Lindelachshof
Lindelachshof
City of Gerolzhofen
Coordinates: 49 ° 53 ′ 57 ″ N , 10 ° 21 ′ 51 ″ E
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Height : | 244 m above sea level NHN |
Residents : | 9 (May 25 1987) |
Postal code : | 97447 |
Area code : | 09382 |
The Lindelachshof (also Lindelachsmühle Obere Mühle , Oberkleesen-Mühle , Oberkleesenmühl ) is an estate in the district of the Lower Franconian town of Gerolzhofen in the Schweinfurt district .
Geographical location
The desert is in the east of the Gerolzhöfer municipality on the Volkach , a good 1 km east of Gerolzhofen, separated by the federal highway 286 . State road 2274 passes to the north at a distance of 300 m , further to the north lies Rügshofen , also a district of Gerolzhofen. The municipality of Dingolshausen begins to the east, while the Kapellberg with the Gertraudiskapelle rises to the south . To the west is the Klesenmühle .
history
The history of the Lindelachshof is closely linked to that of the deserted village of Lindelach , on whose mark it was until the 17th century. The history of the mill is documented by finds from the Neolithic Age . The lower part of a grinder was found at Faulbach. Initially, the residents of the settlement used hand-operated rotary mills before the immigrant Franconians brought the principle of the water mill to Lindelach.
A mill in Lindelach was first mentioned in 1305, when Heinrich Herlein was enfeoffed with it. Two mills were mentioned as early as 1426 and 1494. In 1508 the Fuchs von Bimbach owned both mills, they had acquired them from Hartung Fuchs von Dornheim. In the 16th century, the Mühlbach was moved away from the Volkach , and in 1591 the mills were given their own mill regulations by the Würzburg bishop Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn .
In 1565 the Obere Mühle was in the hands of the Würzburg bishopric . After the village of Lindelach was destroyed by Swedish troops in November 1631, only the two mills remained. In 1664 there is a report of a fight between the two millers on the outskirts of the desert village. In 1683 the Echter von Mespelbrunn had the fiefdom of the Lindelachshof, like the Klesenmühle , it was run by the miller Valtin Faulhaber.
Attractions
The center of the Lindelachshof is the manor . It is a two-storey half- hipped roof building from the second half of the 18th century. The property was decorated with simple corner pilasters , and drilled frames were attached to the windows. The outbuildings are also worth seeing. The oldest wayside shrine in the corridors of Lindelachshof dates from 1606. Another wayside shrine is from 1853, and a processional altar shows the crucifixion.
See also
literature
- Mario Dorsch: Disappeared Medieval Settlements. Desertification between Steigerwald, Main and the Volkach . Hassfurt 2013
- Hans Koppel: Lindelach. Readings, readings and more (= de geroldeshova vol. 10) . Gerolzhofen 2004
Web links
- Lindelachshof in the location database of the Bavarian State Library Online . Bavarian State Library
Individual evidence
- ↑ 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. 377 ( digitized version ).
- ↑ a b Meyers local and traffic lexicon of the Reich, Volume 2 , Digitalisat
- ↑ historical map on BayernAtlas
- ^ Dorsch, Mario: Disappeared Medieval Settlements , p. 145
- ^ Koppel, Hans: Lindelach , p. 82