Daglfing (municipality)

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The municipality of Daglfing was an independent political municipality east of Munich from 1818 to 1930 . In 1930 it was incorporated into Munich. The place and today's Munich district Daglfing gave it its name .

history

Former community school in Englschalking, now kindergarten

When the community was formed in Bavaria in 1818 , the community of Daglfing was formed from several places that were too small to be able to form their own community. The formation of the congregation is not entirely clear, so the registers of July 5, 1818 and 1820 differ in terms of the size of the congregation. From 1820, the municipality of Daglfing included the four villages of Daglfing , Englschalking , Johanneskirchen , Zamdorf , the hamlet of Denning and the wasteland of Steinhausen . Previously, Zamdorf had formed the independent community of Zamdorf with Steinhausen and Denning.

The community of Daglfing was only a loose association of relatively independent villages, which had their own local representatives and in some cases orientated themselves more towards other neighboring communities than towards the place that gave the community its name, Daglfing. This was not the most important place in the community either, which increasingly became the geographically more central location Englschalking, where the community school was built in 1896. There have been several attempts by villages to be removed from the community of Daglfing. While an application for reorganization from Denning to Bogenhausen (1873) and from Johanneskirchen to Oberföhring (1893) was rejected by the responsible authorities, Zamdorf and Steinhausen succeeded in being assigned to the Berg am Laim community in 1875 .

In 1911, the community of Daglfing made its first application for incorporation into Munich, but it was unsuccessful. It was not until January 1, 1930 that the towns of Daglfing, Englschalking and Johanneskirchen were incorporated into Munich. Denning initially existed as an independent village and thus as a public corporation; the village was only dissolved on December 1, 1930.

The last mayor of the community of Daglfing from 1900 to 1930 was Wilhelm Flaschträger (1866–1930), owner of a brickworks in Englschalking. He was a big proponent of incorporation into Munich. He died six months after this incorporation and was buried in the Englschalking cemetery near St. Nikolaus . The street leading past the church and cemetery was named after him that same year.

Even before it was incorporated into Munich, the community of Daglfing experienced a large population influx in the 1920s. The Denninger Colony , the Obermaiersche Colony and the colonies on Daglfinger Strasse and Oberschlesische Strasse emerged . In John Kirchener moss wild settlements were established. Even after the incorporation, the large open spaces of the community still offered enough space for further settlements such as the garden city Johanneskirchen , Cosimapark and Fideliopark .

cards

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 601 .
  2. Bavarian State Ministry of the Interior of November 11, 1929 No. 3113/3, printed in Lutz (1982), p. 43.
  3. Bavarian State Ministry of the Interior of December 19, 1930, excerpts from Krack (ed.) 2010

literature

  • Roland Krack (ed.): Four villages for Munich . Daglfing, Denning, Englschalking, Johanneskirchen and their incorporation into Munich 1930. NordOstKultur, Munich 2010, ISBN 978-3-9809735-1-9 .
  • Willibald Karl (Ed.): Villages on the brick land . Daglfing-Denning-Englschalking-Johanneskirchen-Zamdorf. Buchendorfer, Munich 2002, ISBN 3-934036-90-2 .
  • Fritz Lutz : Daglfing, Denning, Englschalking, Johanneskirchen. 50 years with Munich (1930–1980). City Archives, Munich 1982.

Web links

  • History of Daglfing on the website of the Association for District Culture in the Munich Northeast eV

Coordinates: 48 ° 9 '  N , 11 ° 39'  E