Haunersdorf
Haunersdorf
Simbach market
Coordinates: 48 ° 36 ′ 27 ″ N , 12 ° 43 ′ 4 ″ E
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Height : | 378 m |
Residents : | 500 |
Incorporation : | July 1, 1972 |
Postal code : | 94436 |
Area code : | 09956 |
Haunersdorf is a parish village and part of the market Simbach in the Bavarian district of Dingolfing-Landau , located on the federal road 20 .
history
Several archaeological finds suggest that the history of the place began as early as 5000 years before Christ.
Naming
The name Haunersdorf is derived from the two names "Hunold" and "Dorf". The old German “Hunold” describes the giant or the one who fights like a giant. Over the centuries the name has changed slightly over and over again. Haunersdorf was first mentioned in 1120 under the names Hunoldstorf and Haunoldstorff an der Vils .
development
Due to the central location of the village at the crossroads of the traffic connections from Salzburg to the Bavarian Forest and from Passau to Munich , the village experienced a strong economic and political upswing. The establishment of the village fire brigade on October 30, 1870 and numerous documents from this time about correspondence with insurance companies, with the Diocese of Passau , with the Landau Rent and District Office and with other communities suggest a great deal of activity at that time.
The train on the Landau – Arnstorf line first drove through Haunersdorf in 1903. Due to the political influence of the Mittermeier family, the railway company did not move the railway line from Landau via Eichendorf , as planned , but via Haunersdorf to Arnstorf . The Mittermeiervilla, today's youth conference center, was built before the start of the First World War. After the end of the Second World War, an economic boom began in Haunersdorf as well. The community took in many expellees after the war ; the village expanded to the east and south with the construction of single-family houses.
The Bavarian state initiated a municipal reform in the early 1970s . The previously independent municipality of Haunersdorf was assigned to the Simbach market after a vote with effect from July 1, 1972 . Agriculture was no longer the main source of income for most of the population. New jobs were created in the manufacturing and service industries. Rail traffic, which in the past 20 years was only used for the transport of goods, was finally discontinued by the German Federal Railroad in 1992 for cost reasons.
On October 16, 1994, the voters of the constituencies of Dingolfing-Landau and Rottal-Inn elected Max Straubinger , the former 1st board member of the Haunersdorf volunteer fire brigade , as a member of the German Bundestag. The market town of Simbach sold the former Mittermeier villa to the Dingolfing-Landau district . He had the building renovated and converted into a youth conference center, which was inaugurated on January 11, 1996. From April to June 1998 the tracks of the former Landau – Arnstorf railway line were demolished in order to build a cycle path on this line. On August 17, 1999, the Bockerlbahnradweg on the former Landau-Arnstorf railway line was opened and Haunersdorf emerged as the winner in the 1999 district decision “ Our village should be more beautiful ”. In 2006 the new building of the fire station was completed with a lot of personal contribution and financial support from the village community. A large training and recreation room was also built here, which serves as a replacement for the inn that is no longer open at many events.
Churches
In 1149 "Zell" is mentioned for the first time. A hermit is said to have lived here who built a small church together with monks from the Cistercian Abbey of Fürstenzell near Passau. This church in Johannszell was formerly the parish church of Haunersdorf.
In 1712 pastor Ferdinand Wisselsberger built the rococo church in St. Antoni in "honor of St. Antonius von Weißenberg". The pastor was seriously ill at that time and asked St. Anthony to help out in need. The clergyman recovered and kept his vow. His miraculous healing meant that the little church he built soon became a place of pilgrimage. Numerous votive tablets still bear witness to the many answers to prayer.
In the years around 1723 the Catholic parish church of Haunersdorf was rebuilt. It is consecrated to St. Stephen with "Sanctissimum and Sepultur". The consecration is celebrated on the Sunday before Jacobi . Of the earlier church, which dates from the second half of the 13th century, only the massive tower structure remains.
In 1969 the parishes of Niederhausen , Mettenhausen , Reichersdorf , Exing , Haunersdorf and Aufhausen were merged to form the first parish association in the Diocese of Passau with its seat in Aufhausen. Today Haunersdorf and Niederhausen belong to the Simbach Parish Association .
societies
Many associations were founded in the mid-1960s. The rural youth, the women's association, the Bavarian curling club, the holiday regulars' table, the tennis club, the re-established fruit and horticultural club , D'Haunersdorfer footballers, the senior citizens' club and the carnival makers enrich village life as well as the so-called old clubs such as the farmers' aid club and the volunteer fire brigade and the warrior and soldier comradeship Niederhausen-Haunersdorf. The Heimatverein Haunersdorf eV was founded in January 2015.
Personalities
- Matthäus Mittermeier (born September 27, 1864 - † March 22, 1939), landowner and brewery owner and privy councilor, is honorary mayor of the community of Haunersdorf.
- Max Straubinger (born August 12, 1954 in Oberlucken) is a German politician ( CSU ).
Web links
Haunersdorf in the location database of the Bavarian State Library Online . Bavarian State Library
Individual evidence
- ↑ http://www.vilstalweb.de/wuerdinger/dorf/dorfchro.htm
- ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 505 .
- ^ Haunersdorf Youth Conference Center / History , accessed on December 30, 2014.
- ↑ http://www.kljb-haunersdorf.de/wir/wir.html