Stallegg

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Stallegg (Rotte)
locality
cadastral community Stallegg
Stallegg (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Horn  (HO), Lower Austria
Pole. local community Rosenburg mold
Coordinates 48 ° 36 '50 "  N , 15 ° 38' 41"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 36 '50 "  N , 15 ° 38' 41"  Ef1
height 261  m above sea level A.
Residents of the village 16 (January 1, 2020)
Area  d. KG 0.46 km²dep1
Post Code 3571f1
prefix + 43/02982f1
Statistical identification
Locality code 04020
Cadastral parish number 10057
Counting district / district Rosenburg (31121 000)
image
View of Stallegg.
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; NÖGIS
f0
16

Stallegg is a place and a cadastral municipality in the municipality of Rosenburg-Mold in the Horn district in Lower Austria .

geography

The place is on the right bank of the Kamp between Rosenburg and Gars am Kamp . The altitude in the center of the village is 261 meters. The area of ​​the cadastral community covers 0.46 km². The population amounts to 10 inhabitants (status: 2001).

Post Code

The cadastral community of Stallegg has the postcode 3571.

population

religion

The vast majority of the population is Roman Catholic . The place belongs to the parish of Gars . There was a local chapel in the center of the village, which was demolished during the Second World War.

Population development

Number of inhabitants
(source: Ortlexikon Niederösterreich)
year 1830 1846 1869 1951 1971 1991 2001 2011
Residents 46 53 39 43 21st 16 10 13

history

View of Stallegg, postcard around 1920.

The place and the castle got its name after the knight family von Staleche , which is documented between 1212 and 1365. The naming of Otto von Stallegg in 1263 as ministerial Austriae shows him as a high-ranking ministerial under King Ottokar II Přemysl . Before 1487 the estate came to the owners of the neighboring Rosenburg . By 1600 Stallegg Castle had already fallen into ruins. The only mill on site, the Hagenmühle, was deserted, but was repaired again in the 17th century and operated until the second half of the 19th century. In the course of the expansion of Kamptalstrasse , the remains of the mill were removed in 1978. After the construction of the Kamptalbahn in 1889, Stallegg developed into a small summer resort with around ten villas. After 1945, Stallegg could no longer follow the tradition of the summer resort. Changed travel habits, but also the construction of the Kamptal reservoirs, which led to a sharp drop in temperature in the Kamp, deprived tourism in the Kamptal of its most important foundations.

Attractions

Stallegg ruins
The ruins of Stallegg can be reached from the village of Stallegg via the hiking trail towards Etzmannsdorf (blue marking) and the second left branching off, newly laid out timber transport path and accessible all year round.
Statue of St. John Nepomuk
At the bridge that leads from Kamptalstrasse to Stallegg is a baroque statue of St. Johann Nepomuk , donated around 1730 by the then administrator of the Rosenburg , Johann Georg Zobl, to whom an inscription on the base commemorates.
Gallows on the court hill
To the north of Stallegg, across from the ruins, there are the remains of a walled gallows system consisting of two columns on the court hill .

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

Stallegg is connected to Kamptalstraße (B34) by a road bridge . The PostBus bus company drives to the Stallegg-Brücke stop on line 1310 ( Horn - St. Leonhard am Hornerwald ). The place is on the Kamptalbahn . The ÖBB operate the Stallegg stop on demand . Two cycle paths, the Kamp-Thaya-March cycle route and the Kamptalweg , lead through Stallegg.

literature

  • A hike from Markt Gars to the ruins of Gars. Via Mannigfall, Bründlkapelle, Kamegg, Stallegg, Rosenburg to Altenburg Abbey, then to the ruins of the Schauenstein am Kamp. Berger, Horn 1896 ( pictures from the Waldviertel 1, 2).
  • Stallegg . In: Falko Daim , Karin Kühtreiber, Thomas Kühtreiber (eds.): Castles Waldviertel Wachau Mährisches Thayatal . 2nd Edition. Vienna 2009, ISBN 978-3-7079-1273-9 , pp. 445-447.
  • Julius Kiennast: Chronicle of the market Gars in Lower Austria. Horn 1920, pp. 147-148.
  • Gerhard Reichhalter: The castle ruins of Stallegg am Kamp. Knives 1993 ( Gruber Burgblätter 9).

Individual evidence

  1. Historisches Ortlexikon Niederösterreich ( Memento of the original dated November 5, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 1.2 MB), part 2, p. 53. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.oeaw.ac.at
  2. ^ Entry on Stallegg in the scientific database " EBIDAT " of the European Castle Institute
  3. Stallegg . In: Falko Daim, Karin Kühtreiber, Thomas Kühtreiber (eds.): Castles Waldviertel Wachau Moravian Thaytal . 2nd edition Vienna 2009, pp. 445–447.
  4. ^ Susanne Hawlik: Summer vacation in the Kamptal. The magic of a river landscape. Vienna-Cologne-Weimar 1995.
  5. Entry about Stallegg castle ruins in Lower Austria Burgen online - Institute for Reality Studies of the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Era, University of Salzburg
  6. Hanns Haas: Footbridges and bridges (part 4): The Johannes von Nepomuk statue on the Stallegger bridge. In: Rosenburg-Mold Aktuell , born in 2003, unpag.
  7. Ignaz Steininger: Historical sketches about Rosenburg, manuscript. Rosenburg 1953-1978.

Web links

Commons : Stallegg  - collection of images, videos and audio files