Hilpensberg

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Hilpensberg is a residential area in Denkingen , one of seven localities in the city of Pfullendorf in the Baden-Württemberg district of Sigmaringen in Germany .

geography

Geographical location

The hamlet of Hilpensberg is located in the Denkingen district east of Straß . The highest point in the city of Pfullendorf is in Hilpensberg.

history

Hilpensberg was first mentioned in 1337 as Hiltpolsberg . In 1387 a local court was an accessory for Ramsberg Castle . The place was mentioned in 1393 together with Daisendorf , Schönach and Langgassen in a "guarantee and insurance" from Margarethen von Ladenberg . At an unknown point in time, the Cistercian convent in Wald had acquired a farm and an estate in Hilpensberg, but in 1500 the provost and chapter of Betenbrunn exchanged their estate in the Wald village of Hippetsweiler .

Hilpensberg was part of the Denkingen office of the Überlingen hospital . The hamlet belonged to the area of ​​the free imperial city of Überlingen . With the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss , Überlingen lost its imperial immediacy in 1803 and became part of the Electorate and later Grand Duchy of Baden . It was administered by the office or district office of Überlingen . In 1939 the district office became part of the Überlingen district .

From 1803 the hamlet of Hilpensberg belonged to the community of Denkingen of the Pfullendorf district office in the Baden Seekreis and formed the border between the Grand Duchy of Baden and Württemberg .

In the course of the municipal area and district reform in Baden-Württemberg , the previously independent municipality of Denkingen and thus Hilpensberg was incorporated into the city of Pfullendorf on January 1, 1973 and at the same time assigned to the district of Sigmaringen .

Residents

53 people currently live in Hilpensberg (as of May 2015).

religion

Ecclesiastically, Hilpensberg belongs to the Roman Catholic parish of Pfullendorf until 1736 and to this day to the parish of Denkingen.

Personalities

  • Adolf Bernhard (born September 21, 1882 in Hilpensberg, † July 11, 1942 in Dachau concentration camp ); cath. Martyr priest, religion teacher and victim of the Nazi regime. As pastor of Hondingen, he was arrested by the Gestapo on September 17, 1940 and taken to the Dachau concentration camp due to the treachery law in 1941. There he was infected with phlegmon germs by the concentration camp doctor Sigmund Rascher in a series of medical experiments and died from it.

literature

  • Edwin Ernst Weber (editor): 775 years of Denkingen. 1226-2001: Langgassen - Straß - Hilpensberg - Andelsbach - Kleinstadelhofen - Mettenbuch - Neubrunn - Furtmühle - Sylvenstal - Ochsenbach - Oberochsenbach - Zoznegg - Freudenberg - Gampenhof - Krähenried - Oberhaslach - Brunnhausen. June 10, 2001 anniversary celebration . ed. vd Stadt Pfullendorf - district Denkingen, Denkingen 2001.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d cf. Pfullendorf b) Denkingen . In: The state of Baden-Württemberg. Official description by district and municipality. Volume VII: Tübingen administrative region. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1978, ISBN 3-17-004807-4 . Pp. 834-841, here pp. 835f.
  2. ^ Karlheinz Fahlbusch: District check: This is what citizens say about Denkingen . In: Südkurier of May 29, 2015
  3. Cf. Maren Rehfus: The Cistercian convent forest: manorial rule, jurisdiction and administration . M. Liehners Hofbuchdruckerei, Sigmaringen 1971, p. 63.
  4. See Hilpensberg . In: Maren Kuhn-Rehfus : The Cistercian Monastery of Wald (= Germania Sacra , New Part 30, The Dioceses of the Ecclesiastical Province of Mainz. The Diocese of Constance, Volume 3 ). Walter de Gruyter, Berlin & New York 1992. ISBN 3-11-013449-7 . P. 390.
  5. Helmut Gitschier: history of Denkingen
  6. Jürgen Witt (jüw): A country nobleman once set fire to the village . In: Südkurier of May 26, 2015
  7. ^ Kristiane Schmalfeldt: Bernhard, Adolf, cath. Clergyman, victim of the Nazi regime: * September 21, 1882 Hilpensberg, rk., † July 11, 1942 Dachau . In: Baden biographies. - NF 3. 1990 . P. 41f.
  8. ^ Bernhard, Adolf on the pages of www.leo-bw.de (regional information system for Baden-Württemberg)
  9. Falko Hahn: A fighter for Christianity . In: Südkurier of July 10, 2004

Coordinates: 47 ° 52 ′ 9 ″  N , 9 ° 17 ′ 19 ″  E