Hagenbuch (Hilpoltstein)

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Hagenbuch
City of Hilpoltstein
Coordinates: 49 ° 8 ′ 11 ″  N , 11 ° 18 ′ 11 ″  E
Height : 429 m
Area : 3.39 km²
Residents : 77  (2020)
Population density : 23 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Incorporated into: Meckenhausen
Postal code : 91161
Area code : 09179
Hagenbuch
Hagenbuch
Local chapel of the Holy Family

Hagenbuch is a parish village and part of the town of Hilpoltstein in the Middle Franconian district of Roth in Bavaria .

location

Hagenbuch is located in the foothills of the Middle Franconian Jura above the Schwarzach Valley, southeast of the municipality's headquarters. The federal motorway A 9 passes to the east and the district road RH 28 to the west. There are communal roads connecting the neighboring towns of Holzi and Tandl .

history

The village was first mentioned in a document in 1544, namely in a Nuremberg Salbuch about the Palatinate-Neuburgian office of Hilpoltstein, which was pledged to the imperial city in 1542 by the heavily indebted Count Palatine Ottheinrich for 36 years. At that time the place consisted of "14 farms, estates and teams" that belonged to six landlords. In 1747 Hagenbuch wrote: "A mixed village, in it the subjects partly Palatinate-Neuburgisch, but mostly Nurembergisch, located on the back of Schwarzach, an hour from Stauff ."

In the Middle Ages, Hagenbuch did not have a church; the place was ecclesiastically divided into two parts in the 16th century: one part belonged to the Catholic parish of Obermässing , the other part to the margrave-Lutheran parish of Offenpaur (= Offenbau ). Later Hagenbuch was parish in the Catholic Meckenhausen (parish presumably since 1540; 1542 introduction of the Lutheran church order; 1628 re-Catholicization ) and came from there with houses and Holzi in 1835 to the Catholic parish Obermässing, where the children also went to school. The Catholic village chapel of the Holy Family in Hagenbuch was built in 1829 for private devotion.

At the end of the Old Kingdom , Hagenbuch consisted of 15 properties, which were subordinate to the Hilpoltstein maintenance office and owned by eight manors: five subjects belonged to Count Matthäus Carl Anton von Vieregg of Munich , two to the Baron von Harsdorf of Nuremberg, two the former Wolffstein , since 1740 Wittelsbach - curb Bavarian caste office Sulzbürg , two the Rentamt Hilpoltstein and one each of the Handelsmann- Martin Dillmann 's foundation founded in 1780 in Hilpoltstein, the Pemmer'schen (= Pömer'schen) manor of Nuremberg and the Hospital Freystadt . One property was freely owned . The community owned a shepherd's house.

After the fall of the Old Kingdom, the new Kingdom of Bavaria put an end to the splintering of power in 1806. With the community edict of 1818, Hagenbuch and the neighboring villages of Hauten and Holzi became the rural community of Hagenbuch in the Weinsfeld tax district . At that time the village of Hagenbuch consisted of 16 farms in which 71 people in 17 families lived. In 1831 one learns about the affiliations of a farm to be auctioned in Hagenbuch: “... the main estate, called Sixenhof, consisting of residential building no. 15 with barn , oven , draw well , Hofraith , 15 acres of field, 3 Tgw. (= Daily work ) meadows, 4 acres of wood, 1/3 day. Grass garden behind the barn and all municipal rights ”, plus more meadows and fields. In 1873, the 81 inhabitants kept twelve horses and 106 cattle in 34 buildings.

In the course of the regional reform in Bavaria, the municipality of Hagenbuch with its three districts Hagenbuch, Houses and Holzi was incorporated into Meckenhausen on January 1, 1972. On July 1, 1976, the municipality of Meckenhausen had to give up its political independence and became part of the municipality of Hilpoltstein; since then, Hagenbuch has been one of 49 districts in the town of Hilpoltstein.

Population development

  • 1818: 71
  • 1836: 67 (15 yards)
  • 1875: 81 (34 buildings)
  • 1904: 71 (15 residential buildings)
  • 1937: 75
  • 1950: 94 (15 residential buildings)
  • 1961: 67 (15 residential buildings)
  • 1973: 59
  • 2012: 59
  • 2016: 69
  • 2020: 77

Local Catholic Chapel of the Holy Family

Erected in 1829 by the master mason Alois Nißlbeck from Meckenhausen, it contains an early Baroque four-column altar (around 1700) with classicist additions and an altar sheet showing the Holy Family. In miniature paintings in the Rococo style , St. Charles Borromeo and St. Portrayed John of Damascus .

Architectural monuments

In addition to the local chapel, the door frame and door of Hagenbuch No. 1 and the former stable house of Hagenbuch No. 6 are considered architectural monuments .

See also list of architectural monuments in Hilpoltstein # Hagenbuch

societies

  • Hagenbuch volunteer fire department

literature

  • Josef Fritsch with the assistance of Bartholomäus Großhauser: Closely linked from time immemorial: Chronicle of Hagenbuch, Häuser and Holzi . In: Heimat-Blätter for Hilpoltstein, Allersberg, Greding, Heideck and Thalmässing 27.1 (1987), p. 2 f.
  • Wolfgang Wiessner: Hilpoltstein . In: Commission for Bavarian State History at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (Hrsg.): Historical Atlas of Bavaria . Part Franconia, Series I, Issue 24. Munich 1978, ISBN 3-7696-9908-4 ( digitized version ).
  • Franz Xaver Buchner : The Diocese of Eichstätt , 2nd volume. Eichstätt 1938
  • Kgl. Statistical Bureau in Munich (edit.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria , Munich 1876, column 888
  • Carl Siegert: History of the rule, castle and town Hilpoltstein ... In: Negotiations of the historical association of Upper Palatinate and Regensburg, 20 vol. (1861), p. 226

Web links

Commons : Hagenbuch  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official city directory for Bavaria, territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census . Issue 260 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1964, DNB  453660959 , Section II, Sp. 795 ( digitized version ).
  2. ^ Franz Tichy : Geographical Land Survey: The natural spatial units on sheet 163 Nuremberg. Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1973. →  Online map (PDF; 4 MB)
  3. a b Wolfgang Wiessner: Hilpoltstein . In: Commission for Bavarian State History at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (Hrsg.): Historical Atlas of Bavaria . Part Franconia, Series I, Issue 24. Munich 1978, ISBN 3-7696-9908-4 , p. 30 ( digitized version ).
  4. ^ Siegert, p. 226
  5. Georg Paul Hönns: Lexicon topographicum in which all of the Franconian Craises cities ... included ... , Frankfurt / Leipzig 1747, p 484
  6. ^ Siegert, p. 226
  7. ^ Wolfgang Wiessner: Hilpoltstein . In: Commission for Bavarian State History at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (Hrsg.): Historical Atlas of Bavaria . Part Franconia, Series I, Issue 24. Munich 1978, ISBN 3-7696-9908-4 , p. 170 ( digitized version ).
  8. Buchner, p. 290
  9. Buchner, pp. 117, 290, 293
  10. ^ Wolfgang Wiessner: Hilpoltstein . In: Commission for Bavarian State History at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (Hrsg.): Historical Atlas of Bavaria . Part Franconia, Series I, Issue 24. Munich 1978, ISBN 3-7696-9908-4 , p. 214 ( digitized version ).
  11. a b Alphabetical index of all the localities contained in the Rezatkreise according to its constitution by the newest organization: with indication of a. the tax districts, b. Judicial Districts, c. Rent offices in which they are located, then several other statistical notes . Ansbach 1818, p. 35 ( digitized version ).
  12. Supplement to the intelligence sheet for the Rezat district , Ansbach, September 10, 1831, column 691
  13. a b Kgl. Statistical Bureau (ed.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria. According to districts, administrative districts, court districts and municipalities, including parish, school and post office affiliation ... with an alphabetical general register containing the population according to the results of the census of December 1, 1875 . Adolf Ackermann, Munich 1877, 2nd section (population figures from 1871, cattle figures from 1873), Sp. 888 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb00052489-4 ( digital copy ).
  14. ^ [1] City of Hilpoltstein
  15. Th. D. Popp: Register of the Bissthumes Eichstätt . Eichstätt: Ph. Brönner 1836, p. 125 (No. 129)
  16. K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Directory of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria, with alphabetical register of places . LXV. Issue of the contributions to the statistics of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Munich 1904, Section II, Sp. 1218 ( digitized version ).
  17. Buchner, p. 291
  18. a b Wolfgang Wiessner: Hilpoltstein . In: Commission for Bavarian State History at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (Hrsg.): Historical Atlas of Bavaria . Part Franconia, Series I, Issue 24. Munich 1978, ISBN 3-7696-9908-4 , p. 251 ( digitized version ).
  19. Müller's Großes Deutsches Ortsbuch 2012 , Berlin / Boston 2012, p. 509
  20. Website of the city of Hilpoltstein: Hagenbuch (hilpoltstein.de, accessed on June 3, 2020)
  21. On the road together. Churches and parishes in the district of Roth and in the city of Schwabach , Schwabach / Roth undated [2000], p. 114