Innenried

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Innenried
City of Zwiesel
Coordinates: 49 ° 1 ′ 20 ″  N , 13 ° 12 ′ 23 ″  E
Height : 655 m above sea level NN
Postal code : 94227
Area code : 09922
map
The village chapel of Innenried

Innenried is a district of the city of Zwiesel in the Lower Bavarian district of Regen .

location

Innenried is located in the Bavarian Forest on an elevation one kilometer west of Zwiesel.

history

The village, which is characterized by farms, is mentioned for the first time in a document from 1409. Around 1800 there were 7 horses, 32 oxen, 36 cows, 82 young cattle, 9 sheep and 13 goats. From the 19th century, Innenried belonged to the former municipality of Klautzenbach .

The village chapel was built in 1851. Its founder is Florian Koller, born in Innenried and died as episcopal dean in Straubing. The altarpiece shows Mary as Queen of Angels. In 1867 Innenried had 18 houses and 139 inhabitants.

In the course of the municipal reform , Innenried came to the city of Zwiesel on October 1, 1971 when the municipality of Klautzenbach was incorporated. The most important association in town is the Innenried volunteer fire department . It broke away in 1931 from the community defense established in 1911 in the municipal parts of Innenried and Klautzenbach. In addition, there has been an ice rifle club since 2003, the EC Blauweiss Innenried.

Since Innenried was connected to the canal network and the water supply of the city of Zwiesel, the place has developed considerably. Ten new residential buildings were added to the six homesteads. The children's playground built by the city of Zwiesel became the new center of the village. Agritourism, based on the principle of farm holidays, plays a certain role . The excursion destinations Hennenkobel and Stockauwiesen are in the immediate vicinity . On December 31, 2006, Innernried had 199 inhabitants.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Stadt Zwiesel Heimatbuch Volume 2 (1998), p. 109
  2. Description of the Zwiesel parish from 1867 according to the Chronik Zwiesel and its surroundings, summarized by Josef Schaller (1993), p. 197