Holzhausen (Pfeffenhausen)

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Holzhausen
Coordinates: 48 ° 39 ′ 2 ″  N , 11 ° 57 ′ 20 ″  E
Height : 450 m above sea level NN
Incorporation : July 1, 1972
Postal code : 84076
Area code : 08782
Wegkapelle Holzhausen (east, outside)
Wegkapelle Holzhausen (east, outside)

Holzhausen is a district of the Markt Pfeffenhausen in Lower Bavaria in the Landshut district, 1.5 km to the north-west . Until 1972 it formed an independent municipality.

Location and traffic

The village lies in the valley of the Marktbach , a right tributary of the Laber running one kilometer to the north . The area is mainly dominated by agriculture, especially hops .

The place is accessible by the district road LA 38 , which is called Moosburger Strasse there , and leads to the federal road 299 running immediately to the north .

history

An early documentary mention of the place is already in the late Carolingian period around the year 871 as a single farm. Isolated finds confirm the existence of an abandoned manor south of Lohbachstrasse , the underground remains of which are protected as a ground monument with the file number D-2-7337-0110. After being destroyed in the Thirty Years' War of the manor in the 17th century with the former was Amtshof built over a three-sided farm with a mighty residential buildings, stables, outbuildings and moat. The office building is preserved as a monument (D-2-74-172-37), the moat as a fire water pond . Today only the street name Ziegeleistraße is reminiscent of a brick factory that was formerly located on the northern edge of the village in the beginning of the industrial age . This benefited from the abundance of water, the sand, gravel and clay deposits and, after their exploitation, following tradition today, has been completely overbuilt by a construction company.

The former field chapel from the 18th century (D-2-74-172-38, see picture), located to the east outside, also in the local area of ​​Holzhausen, is also under monument protection , but becomes spatial today after the construction of the federal highway 299 cut off, hardly recognized as belonging. see: Monuments in Holzhausen

The Bavarian original cadastre recorded a hamlet with nine courtyards with a 650 m² extinguishing water pond as Holzhausen in the 1810s . The agricultural areas were already heavily parceled out by inheritance. The municipality of Oberhatzkofen was founded by the Bavarian municipal edict in 1818 and included Holzhausen, Anzelstetten, Backlreuth, Dirnberg, Dürnwall, Eichstätt, Elfing, Gasselsberg, Haarland, Hintlaber, Kolmöd, Langenwies, Neßlthal, Obergrub, Oberspiegelreuth, Unterspiegelreuth and Zornhofreuth. A land consolidation took place in 1972. On July 1 of that year, the formerly independent municipality Holzhausen was in the course of administrative reform in Bavaria amalgamated with Pfeffenhausen. Kolmöd has been with Obersüßbach since January 1, 1979.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c LfD list for Pfeffenhausen, pages 2, 4 and 11 (.pdf)
  2. Holzhausen on a historical map
  3. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 563 .