Mönchsberg (Weißenohe)

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community Weißenohe
Coordinates: 49 ° 38 ′ 3 ″  N , 11 ° 15 ′ 27 ″  E
Height : 441 m above sea level NHN
Residents : (1970) 
Postal code : 91367
Area code : 09192
The Weißenoher district of Mönchsberg
The Weißenoher district of Mönchsberg

Mönchsberg (or earlier also Fuchsberg ) is a Franconian wasteland in the north-western part of the Graefenberg floodplain .

geography

The village is one of five districts of the municipality Weißenohe in the south-western part of Upper Franconia . It is located about 700 meters north-northeast of the center of Weißenohe and is at an altitude of 441  m above sea level. NHN .

history

Towards the end of the Middle Ages, the place, then still called Fuchsberg , was owned by the Weißenohe Monastery, which was part of the Electoral Palatinate . A few years after the end of the Landshut War of Succession , the wasteland was then subject to the high jurisdiction of the Nuremberg nursing office Hiltpoltstein . Because in 1520/21 the Electoral Palatinate and the Imperial City of Nuremberg had contractually agreed to incorporate the monastic properties conquered from the Imperial City during the war into the High Court District of the Nursing Office. The bailiwick of the two only properties in the village continued to hold the Weißenohe monastery, which also acquired sovereignty over the village. In essence, nothing changed when the Upper Palatinate was handed over as a fief to Kurbaiern after the ostracism of the Palatinate Elector Friedrich V (the so-called Winter King ) . For the wasteland, this only meant that the sovereignty over the village was now taken over by another Wittelsbach line .

As a result of the administrative reforms carried out in the Kingdom of Bavaria at the beginning of the 19th century , the place became part of the rural community of Weißenohe with the second municipal edict in 1818, which also included the village of Dorfhaus and the wasteland of Sonnenberg . In the period that followed, the village shared the fate of this community, which was later expanded by the wasteland Weinberg , which was surrounded by Igensdorf to Weißenohe . In 1970 Mönchsberg had seven residents.

traffic

The connection to the public road network is made by an inner-town road that leads from Weißenohe to Sonnenberg and ends there as a dead end.

literature

  • Ingomar Bog: Forchheim . In: Historical Atlas of Bavaria . Commission for Bavarian State History, Munich 1955.
  • Gertrud Diepolder : Bavarian History Atlas . Ed .: Max Spindler . Bayerischer Schulbuch Verlag, Munich 1969, ISBN 3-7627-0723-5 .
  • Eckhardt Pfeiffer (Ed.): Nürnberger Land . 3. Edition. Karl Pfeiffer's Buchdruckerei und Verlag, Hersbruck 1993, ISBN 3-9800386-5-3 .

Web links

Commons : Mönchsberg  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Bavarian State Statistical Office (Hrsg.): Official local directory for Bavaria . Issue 335 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1973, DNB  740801384 , p. 154 ( digitized version ). , accessed on May 20, 2019
  2. ^ Mönchsberg in the local database of the Bayerische Landesbibliothek Online . Bavarian State Library, accessed on May 20, 2019.
  3. Geographical location of Mönchsberg in the BayernAtlas , accessed on May 20, 2019
  4. Gertrud Diepolder : Bavarian History Atlas . Ed .: Max Spindler . Bayerischer Schulbuch Verlag, Munich 1969, ISBN 3-7627-0723-5 , p. 25 .
  5. ^ Ingomar Bog: Forchheim . S. 18 .
  6. ^ Eckhardt Pfeiffer (Ed.): Nürnberger Land . 3. Edition. Karl Pfeiffer's Buchdruckerei und Verlag, Hersbruck 1993, ISBN 3-9800386-5-3 , p. 100-101 .
  7. ^ Ingomar Bog: Forchheim . S. 21 .
  8. ^ Ingomar Bog: Forchheim . S. 53 .
  9. ^ Ingomar Bog: Forchheim . S. 19 .
  10. ^ Ingomar Bog: Forchheim . S. 125-126 .
  11. ^ Ingomar Bog: Forchheim . S. 119 .