Hasenhof (Waldshut-Tiengen)

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Aerial view over the Hasenhof (in the foreground) with a view over the city of Tiengen and the Vitibuck

The Hasenhof is an agricultural estate in the Waldshut district between Tiengen and Breitenfeld .

history

The Hasenhof is located on the southern slope of the Hohen Brand (516 m above sea level), which runs out here into the Vitibuck ; it is known as Hasenstuckis Hof near Breitenfeld in 1483 . Presumably from the possession of the Lords of Krenkingen , the court came to the Bishop of Konstanz , who gave it as a fief to his bailiffs, among them Hans Tromer from Kaiserstuhl , from whose heirs the city of Tiengen bought him in 1461 together with the brickworks in Tiengen and the Reutehof bought for 150 Rhenish guilders. In the 16th century the farm was owned by the Counts of Sulz , who lent it to the Niesser from Unterlauchringen. The Grießer are named as their successors . The Hasenhof farmer was obliged to keep a stately hunting dog . The farm was looted during the Peasants 'War and the Thirty Years' War.

From 1844 to 1900 it was owned by the Fürstenberg family .

It burned down on August 31, 1947. Considerable stocks of crops and 57 head of cattle were burned, plus 8 horses and two young oxen, as well as the stables and the entire vehicle fleet and machines. It was a heavy blow for the tenant family at the time. The cause of the fire could not be clarified.

From 1901 to 1902 it belonged to the municipality of Breitenfeld. Since 1949 it has belonged to the Waldshut hospital fund administration . The farm is now a horse pension, the arable land is leased. The hare wood, a piece of forest, now a field name , once belonged to the farm .

Owners, administrators or tenant families

  • Krenkinger, Bishops of Constance
  • 1461 City of Tiengen, each of which appointed a Maier
  • 1506 Count Rudolf von Sulz
  • 1521 Hans Steineck
  • 1533 Melchior Niesser, manorial Hasenmaier
  • 1620 Jakob Niesser, Hasenhofmeier , he received the tithe of Unterlauchringen from the Count von Sulz, his guarantors were: Antoni Rüeger, Hans Weicher, Beat Hartmann and Friedrich Boller from Oberlauchringen
  • 1659 to 1796 family Grießer
  • 1844–1900 Fürstenbergisch
  • 1902–1909 Hermann Fritz
  • 1909–1912 Christian Lohrer
  • 1912–1914 Franz Keller
  • 1914–1919 Junker Rudolf Parsius
  • 1919–1926 Erich von Kirchbach and his wife Beate b. von Brentzen, a son died as a child and was buried in the specially designed resting place Hasenhof .
  • 1926–1949 Walter Rust, leased from 1928 to 1931 to the farmer Osiander, then ten years to Eugen Rudolph and from 1942 to 1948 to the Heinrich Fehr family
  • 1949 Waldshut Hospital
  • 1948 to 1956 manager Hans Duttlinger
  • 1956 to 1972 administrator Leo Martin
  • 1972 to 2008 administrator of the Landes family
  • since 2008 Zeitz family

literature

  • Hans Matt Willmatt, Schöne Heimat am Hochrhein Pictures of the people and their work in the Waldshut district , Südkurier (ed.), 1967
  • Brigitte Matt-Willmatt, Karl Friedrich Hoggenmüller: Lauchringen, Chronicle of a Community , 1985

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Heinz Voellner, Tiengen, Pictures of an old city , p. 193.
  2. Hans Matt-Willmatt, Schöne Heimat am Hochrhein Pictures of the people and their work in the Waldshut district , Südkurier (ed.), 1967, p. 44
  3. Hans Matt-Willmatt, Schöne Heimat am Hochrhein Pictures of the people and their work in the Waldshut district , Südkurier (ed.), 1967, pp. 44 to 45
  4. Brigitte Matt-Willmatt, Karl Friedrich Hoggenmüller: Lauchringen, Chronik einer Gemeinde , 1985, pp. 114 to 115

Coordinates: 47 ° 38 ′ 53.2 "  N , 8 ° 17 ′ 53"  E