Haringhof

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Haringhof
City of Eichstätt
Coordinates: 48 ° 53 '36 "  N , 11 ° 12' 55"  E
Height : 515 m
Residents : (1987)
Postal code : 85072
Area code : 08421
Häringhof (Bavaria)
Haringhof

Location of Häringhof in Bavaria

Haringhof
Haringhof

Häringhof is a wasteland incorporated into the city of Eichstätt in the Upper Bavarian district of Eichstätt .

location

Häringhof is located three kilometers northeast of Eichstätt on the plateau of the Franconian Alb .

history

The farm is first mentioned in the 16th century as "Hungerhoff", laid out by the Eichstatter canon and provost Ambrosius von Gumppenberg (around 1501–1574). The farm was built on poor and therefore not very productive land, so that hunger was probably no stranger to its residents; but the nickname "hunger" may also have given it its name. In 1614 there is talk of "rabble" staying there, against which the Bishop of Eichstätt is taking action with a mandate. At that time, the description of the location was for the first time “Vnder Wimpasing” (Unterwimpasing) - in relation to the “(Upper) Wimpasing” (= “Area knocked over by the wind, particularly exposed to the wind”). In 1645 there is talk of the Hungerhof at “Nieder Wimpesing”, on which the Domkapitel's subject Veit Neusesser sits. As reported in 1660, the tithing of the court belonged to the collegiate foundation “Our Lady” in Eichstätt; The Marienpfarrkirche, rebuilt from 1472 and largely demolished in the 19th century, had been incorporated into the cathedral chapter since 1233, the collegiate monastery existed since 1316/18. In 1800 the parish “Our Lady” quarreled with Count von Schenck as the owner of the “Ungerhof” at the time. In 1808 the name Häringhof appears for the first time, which gradually gained acceptance: While in 1836 it was said that the "Hunger- (or Häring-) hof" consists of a house with ten souls, in 1882 only "Häringhof" with four residents is mentioned. If this name did not come up after an owner called "Häring / Hering", it should again be based on a nickname in the sense of "thin, unsightly". In the 1906 district handbook one finds the designation "Unterwimpasing (Niederwimpasing-Häringhof)". In the new Kingdom of Bavaria (1806) the property belonged to the tax district and municipality of Preith . On May 1, 1978 the Preith community was dissolved, Häringhof came to the city of Eichstätt.

In 1818 the farm owner was called Eigeneseher. In 1876 the estate came into the possession of the Swiss Ming family in a foreclosure auction, and they remained there until 1915/16. The farm is still an agricultural business today (arable farming, pig breeding business, with a biogas plant since 2002).

Maria-Hilf chapel at Häringhof

Others

  • The manor wall probably dates from the 18th century.
  • In 1944 a military airfield was to be built near Häringhof.

Population development

  • 1821: 11
  • 1836: 10
  • 1882: 4
  • 1937: 11
  • 1950: 14
  • 1987: 5

Transport links

The Häringhof can be reached via a spur road that branches off to the east from State Road 2225, the so-called Jura Hochstraße, coming up from Eichstätter Spindeltal at the height of the Eichstätter settlement area Seidlkreuz.

literature

  • Franz Xaver Buchner : The diocese of Eichstätt. Volume I, Eichstätt: Brönner & Däntler, 1937.
  • Antonius Reith: Eichstätt. City and Altlandkreis. (Historical book of place names of Bavaria, 8). Munich: Commission for Bavarian State History, 2017.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Anton Hotter: The Eichstätt District Office , 2nd part, Eichstätt: 2nd edition 1875, p. 46; if the year of origin stated there is correct, it cannot have been the Gumppenberg stated there. Gumppenberg laid out the nearby Ziegelhof in 1571 - perhaps at the same time the Hungerhof.
  2. Reith, p. 222 f .; Buchner, pp. 218-224
  3. ^ General Intelligence Gazette for the Kingdom of Baiern of July 4, 1818, Col. 727
  4. ^ Bert Braun: Großgemeinde Pollenfeld with the parish parts . Erlangen-Spardorf 1984, p. 463
  5. [1]
  6. ^ Wilhelm Neu and Volker Liedtke (editors): Upper Bavaria. Ensembles, architectural monuments, archaeological site monuments. Munich 1986, p. 249
  7. ^ From the holdings of the Eichstätt University Library, Volume 1, Texts. Ferdinand von Werden's diaries. Diaries for the restoration of the Eichstätt Cathedral 1938–1945 , Wiesbaden 1999, p. 279
  8. ^ Leo Hintermayr: The Principality of Eichstätt of the Dukes of Leuchtenberg 1817–1833 . Munich: CH Beck, 2000, p. 160
  9. Buchner, p. 255
  10. ^ Gerhard Hirschmann: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Part of Franconia. Row I, Issue 6. Eichstätt. Beilngries - Eichstätt - Greding. Munich 1959, p. 198
  11. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing (Ed.): Official local directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 25, 1987 . Issue 450 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich November 1991, DNB  94240937X , p. 81 ( digitized version ).

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