Hofmark Pasenbach

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Pasenbach Castle, copper engraving by Michael Wening (around 1700)

The Hofmark Pasenbach was a Hofmark based at Pasenbach Castle in Pasenbach , a district of the municipality of Vierkirchen in the Upper Bavarian district of Dachau .

The original castle belonged to the Lords of Daxberg, who called themselves Daxberg zu Pasenbach, from 1220 to 1400. In 1440 Pasenbach was first referred to as Hofmark and Wildprecht and Schrenk were known as owners until the 16th century.

At the beginning of the 16th century, the castle came into the possession of the Munich patrician family of the Barths , who remained there until the beginning of the 19th century. The castle was destroyed by the Swedes in 1632 during the Thirty Years' War .

From 1662 it was rebuilt. At that time, Pasenbach Castle was a simple, rectangular, two-storey building with a high pitched roof, which was surrounded by a wide moat. There were little turrets with onion roofs at the four corners. A massive square onion dome dominated the south side of the castle.

The last Barth had a daughter who married the Bavarian lieutenant Rudolf von Rechthaler around 1810. Thereafter, Count Spreti von Unterweilbach acquired the property in Pasenbach (1840–1843). He sold it to the farmer Franz Grahamer in 1843. Then the castle was demolished and the remaining buildings were used for agriculture.

literature

  • Vierkirchen community. Citizen information. 4th edition, REBA-Verlag, Freising 2015, p. 13.
  • Peter Dorner: Palaces and castles around Dachau . 1956

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 21 '36.3 "  N , 11 ° 26' 14.9"  E