Grünreuth

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Grünreuth
Hartenstein municipality
Coordinates: 49 ° 35 ′ 24 ″  N , 11 ° 32 ′ 38 ″  E
Residents : 62  (2005)
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Postal code : 91235
Area code : 09152

The village of Grünreuth is a district of the municipality of Hartenstein in the Middle Franconian district of Nürnberger Land in Bavaria .

General

Grünreuth is about 1.8 kilometers southeast of Hartenstein, west of the Hasenleite mountain (555 m) and east of the Zenkelberg (535 m). The hamlet has about 45 buildings and is surrounded by fields and forests. In 1875 the place had 87 inhabitants. In 1925, 98 residents lived in 17 residential buildings in Grünreuth. In 1950 there were still 89 residents in 16 residential buildings. In the following years the population continued to decrease. In 1961 there were 84 inhabitants, in 1972 only 69 inhabitants. Grünreuth was an independent municipality until January 1, 1972 , before it was incorporated into Hartenstein. In 2005, 62 residents were registered in Grünreuth.

history

Grünreuther manor around 1722

The founding of Grünreuth goes back to the high and late medieval clearing period from the 11th to the 14th century, which is proven by the ending -reuth . The place initially belonged to the northern part of Bavaria . After the establishment of the Bamberg diocese in 1007 by King Heinrich II , the area became part of the Bamberg diocese in 1011. The Counts of Sulzbach exercised manorial rule and fiefdom as Bamberg bailiffs , then the Lords of Hartenstein, whose progenitor Rupert I von Neidstein was. This was mentioned in a document between 1240 and 1245. The property of the Hartensteiner came to the Schenken von Reicheneck around 1325, three years later to the Wittelsbacher and in 1448 the Parsberg Grünreuth loaned it to the Stör and later to the Hartenstein office. In the Thirty Years War , Hartenstein went to the Kurbayern . From 1700 the Ebner von Eschenbach were the landlords of Grünreuth. In 1857 the community of Grünreuth came to the district court of Auerbach, and in 1880 to the district office of Hersbruck . The Grünreuther Schlösschen can only be seen today as a castle stable .

Worth seeing in nature

literature

  • Nuremberg country . Karl Pfeiffer's Buchdruckerei und Verlag, Hersbruck 1993. ISBN 3-9800386-5-3
  • Monument protection questionnaire by the architects' office Stuhlmann

Web links