Gstöttenau

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Gstöttenau ( Rotte )
locality
Gstöttenau (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Eferding  (FR), Upper Austria
Judicial district Eferding
Pole. local community Pupping   ( KG  Pupping)
Coordinates 48 ° 19 ′ 41 ″  N , 14 ° 1 ′ 19 ″  E Coordinates: 48 ° 19 ′ 41 ″  N , 14 ° 1 ′ 19 ″  E
height 264  m above sea level A.
Residents of the village 191 (January 1, 2020)
Building status 50 (2001)
Post Code 4070 Pupping ( Eferding )
Statistical identification
Locality code 08160
Counting district / district Pupping (40509 000)
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; DORIS
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191

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Gstöttenau is a place in the Eferdinger basin in Upper Austria , and a place of the communities Pupping and Hinzenbach in the district of Eferding .

geography

Gstöttenau ( settlement )
locality
Basic data
Pole. District , state Eferding  (FR), Upper Austria
Judicial district Eferding
Pole. local community Hinzenbach   ( KG  Hinzenbach)
Coordinates (K) 48 ° 19 ′ 44.8 "  N , 14 ° 0 ′ 36.2"  E
height 266  m above sea level A.
Residents of the village 34 (January 1, 2020)
Building status 11 (2001)
Post Code 4070 Hinzenbach ( Eferding )
Statistical identification
Locality code 08105
Counting district / district Hinzenbach (40507 000)
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; DORIS ;
(K) Coordinate not official
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Template: Infobox community part in Austria / maintenance / side box
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34

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The place is about 2 kilometers directly north of Eferding , not far from the banks of the Danube , at around 265  m above sea level. A. Gsöttenau extends along the Aschach , whose estuary floodplains begin a few hundred meters further, from the B 130  Nibelungen Straße (around km 2.5) southeast downstream.

The two villages have around 60 buildings with around 220 inhabitants.

The area belongs to the level of the natural landscape spatial unit Eferdinger Becken .

Neighborhoods
Pupping (according to Pupping) Au near Brandstatt (Gem. Pupping) Brandstatt (Gem. Pupping)
Seebach (Gem. Hinzenbach)

Leumühle (Gem. Pupping)

Neighboring communities Au at high bridge (according to pupping)
Wash point (according to pupping )

history

Gstöttenau Castle (engraving by Georg Matthäus Vischer , 1674)

The Roman fort Joviacum is believed to be here, but this is somewhat controversial as there are no finds - the Pupping Monastery , 1.2 km away , where Roman roof tiles were actually found, would appear more plausible .

Around 1317 a property is documented in Steten ob Everding . Dietmar von Aistersheim is said to have given it to Wilhering Abbey at the time. Originally the estate belonged to the Schaunbergers , at least it appears in the Schaunberger Urbar from 1371. Spelling variants over the course of time are Gstettenau Gstättenau or Gestettenau, Gestöttenau , the place name comes from the place “Ort” and -au “Au, Feuchtlandschaft”.
An earth stable is also reported from the Middle Ages .

The Gstöttenau Castle , at the time a magnificent country castle with vast assets is likely to be built only in the Baroque: 1742 it is called as "a beautiful [...] on a fertile plain located and to the new art built castle". At the end of the 16th century, the castle was owned by Niklas Glötschl von Gallham (Götschlein von Gallhaimb) and then passed to the von Sprinzenstein and von Hungersbach and then the Praunfalk , in 1620 to the Starhembergers , who owned the property until 1934. In 1830, however, the castle was already in ruins, and around 1884 it was partially torn down to the foundation walls between 1934 and 1936. Today only building remains are left, the former Meierhof or the former brewery is now the Gasthaus Schickerbauer.

Settlements were already established around the castle in Josephinism , and in 1787 the New World appeared east of the castle and the brewery, as well as buildings to the south around the pheasantry ( pheasant camp) . Around 1820 the village already had 35 houses, 42 tenants and 164 residents, and belonged to the Eferding parish church in the Efferding district commissioner - today only the southern part belongs to Eferding, the northern part to the Hartkirchen parish church . The eastern border to today's Brandstatt was formed by a branch of the Danube, which has now been filled in, and which the place name Au “bei high Steg” recalls as a transition.

The Hinzenbach district is a young settlement that arose along the B 130: this cuts a piece of the old Gestenauerfeld that belongs to Hinzenbach .

Gasthof Schickerbauer: entrance passage
Population and building status
  Krld. Austrian odEnns
( Kthm. Österr. / Österr.- Ugrn. )
Bld. Upper Austria
( Rep. Austria )
  1809 1825 1869 1951 1961 1971 1981 1991 2001
total - 164 187 160 196 222
34 35 33 34 40 61
Pupping 159 167 178 186
33 44 44 50
Hinzenbach 36
11

Attractions

  • Meierhof / Brauhaus Gstöttenau (today Gasthaus Schickerbauer, Gstöttenau 3), various medieval remains of the castle

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Thesis by Werner Lugs: Contribution to the localization of the Roman places Joviacum and Marinianium. In: Yearbook of the Upper Austrian Museum Association. Year 141, Linz 1996, p. 164 ( PDF on ZOBODAT ).
    also Josef Stern: Even Where Roman Wheels Rolled: Considerations on the Course of Roman Roads Volume 24 by the Austrian Archaeological Institute: Special Writings , Verlag A. Hartleben-Dr. W. Rob Verlag, 1994, ISBN 978-3-9500221-0-0 , p. 70 and 122.
    Franz Gillmayr found roof tiles, mentioned in Gstöttenau .  (
    Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. doris.ooe.gv.at → Digital Upper Austrian Culture Atlas (DOKA)
    @1@ 2Template: Toter Link / doris.ooe.gv.at  
  2. sdmftl. Survey 1965, mentioned in Josef Reitinger: The prehistoric and early historical finds in Upper Austria. Volume 3 of the Upper Austrian series of publications. Musealvereines 1968, p. 342
  3. Jakob Christoph Iselin : Historical and Geographical General Lexicon . In which [...] finite The description of the kayships, kingdoms, principalities, freyer estates, landscapes, islands, cities, castles, monasteries, castles, seas, lakes, rivers, and so on from now on; … 3. Edition. tape 3 . Brandmüller, 1742, Gstöttenau , p. 923 , col. gst – gua ( Google Book, full view ).
  4. ^ S. Schütz, F. Müller: Mappa of the land above the Enns. Reduced and engraved in 1781 by CS Schütz and written by F. Müller in 1787 (layer online on DORIS → first regional recordings )
  5. ^ Benedikt Pillwein (Ed.): History, geography and statistics of the Archduchy of Austria on the Enns and the Duchy of Salzburg . With a register, which is also the topographical and genealogical lexicon and the district map. Geographical-historical-statistical detail according to district commissariats. 1st edition. Third part: the Hausruckkreis . Joh. Christ. Quandt, Linz 1830, District Commissioner Efferding: Gstättenau, Gestöttenau , p. 245  ( Google eBook ). 2nd edition 1843 ( Google Book )
  6. a b Franziszäischer Cadastre 1817–1861 (layer online at DORIS)
  7. ^ 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 1, Pupping: Gstöttenau , p.  53 f . ( Online document , explanations . Suppl . ; both PDF - oD [updated] series 1951 and 1961 with the district belonging to G Hinzenbach; no information in Hinzenbach p. 53). Special references:  1809: Numbers of houses and residents from the military conscription; after Ignaz Gielge: Topographical-historical description of all cities, markets and castles, parishes and other strange places in Austria above the Enns , 1814/15. • 1825:  military conscription 1823/30; quoted from Benedikt Pillwein (ed.): History, geography and statistics of the Archduchy of Austria ob der Enns and the Duchy of Salzburg . With a register, which is also the topographical and genealogical lexicon and the district map. Geographical-historical-statistical detail according to district commissariats. 1st edition. Third part: the Hausruckkreis . Joh. Christ. Quandt, Linz 1830 ( Google eBook ). 2nd edition 1843 ( Google Book ) • 1869:  Statistical Central Commission (Hrsg.): Local repertories of the kingdoms and countries represented in the Austrian Imperial Council . (1871 ff.).  • 1951 and later: Austrian Central Statistical Office / Statistics Austria (ed.): Directory of places . (Results of the census).