Hornmühle (Titting)

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Horn mill
Market Titting
Coordinates: 49 ° 0 ′ 16 ″  N , 11 ° 11 ′ 39 ″  E
Height : 459 m
Residents : (1987)
Postal code : 85135
Area code : 08423
Townscape
Townscape

The Hornmühle is a district of the municipality of Kesselberg, which is incorporated into Markt Titting, in the Upper Bavarian district of Eichstätt in Bavaria .

The Hornmühle in the Anlautertal

Geographical location

The Hornmühle is located in the southern Franconian Alb in the Anlautertal to the left of the Anlauter between the Tittinger district of Bürg in the north and Titting in the southeast.

history

In 1473 the Bishop of Eichstätt acquired the Hornmühle, among other things, by swapping it from the Teutonic Order Commander Ellingen and subordinating it to the Raitenbuch Vogtamt. In the Salbuch from 1548 of the prince-bishop's office of Eichstätt, which had been installed shortly before, a "community" is described, formed from the three hamlets of Ober-, Mittel- and Unterkesselberg, with three mills belonging to Unterkesselberg, namely the Tafer-, Horn- and Aichmühle. Highly judicially, this community was subordinate to the Neck Court Titting (-Raitenbuch), which had been in Eichstätt since 1544. The keeper or Vogt zu Titting exercised the village and community rule over the hamlets and their mills. The Hornmühle was Vogtbar as the landlord of the Eichstätt Cathedral Chapter and therefore belonged to the Wachenzell marriage custody. Ecclesiastically, the subject family on the Hornmühle belonged to the parish of Titting.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the Sammiller / Sammüller family of millers sat on the mill. In 1718 the mill was rebuilt. Xaver Betz bought it in 1816. The Kurzinger family owned the property from 1896.

After the secularization of the Eichstätt Monastery as a result of the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss , the Hornmühle came as part of the Kesselberg community in 1802 to the Grand Duchy of Toscana and in 1806 to the Kingdom of Bavaria. There the community belonged to the tax district Titting from 1808 and from 1811 to the rural community Titting in the Raitenbuch district court (moved to Greding from 1812 ). In 1818 Kesselberg became an independent political municipality with Bürg and with his mills, which from 1862 belonged to the district office of Beilngries and from 1879 to the district office (later district) of Hilpoltstein .

On July 1, 1971, Kesselberg was incorporated with its mills and with Bürg in the Titting market and came with him on July 1, 1972 to the enlarged Upper Bavarian district of Eichstätt .

The mill operation was given up, so that the mill is only an agricultural property today. There is also a timber trade.

Population numbers

  • 1823: 06 inhabitants, wasteland with 1 property
  • 1950: 13 inhabitants, wasteland with 1 property
  • 1961: 07 residents, 1 residential building
  • 1987: 06 inhabitants

traffic

The EI 41 district road passes the Hornmühle and crosses the Anlauter to the north of the mill. At the mill, a road branches off to the north, which leads to the Alb plateau and there merges into farm roads.

literature

  • Gerhard Hirschmann (edit.): Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Part Franconia, series, I issue 6: Eichstätt. Beilngries - Eichstätt - Greding . Munich: Commission for Bayer. National history 1959.
  • Titting. Contributions to the natural and cultural history of the middle Anlautertal. Kipfenberg: Hercynia 1999.

Web links

Commons : Hornmühle  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Titting, pp. 161f.
  2. Hirschmann, p. 113
  3. ^ Titting, p. 162
  4. a b c Hirschmann, p. 227
  5. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 482 .
  6. ^ Official register of places for Bavaria 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census. Munich 1964, column 795.
  7. Genealogy network