Re-bleach

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Neubleiche is a desert in the statistical district 10 of the city of Nuremberg .

geography

The former hamlet was in the open at an altitude of 306  m above sea level. NHN at a pond that was fed by the Siechgraben and the Schütt- and Spitalwasserleitung, which flow about 0.5 km further north between Kressen- and Vogelsgarten as the left tributaries of the Pegnitz . Approx. The Dürrenhof was 0.2 km northwest, St. Peter was about 0.3 km south, and Gleißhammer was about 0.5 km east . Today the street name Neubleiche reminds of the place.

history

Swabian barch weavers were settled in the 15th century . The first bleaching was carried out on the island of Schütt . In 1490 another bleaching facility was laid out and mentioned as "our gentlemen bleaching" because it was directly subordinate to the imperial city of Nuremberg . For the original bleach, the name Alte or Untere Bleiche became common, while the younger bleach was called Neue or Obere Bleich. In the 18th century it was used for the red tannery.

Towards the end of the 18th century there was an estate in neue Bleich (also called upper Bleich). The high court exercised the imperial city of Nuremberg, but this was disputed by the Brandenburg-Ansbach Vogtamt Schönberg . The landlord was the interest master's office in the imperial city of Nuremberg.

As part of the community edict, Neubleiche was assigned to the Gleißhammer tax district formed in 1808 . It also belonged to the rural community of Gleißhammer founded in the same year . In 1825 Neubleiche was incorporated into Nuremberg .

From 1829 until the mill was shut down in 1954, gypsum was ground in Neubleich. In 1979 the building was removed and the interior of the gypsum mill was moved to the Museum Centrum Industriekultur .

Population development

year 001818 001824 001840
Residents 34 29 36
Houses 5 4th 6th
source

religion

The place has been predominantly Protestant since the Reformation. Originally the inhabitants of the Evangelical Lutheran denomination were parish in St. Lorenz (Nuremberg) , later to St. Peter (Nuremberg) .

literature

Individual evidence

Coordinates: 49 ° 26 '49.5 "  N , 11 ° 5' 56.1"  E