Lindenmühle (Igensdorf)

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Lindenmühle
Igensdorf market
Coordinates: 49 ° 36 ′ 8 ″  N , 11 ° 13 ′ 46 ″  E
Height : 321 m above sea level NHN
Residents : (1987) 
Postal code : 91338
Area code : 09126

The Lindenmühle is a Franconian wasteland that belongs to Igensdorf .

geography

The in Erlanger Albvorland preferred solitude is one of 25 officially designated community parts of the Upper Franconian market Igensdorf. The Lindenmühle is a little more than two kilometers south of the center of Igensdorf at an altitude of 321  m above sea level. NHN .

history

The Lindenmühle was first mentioned in a document in 1370. Until the beginning of the 19th century it had sovereignty of reaching immediate subordinate to nobles, located in the the Frankish knights circle belonging Ritter Canton Gebürg had organized. The bailiwick , which is decisive in the Franconian region for the successful claim of sovereignty , was exercised by the barons of Schönfeld . The perception of high jurisdiction was the the city of Nuremberg belonging Pflegamt Hiltpoltstein in his role as Fraischamt to. In 1803 the Lindenmühle was annexed by Prussia as a result of the main land settlement concluded between the Electorate Pfalzbaiern and the Kingdom of Prussia. It was incorporated into its southern German administrative area of Ansbach-Bayreuth and thus later became part of the Eschenau road district , a corridor connection with which the two geographically separated parts of this territory were connected via a military road. After the Prussian defeat in the Fourth Coalition War , the desert, together with the entire Principality of Bayreuth, was placed under a military administration set up by the French Empire in 1807 . With the acquisition of this principality by the Kingdom of Bavaria in 1810 , the Lindenmühle finally became Bavarian.

Due to the administrative reforms carried out in the Kingdom of Bavaria at the beginning of the 19th century , the Lindenmühle became part of the independent rural community of Rüsselbach with the second municipal edict in 1818 , which also includes the villages of Kirchrüsselbach , Mittelrüsselbach , Oberrüsselbach and Unterrüsselbach , the two hamlets Weidenbühl and Weidenmühle as well as the wasteland Lindenhof belonged. In the course of the municipal territorial reform in Bavaria carried out in the 1970s , the Lindenmühle was incorporated into the Igensdorf market together with the entire municipality of Rüsselbach at the beginning of 1972. In 1987 the Lindenmühle had two residents.

traffic

The federal road 2 passes about 300 meters east of the village and connects the Lindenmühle to the road network by means of a spur road. The Lindenmühle is not served by public transport , the next stop of the VGN bus line 212 is in Lindenhof. The nearest railway station is just south of preferred Weidenbühl breakpoint Rüsselbach the Gräfenbergbahn .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b 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. 302 ( digitized version ). Retrieved November 2, 2019
  2. ^ Lindenmühle in the local database of the Bavarian State Library Online . Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, accessed on November 2, 2019.
  3. Geographical location of the Lindenmühle in the Bavaria Atlas , accessed on November 2, 2019
  4. ^ Fritz Fink: Hike through the past of the Schwabach valley - the landscape between Erlangen and Graefenberg . Self-published, Eschenau 1999, ISBN 3-00-004988-6 , p. 154 .
  5. Ingomar Bog : Forchheim (=  Historical Atlas of Bavaria, Part Franconia . I, 5). Komm. Für Bayerische Landesgeschichte, Munich 1955, DNB  450540367 , p. 69 ( digitized version ).
  6. ^ Ingomar Bog: Forchheim . In: Commission for Bavarian State History (Hrsg.): Historischer Atlas von Bayern . Munich 1955, map supplement 1 ( Digitale-sammlungen.de [accessed October 31, 2019]).
  7. ^ Sigmund Benker, Andreas Kraus (ed.): History of Franconia up to the end of the 18th century . 3. Edition. Beck, Munich 1997, ISBN 3-406-39451-5 , p. 523 .
  8. ^ Hanns Hubert Hofmann: Between power and law. The Eschenau street district between Prussia, the Electoral Palatinate of Bavaria and the imperial city of Nuremberg (1805/1806) . In: Association for the history of the city of Nuremberg eV (Hrsg.): Messages of the association for the history of the city of Nuremberg . tape 53 . Self-published by the Association for the History of the City of Nuremberg, Nuremberg 1965, p. 13–59 ( digital-sammlungen.de [accessed November 3, 2019]).
  9. ^ Sigmund Benker, Andreas Kraus (ed.): History of Franconia up to the end of the 18th century . 3. Edition. Beck, Munich 1997, ISBN 3-406-39451-5 , p. 776 .
  10. ^ Sigmund Benker, Andreas Kraus (ed.): History of Franconia up to the end of the 18th century . 3. Edition. Beck, Munich 1997, ISBN 3-406-39451-5 , p. 529 .
  11. ^ Sigmund Benker, Andreas Kraus (ed.): History of Franconia up to the end of the 18th century . 3. Edition. Beck, Munich 1997, ISBN 3-406-39451-5 , p. 530 .
  12. Ingomar Bog : Forchheim (=  Historical Atlas of Bavaria, Part Franconia . I, 5). Komm. Für Bayerische Landesgeschichte, Munich 1955, DNB  450540367 , p. 124 ( digitized version ).
  13. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 682 .