Eden meadows
Edenwiesen ( Rotte ) village |
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Basic data | |
Pole. District , state | Schärding (SD), Upper Austria |
Pole. local community | Diersbach ( KG Diersbach and Großwaging ) |
Coordinates | 48 ° 25 ′ 42 " N , 13 ° 34 ′ 13" E |
Residents of the village | 52 (January 1, 2020) |
Post Code | 4776 |
Statistical identification | |
Locality code | 11419 |
Counting district / district | Diersbach (41 414 000) |
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; DORIS |
Edenwiesen is a district and a Rotte in the municipality of Diersbach in Upper Austria ( Schärding district ). The village has 52 inhabitants (as of January 1, 2020).
geography
Edenwiesen is located about 1.5 kilometers north of the center of Diersbach in the north-western part of the municipality. The district lies mainly in the cadastral community of Diersbach , a small part of Edenwiesen belongs to Großwaging . The district of Edenwiesen consists of the Rotte Edenwiesen on Eisenbirner Landstrasse (L 515), the hamlet of Denk (also Dank ) , which is also south of the Landstrasse, as well as various individual farms and scattered houses. Neighboring towns of Edenwiesen are Mayberg in the northwest, Elend in the northeast, Froschau and Herrnberg in the east, Bernolden or Ober- and Unterhörlberg in the southwest, Schwabenhub and Diersbach in the south and Doblmann, Rager and Dipoltsberg in the west.
History and population
Edenwiesen was first mentioned in a document in 1262 as Odenwisen , whereby this place name is a compound site name from the Middle High German adjective oede (for deserted, empty or undeveloped) and the Middle High German basic word wise (meadow). The so-called Maier-Gut was the seat of the Lords of Oedenwiser and Edenwisär in the 13th and 14th centuries before they moved to Schärding .
In 1869, 61 people lived in nine houses in Edenwisen. By 1910 the population rose to 66 people, with 32 men and 34 women or exclusively Catholics counted. The number of houses had risen to eleven. In the statistics, Edenwiesen was divided into three components at this point in time. The hamlet of Denk comprised six houses and 26 residents, the hamlet of Edenwiesen four houses and 32 residents and the Ziergelmühle one building and eight residents. In 1923, too, little had changed in terms of the size of the settlement. The number of houses had risen to 1 ^ 2, the population to 78. Denk comprised seven houses with 38 residents, Edenwiesen four buildings with 31 residents and the Ziergelmühle one building and nine people. By 1951 the population had already increased to 103, with the number of houses being 14. Denk had seven houses and 41 residents, Edenwiesen 44 residents in six buildings and the Ziergelmühle 18 residents. In 1971 the number of buildings had increased further, with 7 of the 16 houses in Denk and 9 in Edenwiesen. The ornamental gel mill was no longer shown separately. Edeniwesen had 63 inhabitants, Denk 37. In 1981 Statistics Austria divided Edenwiesen into the hamlet of Denk, the Rotte Edenwiesen and additionally scattered parts of the settlement (scattered houses), whereby the farms Lambert and Schlöglmann and the Ziergelmühle were named as additional settlement names. This year, Denk had seven buildings with 37 residents, Edenwiesen eight buildings with 44 residents and the scattered areas three buildings with 12 residents. In 2001, the Edenwiesen district was no longer subdivided. The district comprised a total of 23 buildings and 84 inhabitants. There were 22 buildings with main residences, 31 apartments and 31 households as well as nine agricultural and forestry facilities. In 2011 the village only housed 66 residents.
Buildings
In Edenwiesen there is the so-called Bründl Chapel, a sacred building that, according to legend, was built at a place where a blind man was healed from the spring water. The chapel is located at the source east of the Schnolzenbach on a meadow belonging to the Maiergut in Edenwiesen. The chapel dedicated to St. Mary developed into a small place of pilgrimage, where those seeking help washed their eyes with spring water. However, the original chapel was demolished by Lambert Mayer, a previous owner of the Maiergut, using the material for a moving house. After the Mayr family had to sell the property in 1930, the following owner, Johann Parzer, had a new wooden chapel built with the help of his brother Josef Parzer from the Oberhörlbergergut in Bernolden and the residents of Edenwiesen. The plans for the chapel came from Franz Wirth, who also created the Diersbach war memorial. The chapel was consecrated on July 7, 1935. The spring, on the other hand, dried up after a bulldozer leveled the ravine above the chapel in the 1960s.
In addition to the chapel, there is also a Kreuzstöckl at the brick miller's property in Edenwiesen.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Classification according to Statistics Austria
- ↑ Statistics Austria: Population on January 1st, 2020 by locality (area status on January 1st, 2020) , ( CSV )
- ^ Kk statistical Central Commission (ed.): Orts-Repertorium des Erzherzogthumes Oesterreich ob der Enns. Based on the census of December 31, 1869 Linz 1871, p. 101
- ↑ kk Central Statistical Commission (Ed.): Spezialortsrepertorium von Oberösterreich. Edited on the basis of the results of December 31, 1910. Vienna 1916, p. 112
- ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Directory of Austria. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of March 7, 1923. Vienna 1930, p. 49 Upper Austria
- ^ Austrian Central Statistical Office (ed.): Local directory of Austria. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of June 1, 1951. Vienna 1953, p. 97 Upper Austria.
- ^ Austrian Central Statistical Office (ed.): Ortverzeichnis 1971. Edited on the basis of the results of the census of May 12, 1971. Upper Austria. Vienna 1976, p. 118
- ^ Austrian Central Statistical Office (ed.): Local directory 1981. Upper Austria. Vienna 1985, p. 271
- ^ Statistics Austria (ed.): Ortverzeichnis 2001. Oberösterreich. Vienna 2005 , p. 286
- ^ Parish Diersbach ( Memento of October 18, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Small monuments
- ^ Parish Diersbach ( Memento from November 5, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Kreuzstöckl
literature
- Josef Peterbauer: Diersbach. A rural community in Lower Innviertel through the ages . Mosbauer Druck & Verlag, Ried im Innkreis 2009. ISBN 978-3-902684-00-4