Körnersdorf

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Körnersdorf
community Muehlhausen
Coordinates: 49 ° 9 ′ 58 ″  N , 11 ° 25 ′ 0 ″  E
Height : 420 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 52  (2012)
Postal code : 92360
Area code : 09185
Körnersdorf with Sulzbuerg in the background
Körnersdorf with Sulzbuerg in the background

Körnersdorf is a village and part of the municipality of Mühlhausen in the Upper Palatinate district of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate .

location

Körnersdorf is located in the south of the Schlüpfelberg Sulzbürg and north of the Main-Danube Canal at about 420  m above sea level. NHN .

history

In Körnersdorf there were servants for the von Stein auf Niedersulzbürg family . Around 1320/30 "F [ritz] de Chunrstorff" received the tithing of the village from the Eichstätter bishop . In 1328 he sold his estate at Körnersdorf in agreement with Hilpolt II von Stein to the Cistercian monastery Seligenporten , but in 1329 argued with the monastery about this property. Most of the goods in the village were owned by the Wolfsteiners before 1359 . When the monastery Grab was founded in 1376 by the Lords of Stein am Schlüpfelberg as a kind of branch monastery of the Benedictine monastery in Plankstetten , the foundation goods from the Steiner's own property also included an estate in Körnersdorf. The Plankstetten Monastery lost jurisdiction over this property to the Wolfsteiners through the Reformation . When the Wolfsteiners bought the Niedersulzbürg Castle from Schweiker von Gundelfingen in 1403, it also included goods in Körnersdorf.

Körnersdorf, a village in the south of the Sulzbürg rule on a map from 1748

At the Augsburg Reichstag in 1530, the Wolfsteiners were present among the Protestant aristocrats, so they had accepted the Reformation. Since 1625 under the Bavarian Elector Maximilian onset Counter-Reformation had before the sovereignty of Wolfsteiner halt, so grains village remained Protestant. Catholics first settled in the Bavarian period. Around 1732, the village of “Könnersdorf”, consisting of ten “teams” (= courtyards) and the shepherd's house, belonged to the Wolfstein office in Sulzbürg. 1740 died out with the last Count of Wolfstein, Christian Albrecht, the family; the property came as a settled imperial fief (1769 also the allodial property ) to the ducal Bavaria , which set up the Sulzbürg- Pyrbaum cabinet rulers to manage these goods, including those of the village of Körnersdorf . At the end of the Old Kingdom , around 1800, the place made up eight courtyards, namely four quarter courtyards, an eighth courtyard, a 5/8 courtyard and two 1/16 courtyards, of which the cabinet rule Sulzbürg three, the monastery grave manor two and the monastery judge in Plankstetten, three were subordinate to the lower court , while the high court was also exercised by the Sulzbuerg cabinet rule.

In the new Kingdom of Bavaria (1806), Körnersdorf was assigned to the Erasbach tax district , which was formed around 1808 . With the community edict of 1818, the rural community of Bachhausen was formed from Bachhausen and Körnersdorf in the district court of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate , which came to the district court and rent office of Beilngries in 1827 and to which the rice mill from the community of Erasbach and Wiesenheid from the community of Pollanten were added in 1830 ; Wiesenheid is no longer detectable after 1856 and has since disappeared. In the course of the regional reform in Bavaria , the municipality of Bachhausen was incorporated from the dissolved Central Franconian district of Beilngries on July 1, 1972, to Mühlhausen in the Upper Palatinate district of Neumarkt. Since then, Körnersdorf has been one of 24 officially named municipal parts of Mühlhausen. Compared to 2012, the village had almost twice as many inhabitants (1867).

Half-timbered building in Körnersdorf
Old farm in Körnersdorf

Population numbers

  • 1830: 070 (16 houses)
  • 1864: 101 (22 buildings) (11 Catholics, 90 Protestants)
  • 1875: 074 (48 buildings; cattle: 9 horses, 99 cattle)
  • 1900: 076 (17 residential buildings)
  • 1938: 058 (9 Catholics of the parish Sulzbürg, 49 Protestants)
  • 1950: 069 (13 houses)
  • 1961: 060 (13 residential buildings)
  • 1978: 052
  • 1987: 041 (12 residential buildings, 14 apartments)
  • 2012: 052

Architectural monuments

The residential stalls house No. 1 (house with mid-gable, 19th century), No. 5 (mid-19th century) and No. 7 (with half-hipped roof and half-timbered gable, 18th century) are considered architectural monuments.

Transport links

A community road leads from the district road NM 19 in the east on the southern edge of Körnersdorf via Kerkhofen to Oberndorf, where it meets the district road NM 18. South of Körnersdorf, the Main-Danube Canal can be crossed in the direction of Bachhausen and on to Erasbach.

literature

  • Bernhard Heinloth: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Part Altbayern, Issue 16: Neumarkt , Munich: Commission for Bavarian State History, 1967
  • Gerhard Hirschmann: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Part of Franconia. Row I, Issue 6. Eichstätt. Beilngries - Eichstätt - Greding, Munich 1959

Individual evidence

  1. Eckard Lullies: The oldest loan books of the Hochstift Eichstätt, Ansbach 2012, No. 678 with annotation
  2. Heinloth, p. 168
  3. Heinloth, p. 95
  4. Summary designation of the Gräfl. Wolffstein Imperial Fiefs and Allodial Goods , o. O., [after 1732], p. 113
  5. Heinloth, p. 106
  6. Heinloth, p. 267
  7. Hirschmann, p. 211
  8. ^ Karl Friedrich Hohn: The rain district of the Kingdom of Bavaria, described geographically and statistically , Stuttgart and Tübingen: Cotta, 1830, p. 140
  9. ^ Joseph Heyberger, Chr. Schmitt, v. Wachter: Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical local dictionary . In: K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Bavaria. Regional and folklore of the Kingdom of Bavaria . tape 5 . Literary and artistic establishment of the JG Cotta'schen Buchhandlung, Munich 1867, Sp. 992 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb10374496-4 ( digitized version ).
  10. Kgl. Statistical Bureau (ed.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria. According to districts, administrative districts, court districts and municipalities, including parish, school and post office affiliation ... with an alphabetical general register containing the population according to the results of the census of December 1, 1875 . Adolf Ackermann, Munich 1877, 2nd section (population figures from 1871, cattle figures from 1873), Sp. 1156 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb00052489-4 ( digitized version ).
  11. K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Directory of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria, with alphabetical register of places . LXV. Issue of the contributions to the statistics of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Munich 1904, Section II, Sp. 807 ( digitized version ).
  12. ^ Franz Xaver Buchner : The diocese of Eichstätt. Volume II, Eichstätt 1938, p. 571
  13. Hirschmann, p. 211
  14. Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official city directory for Bavaria, territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census . Issue 260 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1964, DNB  453660959 , Section II, Sp. 517 ( digitized version ).
  15. Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official place directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 1, 1978 . Issue 380 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich December 1978, DNB  790598426 , p. 122 ( digitized version ).
  16. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing (Ed.): Official local directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 25, 1987 . Issue 450 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich November 1991, DNB  94240937X , p. 259 ( digitized version ).
  17. ^ Müller's Großes Deutsches Ortsbuch 2012 , Berlin / Boston 2012, p. 750
  18. ^ Sixtus Lampl and Otto Braasch: Monuments in Bavaria, Volume III: Upper Palatinate. Ensembles, architectural monuments, archaeological site monuments, Munich: R. Oldenbourg Verlag, 1986, p. 153

Web links

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