Eckmannshofen

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Eckmannshofen
Thalmässing market
Coordinates: 49 ° 5 ′ 17 ″  N , 11 ° 14 ′ 1 ″  E
Height : 420 m
Residents : 38  (Jan 2, 2018)
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Postal code : 91177
Area code : 09173
Eckmannshofen, seen from the north
Eckmannshofen, seen from the north

Eckmannshofen is a district of the market Thalmässing in the district of Roth in the administrative region of Middle Franconia in Bavaria .

location

Today's village , formerly a hamlet , lies east of the Thalmässing parish, north of the Thalach , south of Schwimbach and northwest of Aue . It can be reached via a road that branches off from State Road 2227. Hiking trail 452 of the Altmühltal nature park leads via Eckmannshofen, a circular trail from Thalmässing with the marking of an ammonite and the number 2 on a yellow background.

Place name interpretation

The place name in its early spellings contains the personal name Ecgmund / Agimund / Egiman.

history

Eckmannshofen is mentioned for the first time as "Hecmushoue" and "Ecgemundhove" in the donation book of the Berchtesgaden Propstei around 1150: Pillunk and Wolfram de Talmasingen (= Thalmässing) gave the monastery an estate in the village to support their sister. Around the same time, Chonrat and Engilman de Ecgmundhoue are named as local nobility. In 1301 an Albertus de Egmanshoven appears. In 1332 a Wilhelm von Eckmannshofen appeared as a documentary witness when Rüdiger von Erlingshofen sold the Burgstalles Brunneck near Erlingshofen to the Eichstätter Bishop. From 1411 to 1421 the local aristocrat Vlrich der Eckmanshofer served as bailiff at the nearby Landeck Castle, which the Lords of Thalmässing owned as an imperial fief. In 1421 the place was transferred to the Heilig-Geist-Spital Nuremberg .

In 1787 the hamlet consisted of eight, in the 19th century nine farms, which cultivated the 116 hectares of land .

Towards the end of the Old Kingdom, Eckmannshofen was subject to the high court of the Brandenburg-Ansbach Landvogtei-Oberamt Stauf-Landeck until 1796 . The Nuremberg Hospital Authority held the authority of the village and community. Ecclesiastically, the hamlet belonged to the lower parish of St. Gotthard in neighboring Thalmässing. The Nuremberg hospital office owned two half yards and six Köbler estates; another Köblergut belonged to the Eichstätt cathedral chapter . There was also a parish shepherd's house. In 1796 the Principality of Ansbach fell to the Kingdom of Prussia , which put an end to the coexistence of rulers in the smallest of spaces, as was the case in Eckmannshofen.

In the new Kingdom of Bavaria (1806) Eckmannshofen with Hagenich, Gebersdorf and the Bergmühle (Guckerlamühle) formed the rural community of Hagenich in the tax district of Thalmässing in the Raitenbuch district court , from 1812 in the Greding district court .

In 1875 there were 32 buildings in Eckmannshofen; there were four horses and 72 head of cattle in the stables. The children attended the Protestant school in Thalmässing.

Eckmannshofen has been incorporated into the Thalmässing market since February 1, 1960 and has almost grown together with the town hall.

Population development

  • 1818: 49 (9 "fire places" = households, 10 families)
  • 1823: 45
  • 1871: 43
  • 1900: 49
  • 1937: 40
  • 1950: 66
  • 1970: 44
  • 2012: 44
  • January 1, 2014: 39

monument

The farmhouse Eckmannshofen No. 7 is designated as an architectural monument.

See also list of architectural monuments in Thalmässing # Other districts

Recurring festivals

  • Annual parish fair on the last weekend in July

literature

Web links

Commons : Eckmannshofen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Thalmässing
  2. Wiessner, p. 119, note 524; Collecting sheet of the Histor. Eichstätt Association 45 (1930), p. 196
  3. Wiessner, pp. 28, 119, 131; Buchner II, p. 413
  4. Wiessner, pp. 87, 141; Bundschuh I, Sp. 685; Collecting sheet of the Histor. Eichstätt Association 39 (1924), p. 8
  5. ^ Announcements of the Association for the History of the City of Nuremberg , 1975, p. 353
  6. Wiessner, p. 28; Joseph Anton Eisenmann and Karl Friedrich Hohn: Topo-geographical-statistical lexicon of the Kingdom of Bavaria. 1st volume, Erlangen 1840, p. 325; Johann Bernhard Fischer: Statistical and topographical description of the Burggraftum Nuremberg, below the mountain; or of the Principality of Brandenburg-Anspach, Part 2, Ansbach 1787, p. 433
  7. Hirschmann, p. 99; Bundschuh I, Sp. 685
  8. The subjects sold for annuity . In: Donaukurier from February 24, 2012
  9. Hirschmann, p. 226
  10. Kgl. Statistical Bureau in Munich (edit.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria , Munich 1876, column 1162
  11. ^ [1] Website of the Thalmässing market
  12. Alphabetical index of all the localities contained in the Rezatkreise ... , Ansbach 1818, p. 21
  13. Hirschmann, p. 226
  14. Kgl. Statistical Bureau in Munich (edit.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria , Munich 1876, column 1162
  15. ^ Locations directory of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical register of locations , Munich 1904, column Sp. 1223
  16. Buchner II, p. 415
  17. Hirschmann, p. 226
  18. Official directory for Bavaria , vol. 1978 = 380, Munich 1978, p. 166
  19. ^ Müller's Großes Deutsches Ortsbuch 2012 , Berlin / Boston 2012, p. 302
  20. ^ [2] Website of the Thalmässing market