Frankenreuth (Waidhaus)

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Frankenreuth
Waidhaus market
Coordinates: 49 ° 39 ′ 3 ″  N , 12 ° 30 ′ 21 ″  E
Height : 520 m above sea level NN
Postal code : 92726
Area code : 09652
Frankenreuth, view of the castle
Frankenreuth, view of the castle

Frankenreuth is a district of the Bavarian market Waidhaus in the district of Neustadt an der Waldnaab in the administrative district of Upper Palatinate .

Geographical location

Frankenreuth is about two kilometers northeast of Waidhaus, one kilometer north of the A6 motorway and one kilometer west of the Czech border. Frankenreuth is located south of the 755 meter high Sulzberg and on the north bank of the Grabenbach. The Grabenbach rises on the slope of the Sulzberg and flows east of Waidhaus into the Rotlohbach.

history

The ending -reuth of the place name Frankenreuth indicates an early development of the place before the 13th century. The places with the place names ending in -reuth, -rieth, -ried, -richt (earlier spellings: -riut, -rivt, -rewt, derived from "clearing", "clearing") emerged in connection with the first settlement of the area by clearing the dense forest. Places with such names occur very often in the area of ​​the rivers Pfreimd and Luhe and the adjacent streams. These were the starting point for the settlement of the region.

The rich deposits of feldspar and quartz as well as the forest (potash was extracted from the wood) favored glass production. The first glassworks in Frankenreuth existed in the middle of the 16th century. As early as 1487, a glassworks near Waidhaus was built by Hans Gläser. In the Frankenreuth glassworks, slug panes and later hand-blown mirror glass were produced. This glassworks went down in 1621 during the Thirty Years War . At the beginning of the 18th century, Franz Ferdinand Alois Schedl founded a new glassworks, the Schedlhütte, which existed until 1926.

Information about the situation in the 18th century is provided by: a tax description from 1773/74, a list of herds from 1762, the general files from 1792, a description of the direct subordinates of the court and the backers from 1808, the house and rustic tax cadastre from 1810/11, the The original cadastre from 1840 and the register of the diocese of Regensburg from 1782. In these documents, the Frankenreuth estate was described as belonging to the Treswitz nursing office . At that time Frankenreuth was in the Vohenstrauß district, belonged to the Waidhaus community and had two properties and a shepherd's house. In addition, a glassworks and a mill belonged to Frankenreuth.

Zacharias Schedl von Greifenstein was a toll clerk and magistrate in Waidhaus in the 18th century. He had built a special glass factory on his estate in Frankenreuth. On May 4, 1796, he was granted the freedom of the landed people. As a result, he acquired lower jurisdiction over his landholders , a tavern keeper and a farmer. Schedl also owned several houses in which his day laborers and glassmakers lived for rent.

1809 Frankenreuth was a closed district where Zacharias Schedl of Greifenstein a patrimonial four land-owning tenants had. Zacharias Schedl von Greifenstein was granted jurisdiction for life in 1807 by special grace. However, his application for the establishment of a second class patrimonial court was rejected. After his death, the jurisdiction over Frankenreuth fell to the state.

In 1808 tax districts were formed. The village of Frankenreuth, together with the hamlet of Reichenau and the desert areas of Kühmühle, Richterhaus and Speckermühle and the village of Waidhaus, belonged to the Waidhaus tax district. The Waidhaus tax district belonged to the Vohenstrauß regional court.

Markets, rural communities and village communities emerged from the tax districts . In 1821 Frankenreuth was an indirect patrimonial rural community with 26 families.

In 1830 Frankenreuth was incorporated into Waidhaus.

The Frankenreuther glassworks in the 19th and 20th centuries

Until 1850 the landowner Johann Baptist von Schedel (other spelling: Schedl) ran the Frankenreuth glassworks. Then Gressmann & Co. leased the hut for six years.

In 1856 the Jewish glass entrepreneurs Moritz and Alois Kupfer took over the lease. In the following years, the Kupfer family gradually bought the factory buildings, the administrator's house, the workers' houses, the Pocherhaus in Grafenau , the manor house, the brewery, the inn and the associated areas. The glassworks was modernized and expanded. Towards the end of the 19th century, 195,000 raw glasses were delivered annually to the surrounding grinding and polishing works, the workforce consisted of 70 workers, and the annual production was 200,000 marks. After the long-time factory director Josef Kupfer died in 1898, the glassworks went into decline under his successor Max Kupfer. Numerous rescue attempts under Eduard Kupfer resulted in the union of the Frankenreuther Glashütte with the Bavarian mirror and mirror glass factories in 1907. The First World War , inflation and an expensive but failed attempt at modernization led to the closure of the glassworks in 1926 and subsequent deterioration.

religion

Frankenreuth belongs to the parish of St. Emmeram Waidhaus and to the dean's office in Leuchtenberg. It has a Nepomuk chapel that was built in 1855. In 1913 Frankenreuth had 35 houses and 203 Catholics. At that time there were 1653 Catholics, 8 Protestants and 16 Jews living in the area of ​​the parish Waidhaus. In 1990 there were 198 Catholics in Frankenreuth. At that time, 95.39% of the inhabitants of the parish Waidhaus were Catholic. In 2011, 86.6% of the residents of the Waidhaus community were Catholic and 3.8% Protestant.

Culture and sights

The following properties in Frankenreuth are listed:

societies

Frankenreuth has an active shooting club. It was founded in 1910 by workers and employees of the Frankenreuth glassworks. At first it was called "Schützenverein Edelweiß", since 1950 it has been called "Schützenverein Enzian". The shooting club can look back on an eventful history of closings and start-ups. He played and still plays a role in the social life of Frankenreuth. In 1969 he renovated the village chapel. From 1982 to 1985 he built a shooting range with shooting ranges in the basement on the site of the former glass factory. Since the border was opened in 1990, he has been on friendly terms with the “Arnika” shooting club in Tachov , Czech Republic .

economy

A compressor station of the Central European Gas Pipeline (Megal Nord) is located in Frankenreuth.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Fritsch hiking map of the Northern Upper Palatinate Forest Nature Park, scale 1: 50,000
  2. ^ Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I, Issue 39: Vohenstrauss p. 6
  3. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern series I, issue 39: Vohenstrauss p. 3
  4. http://www.frankenreuth.de/servus.html
  5. Archived copy ( memento of the original from October 6, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.waidhaus.de
  6. http://www.frankenreuth.de/servus.html
  7. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I, Issue 39: Vohenstrauss pp. 117–119
  8. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I, Issue 39: Vohenstrauss p. 127
  9. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I, Issue 39: Vohenstrauss p. 202
  10. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I Issue 39: Vohenstrauss p. 205
  11. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I Issue 39: Vohenstrauss p. 211
  12. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I, Issue 39: Vohenstrauss p. 218
  13. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern Series I, Issue 39: Vohenstrauss p. 226
  14. http://www.rijo.homepage.t-online.de/pdf_2/DE_BY_JU_frankenreuth.pdf
  15. Manfred Müller (Ed.): Register of the diocese of Regensburg. Verlag des Bischöflichen Ordinariats Regensburg, 1997, pp. 760, 761
  16. ^ Diocese of Regensburg (ed.): Register of the Diocese of Regensburg . ed. i. A. Sr Excellency of the Most Revered Bishop Dr. Antonius von Henle from the Episcopal Ordinariate Regensburg. Regensburg 1916, p. 335 ( digitized version ).
  17. Manfred Müller (Ed.): Register of the diocese of Regensburg. Verlag des Bischöflichen Ordinariats Regensburg, 1997, p. 760
  18. Archived copy ( memento of the original from October 1, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.statistik.bayern.de
  19. http://enzian-frankenreuth.de/beispiel-seite/ueber-uns/
  20. Frankenreuth, Waidhaus - aerial photo, Upper Palatinate

Web links

Commons : Frankenreuth  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files