Hoppental

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Hoppental is a deserted area in the district of Jungnau , a district of the city of Sigmaringen in the district of Sigmaringen in Baden-Württemberg , Germany .

geography

The remains of the Hoppental settlement are in the Gewann of the same name , in the forest as the crow flies between Jungnau and Hornstein , and can be reached via the hiking trail from Sigmaringen to Jungnau if you turn east in front of the quarry.

history

The settlement of Hoppental was mentioned in a document in 1138 in the possession of the Zwiefalten monastery and in 1536 as part of the Jungnau rule of the Fürstenberg family. There was also a Hallstatt burial mound with burial and grave goods (two lance tips, two bronze foot rings, two bronze arm rings with a stamped end, bronze foot ornamental fibula, bronze fiebel with foot plate), which indicates a mixed grave for men and women.

In 1887 the Hoppental settlement consisted of four farms. In 1920 it was given up due to lack of water. The last resident left Hoppental in 1927. Walther Genzmer , the state curator for the Prussian province of Hohenzollern , names the courtyards in his work Die Kunstdenkmäler Hohenzollern from 1939 as still in existence.

Today only overgrown wall remnants and a bricked well are evidence of the abandoned settlement.

Individual evidence

  1. See Johann Adam Kraus: Disappeared settlements near Jungnau . In: Association for history, culture and regional studies in Hohenzollern in connection with the Hohenzollern teachers (ed.): Hohenzollern homeland. 15th year, No. 1 / January 1965 . P. 38f.
  2. See Johann Adam Kraus: Zwiefalter income from Jungnau . In: Hohenzollerischer Geschichtsverein (Hrsg.): Hohenzollerische Heimat. Volume 39, No. 1 / March 1989 . P. 26f.
  3. a b [Hoppental (desert) http://www.leo-bw.de/web/guest/detail/-/Detail/details/ORT/labw_ortslexikon/24213/Hoppental+%5BW%C3%BCstung%5D ] on the Pages from www.leo-bw.de (regional information system for Baden-Württemberg)
  4. Susanne Sievers: The Central European Hallstatt Daggers . Prehistoric bronze finds. Department VI: Daggers, Stick Daggers, Volume 6. CH Beck, Munich 1980, ISBN 3-406-08070-7 . P. 135.
  5. a b Ignaz Stösser: Eulengruben-Weiblein leads hikers astray . In: Schwäbische Zeitung from December 26, 2016; accessed on December 27, 2016
  6. See Freiburg Diocesan Archive, Volumes 88–89, Herder Verlag, 1968