Flour hood

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Flour hood
Former municipality of Nainhof-Hohenfels
Coordinates: 49 ° 13 ′ 5 ″  N , 11 ° 51 ′ 31 ″  E
Height : 469 m
Residents : 10  (Sep 13, 1950)

Mehlhaube , most recently a district of the municipality of Nainhof-Hohenfels in the former district of Parsberg , is a deserted area in the Hohenfels training area , partly overbuilt with military installations of the US Army.

Geographical location

The wasteland Mehlhaube was in the Upper Palatinate Jura of the southern Franconian Jura about 2 km north of Hohenfels at about 469 m above sea ​​level on the slope of the Mehlhaube elevation.

history

With the second Bavarian municipal edict of 1818, the rural community Unterödenhart was formed in the district court of Parsberg (later the district of Parsberg ) with the seven places Unterödenhart, Aicha , Butzenhof (en) , Machendorf , Oberödenhart , Pöllnricht and Sichendorf . The wasteland Mehlhaube, built in 1870, was added to it; the place name appears officially for the first time in 1884, but it is older than the field name there, as the Bavarian first recording shows.

When a Wehrmacht training area was set up in the Upper Palatinate in 1938, the Unterödenhart community and with it the Mehlhaube wasteland had to be relocated and officially became part of the Hohenfels Army Estate in 1944 . After the end of the Second World War , the deserted property was repopulated by refugees and displaced persons. In autumn 1950, the ten new settlers had to leave the property again because the US and NATO military training area Hohenfels was being built. In him the wasteland became desolation; military objects of the "US Camp Mehlhaube" were created.

As part of the regional reform in Bavaria , the area of ​​the former community Unterödenhart was attached to the Hohenfels market on October 1, 1970 . Mehlhaube has been an officially named district of Hohenfels since then.

Population and building / yard numbers

  • 1900: 9 residents, 1 residential building
  • 1925: 8 residents, 1 residential building
  • 1950: 10 residents, 1 residential building

Church conditions

The wasteland belonged to the Catholic parish of St. Ulrich zu Hohenfels in the area of ​​the diocese of Regensburg . The children went there until they moved to the Catholic school.

literature

  • Manfred Jehle: Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Old Bavaria, volume 51: Parsberg , Munich 1981

Individual evidence

  1. Jehle, p. 545
  2. Jehle, p. 555
  3. Jehle, p. 518
  4. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (Ed.): Handbook of the Bavarian offices, municipalities and courts 1799-1980. Munich 1983, p. 547
  5. K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Directory of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria, with alphabetical register of places . LXV. Issue of the contributions to the statistics of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Munich 1904, Section II, Sp. 904 ( digitized version ).
  6. Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Localities directory for the Free State of Bavaria according to the census of June 16, 1925 and the territorial status of January 1, 1928 . Issue 109 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1928, Section II, Sp. 914 ( digitized version ).
  7. Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official place directory for Bavaria - edited on the basis of the census of September 13, 1950 . Issue 169 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1952, DNB  453660975 , Section II, Sp. 785 ( digitized version ).