Hammer lock coat

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MantelHammerLock 02

The listed Hammerschloss Mantel (historically also known as Hammerschloss Untermantel ) is located in the Mantel market in the Upper Palatinate district of Neustadt an der Waldnaab (Sägstrasse 12).

history

The later Landsassengut Untermantel originally dates back to the Letzenmühle , which was converted into a tin hammer at the beginning of the 15th century . In the Salbuch of Emperor Karl IV. , A mül zu Leutschenpach is mentioned among the Upper Palatinate possessions ; this appears in 1415 as Letzenmühle under the Parkstein caretaker Heimeram Nothaft zu Wernberg owned by a Frank. Until the 1920s the hammer masters and hammer masters were called Hans Frank, in 1525 Hans and Jörg die Plecher zu Mantel appeared . Like the other hammer gentlemen, they were obliged to keep a raging horse ready at the request of the judge and keeper . After 1576 the country estate passed to Albrecht Schröttel. In the tax book of 1588/90, Albrecht Schrötzel is entered on the hammer coat, but with the comments now Balthasar Haberstumpf and is currently not a hammer mill . Then this is Thomas Walbrun and soon after him Hans Walbrun. In 1591, Balthasar Haberstumpf took the oath of homage in Neunburg. Before 1607 the country estate was transferred to Paul Schertl, followed by Christoph Schertl (1636). The Scherftl family can still be found here during the Thirty Years' War . At that time there were no more people behind the wheel, the pond was unused and the fields were barren. In the middle of the 17th century the princely chancellery of Sulzbach Hans Christoph Schertl is mentioned here. In 1661 his widow Anna Elisabeth Schertl reported that the property was in poor condition. In 1661 four rear passengers moved into the newly built houses; the mill at Latschenbach was leased to a miller again, but he wanted to move away soon. The widow married Wolfgang Balthasar Moller; this gradually came into possession, which was now called Unterhammer. After the death of Anna Elisabeth, Moller married Eva Sophie Hundt. After the death of her husband († 1676), she sold the estate to Rudolf Heinrich von Schönstett. He sold the estate on May 1, 1717 to his son-in-law Franz Joseph Freiherr von Horneck zu Hornberg. He was followed by Konrad Forster, the landlord's son from Mantel; from this the estate went to his ennobled son Franz Friedrich von Forster and then to Maria Ludwig Count of Pestalozza. At the turn of the 19th century, Wilhelmine Freifrau von Vittinghof, née von Schirnding, bought the country estate; she was enrolled in 1801. The manorial rights were withdrawn in 1815 and were therefore extinguished.

The market town of Mantel was initially in the Neustadt an der Waldnaab district court . When the Weiden District Court was established, Mantel was incorporated there in 1838. The place name Untermantel was repealed by a government resolution of January 17, 1966.

Hammer lock coat today

The current building dates from the middle of the 18th century; it bears the year 1717, but its core is probably older. It is a hipped roof building with corner pilasters and drilled window frames.

literature

  • Heribert Sturm: Neustadt an der Waldnaab, Weiden (= Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern issue 47). Commission for Bavarian State History, Verlag Michael Lassleben, Munich 1970 (p. 321 ff) 1978, ISBN 3-7696-9912-2 .

Web links

Commons : Hammerschloss Unterermantel  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. List of listed objects in Mantel .
  2. Historical Atlas of Bavaria, p. 233 f.

Coordinates: 49 ° 39 '12.2 "  N , 12 ° 2' 6.6"  E