Noble seat Manglburg (Grieskirchen)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Manglburg around 1910

The former noble seat Manglburg (also known as Manglburg or, after the various owners, Huglmühle, Schatzlmühle or Zillichmühle) was located in the town of Grieskirchen in Upper Austria .

history

The name of the noble or outdoor seating is derived from the middle-class Manglburger family; this has been attested in Grieskirchen since the 15th century. The first documented family member in 1449 is Wolfgang Manglburger, vicar of Kalham and later pastor of Grieskirchen and Polham. A brother of the same is Cholman, citizen and owner of a "free property on the Stainreut" . It was not until 1558 that the name of a Hannß Manglburger, citizen of Grieskirchen, reappeared as a witness on a document. A son of this Manglburger was Christoph Manglburger († 1616), first mayor of Grieskirchen (1613). At that time the Protestant creed was widespread in Grieskirchen, although it had to be part of the Counter-Reformationand the despotic reign of terror of the Bavarian governor Count Herbersdorf, the Protestants leave the country or become Catholic. The older son of Christoph, Hans Manglburger, left Upper Austria for Regensburg , while the younger brother Wolf became a Catholic and stayed in Grieskirchen. The seal of Hans Manglburger showed on a Regensburg document from 1627 a shield with three leafy stems, of which the two outer heraldic lilies and the middle one carries a rose; There is a red bar above all of this. However, there is no coat of arms on the grave stone of his father Christoph in the parish church of Grieskirchen; There is also no such reference in the aristocratic archives in Vienna. There are no further traces of the descendants of the Wolf Manglburger.

In 1634 the Manglburg was in the possession of Gundaker Hugl, which apparently had been bought by his father Sigmund Hugl from an Inderseer. At that time the Manglburg was not a free aristocratic property, but belonged to the Polhaimern of Parz . Gundaker Hugl is recorded as Herberstein Regent of Peuerbach in 1633 . In 1634 he made a request for majesty for the confirmation of his old coat of arms and for the title of Manglburg. This was granted to him, and the privilege “de non usu” (the right not to use the title of nobility occasionally or temporarily) was granted to him. On a certificate from 1639, he is sealed as "Gundaker Hugl von der Manglburg zum Rosenstein at the time Pfleger zu Peuerbach" . Gundaker Hugl only had one daughter named Anna Maria. In 1633 she married Albrecht Pusch, Polhaim's keeper at Parz, and after the death of her father gave him the property of the Manglburg. In 1636 he received the knightly title of nobility. He was recorded in 1639 as Albrecht Pusch at the Huglmühle . In 1644 the Barons von Polhaim gave him all the rights and justice of the man in the Mangelburg. Thus the Manglburg had been raised to a free noble mansion with land authority over the associated subjects. After the death of Albrecht Pusch (around 1661), his widow married the nobleman Johann Georg Laubmann in 1661 and brought him the Manglburg; as early as 1664 he was documented as Hans Georg Laubmann on the Huglmühle . After the death of Anna Maria († 1673), Laubmann married the widow Maria Salome Riedl, b. Dizenin, from Linz. From 1657 to 1670 she was married to Christoph Riedl, the keeper of the Gallspach estate . With her, Laubmann fathered his ancestor Johann Achaz Jacob (born April 30, 1678) after his first marriage, which remained childless. After the death of his father Johann (Hans) Georg († 1687), he took over the property. At the age of 19 he married the 13-year-old Helena (unknown family name), who gave birth to a first daughter and 12 more children at the age of 14. After the death of Johann Achaz († 1753) and his widow Helena († 1763), the last owner of the Manglburg from the Laubmann family, Johann Achaz II (* 1710), followed. He married Maria Anna Susanna Schickhmayr. Since the marriage remained childless, Johann Achaz seems to have sold the Manglburgmühle (or now Laubmannmühle) to Josef Gschlössl in 1766. The Laubmann family then disappears from the annals of Grieskirchen.

The miller's trade came to the fore under the Gschössls; after his father's death, his son Johann († 1828) probably took over the Manglburg around 1811. His widow Maria Anna married her foreman Jacob Schatzl in 1827. After the death of Maria Anna († 1842) Schatzl married Anna Baminger, with whom he had seven children. After the death of his father († 1881), Leopold Schatzl took over the Manglburg, then called Schatzlmühle.

Manglburg today

In 1881 the Manglburg was deleted from the country table and lost its Dominical rights as a noble seat. The Manglburg remained in the hands of the Schatzl family for generations. Some of the Manglburg buildings were demolished from 1982 onwards. The Manglburg event center was then built in 1987. From the original building stock, the mill building (now the Naturfreunde association building) and the warehouse building (now the local Marxim) at Manglburg 13a have been preserved. In addition, the residential building and part of the former agricultural wing at Manglburg 15 are still there.

literature

  • Norbert Grabherr : Castles and palaces in Upper Austria. A guide for castle hikers and friends of home. 3rd edition . Oberösterreichischer Landesverlag, Linz 1976, ISBN 3-85214-157-5 .
  • Georg Grüll : Castles and palaces in Upper Austria, Volume 2: Innviertel and Alpine foothills . Birken-Verlag, Vienna 1964.
  • Viktor von Handel-Mazzetti : The Manglburg near Grieskirchen. In the municipality of Grieskirchen (Hrsg.): Grieskirchen. Festschrift for the three hundredth anniversary of the city of K. uk Hofbuchdruckerei Jos. Feichtinger's heirs in Linz, Grieskirchen 1913, pp. 42–67.

Coordinates: 48 ° 14 ′ 1 "  N , 13 ° 49 ′ 34.3"  E