Mantlach (Titting)

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Mantlach
Market Titting
Coordinates: 49 ° 0 ′ 57 ″  N , 11 ° 13 ′ 16 ″  E
Height : 535 m
Residents : 126  (2007)
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Postal code : 85135
Area code : 08423

Mantlach is a district of the Titting market in the Upper Bavarian district of Eichstätt in Bavaria .

Geographical location

The street village is about 1.5 km north of the Anlautertal on the plateau of the southern Franconian Jura at 535 meters above sea level on the state road 2225. It is about 2 km away from the municipality in Titting.

history

At least eleven prehistoric burial mounds have been documented in the “Standesloh” forest.

In 1248, citizens of the episcopal town of Eichstätt are referred to as von “Mantelach” (the place name is derived from the Middle High German “mantl” for pine ). In 1302, Count Gebhard VII von Hirschberg sold his goods in Mantlach to the Eichstätt bishop. In the course of the Hirschberg inheritance in 1305, the place was finally assigned to the Eichstätt monastery . In 1343 the Eichstatt bishop sold a farm in Mantlach to a citizen of Eichstatt. Around 1448 the von Brunneck gentlemen owned goods in Mantlach. In 1546 there were 17 farms and a shepherd's house (demolished in 1938) according to the Salbuch of the Brunneck Office in Mantlach. Brunneck owned the bailiwick rights and thus the lower, the judicial office Greding the high jurisdiction; however, the chapter itself held the bailiwick of the three estates of the Eichstätter cathedral chapter in Mantlach. At that time two estates belonged to the Eichstätt Monastery. The Wülzburg monastery and the Heilig-Geist-Spital Eichstätt included so-called field fiefs that were not firmly attached to farms . One yard was available to the Eichstätt preacher monastery and another to the Kastner von Heideck .

From 1808 the village belonged to the Altmühlkreis and in it to the tax district Titting, from 1810 to 1817 to the Oberdonaukreis . From 1838 the place was Middle Franconian and belonged to the district office Hilpoltstein, from 1938 to the district Hilpoltstein . In 1923 the place was electrified. In 1951 the place joined the Eichstätt District Office. In 1956 a land consolidation was carried out. On January 1, 1972, the incorporation into the Titting market took place in the course of the regional reform . In 1983 there were 13 full-time farms and two part-time farms with 117 inhabitants. In 1999 the village was officially recognized as a resort. In 2007 it had 126 inhabitants.

Culture and sights

Buildings

Filial church St. Johann Baptist - Mantlach
  • The Filialkirchdorf (von Morsbach ) has a St. Church dedicated to John the Baptist, rebuilt in 1613. In 1892 it was extended to the west by two axes. The square tower has a helmet made of partially green glazed bricks. The high altar is an early Rococo complex from 1730 to 1750; the two side figures of the patron saint and St. John the Evangelist are late Gothic (around 1490). The baroque side altars date from the middle of the 17th century, the pulpit is a bit older.
  • At the end of the village in the direction of Waizenhofen there is a chapel with a "Savior on the Scourge Column " from the 17th / 18th. Century.

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

From the federal autobahn 9 , coming from the south, you can reach Mantlach via the Altmühltal exit and drive through the Anlautertal to Titting. From there, head towards Thalmässing until you reach Mantlach. Coming from the north, exit in Greding and reach the Anlautertal via Grafenberg in Emsing .

literature

  • Felix Mader (editor): The art monuments of Bavaria. Middle Franconia. III. District Office Hilpoltstein. 1929 (Reprint 1983, ISBN 3-486-50506-8 .) Pp. 224f.
  • The Eichstätter area past and present. 2nd Edition. Eichstätt: Sparkasse Eichstätt 1984, p. 240.
  • Emmi Böck : Legends and legends from Eichstätt and the surrounding area. Eichstätt: Brönner & Daentler 1977. p. 100.
  • Titting. Contributions to the natural and cultural history of the middle Anlautertal. Kipfenberg: Hercynia 1999, et al. Pp. 167-171, 240f., 261-263, 303-305.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 482 .

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