Ludwigsmoos

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Ludwigsmoos
Community Königsmoos
Coordinates: 48 ° 39 ′ 17 ″  N , 11 ° 12 ′ 12 ″  E
Height : 383 m above sea level NN
Residents : 1034  (Jan 12, 2010)
Incorporation : 1st January 1975
Postal code : 86669
Area code : 08433

Ludwigsmoos is a parish village and district of Königsmoos in the district of Neuburg-Schrobenhausen , which belongs to the administrative district of Upper Bavaria in Bavaria . The municipality also includes the village of Achhäuser , which was part of the municipalities of Sinning and partly of Hollenbach and Dinkelshausen until the regional reform . The former Grabmühle district is now part of the Langenmosen community .

geography

Ludwigsmoos is a street village and is located in the west of the Donaumoos .

Ludwigsmoos is located on the north-east-south-west running state road St 2049 from Ingolstadt (southern bypass) to Pöttmes . Achhäuser is located on the northwest-southeast running state road St 2050 from the federal road 16 near Straß to Schrobenhausen . The two streets cross south of Achhäuser.

The neighboring towns of Ludwigsmoos and Achhäuser are Klingsmoos in the southwest , Ehekirchen and its districts Wallertshofen , Seiboldsdorf and Dinkelshausen in the west, Rohrenfels and its districts Wagenhofen and Neustetten in the north, Stengelheim and Untermaxfeld in the northeast, Obergrasheim and Untergrasheim in the east, Berg in the southeast in the Gau and its districts Lampertshofen and Eppertshofen and in the south Langenmosen with its district Grabmühle .

For district Ludwigsmoos also owned conservation area spawning at Ludwigsmoos .

history

Early excavations indicate that the area was already settled in the Neolithic Age, such as a rectangular hatchet east of the spawn and an arrowhead made of chert. An early Bronze Age dagger was also found. A Roman coin comes from the foundation ditch of the Catholic Church.

Ludwigsmoos was settled from 1822 after the Danube moss moor had been drained. At that time it was called Ludwigsfeld after the then Bavarian King Ludwig I. In
1831 the community Ludwigsmoos was formed from the places Ludwigsmoos (now renamed), Klingsmoos (formerly Theresienfeld ), Grabmühle (today near Langenmosen ) and the colonist property of Peter Lohner. It should be a unified moss community. Since this did not suit the people of Klingsmoos, they asked for the formation of an independent community, which was approved in 1845; so they were eliminated until further notice.

Achhäuser was named after the so-called Donaumoos-Ach , which flows through the entire Donaumoos and on the two banks of which the village of Achhäuser is lined up.

Until July 1, 1972, the independent municipality of Ludwigsmoos with its Grabmühle district belonged to the Swabian district of Neuburg an der Donau and then, with the regional reform in Bavaria, fell to the enlarged, now Upper Bavarian district of Neuburg an der Donau, which was named on May 1, 1973 District Neuburg-Schrobenhausen received. On January 1, 1975, the three moss communities of Klingsmoos , Ludwigsmoos (now with Achhäuser) and Untermaxfeld merged to form Königsmoos.

In 1834 a Catholic colonial pastoral care center was established in Ludwigsmoos and a Catholic branch school was built in 1856. The Protestant community received a school and a vicariate in Ludwigsmoos in 1857 and a church in neo-Gothic style in 1864 . Catholic pastoral care was elevated to parishes in 1893 and the Protestant vicariate in 1912. The Catholic parish church of Sankt Maximilian was also built in 1912 , a neo-baroque barrel-vaulted hall church with a turret (choir at the end of the 18th century); the architect was Franz Baumann from Munich, the ceiling paintings were created by Gebhard Fugel .

The Donaumoos level the property Ludwigstraße 88 shows the Moorsackung since 1836 to 2.85 meters (as of 2006).

Personalities

  • Lorenz Specht (* 1931 in Ludwigsmoos, † 2016), motorcyclist
  • Theo Berger (* 1941 in Ludwigsmoos, † 2003 in Straubing), violent criminal

Individual evidence

  1. ^ 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 GmbH, Stuttgart and Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 601 .

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