Matheshörlebach

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Matheshörlebach
Coordinates: 49 ° 6 ′ 52 ″  N , 9 ° 49 ′ 42 ″  E
Height : approx. 385 m above sea level NHN

Matheshörlebach is a part of the Schwäbisch Hall district of Sulzdorf .

Surname

The name Matheshörlebachs is locally partly shortened by the initial saint's name and also pronounced in the local dialect such as Herlebach , which is written in German . The addition of saints may have served to differentiate two nearby hamlets with the same pronunciation.

geography

Matheshörlebach is a hamlet with fewer than two dozen house numbers on the Haller level, almost 7 km east of the town center of Hall and about 1.5 km northwest of the center of Sulzdorf. Surrounded by predominantly arable farmland, it is open and nearly bumpless corridor about one kilometer from the forest area Hasenbühl in the southeast, the northernmost, flat tails of Limpurger mountains , and less than one kilometer south of the valley section of the east of Buhler current Otterbachs . The village is crossed in a wide and flat hollow by the Matheshörlebach , which drains over the Otterbach and begins as a field path ditch in front of the Hasenbühl.

The hamlet is opened up by the K 2665 from Schwäbisch Hall to Großaltdorf in the east beyond the Bühlertal cut. At the eastern edge of the hamlet, the K 2601 branches off to Sulzdorf. Both roads are used by traffic between Schwäbisch Hall and its east.

history

The hamlet used to belong to Tüngental . The name is derived from the 1371 mentioning "Hurlebach prope capellam S. Mattaei". An abandoned chapel dedicated to St. Matthew is still documented in 1529. Presumably a castle or a noble residence also existed here, after which a branch of the Enslingen family named itself . Nikolaus von Enslingen, envoy from the imperial city of Schwäbisch Hall to the Council of Constance , was also called "von Hürdelbach". The people of Ensling had their burial place in the Marienkirche Tüngental .

The coat of arms of those of Enslingen, who also appear under the name "von Hörlebach" or "von Hürdelbach", shows a split shield. The right side is bare and red. The left side is divided three times in silver and black. There are two buffalo horns on the helmet. The right buffalo horn is red. The left buffalo horn is divided into three silver-black sections. The buffalo horns have a red and silver cover on the right and a black and silver cover on the left.

The location of the chapel and the castle is unknown.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Eugen Gradmann : The art and antiquity monuments of the city and the Oberamt Schwäbisch-Hall . Paul Neff Verlag, Esslingen a. N. 1907, OCLC 31518382 , pp. 174 ( archive.org ).
  2. ^ Eugen Gradmann : The art and antiquity monuments of the city and the Oberamt Schwäbisch-Hall . Paul Neff Verlag, Esslingen a. N. 1907, OCLC 31518382 , pp. 173 ( archive.org ).
  3. ^ Enslingen. In: Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts . Volume 8, Leipzig 1734, column 1263.
  4. Otto Titan von Hefner : Stammbuch des blooming and dead nobility in Germany , Volume 4, p. 286, Regensburg, 1865; books.google.de