Lueg (municipality of Sankt Gilgen)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lueg (location component f0)
Lueg (municipality of Sankt Gilgen) (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Salzburg area  (SL), Salzburg
Judicial district Thalgau
Pole. local community Sankt Gilgen   ( KG  Sankt Gilgen )
Locality Sankt Gilgen
Coordinates 47 ° 45 '15 "  N , 13 ° 22' 20"  E Coordinates: 47 ° 45 '15 "  N , 13 ° 22' 20"  E
height 540  m above sea level A.
Post Code 4866 Unterach
Statistical identification
Counting district / district St. Gilgen Center ( 50 330 000)
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; SAGIS
f0

BW

Lueg (pronounced: "Lu-eg" or "Luhg") is a location in the Wolfgangsee region in the Salzburg part of the Salzkammergut and belongs to the municipality of Sankt Gilgen in the Salzburg area .

geography

Lueg is located 25 kilometers east of the city of Salzburg , directly south of the town of St. Gilgen . It is located on the west bank of the Wolfgangsee  ( 583  m above sea level ), on the narrow strip of shore below the Gamswand, the eastern edge of the Zwölferhorn below the Sausteigalm . Opposite the lake is the Falkensteinerwand of the Schafberg.

The location extends for about 1 kilometer along the lake, at the southern end is the Lueg hotel . The houses here have the addresses Luegerstraße , that's a good 20 addresses. The Wolfgangsee Straße  (B158) bypasses the place above. To the north is the demarcation to the town of St. Gilgen itself around Gunzenbach and the Lueger Waldweg , where there are a further 20 houses. Here is the southern entrance to the B158 to St. Gilgen, and the approach to Lueg.

Neighboring places:
Neighboring communities
Wolfgangsee

History and infrastructure

Gasthof Lueg (around 1905)

The place name Lueg stands for peeping , looking, peeking, and is therefore pronounced luːɘg or something similar.

The Brauhaus zu Lueg, one of the oldest known breweries in the state of Salzburg, can be found in documents as early as 1350. Originally, the steep slopes of the Zwölferhorn (Gamswand) and Troiferberg (Litzlwand) fell directly into the lake, the path towards Ischl was only made passable in the High Middle Ages. The Litzlwand toll office was located near Lueg , one of the four toll stations on the road from Salzburg to Ischl (today's  B158 ).

The brewery was the only brewery in the entire Thalgau district to have a secure customer base as far as Faistenau and Hintersee . The Kirchpüchler family from Thalgauegg owned the brewery from 1500 to 1601 , and in some cases also ran the toll office and administration in Hüttenstein . Christof Adam von Seyboldstorfer bought it in 1649. During that time the brewery was rebuilt. In 1709 the property went to the Prince Archbishop's Court Chamber. In 1718, the barons of Schnedizen, higher Salzburg officials, acquired the brewing rights. The property was auctioned off in 1817, at the time it comprised a residential building, a new building, a brewery, a brewhouse, a distillery and several outbuildings. This also included the Lueger mill to the south, which is the current location of the Franzosenschanze .

The brewery then had various owners in a row, and became a brewery inn when the summer freshness began. From this time on, the development of the town began, and a number of holiday homes and houses were built on the lake in the direction of Sankt Gilgen. As a result, Lueg was also approached by the Wolfgangsee shipping company. Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach , who vacationed in St. Gilgen from 1889–98, was one of the better-known regulars of the inn . In 1893 the Ischlerbahn (Salzkammergut-Lokalbahn, SKGLB) was built here, with the most difficult section of the whole route. Curiously, the Ischlerbahn ran right through the guest garden of the inn. In 1902 the Stiegl brewery in Salzburg acquired the brewery , the baroque building was demolished and a new inn built in the Salzkammergut style.

In 1915 the St. Gilgen church cemetery had to be closed due to overcrowding, a provisional forest cemetery was created near Lueg (at today's Lueger Waldweg ). After a major fire, the inn was rebuilt in 1920. In 1957 the Ischlerbahn was discontinued and then dismantled, the route is now a walking path. In 1992 the bypasses were built, the Luegerstraße is the old Grazerstraße. This is also where the western bypass for the whole of St. Gilgen should begin, but it was never realized.

In 1989 the hotel property Lueg became a "Ferienhof" of Young Austria  (YA !, formerly Austrian youth holiday organization ). In 2016, operations were discontinued and a modern wellness hotel is being built.

proof

  1. ^ Entry Lueg. In: Remaraweng Boarisch: History of Language. bairische-sprache.at (accessed April 29, 2017).
  2. a b c d e Salzburg Week. Edition Flachgauer Nachrichten . August 23, 2012, SoA; to the Lueg brewery . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  3. Urbar 3 , Salzburg State Archives; According to the Lueg brewery . In: Salzburger Nachrichten: Salzburgwiki .
  4. ^ Leopold Ziller: From fishing village to tourist resort. History of St. Gilgens and Aberseeland. St. Gilgen 1975, p. OA; quoted in The Ancient Romans. Geocache from daggi49, August 31, 2016 (on geocaching.com, accessed April 24, 2017).
  5. ^ A b Leopold Ziller: Der Hof zu Elsenwang: In: Mitteilungen der Gesellschaft für Salzburger Landeskunde 118, 1978, pp. 51, 52 u. 56 (full article pp. 45–58).
  6. ^ A b c d e L. Huebner: Description of the archbishopric and imperial princes Salzburg with regard to topography and statistics. Volume 1: Das Salzburgische Flache Land , Verlag FX Oberer, Salzburg 1796, (section Hüttenstein care and regional court: Strange buildings b4) Das Schnedizenische… Bräuhaus zu Lueg , p. 281 ff ( digitized version , Google, full view ).
  7. ^ A b Imperial and Royal Austrian Official and Intelligence Gazette from Salzburg for the year 1817. Verlag Franz Xaver Duyle, Salzburg 1817, p. 1083 f ( digitized version, Google, complete view ).
  8. a b c (oA :) Tourist guide on excursions and hikes in Salzburg and the high valleys of Pongau's, Lungau's and Pinzgau's. Volume 1, Verlag Carl Gerold, Vienna 1845, p. 33 f ( digitized version, Google, complete view ).
  9. For example Karl Baedeker: Southern Bavaria, Tyrol, Salzburg, Upper and Lower Austria, Styria, Karten and Krain: Handbook for travelers. Series Baedeker's travel guides , published by K. Baedeker, 1914, p 134 ( limited preview in Google Book Search).
  10. ^ Renat Ebeling-Winkler, Horst Ebeling: Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach in St. Gilgen. 2nd edition, Verlag Heimatkundliches Museum St. Gilgen, 2003, p. 77.
  11. cemetery. Parish St. Gilgen (on kirchen.net, accessed May 4, 2017).
  12. New health hotel in St. Gilgen. salzburg.orf.at, November 8, 2012.
  13. Development plan Hotel Lueg. Projects Raumordnung, Ursula Brandl, Gfz: 210/7/12-A (pdf, on gemgilgen.at, accessed May 2, 2017).