Hailing (Leiblfing)

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Hailing
Municipality Leiblfing
Coordinates: 48 ° 44 ′ 37 ″  N , 12 ° 33 ′ 22 ″  E
Residents : 328  (May 25 1987)
Incorporation : May 1, 1978
Hailing (Bavaria)
Hailing

Location of hailing in Bavaria

The branch church of St. Pauli Conversion
The branch church of St. Pauli Conversion

Hailing is a district of the Leiblfing community in the Straubing-Bogen district in Lower Bavaria . Until 1978 it formed an independent municipality.

location

Hailing is located on the Hailinger Bach about three kilometers southeast of Leiblfing.

history

Some stone and chert tools that were found between 1904 and 1935 are the earliest traces of settlement in the Hailingen area. The most important early legacies are the so-called Roman hills in the Tattenbacher Wald near Haslau.

The Celts and Romans already cultivated the fertile soil around Hailing. Hailing's origins go back to the 6th century AD. The place name Hailing probably comes from the Bavarian nobility, the Hahilinga, with its progenitor Hahilo (or Hahalo), who, together with other families, settled in Old Bavaria at that time and was resident in the Danube region. Presumably, Hahiling was the ancestral seat of the Hahilinga, whose castle was possibly enthroned on the legendary Dickerlberg (also Dickerlesberg) below Hailings near Mundlfing, as this is the highest point in the Reiss Valley. A number of legends tell about a castle sunk in the Dickerlberg.

Since 840 Hailing was Hofmark , which was subordinate to the Hochstift Regensburg . Probably from 983 the Counts of Leonsberg had the Hofmark Hailing as a fief. The Leonsberger Wernhardt (also Wanhart) then sold them to Jutta von Wiesent, abbess of the St. Paul monastery for 35 pounds Regensburg pfennigs . From there, Hailing was manned by a bailiff, the bunting, who administered it. The bunting sat on what was then the most handsome farm in the middle of the village, which has been owned by the Röckl family (now Speiseder) since 1889.

Hailing gained a certain fame through Brigitha von Stinglhaim, who is said to have given birth to sevenlings twice in a row in the last years 1390/1391. A preserved epitaph in the baptistery of the Hailingen Church indicates this miracle. A descendant of the Stinglhaimerin, Hans Urban Stinglhaimer von Thürnthenning , had the monument erected in 1617.

In the course of the Landshut War of Succession , Hailing burned down in 1504. There was already a church in Hailing before 1598, in which a side altar was set up at the instigation of the Jesuits. During the Swedish War, the church was plundered several times by mercenaries passing through. During the War of the Spanish Succession , Austrian soldiers looted the area.

From the Leonsberg Regional Court, which was dissolved in 1803 , Hailing came to the Straubing Regional Court . The municipality of Hailing emerged from the Hailing tax district of 1811 in 1818/1821. In 1814 the Hailing Patrimonial Court of the St. Paul School Institute in Regensburg was set up, but was already withdrawn by the Straubing Regional Court with an edict of October 5, 1818. The district of Rutzenbach came to Hailing in 1821 from the community of Hankofen because of the parish conditions. In 1832 all 72 house numbers in the community were farms with a total arable area of ​​1836 days .

Of the 30 soldiers that Hailing hired in the war of 1870/1871 , four never returned. In the First World War, 29 Hailingers fell or went missing, in the Second there were 32. In 1952 the community had the following districts: Hailing, Aspergrund, Weihern, Winkl and Rutzenbach. The Winkl district is no longer mentioned in 1970. In the course of the regional reform in Bavaria , the municipality of Hailing was assigned to the municipality of Leiblfing by ordinance of the state government on May 1, 1978. The last mayor of Hailing was Anton Wiesbeck. The old school is now a community center. In 1987 the parish village of Hailing had 328 inhabitants.

Attractions

  • Filial church St. Pauli Conversion. The neo-baroque building was built in 1913/1914 by Heinrich Hauberrisser in place of a previous church that had been demolished. The high altar with the Damascus scene of St. Paul dates from the year 1732. The church also houses a Rococo painting from around 1750 depicting the heart of Mary, as well as the epitaph of Brigitha von Stinglhaim. In the years 1978 to 1988 an interior and exterior renovation was carried out.

societies

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. 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. 236 ( digitized version ).