Diepoltsdorf (Simmelsdorf)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Diepoltsdorf
Community Simmelsdorf
Coordinates: 49 ° 36 ′ 31 ″  N , 11 ° 21 ′ 20 ″  E
Height : 394 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 291  (2016) 
Incorporation : July 1, 1971
Postal code : 91245
Area code : 09155
The Simmelsdorf district of Diepoltsdorf
The Simmelsdorf district of Diepoltsdorf

Diepoltsdorf is one of 24 districts in the municipality of Simmelsdorf in Middle Franconia .

geography

The village is located in a valley, just under two kilometers northeast of the center of Simmelsdorf.

history

Diepoltsdorf was first mentioned in 1319.

As a result of the administrative reforms in the Kingdom of Bavaria at the beginning of the 19th century , the town became an independent rural community with the Second Community Edict , to which the hamlet of Rampertshof also belonged. In April 1971 the previously independent municipality Utzmannsbach (four districts) was added. Shortly afterwards, the municipality of Diepoltsdorf was incorporated into the municipality of Simmelsdorf as part of the municipal regional reform in Bavaria in July 1971. In 2016 Diepoltsdorf had 291 inhabitants.

traffic

The district road LAU 2 runs through the place, coming from Simmelsdorf in the southwest in a northwest direction to Unterachtel .

Attractions

"Front dwelling" mansion

There are several architectural monuments in Diepoltsdorf, including three mansions (Naifer Strasse 5 and 7 and 18) and a mill. The history of the older castle, the so-called “front dwelling”, a tower house with a moat, can be traced back to the year 1366.

The “Vordere Sitz” including the local authority came to the Groland family in 1366 , who had been promoted to the Nuremberg patriciate in 1344 through admission to the “Inner Council” . Since 1450 she has also owned the neighboring Utzmannsbach manor . The last owner was Sebastian Groland, whose granddaughter Maria Coburger married the patrician Christoph Gottfried Gugel in 1627. From then on, this family was called Gugel von Brand and Diepoltsdorf . In 1660, the Gugels also acquired the immediately adjacent “rear seat” and reunited the estate in one hand. The Gugel remained in possession for almost two and a half centuries. The Diepoltsdorf property of the family also included a hammer mill, a mirror glass loop and a mill. The last of the Diepoltsdorf line, Joseph Maria Ludwig Christoph (1764–1843), sold the estate in 1816 to his nephew Franz Wilhelm Christoph von Gugel (1771–1848); the alliance coat of arms Gugel / Muffel above the entrance reminds of him and his second wife Adelheid . After an inheritance among his daughters, the property passed to his daughter Luise and her husband, Wilhelm Johann von Loefen, who came from an old Upper Palatinate family of hammer lords. The von Loefen family still owns the front and rear house mansions today.

With the so-called "New Housing" , a two-story, massive hipped roof building was built in 1570 under Katharina Groland , widow of Christoph Groland, who died in 1561, the third manor house in Diepoltsdorf (Naifer Straße 18), northeast of the von Loefenschen headquarters. In 1599 it came to the Stockhamer family (Stockamer, a family of "Erbarkeit", i.e. the second estate ) by inheritance and in 1689 to the patrician Georg Christoph Pömer, who from then on called himself Pömer von Diepoltsdorf . In 1760 a Herr von Velhorn followed by purchase and in 1766 the Nuremberg merchant Johann Stephan Zeltner. In 1809, through the marriage of Hedwig Zeltner to Johann Carl Friedrich Christoph Harsdorf von Enderndorf , the seat came to an old Nuremberg patrician dynasty , which in 1878 transferred it to the Baron von Harsdorf Family Foundation, which still owns the “New Housing” today.

See: List of architectural monuments in Diepoltsdorf

literature

  • Nuremberg country . Karl Pfeiffer's Buchdruckerei und Verlag, Hersbruck 1993. ISBN 3-9800386-5-3

Web links

Commons : Diepoltsdorf  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Population of Diepoltsdorf on the website of the municipality of Simmelsdorf (accessed on October 15, 2017)
  2. ^ Diepoltsdorf in the local database of the Bayerische Landesbibliothek Online (accessed on October 29, 2017)
  3. Geographical location of Diepoltsdorf (accessed October 15, 2017)
  4. Brief description of Diepoltsdorf on the website of the municipality of Simmelsdorf (accessed on October 13, 2017)
  5. Political composition of the rural community Diepoltsdorf (accessed October 15, 2017)
  6. ^ 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, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 717 .
  7. Herrensitze.com (Giersch / Schlunk / von Haller)