Kleinpertholz (Heidenreichstein municipality)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kleinpertholz ( village )
locality
cadastral community Kleinpertholz
Kleinpertholz (Heidenreichstein municipality) (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Gmünd  (GD), Lower Austria
Judicial district Gmünd in Lower Austria
Pole. local community Heidenreichstein
Coordinates 48 ° 51 '42 "  N , 15 ° 6' 27"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 51 '42 "  N , 15 ° 6' 27"  Ef1
height 546  m above sea level A.
Residents of the village 172 (January 1, 2020)
Building status 90 (2001)
Area  d. KG 5.08 km²
Statistical identification
Locality code 03646
Cadastral parish number 07120
Counting district / district Heidenreichstein-Southwest (30 916 002)
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; NÖGIS
f0
f0
172

BW

Kleinpertholz is a place and at the same time a cadastral municipality of the municipality of Heidenreichstein in the northwestern Waldviertel. The village is a row village with Waldhufenanlage and lies west of the cadastral community Heidenreichstein am Romaubach .

geography

The cadastral community of Kleinpertholz borders the cadastral communities of the municipality of Heidenreichstein as follows: Altmanns to the west and northwest , Heidenreichstein to the east and northeast, and Wielandsberg and Seyfrieds to the south . Kleinpertholz also borders on the Aalfang cadastral community of Amaliendorf-Aalfang . The Edelweiher and the Kaltenbachteich are located in the area of ​​the cadastral community. Coming from Heidenreichstein, the Romaubach flows through the area of ​​the cadastral community and then reaches Aalfang, where it flows into the Braunaubach. The Braunaubach belongs to the water network of the Lainsitz , a tributary of the Vltava (river) draining into the North Sea

Kleinpertholz lies at 546  m above sea level. A. The highest elevation of the cadastral community is in the southeast in Meinhartswald at 563  m above sea level. A.

history

Sculpture "I am the main" in the sculpture park "Haupt-Platz"

The place name is derived from the Old High German personal name "Perthold".

Kleinpertholz was first mentioned in a document in 1244, became a cadastral municipality in 1784 and joined the market town of Heidenreichstein in 1850 with a population of 187 at the time.

Kleinpertholz was in the Litschau rule until 1788 and then came (again) to the Heidenreichstein rule; In 1751 the place had 16 subordinate houses.

The village was previously administered by a village judge under the authority and responsibility of the rulership and had its own local manager until 1970 within the framework of the Heidenreichstein municipal administration.

Museums, galleries

In Kleinpertholz there is the gallery of the regional sculptor Mannhard Zeh with the Franz Zeh Museum and the sculpture park with sculptures by Austrian sculptors.

The "main square" is a project with 16 granite heads in connection with the word "main". Also in Kleinpertholz is the House of the Moor in connection with the local history museum of the town of Heidenreichstein.

The rails of the museum railway run by the Waldviertel Narrow Gauge Railways Association lead through the area of ​​the cadastral community and there is also a stop there.

literature

  • Erich Geppert, Karl Pichler: Kleinpertholz and Wielandsberg. In: 800 years of Heidenreichstein, Waldviertel - culture and history. Heidenreichstein 2005, p. 362 ff.
  • Stefan René Buzanich: The lifeworld of the village subjects of the Kuefstein rule Litschau as reflected in the legacy treatises of the 1st half of the 18th century (dissertation at the University of Vienna, 2020, 4 volumes).

Individual evidence

  1. Lower Austria Atlas ( Memento of the original from April 18, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.intermap1.noel.gv.at
  2. Stefan René Buzanich: The lifeworld of the village subjects of the Kuefstein rule Litschau as reflected in the legacy treatises of the 1st half of the 18th century (dissertation at the University of Vienna, 2020, 4 volumes). S. 23 .