Hilsbach winery

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The winery Hilsbach was from the 16th century until 1803 an office area of the Palatine domain management within the Oberamt Mosbach .

Winery from 1517

Hilsbach came to the Electoral Palatinate in 1310 , and in 1517 the Lords of Venningen , who provided many Electoral Palatinate bailiffs on the nearby Steinsberg , received the Steinsberg, hamlets and other farms as an Electoral Palatinate fief .

The Electoral Palatinate Bailiwick was then relocated from Steinsberg to Hilsbach and a winery was established there in 1517. The administration of the Electoral Palatinate was divided into 18 upper offices, and Hilsbach was subordinate to the Oberamt Mosbach as well as the wineries Eberbach , Lohrbach , Neckarelz and Minneburg .

Official area 1670

Official cellar building in Hilsbach from 1732/33

In 1670 the Hilsbach winery consisted of ten locations and two farms that were fully owned by the Electoral Palatinate, and other locations in which the Electoral Palatinate only had individual rights and income. In full ownership were: Hilsbach, Sinsheim , Elsenz , Kirchardt , rows , Richen , Schluchtern , Stebbach , Steinsfurt , the castle Streichenberg (today Gemmingen), the Immelhäuser Hof (today Sinsheim) and the Ursenbacher Hof (Daisbach).

The Electoral Palatinate owned further rights and taxes in Adelshofen , Adersbach , Berwangen , Daisbach , on the Dammhof , in Dühren , Fürfeld , Gemmingen , Grombach , Großgartach , Güglingen , Hoffenheim , Kirchhausen , Landshausen , Massenbach , Massenbachhausen , Niederhofen , Nordheim , Rohrbach am Gießhübel , Rohrbach near Sinsheim , Schwaigern , Stetten am Heuchelberg , Tiefenbach , Waibstadt , Waldangelloch , Weiler and on the Steinsberg.

In 1732/33 a new cellar building was built in Hilsbach. The figure of Mary on the corner of the building was probably created by the same master who made the Sinsheim Mother of God from the Palatinate Court .

Through the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss 1803 and the dissolution of the Electoral Palatinate, the Hilsbach winery and its associated locations came to the princes of Leiningen . The Rheinbund act mediated the House of Leiningen in 1806, the princes of Leiningen became noblemen under the sovereignty of Baden . The Hilsbach winery has now become the Princely Liningian Office of Hilsbach in the province of the Lower Rhine and the Baden Palatinate County with its seat in Mannheim . In 1809 the Hilsbach office was dissolved.

Officials of the winery

1517 Nicolas of Siglingen
1519-1536  Hans of Doubt
1537-1572 Conrad vom Zweiffel († June 4, 1572)
1573-1577 Johann Engelhardt von Mohr
1581-1584 Peter Valentin (from) Krug
1585-1590 Hans Jörg Diemar
1591-1613 Erasmus Walstetter († March 28, 1613)
1613-1620 Anselm Glöckner
1628 Christoff Beckelhaub
1637-1638 Johann Diemar
until 1649 Bernhard Beringer
1649 Flavian Hemelius
1652-1665 Johannes Baptista Paravicini († May 1, 1665)
1665-1667 Johann Jakob Lumpert (1653–1665 mayor in Eppingen )
1668-1671 Johann Georg Erkenbrecht
1671-1677 Wilhelm Adam Reyger (1667–1673 mayor in Eppingen )
1680-1683 Johann Friedrich Schenk
1683-1739 Johann Carl Vollmar († February 26, 1739)
1739-1760 Maximilian Heinrich Cronnacher († June 7, 1760)
1760-1787 Friedrich Jung († February 4, 1801 in Mannheim)
1787-1802 Franz von Vogel
1802-1804 van der mast
1808-1813 Anton Ortallo

literature

  • Franz Gehrig : Steinsberg Castle and the town of Hilsbach . In: Kraichgau. Local history research in the district of Sinsheim, taking into account its immediate neighboring areas . Episode 2, 1970, pp. 80-102.
  • Meinhold Lurz: From the Electoral Palatinate city to the district of Sinsheim. Hilsbach's development over the past 200 years . In: Kraichgau. Contributions to landscape and local research , volume 15. Heimatverein Kraichgau , Sinsheim 1997, ISBN 3-921214-14-9 , pp. 201–223.
  • Meinhold Lurz: The Hilsbach office in 1670 . In: Kraichgau. Contributions to landscape and local research , volume 15. Heimatverein Kraichgau, Sinsheim 1997, ISBN 3-921214-14-9 , pp. 409-423.
  • end: Built a quarter of a millennium ago as an official cellar: now the new residence of the local administration . In: Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung of April 23, 1982.

Individual evidence

  1. Wilhelm Bauer: The Mother of God from the “Pfälzer Hof” In: Our Land 2004. Home calendar for Neckartal, Odenwald, Bauland and Kraichgau , Heidelberg 2004, pp. 228-231.