Neuhausen (Offenberg)

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View of Neuhausen with the parish church of St. Vitus

Neuhausen is a district and capital of the Offenberg community in the Deggendorf district in Lower Bavaria .

location

Neuhausen is located about one kilometer northwest of Metten on State Road 2125.

history

Neuhausen was founded in the 9th to 10th centuries by monks from the nearby Metten Monastery . The parish of Neuhausen is an original parish in the region. In 1275 the respective abbot of the Metten monastery received the right to appoint the pastor in Neuhausen. For centuries, the parish was pastoral care as the vicariate of the monastery. From a political point of view, the Hofmark Neuhausen in the Mitterfels district court was closely linked to the Hofmark Offenberg.

The first school house was built at the beginning of the 17th century. It was a large, one-story wooden building at the entrance to Neuhausen. The teachers of this time were sextons and gravedigger at the same time. Until the rectory was built in 1813, a chamber in the old schoolhouse was reserved for the pastor coming from the Metten monastery.

When the tax districts were formed in 1808/1811, Neuhausen became part of the Metten tax district and when the community was formed in 1821, it became part of the Offenberg community, which was formed from parts of the Metten and Offenberg tax districts. Neuhausen also became part of the Patrimonial Second Class Offenberg, which was also established in 1821 and which existed until the patrimonial jurisdiction was abolished in 1848.

On May 8, 1831, Neuhausen, together with the districts of Kleinschwarzach , Hubing and Unterried, asked the king to be separated from the Offenberg community and assigned to the city of Deggendorf by the police , but this was finally rejected on March 10, 1832.

The new schoolhouse was built in 1965. After two and a half years of construction, it was renovated and expanded in the 2000/2001 school year.

Attractions

Parish Church of St. Vitus
  • Parish Church of St. Vitus. The essentially late Gothic church from around 1450 to 1500 has a Romanesque tower substructure. It was redesigned in Baroque style in 1726 by Straubing's city architect Jakob Ruesch, expanded to include the north aisle in 1875/1876, and the interior was re-gothicized. During the renovation in 1962, the neo-Gothic altars and the pulpit were removed. The original late Gothic stone sculptures and carved figures have been preserved, as well as the only piece of baroque furnishings, a painful Mother of God.

education and parenting

  • St. Vitus Kindergarten
  • Elementary school Neuhausen

societies

  • CSU local association Neuhausen-Offenberg
  • Neuhausen volunteer fire brigade, founded on November 29, 1896
  • Indoor Flyers Neuhausen
  • Catholic workers' movement Neuhausen-Offenberg
  • Catholic rural youth movement (KLJB) Neuhausen
  • Church choir Neuhausen
  • Preller-Schützen Neuhausen e. V., founded on November 1st, 1959
  • Preller Altschützen Neuhausen
  • Culture and fun society
  • Newhouse strings
  • Musikverein Neuhausen e. V., founded in 2009
  • Association for horticulture and land maintenance
  • SPD local association Neuhausen
  • SV Neuhausen Offenberg e. V., founded in 1950
  • Sports bowling club 1977 Neuhausen
  • Tennis club Neuhausen-Offenberg, founded on April 12, 1986
  • Freundeskreis Roncone eV

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 52 '  N , 12 ° 54'  E