Goppelsdorf

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Goppelsdorf , partly also Göppelsdorf , is a deserted area near Senftenhof , a district of the Stammbach market in the Upper Franconian district of Hof .

The name of the Goppelhöhe field west of Senftenhof is reminiscent of the small town, but its location is unknown. Presumably he was in the immediate vicinity of Senftenhof. After Hennig, Goppelsdorf was on an old road that ran over the Goppelshöhe. Remains of the wall are said to have been found in 1838, but the location has not been recorded. It is believed that stones from the decaying Göppelsdorf were built in Senftenhof. The former rector of the Stammbach School, Dietmar Reichel, dealt with the subject.

According to Haberlah-Pohl, Goppelsdorf is named in 1407 as a Bamberg enfeoffment as a desert. In 1422 the Goppelsdorf desert was a Bamberg fiefdom of the von Waldenfels . Although the place was later undisputedly recognized or tolerated by the Bamberg bishops as margravial property , there were conflicts about high jurisdiction (see also Fraisch ) and other rights, similar to the case of the Absängermühle, until the transition to Bavaria in 1810 . The responsible Bamberg Bailiwick office was in Marktschorgast . In 1480, in a letter from the Stammbach administration to the margravial government in Bayreuth , Goppelsdorf is still a desert. In the Forchheim Treaty of 1536, Bishop Weigand von Redwitz tried to clarify border disagreements, including regarding the high jurisdiction in Goppelsdorf. Haberlah-Pohl assumes that the place was repopulated between 1618 and 1666. The name Goppelsdorf and Senftenhof alternated and from 1811 onwards it was only referred to as Senftenhof.

The area around the deserted Goppelsdorf served as a pasture to which the drive ways led. In 1538 Bamberg officials sued against the grazing of sheep by Stammbach citizens. In Stammbach's land book from the middle of the 15th century, seven active hut willows, which are used as common land (more precisely: Peunt), are described. With regard to grazing rights in the desert of Goppelsdorf, witnesses are recorded in the chapter Customers who remember the use as a traditional right and thus form a basis for current claims.

literature

  • Karl Dietel : Münchberg history of an official and industrial city , 1963. P. 43.
  • Helmut Hennig: The history of Stammbach - from the beginnings to the founding of the empire . Wunsiedel 1989, pp. 23, 36, 67.
  • Annett Haberlah-Pohl: Historical Atlas of Bavaria , Franconia, Münchberg - The Altlandkreis (series I, volume 39). Munich 2011, ISBN 978-3-7696-6556-7
  • Karl Walther: Land book about Stanbach . Eckersdorf 1997. pp. 13f.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Hennig, p. 23.
  2. Haberlah-Pohl, p. 23f.
  3. Haberlah-Pohl, p. 107f.
  4. Haberlah-Pohl, p. 166.
  5. Haberlah-Pohl, p. 23f.
  6. Haberlah-Pohl, p. 284.
  7. Hennig, p. 29f.

Coordinates: 50 ° 8 ′ 42 ″  N , 11 ° 42 ′ 18 ″  E