Innerbittlbach

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The small church village Innerbittlbach is a south-western part of the municipality of Lengdorf in Upper Bavaria in the district of Erding , right on the border with Markt Isen . The place (85 inhabitants) is on a slight hill above the Kalten - / Isental and on local roads from Lengdorf to Buch am Buchrain and Isen to Ausser - / Innerbittlbach.

St. Ulrich Innerbittlbach Church

history

In 758 a nobleman named Haholt from the village of Bittlbach (Poatilinpach) gave his son Arn to the monastery in Isen and thus to the bishop of Freising. Arn became an important church scholar and the first archbishop of Salzburg. He was an advisor to the politically powerful at the time: Duke Tassilo of Bavaria and later Charlemagne . From the High Middle Ages to the secularization in the early Kingdom of Bavaria , Innerbittlbach belonged to the Freisingian rule of Burgrain , in the course of the reorganization of Bavaria ( municipal edict 1818) the place was added to the municipality of Lengdorf and thus to the Erding district office. From September 18, 1900, Innerbittlbach had a breakpoint (Bittlbach) on the Thann-Matzbach – Haag railway line , which was near Penzing on Westach's municipality. Passenger traffic was discontinued on September 28, 1968 and the tracks were dismantled in 1992.

Filial church St. Ulrich

A church in “Poitilinpach” is already occupied for 758, when the noblewoman Haholt and his son Arn, who later became the Archbishop of Salzburg, handed over a church to the Bishop of Freising. Whether the church in Inner- or Auserbittlbach was meant is controversial, but it is clear that Innerbittlbach is ancient cultural land. Since 768 one can prove a priest for Innerbittlbach who was appointed by Freising (that did not apply to the clergy from Auserbittlbach). Innerbittlbach was likely to have received the church patron St. Ulrich in the 10th century, according to a fashion of the time. The building itself in its current form goes back to the 12th century (Romanesque south window), most of it was built in 1480, as the inscription on the choir arch reveals. The interior has a ribbed vault and the crucifixion group dates from 1540 - so the Gothic predominates overall. The high altar was originally designed for the church in Schönbrunn in 1890, but then found its place of residence in Innerbittlbach. Innerbittlbach belonged to the Pemmering parish until 1827, when it became an Isen branch. The pointed helmet tower to the west is a neo-Gothic ingredient.

Sources / literature

Individual evidence

  1. Karl Bürger: From royal Bavarian times to the S-Bahn and airport railways. Railway history using the example of the district of Erding. Pictures - backgrounds - glances . Self-published, Walpertskirchen 2013, ISBN 978-3-00-044232-2 , p. 89, 204 .

Coordinates: 48 ° 14 '  N , 12 ° 2'  E