Grosspiesenham

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Großpiesenham ( village )
locality
Großpiesenham (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Ried im Innkreis  (RI), Upper Austria
Judicial district Ried im Innkreis
Pole. local community Pramet   ( KG  Pramet )
Coordinates 48 ° 8 '7 "  N , 13 ° 30' 2"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 8 '7 "  N , 13 ° 30' 2"  E
height 538  m above sea level A.
Residents of the village 423 (January 1, 2020)
Building status 47 (addresses 2014 f1)
Post Code 4925 Pramet
Statistical identification
Locality code 10615
Counting district / district Pramet (41 223 000)
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; DORIS
f0
423

BW

Großpiesenham is a village in the Innviertel of Upper Austria as well as the village of the municipality Pramet in Ried im Innkreis District . It is the birthplace of Franz Stelzhamer (1802–1874), the most famous dialect poet of the southern German-speaking area.

geography

The place is located about 8 kilometers south of Ried im Innkreis , at the northern foot of the middle Hausruck to the Innviertel hill country (southern Innviertel).

The village is 1½ kilometers southeast of Pramet at 540  m above sea level. A. am Windischhuber Bach in the area of ​​the upper reaches of the Oberach , a tributary of the Antiesen near Ried.

Around 130 people live in around 50 buildings in the village.

Neighboring towns and cities:
Pramet Gutensham Senzenberg (Gem.  Pattigham )
Crunching Neighboring communities Noxberg
Kleinpiesenham Windischhub

history

In the High Middle Ages the place belonged to Passau , including Kleinpiesenham. The Bavarian -ham name is mentioned in a land register around 1260. Until 1779 the area was Bavarian (then Innbaiern ), and until 1783 (foundation of the diocese of Linz ) Passau. It belonged to the Waldzell parish until 1784 , to the Schildorn parish until 1884 , and to the parish there until 1887 .

Population and building status
1260 1788 1811 1869 1951 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001 2011
162 169 173 147 136 136 136 134 133
4th 21st 31 31 33 33 36 40 43 (47)
Addresses 2014

economy

The area around Pramet is part of an old coal field that was in operation until the 1960s. Until the 19th century it was characterized by small mining entrepreneurs ("peasant mining").

In 2001 there were eight agricultural and forestry holdings registered in the village - with 42 households .

Attractions

The
Stelzhamerhaus museum courtyard

The Stelzhamerhaus , the listed birthplace of Franz Stelzhamer , is located in the center of Großpiesenham. It is a small wooden block house in which the fully preserved Muadastüberl and its original furnishings can be viewed. Hiking trails with boards that present the poet's works have also been laid out.

The carpenter's farmer's house , across from the Stelzhammerhaus, dates from the 17th century and can also be visited with the fully preserved inventory.

The Schatzdorfer family's violin-making workshop is located about 100 meters from the town center. This Schatzdorferhaus , which was renovated in 1997 for the 100th anniversary of Franz Stelzhamer's birth, is also a listed building.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Kurt Klein  (edit.): Historical local dictionary . Statistical documentation on population and settlement history. Ed .: Vienna Institute of Demography [VID] d. Austrian Academy of Sciences . Upper Austria part 2, Großpiesenham , p.  2 ( online document , explanations . Suppl . ; both PDF - oD [updated]). Special references:  1260: Passauer Urbare from the 13th century, Urkundenbuch II, p. 47/48; after Adam Maidhof: The Passau land register . In: Publications of the Institute for East Bavarian Homeland Research . 1/17/19 (1933 and 1939).  • 1788:  Josephinisches Lagebuch 1786/90, Oberösterreichisches Landesarchiv. • 1811: census of the Bavarian administration ( Montgelas census ) . In: Franz Xaver Weilmeyr: Topographisches Lexikon vom Salzach-Kreis . 1812.  • 1869:  Statistical Central Commission (Ed.): Local repertories of the kingdoms and countries represented in the Austrian Imperial Council . (1871 ff.).  • 1951 and later: Austrian Central Statistical Office (ed.): Directory of places . (Results of the population censuses; from 2011 register censuses see above).
  2. Ostlicher Hausruck from Waldzell to Wolfsegg, cf. Hausruck , Wolfsegg-Traunthaler Coal Works AG
  3. ^ Roman Groiss: Geology and coal mining in Hausruck (Upper Austrian Molasse) . In: Geologische Bundesanstalt (Ed.): Arch. F. Storage research Geol. B.-A. tape August 11 , 1989, ISSN  0253-097X , p. 167–178 ( geologie.ac.at [PDF]).