Mindelstetten

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the community of Mindelstetten
Mindelstetten
Map of Germany, position of the municipality of Mindelstetten highlighted

Coordinates: 48 ° 51 '  N , 11 ° 39'  E

Basic data
State : Bavaria
Administrative region : Upper Bavaria
County : Eichstatt
Management Community : Pförring
Height : 403 m above sea level NHN
Area : 22.69 km 2
Residents: 1680 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 74 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 93349
Primaries : 08404, 09446Template: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / area code contains text
License plate : EGG
Community key : 09 1 76 147
Community structure: 10 parish parts
Address of the
municipal administration:
Mayer-Platz 1
93349 Mindelstetten
Website : mindelstetten.de
Mayor : Alfred Paulus (CWG)
Location of the community of Mindelstetten in the district of Eichstätt
Landkreis Donau-Ries Landkreis Roth Landkreis Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen Landkreis Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz Landkreis Regensburg Landkreis Kelheim Landkreis Pfaffenhofen an der Ilm Landkreis Neuburg-Schrobenhausen Ingolstadt Haunstetter Forst Adelschlag Altmannstein Beilngries Böhmfeld Buxheim (Oberbayern) Denkendorf (Oberbayern) Dollnstein Egweil Eichstätt Eitensheim Gaimersheim Großmehring Hepberg Hitzhofen Kinding Kipfenberg Kösching Lenting Mindelstetten Mörnsheim Nassenfels Oberdolling Pollenfeld Pförring Schernfeld Stammham (bei Ingolstadt) Titting Walting Wellheim Wettstettenmap
About this picture

Mindelstetten is a municipality in the Upper Bavarian district of Eichstätt and a member of the Pförring administrative community .

geography

Mindelstetten is located in the Ingolstadt region, between the Bellerberg and Schellerberg, in the Hallertau on the border with Lower Bavaria. The Dettenbach flows through Mindelstetten .

Community structure

The municipality has 10 officially named parts of the municipality (the type of settlement is given in brackets ):

history

Until the 19th century

Mindelstetten is located on the old salt and iron road Nuremberg - Landshut . The first documentary mention was made in 1042 in a document from the colonization monastery of St. Emmeram in Regensburg; In it, an Erchantrud gives the monastery a good "Mundilstetti". A local nobility existed in the 12th century. In 1123 a Tiemo von Mundelstetten appeared as a witness. For 1244, Henricus Plebanus, the first pastor of Mundilstatt, is mentioned in a document, commissioned by the Bishop of Eichstätt . In 1408 the lords of the Althinzenhauser acquired the village of Mingelstetten from the Solnhofen monastery ; the Solnhofen provost, belonging to the Fulda monastery , should have received patronage rights soon after 1100. In 1632 the village suffered severe damage during the Thirty Years War . In 1692 a great fire ravaged the village. Mindelstetten acquired a fire engine for the first time in 1860.

Mindelstetten belonged to the Munich Rent Office and from 1803 to the Abensberg Regional Court of the Electorate - and later the Kingdom of Bavaria. Since the merger of the Abensberg Regional Court with the Kelheim Regional Court to form the Kelheim District Office in 1862, Mindelstetten has belonged to the Kelheim District Office , which was renamed the Kelheim District in 1939 .

In 1838 Mindelstetten had 42 houses and 224 inhabitants, Hiendorf 19 houses and 112 inhabitants and Harlanden 4 houses and 30 inhabitants.

Incorporations

On June 1, 1928, part of the dissolved community of Schwabstetten was incorporated. On July 1, 1972, Hiendorf was added. Hüttenhausen followed on May 1, 1978 with Offendorf, which was incorporated in 1939.

Population development

Between 1988 and 2018 the municipality grew from 1,253 to 1,718 by 465 inhabitants or 37.1%.

  • 1838: 0366 inhabitants, 112 in Hiendorf, 30 in Harlanden and 224 in Mindelstetten
  • 1910: 0398 inhabitants
  • 1961: 1069 inhabitants, of which 132 in Hiendorf, 366 in Hüttenhausen and 571 in Mindelstetten
  • 1970: 1273 inhabitants, including 134 in Hiendorf, 492 in Hüttenhausen and 647 in Mindelstetten
  • 1987: 1254 inhabitants
  • 1991: 1340 inhabitants
  • 1995: 1464 inhabitants
  • 2000: 1611 inhabitants
  • 2005: 1665 inhabitants
  • 2010: 1637 inhabitants
  • 2015: 1658 inhabitants

religion

The Catholic parishes Mindelstetten and Offendorf exist in the municipality .

politics

Municipal council

The Mindelstetten municipal council has twelve members. In the local elections on March 15, 2020 , only the joint nomination by the CSU and the Christian Voting Community (CWG) with 24 applicants was submitted. The twelve applicants on this list who received the most individual votes form the municipal council with the mayor from 2020 to 2026. The turnout was 72.28%. - For the two previous terms of office (2008–2014 and 2014–2020) the CSU and CWG had applied separately - each group received six seats.

mayor

Mayor is Alfred Paulus (CWG). He became the successor to Josef Kundler (CSU) in 2014 and was confirmed in office on March 15, 2020 (as a joint applicant for the CSU and CWG) with 89.94% of the votes.

coat of arms

The coat of arms depicts a marten, in memory of the Muggenthal family, who had their seat in Hüttenhausen, and a hop plant, as hops play a major role in the region. In the lower area there is still a wreath of thorns and a lily, both in memory of St. Anna Schäffer .

Culture and sights

Birthplace of Anna Schäffer

There is a theater association in Mindelstetten. The birth house of the mystic Anna Schäffer is located in the street named after her.

Architectural monuments

Parish church of St. Nicholas in Mindelstetten

The parish church of St. Nicholas with an extension
Altar with portrait of Anna Schäffer

The first local church was probably built in the second half of the 12th century; the basement of today's tower dates from this time. It is unclear whether this choir tower church was built by the St. Emmeram monastery or by the Solnhofen provost; In any case, the left side altar of the church was consecrated to Saint Sola until 1684 . The church was redesigned Gothic around 1400 (consecration 1433) and destroyed by fire in 1692. In 1707/1711 it was extended to the west and baroque altars were erected there. In 1736 the high altar was consecrated . In 1776 a storm lifted the tower dome. In 1826/27 the church received a new white ceiling during a major renovation after the dilapidated vault was removed; the altars were moved to the east again. In 1846–52 a pyramid-shaped pointed helmet roof was added to the tower with its four gables. In 1904/05 the church was rebuilt under the architect Heinrich Hauberrisser ( Regensburg ) in the "Gothic style of simple form", whereby the tower was reused. The plague cross dates from 1580; the neo-Gothic pulpit acquired in 1905 by the Hiendorf branch church was returned in 1928 and a neo-baroque pulpit was installed in its place in 1955 . The right side altar shows a wooden figure of St. Barbara instead of an altarpiece, the left the wooden figure of Maria as a rosary queen . The way of the cross was painted by artist Goß ( Ingolstadt ) in 1944 . - A roughly twice as large extension to the south of the church was built in 1994/95 by the architectural firm Blasch, Regensburg, for which the south side of the old church was removed. The old school and its outbuildings were demolished for the new building. For the transferred in the extension to three to a total of 22 registers extended organ a new organ was installed in 2001 in the old church. The rococo high altar, which was moved to the new building after a renovation, houses a statue of St. Nicholas from 1905. The left side altar shows Maria Immaculata as an altarpiece, the right the Archangel Michael slaying the dragon, both Nazarene paintings by an unknown hand from the second half of the 19th century. On July 25, 1972, the bones of Anna Schäffer, the "carpenter Nandl", who died on October 5, 1925 as a sufferer in the name of holiness, were exhumed in the course of the abandonment of the old cemetery and one day later in a crypt in the right aisle of the church buried. On January 30, 1999, they were reburied in a new crypt in the center aisle of what is now the Church of the Holy Sepulcher; the grave slab was created by the artist Alfred Böschl from Adlhausen . The beatification process of Anna Schäffer was initiated on March 17, 1973, the beatification took place on March 7, 1999. On October 21, 2012 Anna Schäffer was from Pope Benedict XVI. was canonized in Rome. In 2004 a newly built pilgrimage center was opened; about 25,000 believers visit the grave every year. The parish Mindelstetten belongs to the diocese of Regensburg .

Altöttinger Chapel

The Altöttinger Chapel in Mindelstetten

The Altötting Chapel , modeled on the Gnadenkapelle in Altötting, was built in 1834 at the Neustadt-Vohburg fork in the road, now a junction from the B 299 to Hiendorf, on behalf of the “Straßwirt” from Mindelstetten. In 1916 it was converted into a war memorial chapel.

Sports

In addition to the soccer department playing in the Donau Isar regional class, FC Mindelstetten also offers curling , ladies' gymnastics and taekwondo. The Mindelstetten tennis club plays on three clay courts.

Regular events

Every year on the second weekend in October, the Mindelstetten market with the election of the Jura hop queen is held.

Economy and Infrastructure

Economy including agriculture and forestry

The municipal tax revenue in 1999 was the equivalent of € 585,000, of which the equivalent of € 77,000 (net) was trade tax income. In 1998, according to official statistics, there were no employees at the place of work in the manufacturing sector and 14 in the trade and transport sector. In other economic areas, 27 people were employed at the place of work subject to social security contributions. There were a total of 529 employees at the place of residence subject to social security contributions. There were two companies in the manufacturing sector and one in the construction sector. In addition, in 1999 there were 60 farms with an agriculturally used area of ​​1186 ha, of which 1095 ha were arable land and 91 ha were permanent green space.

traffic

The federal road 299 runs through Mindelstetten .

education

In 2008 the following institutions existed:

  • Kindergartens: 70 kindergarten places with 60 children in three groups
  • Primary schools: a primary school with four classes, six teachers and 88 students

Teacher Hans Bayerlein succeeds Rector Peter Ladenburger as the new headmaster.

sons and daughters of the town

literature

  • Joh. Rottenkolber: Home register of the parish Mindelstetten. A local history on the edge of the Jura to the Danube valley. Published by the Mindelstetten Catholic Parish Office on Kelheim 1964
  • Friedrich Hermann Hofmann, Felix Mader : The art monuments of Bavaria. District Office Beilngries II. R. Oldenbourg, Munich / Vienna 1982 (reprint), p. 84, ISBN 978-3-486-50443-9 , see [1]
  • The Eichstätter area past and present. Eichstätt 1984: Sparkasse, p. 244 f. (with bibliography)
  • Parish Church of St. Nikolaus Mindelstetten October 22, 1995. Commemorative publication for the inauguration (1995)

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. "Data 2" sheet, Statistical Report A1200C 202041 Population of the municipalities, districts and administrative districts 1st quarter 2020 (population based on the 2011 census) ( help ).
  2. ^ Community Mindelstetten in the local database of the Bavarian State Library Online . Bavarian State Library, accessed on September 14, 2019.
  3. Josepf Lipf (Editor): matrikel bishopric of Regensburg . Ed .: Diocese of Regensburg. Pustet, Regensburg 1838, p. 205 ( digitized version ).
  4. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 557 .
  5. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 599 .