Hacklberg (Passau)

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Hacklberg
City of Passau
Hacklberg coat of arms
Coordinates: 48 ° 34 ′ 46 ″  N , 13 ° 26 ′ 18 ″  E
Height : 350 m above sea level NN
Residents : 6236  (Dec. 31, 2005)
Incorporation : July 1, 1972
Postal code : 94034
Area code : 0851
map
Districts of Passau with Hacklberg in the northwest
View of Hacklberg with the parish church of St. Konrad
View of Hacklberg with the parish church of St. Konrad

Hacklberg is a district of Passau . It comprises the urban area north of the Danube , from the city limits in the west to the actual Hacklberg. With an area of ​​1,668.8 hectares , Hacklberg is the second largest district of Passau after Heining .

history

In the time of the prince-bishop

In 1307 a small episcopal fiefdom was built on the northern bank of the Danube, which in 1358 already had two towers and was the venue for a knight's tournament. Prince-Bishop Georg von Hohenlohe built a summer palace in 1410, which Wolfgang von Salm had expanded in 1544. In 1675, Sebastian von Pötting relocated the prince-bishop's brewery to this location, and today's Hacklberg brewery emerged from this . From 1650 onwards, Hacklberg Castle was expanded, but only part of it remained after the secularization of Bavaria . With Schloss Eggendobl and Schloss Freudenhain , further episcopal castles were built in the area of ​​today's district. At the end of the 18th century, 14 villages, 40 hamlets and 45 wastelands belonged to the Hacklberg office of the Passau monastery .

Hacklberg community

The building of the Hacklberg brewery

After secularization , the political community Hacklberg was formed in 1818 from a total of 44 localities. The Veste Oberhaus and Veste Niederhaus also came to Hacklberg at that time. The Hacklberg Voluntary Fire Brigade was founded on September 23, 1883, and today's  Hacklberg Fruit and Horticultural Association dates back to 1903. In 1922 the community was expanded to include some parts of the originally independent Ries community , most of which fell to the Hals community . The community's sports club, SpVgg Hacklberg, has existed since 1925.

As early as April 1, 1939, the easternmost part of the community with the Veste Oberhaus and Veste Niederhaus and the hamlet of Bschütt was incorporated into the city of Passau (there in the Altstadt district ).

In 1961 the population had risen to over 4,000. There were four school buildings in the municipality: the Eggendobl boys 'school, the Freudenhain girls' school, the four-class Dietzing-St. Korona and the only two-class Wörth school. On Friday, October 18, 1963, the new Catholic elementary school Hacklberg was opened.

From 1963 to 1965 architect Siegfried Östreicher built the church of St. Konrad, and in 1965 the Passau bishop Simon Konrad Landersdorfer built the parish of Hacklberg. Because of the longstanding close relationship between Passau and Hacklberg, there was relatively little resistance to incorporation in the course of the regional reform . On December 29, 1971, the local council unanimously approved the voluntary incorporation . This took effect on July 1, 1972.

The new district of Hacklberg, which was created with the incorporation into Passau, includes the parish village of Schalding to the left of the Danube and the hamlet of Minihof (formerly Mimming), which until 1972 belonged to the former municipality of Kirchberg vorm Wald . The Kirchberg community was dissolved and the remaining (larger) part was incorporated into the Tiefenbach community .

A total of 6,236 residences are registered in Hacklberg, of which 5,553 are main residences and 683 are secondary residences (register as of December 31, 2005).

mayor

  • Baptist Häng (1876–1881)
  • Josef Fuchshuber (1881–1906)
  • Paul Riesinger (1906-1918)
  • Josef Fischer (1918–1933)
  • Johann Fernberger (1933–1945)
  • Albert Schmid (1945–1946)
  • August Riesinger (1946–1966)
  • Peter Maier (1966–1972)

Districts

The Hacklberg district comprises the following districts: Berghof, Doblhof, Donauhof, Eck, Eggendobl, Englbolding, Gaißa, Gaißamühle, Grillenöd, Hacklberg center, Hellersberg, Höflein, Jägerreuth, Kuchlhof, Lüftlberg, Maierhof, Minihof, Patriching , Korona , Pramöd, Rieshof Schalding to the left of the Danube, Schellköpfing, Stelzlhof, Thannöd, Walding, Wörth, Zieglstadl.

literature

  • Wolfram Hübner: Freudenhain Palace and Park in Passau (1786 - 1795) and the previous buildings in Hacklberg = Green Row. Sources and research on garden art 26. Wernersche Verlagsgesellschaft , Worms 2007. ISBN 978-3-88462-252-0
  • Franz Mader : The history of the incorporation after Passau (= Der Passauer Wolf. Series of publications of the Passau City Archives. Vol. 7). City archive, Passau 1997, ISBN 3-929350-29-7 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 602 .