Lauterbach (Altomünster)

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Lauterbach
Altomünster market
Coordinates: 48 ° 26 '2 "  N , 11 ° 14' 57"  E
Height : 518 m
Residents : 11  (Nov. 4, 2019)
Postal code : 85250
Area code : 08259
Lauterbach (Bavaria)
Lauterbach

Location of Lauterbach in Bavaria

Lauterbach is a district of the Altomünster market in the Upper Bavarian district of Dachau . On January 1, 1976, the hamlet of Lauterbach came to Altomünster as a district from Randelsried .

history

The place was first handed down as "Luterbach" in a donation to the Benedictine monastery Scheyern before 1171. At that time, Lauterbach was much bigger. According to tradition, the plague spread; also in Lauterbach. The houses in Lauterbach were then set on fire so that the germs (from the plague) would disappear. So the place wasn't that big anymore and so it stayed so small. Allegedly there was once a castle in the forest towards Holzhausen / Schiltberg. From the castle you can only see three ramparts (hill in front of the castle so that the attackers couldn't get to the castle so quickly).

The name is generally interpreted as a place on a noisy, pure stream .

The place and the church Lauterbach, ("on a noisy, pure brook") were first mentioned in writing in 1150.

This church is said to have been built of stone as early as 1020. Parts of the wall are still present in the entrance area. At that time, wooden churches were the norm.

In 1418 Lauterbach is described for the first time as a separate parish in the diocese of Augsburg.

After the Thirty Years' War it no longer had its own pastor, but was administered by the respective pastors of the neighboring parish of Aufhausen.

But Lauterbach is said to have officially remained its own parish with all parish rights to this day. It is currently being looked after by the Schiltberg parish.

Architectural monuments

  • Catholic branch church St. Alban : The church is entered in the list of monuments under number D-1-74-111-4 . The ceiling paintings are by Ignaz Baldauf . The place and the church Lauterbach, ("on a noisy, pure brook") were first mentioned in writing in 1150.

This church is said to have been built of stone as early as 1020. Parts of the wall are still present in the entrance area. At that time, wooden churches were the norm.

In 1418 Lauterbach is described for the first time as a separate parish in the diocese of Augsburg.

After the Thirty Years' War it no longer had its own pastor, but was administered by the respective pastors of the neighboring parish of Aufhausen.

But Lauterbach is said to have officially remained its own parish with all parish rights to this day. It is currently being looked after by the Schiltberg parish.

Lauterbach has always belonged to the Diocese of Augsburg (Deanery Aichach-Friedberg).

The current church dates partly (choir) from the late Gothic period (15th / 16th century). The nave was built in the 18th century. The church was furnished in a baroque style. This late baroque style is particularly successful and still impresses visitors today. The last renovation was carried out between 1990 and 2001 with great financial and physical participation by the village population.

literature

Web links