Hohenbercha

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hohenbercha
Community Kranzberg
Coordinates: 48 ° 23 ′ 18 ″  N , 11 ° 34 ′ 32 ″  E
Height : 473 m
Residents : 123  (2012)
Incorporation : July 1, 1971
Postal code : 85402

Hohenbercha is a parish village and a former municipality in the Upper Bavarian district of Freising , which was incorporated into the municipality of Kranzberg on July 1, 1971 as part of the municipal reform.

geography

Hohenbercha has 123 inhabitants (as of 2012) and is located in the western district of Freising at 473 m above sea ​​level . The next larger city is Freising .

history

The place name 762 appears for the first time in a deed of donation as Perahah , although it is no longer possible to clarify whether this was Hohenbercha or Appercha, two kilometers away.

The core of the Catholic parish church of St. Margareta is a late Romanesque hall church with a choir tower above a straight, drawn-in end of the choir and an attached sacristy. The oldest components date from the 13th century, the renovation of the church took place in 1476. Korbinian Aigner , as an apple pastor known far beyond the region as a pomologist , was a pastor in Hohenbercha during the Nazi era and afterwards. In 1940 he was sentenced to seven months' imprisonment for commenting on Georg Elser's assassination attempt on Hitler and was taken to the Stadelheim prison. Since his pre-trial detention had been credited to him, he was then deported to the Dachau concentration camp .

With the community edict of 1818, the independent political community of Hohenbercha came into being. As part of the regional reform in Bavaria, Hohenbercha was incorporated into Kranzberg on July 1, 1971.

Individual evidence

  1. Müller's Large German Local Book 2012: Complete local dictionary. Walter De Gruyter, Munich 2012, ISBN 978-3-11-027420-2 , p. 656.
  2. “I don't know if that is sin, what the assassin had in mind. Then maybe a million people would have been saved ”. In: Peter J. Brenner: Korbinian Aigner. A Bavarian pastor between church, orchard and concentration camp. Bauer, Thalhofen 2016, ISBN 978-3955510176 .
  3. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 464 .

Web links