Eismannsberg (Altdorf near Nuremberg)
Eismannsberg
City of Altdorf near Nuremberg
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Coordinates: 49 ° 24 ′ 13 ″ N , 11 ° 26 ′ 14 ″ E | |
Height : | 522 (499-541) m above sea level NN |
Residents : | 366 (Jan. 2, 2017) |
Incorporation : | January 1, 1972 |
Postal code : | 90518 |
Area code : | 09187 |
St. Andreas in Eismannsberg
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Eismannsberg is a district of the town of Altdorf near Nuremberg in the district of Nürnberger Land , Middle Franconia .
geography
Geographical location
The parish village of Eismannsberg is located south of the A 6 (Nuremberg – Prague), north of the Traunfelder Bach, south-east of Oberrieden and south-west of Wappeltshofen on the district road LAU 23 . The place is north of the city center of Altdorf. The next motorway junctions on the A 6 are Altdorf / Leinburg and Alfeld .
Streets
The streets of the place are called:
- Eismannsberger Dorfstrasse
- Eismannsberger Hauptstrasse
- Hainesgasse
- Hedwig-von-Eyb-Strasse
- Hay path
- In the corner
- Basement lane
- Mauertsmühlweg
- Master path
- Mühlleitenweg
- Sollachweg
- Steinweg
- To the long hedge
history
Eismannsberg was sold as a fiefdom to a man named Eisenhart around 1100 . The district can look back on over 900 years of existence. In the Hedwig von Eyb Strasse 13 to 15 area is the overbuilt castle stable of Eismannsberg Castle , which first appeared in 1339 as the seat of the Ratz von Eismannsberg. In the second half of the 13th century, the family appeared with the knights Wolfram and Friedrich Ratz in the entourage of the noble free Konrad von Lupburg, at that time the owner and builder of Wolfstein Castle, which was presumably built by the landgraves of Leuchtenberg and married near Neumarkt . Before the summer of 1504 the seat was still preserved and owned by a Ratz zu Reichenschwand; Probably it was ruined by Nuremberg troops in the Landshut War of Succession in 1504/05. On a view of Christoph Vogel from the period shortly after 1600, the castle ruins can still be clearly seen next to the church.
There were three other mansions in the village, only one of which still exists. This was built in 1726 for Christoph Elias Oelhafen von Schöllenbach and remained in the possession of the Nuremberg patrician family Oelhafen until it was sold in 1859. It has been owned by the Wild family since 1901.
With the community edict (1808) Eismannsberg became a politically independent community to which Wappeltshofen belonged. On January 1, 1972, this was incorporated into Altdorf as part of the Bavarian regional reform .
Buildings
See: Monuments in Eismannsberg
Population development
- local community
year | 1910 | 1933 | 1939 |
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population | 350 | 411 | 402 |
- place
year | 1987 | 2013 | 2016 |
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population | 302 | 318 | 366 |
Web links
- Eismannsberg on the website of the city of Altdorf
- Eismannsberg at www.herrensitze.de
- Eismannsberg in the location database of the Bayerische Landesbibliothek Online . Bavarian State Library
- Dieter Wild: The gender of those from Oelhafen and the manors in Eismannsberg , online
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b City of Altdorf b. Nuremberg, population statistics 2016 (accessed on November 3, 2017)
- ↑ Location of the district in the Bavaria Atlas (accessed on November 3, 2017).
- ↑ Herrensitze.com (Giersch / Schlunk / von Haller)
- ↑ Herrensitze.com (Giersch / Schlunk / von Haller)
- ^ Community directory , District Office Nuremberg
- ^ A b Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. City and district of Nuremberg. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
- ^ Association for Computer Genealogy e. V. ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) Info: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Eismannsberg