Dittenfeld (Rennertshofen)
Dittenfeld
Rennertshofen market
Coordinates: 48 ° 45 ′ 10 " N , 11 ° 5 ′ 36" E
|
|
---|---|
Height : | 450 m |
Residents : | 27 (2012) |
Postal code : | 86643 |
Area code : | 08434 |
As a wasteland, Dittenfeld is part of the Rennertshofen market in the Bavarian district of Neuburg-Schrobenhausen . It belongs to the Riedensheim district .
location
Dittenfeld is located about three kilometers east of the main town Rennertshofen and northwest of Riedensheim on the southern edge of the southern Franconian Alb . In terms of traffic, the desert is about 200 meters north of the state road St 2214 , from which it can be reached on two connecting roads from the south-east and south-west.
history
Bronze and Urnfield Age finds were made near Dittenfeld and a Roman building was found in the Sandschlag forest district. Settlement continuity since Roman times is rather unlikely and therefore a later re-development of the Dittenfelder Flur can be assumed.
A first documentary mention of Dittenfeld is for 1280: In the Salbuch of the Bavarian Duke Ludwig , two ducal Bavarian fiefdoms of "Tickenfelt" are mentioned, which are subordinate to the Neuburg office. In 1291 Hartnid von Holzheim, a Lechsgemünd-Graisbacher Ministeriale , sold a farm in Dittenfeld to the Kaisheim monastery , which he had acquired from the knight Wilhelm von Dornsberg. In 1366 knight Wilhelm the Hüttinger zu Tollenstein acquired, among other things, the (no longer existing in the 19th century) St. Nikolaus chapel of "Dikkenfelt", until then owned by Seyfried von Wemding . In 1450 Conrad der Hutinger (Hütting) sold a farm to "Tittchenfelt" to Radbod den Ellenbrunner . Later the monastery in Neuburg an der Donau owned in Dittenfeld. The Augsburg Cathedral Chapter , which received the tithe , also had little real estate here . At the end of the Old Empire , Dittenfeld consisted of 13 properties, four of which had no landlord taxes to pay.
In the Kingdom of Bavaria , Dittenfeld was assigned to the tax district of Riedensheim and, when the community was formed in 1818, to the community of the same name in the Swabian Rent Office and District Court in Neuburg an der Donau , later the district of Neuburg an der Donau . In 1850 the village had 15 houses with 70 residents. Since 1858 under Aloys Nikolaus Ambros Graf von Arco-Stepperg part of the Stepperger rule, the village was transformed by him into a large economic property in 1860 by demolishing most of the houses. "Agricultural pupils" were also taught here. The estate was inherited by the Count's House of Moy de Sons and is now subordinate to the Count's von Moy's main agricultural and forestry administration.
Riedensheim and its only district, Dittenfeld, remained an independent municipality until 1972. On June 30, 1972, as part of the regional reform in Bavaria, this was added to the now enlarged Upper Bavarian district of Neuburg an der Donau, which was given the name of Neuburg-Schrobenhausen on May 1, 1973 . On May 1, 1978 it was incorporated into the Rennertshofen market .
Church affiliation
Dittenfeld belonged in the Bertoldsheim chapter of the Diocese of Augsburg to the parish of Mauern , but the southern property, the Widumhof , belonged to the parish of Rennertshofen. Later belonging to the parish Stepperg, Dittenfeld is today with Stepperg in the "parish community Urdonautal" in the chapter Neuburg of the diocese of Augsburg.
Agricultural research station
Since 2009/10, the Dittenfeld farm has been one of three locations in Bavaria participating in the joint project "Agro-Climate Bavaria" of the Bavarian State Agency for Agriculture in Freising with regard to the technology for standard lane methods and strip cultivation in sugar beet cultivation with a consistent separation of roads and vegetation areas when mulching Ordering system without the use of a plow.
literature
- Markus Nadler: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Neuburg on the Danube. The district court of Neuburg and the nursing courts of Burgheim and Reichertshofen . Munich 2004.
- Carl August Böhaimb: Dittenfeld. In: Kollektaneenblatt for the history of Bavaria, 16 (1850), pp. 93–95.
- Dittenfeld. In: Kollektaneenblatt for the history of Bavaria, 35 (1869), p. 52 f.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Nadler, pp. 6, 25 f.
- ↑ Nadler, pp. 84, 99 (note 246); Kollektaneenblatt 1850, p. 95, 1869, p. 52 f.
- ↑ Nadler, p. 110, note 3
- ↑ Nadler, p. 314
- ↑ Nadler, pp. 242, 410; Kollektaneenblatt 1850, p. 93, 1869, p. 53; Agricultural papers for Swabia and Neuburg 2nd year, No. 37 from September 11, 1863, p. 316
- ^ 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. 602 .
- ↑ Nadler, p. 251, note 213; Stepperg parish
- ↑ Sign on the test area; [1]