Good zengermoos

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Good Zengermoos is an agricultural estate in the municipality of Moosinning in the district of Erding in Bavaria ( Germany ). It is located in Erdinger Moos in the north of Munich, around 3 kilometers east of the Munich East – Munich Airport railway line (Airport S-Bahn). Today it has an operating area of ​​38 hectares. The Zengermoos settlement was only created in the 1980s by the settlement of farmers who had been displaced by the construction of Munich Airport ; Some of the buildings on the estate are used as apartments for municipal employees, and some are leased to traders.

history

Like various other goods in Erdinger Moos, the estate goes back to the moss cultivation of the 1850s, mainly for peat extraction, but also for agriculture. The alpine sand soil of the moor was particularly suitable for growing grain, fodder crops, potatoes, herbs and garden plants. It was founded by Johann Nepomuk Zenger from Erolzheim in Württemberg , who acquired numerous moss grounds and farms from a total of 41 owners. Zenger's property covered more than 700 hectares, of which around 600 were used for peat extraction. The name was given in 1851, it was officially confirmed in 1855. In 1879 the estate came to Zenger's son Max Ludwig, who died in 1890. The indebted property was acquired in 1891 by Johann Michael (III.) Ritter von Poschinger , a glass manufacturer in Zwiesel in the Bavarian Forest , who carried out peat mining on a large scale and in 1894 the Ismaning property of the then lord of the castle, Count Richard von Walderdorff, and in 1896 the Karlshof, a former Vorwerk of the Ismaning castle estate, took over. The 13-kilometer peat railway from Ismaning Castle to the Zengerhof was put into operation in 1896 . In 1899 Poschinger donated the Schlossgut, Gut Zengermoos and Karlshof to the city of Munich. The peat cutters came mainly from the Bavarian Forest and the Upper Palatinate; some of them settled in the moss. In 1919 the castle became the property of the Ismaning municipality. In 1993 the Zengermoos estate was (again) acquired by the City of Munich and converted to organic farming in the following year.

literature

  • Cornelia Oelwein: Between Goldach and Seebach. The history of the Goldachhof and moss cultivation in Ismaning . Franz Schiermeier Verlag, Munich 2013, ISBN 978-3-943866-22-3 .

Web links

  • [1] Website of the city of Munich

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.muenchen.de/rathaus/Stadtverwaltung/Kommunalreferat/stadtgueter/gutsbetriebe/zengermoos.html
  2. Cornelia Oelwein, Goldach (literature), p. 39
  3. Cornelia Oelwein, Goldach (literature), p. 40 f.
  4. ^ Karl and Ludwig Ritter von Poschinger, Hippolyt Freiherr Poschinger von Frauenau, et al .: Directory of the descendants of Joachim Poschinger , o. O. 2014
  5. ^ Adalbert von Bayern: Die Herzen der Leuchtenberg: History of a Bavarian-Napoleonic Family, Nymphenburger Verlag, 1992
  6. Cornelia Oelwein, Goldach (literature), p. 42.
  7. http://www.moosinning.de/index.php?id=0,26

Coordinates: 48 ° 16 ′ 30 ″  N , 11 ° 44 ′ 48 ″  E