , as well as the wasteland of Grafenbuch . In the course of the municipal territorial reform carried out in Bavaria in the 1970s , the entire municipality of Deinschwang was incorporated into the municipality of Lauterhofen in 1978. In 2015 Deinschwang had 92 inhabitants.

Parish Church of St. Martin

The first church in Deinschwang could have existed as early as the 8th century. Today's church, a hall building with a choir tower, hipped roof and pointed helmet, dates from around 1400. Around 1577, the count palatine had adopted the Lutheran faith, later became Calvinist and St. Martin became a Calvinist church around 1600. After the destruction in the Thirty Years' War, only a ruin remained of St. Martin except for the tower. After that, St. Martin became Catholic again. The statue of Mary on the moon floating in clouds on the side altar dates from around 1600, but only came here at a later date. Up until the end of the 17th century there was probably only a sparse church, so that around 1700 it was rebuilt or newly built. The two side altars also date from around 1700. On October 8, 1717, the church was consecrated by Eichstätter Auxiliary Bishop Johann Adam Nieberlein after major changes . The high altar is thought to date from 1750. The baroque apostle figures on the nave walls are remarkable. The altars and the pulpit have rich rococo shapes.

More Attractions

See: Monuments in Deinschwang

traffic

The connection to the public road network is established by a municipal road that leads to the NM 9 county road, which passes about half a kilometer north of the town .

Web links

Commons : Deinschwang (Lauterhofen)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Population of Deinschwang
  2. ^ Deinschwang in the local database of the Bayerische Landesbibliothek Online
  3. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I, Issue 16: Neumarkt Chapter 2. The Bavarian settlement, p. 8
  4. Hans-Jürgen Hennig: Deinschwang's church is 300 years old . In: Mittelbayerische.de . September 22, 2017. Retrieved September 25, 2017.
  5. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I, Issue 24: Landrichteramt Amberg Chapter: History of the court, p. 21
  6. Roland Braun: Our home during the Landshut War of Succession . In: lauterhofen.de . Retrieved September 25, 2017.
  7. Historical municipality register for the Federal Republic of Germany (1970–1982), page 650
  8. Deinschwanger Filialkirche celebrates its consecration anniversary . In: nordbayern.de . September 15, 2017. Retrieved September 25, 2017.
  9. ^ Filialkirche Deinschwang - St. Martin . In: pfarrverband-lauterhofen.de . Retrieved September 25, 2017.
  10. To the birthplace of the Winter King . In: Kulturwanderungen.de . Retrieved September 25, 2017.