Haunsfeld

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Haunsfeld
Mörnsheim market
Coordinates: 48 ° 51 ′ 21 ″  N , 11 ° 2 ′ 25 ″  E
Height : 550 m
Residents : 112  (December 31, 2015)
Incorporation : 1st January 1971
Postal code : 91804
Area code : 08422
Center with the village chapel "Precious Blood of Christ"
Chapel near Haunsfeld, St. Dedicated to Georg

Haunsfeld is a district of the market Mörnsheim in the Upper Bavarian district of Eichstätt in Bavaria . It is located on the Jura plateau 563 meters above sea ​​level .

history

Burial mound fields from the Bronze Age have been discovered in the hallway of Haunsfeld . Iron ore was also mined prehistorically . The place name was interpreted as a clearing name ("Feld des Waldhaues"); Another interpretation sees the personal name "Hûn" in him. Another interpretation brings the place name in connection with the numerous barrows (graves of chicken) in the corridor.

The place is mentioned in the late 11th century in the donation book of the St. Emmeram monastery in Regensburg as "Hunesvelt". In 1316 the knight Sifrit / Seifried von Otting zu Mörnsheim acquired, among other things, the Taferne Haunsfeld from the episcopal fortress Mörnsheim. A marriage detention order has been preserved from 1412 . Around 1720 the community built a Marienkapelle at their own expense; a previous building existed before 1684. In 1779, an enlarged new building was built on the property of a Dollstein parishioner. A renovation took place in 1905; In 1937 an altar by (Georg?) Saumweber, Günzburg , came into the chapel, so that with the consecration on July 4, 1937, the mass could also be read here. In 1797 Haunsfeld was a place of 15 houses, nine of which belonged to the Mörnsheim nursing office and four courtyards and two Sölden to the Dollnstein nursing office; It was not until 1876 that the Dollnstein families were re-parished to Mörnsheim at their own request. At the end of the Old Kingdom the place of 14 estates that up to the parish Mörnsheim belonging consisted Widemhof the Prince Bishop box office Dollnstein were under. The prince-bishop's nursing office Dollnstein exercised the high jurisdiction and the village and community rulership.

As a result of the secularization of the high pin Eichstätt came Haunsfeld first in 1802 to the Grand Duchy of Tuscany of Ferdinand III. In the new Kingdom of Bavaria (1806) the place was assigned together with the Groppenhof and Ried in the Wellheimer Tal to the tax district Dollnstein in the district court and rent office Eichstätt. With the municipal edict of 1818, Haunsfeld became an independent municipality. Around 1820, when Haunsfeld belonged to the Leuchtenberg principality of Eichstätt , the place consisted of 17 houses with 20 families and 88 residents. Around 1900 the number of inhabitants had increased to 115 with 17 residential buildings unchanged.

In 1950 Haunsfeld had 129 inhabitants in 20 properties without Groppenhof and Ried. Initially located in the Middle Franconian district of Eichstätt, Haunsfeld was incorporated into the Mörnsheim market on January 1, 1971 as part of the regional reform in Bavaria ; the districts of Groppenhof and Ried were reclassified to Dollnstein . In 1983 the rural village had ten full-time and five part-time businesses; land consolidation took place from 1969 to 1979.

religion

Haunsfeld belongs to the Catholic parish Sankt Anna in Mörnsheim of the diocese of Eichstätt. In 1937, 99 Catholics lived here. Parts of Haunsfeld have belonged to the Dollnstein parish since ancient times, for example seven houses before 1876.

Architectural monuments

Two former small farms in Haunsfeld, marked 1706 and 1712, are entered in the Bavarian monument list, as is the local chapel and seven wayside shrines, which date back to the 16th century.

societies

literature

  • Franz Xaver Buchner: The diocese of Eichstätt . 2nd volume. Eichstätt: Brönner & Däntler, 1938.
  • Gerhard Hirschmann: Eichstätt. Beilngries-Eichstätt-Greding. Historical Atlas of Bavaria, Part Franconia, Series I, Issue 6. Munich 1959.
  • The Eichstätter area past and present . 2nd ext. Ed., Eichstätt: Sparkasse, 1984.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Statistics from the registration and registry office
  2. ^ Collective sheet of the Eichstätt Historical Association , 22nd year 1907, p. 46, FN 1; that. 54th year 1938, p. 20
  3. ^ Karl Kugler: Explanation of a thousand place names of the Altmühlalp and its surroundings. An attempt . Eichstätt: Krüll, 1873, p. 80
  4. ^ Collective sheet of the Eichstätt Historical Society , year 45, 1930, p. 89
  5. Collector's sheet of the Eichstätt Historical Association , Volume 45, 1930, p. 89; The Eichstätter area, p. 206
  6. Collector's sheet of the Eichstätt Historical Association , 13th year 1898, p. 5 f.
  7. ^ Collective sheet of the Eichstätt Historical Association , Volume 61, 1965/66, p. 21
  8. Buchner II, p. 179 f .; St. Willibalds-Bote Eichstätt from July 18, 1937
  9. Historical papers from Eichstätt , 2nd year (1953), No. 21, p. 41
  10. Hirschmann, p. 110
  11. Hirschmann, p. 195
  12. ^ Leo Hintermayr: The principality of Eichstätt of the dukes of Leuchtenberg 1817-1833 . Munich: CH Beck, 2000, p. 160
  13. ^ Locations directory of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical index of locations . Munich 1904, column 1172
  14. Hirschmann, p. 195
  15. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 456 .
  16. The Eichstätter Room, p. 206
  17. Buchner II, p. 180 f.
  18. Haunsfeld Voluntary Fire Brigade: Ortschronik ( Memento from February 6, 2016 in the Internet Archive )

Web links