Obermühlhausen (Dießen am Ammersee)

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Obermuhlhausen
Municipality of Dießen am Ammersee
Coordinates: 47 ° 58 ′ 58 ″  N , 10 ° 59 ′ 48 ″  E
Height : 661 m above sea level NHN
Area : 8.34 km²
Residents : 309  (March 2, 2015)
Population density : 37 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Postal code : 86911
Area code : 08194
Filial church of St. Peter and Paul
Filial church of St. Peter and Paul

Obermühlhausen is a district of the market in Dießen am Ammersee and a district in the Upper Bavarian district of Landsberg am Lech .

geography

The church village of Obermühlhausen is about nine kilometers northwest of Dießen am Ammersee in Lechrain .

The Windach flows east of the village .

The towns of Obermühlhausen, Oberbeuern, Schlöglhof and Unterbeuern are located in the district.

history

There are several burial mounds from the Bronze Age to the south of the church village .

Obermühlhausen, like Hagenheim and Hofstetten , was settled, probably in the 7th century from Memming .

Obermühlhausen is first mentioned in 943 in a document from the Wessobrunn monastery . In this the noble Durinc donated the villages of Hagenheim and Obermühlhausen to the monastery.

From 1130 the spelling Mulehusen can be found . The Ober- was later added as a differentiation to Untermühlhausen (Penzing).

The church initially belonged to the parish of Dettenschwang, and later to the Wessobrunn monastery. Around the year 1200, 17 hearths are mentioned.

In 1552, 28 properties are already recorded, 25 are landable for the Wessobrunn monastery and 3 properties for the Landsberg caste office. The ownership structure shows only minor differences in 1752. The Wessobrunn Monastery has 26 properties, four for the Elector, two for the parish, and one property each for the Landsberg Jesuit College and the Dettenschwang parish. After secularization, there were 33 in 1808.

In legal terms , the church village belonged to the Hofstetten area of the Mitteramt of the Landsberg district court , which held both the low and high jurisdiction .

In the course of the municipal edicts, the municipality of Obermühlhausen was established in the Landsberg district court in 1818.

The first school building was built in 1830, the Windach was regulated in 1920, and the village was electrified in 1921. The Windachspeicher was built in 1962, the village streets and the connections to Unterbeuern and Oberbeuern were built in 1964, and in 1970 the road connections to Thaining and Finning followed after the land consolidation .

Until it was incorporated into Dießen am Ammersee on January 1, 1972, the church village was an independent community with a community area of ​​around 835 hectares and the towns of Obermühlhausen, Oberbeuern , Schlöglhof and Unterbeuern .

Mayor and mayor up to the incorporation

Mayor 1845–1870

  • 1845–1846 Jakob Strobl
  • 1847-1851 Joseph Giggenbach
  • 1851–1854 Kaspar Happach
  • 1854–1857 Augustin Fichtl
  • 1857–1859 Kaspar Happach
  • 1860–1868 Xaver Dirringer

Mayor 1870–1972

  • 1870–1874 Jakob Lautenbacher
  • 1875–1881 Theodor Müller
  • 1882–1911 Josef Seelos
  • 1912–1933 Josef Lautenbacher
  • 1933–1945 Georg Schaupp
  • 1945–1948 Josef Lautenbacher
  • 1948–1966 Leonhard Berghofer
  • 1966–1972 Sebastian Mayr

Attractions

In the middle of the village is the Catholic branch church St. Peter and Paul. The core of the late Middle Ages was extended to the west in the 17th century and given a baroque style. In the church there are three altars from around 1680, figure decorations from the Degler workshop in Weilheim and tabernacle figures by Lorenz Luidl .

See also: List of architectural monuments in Obermühlhausen

Soil monuments

See: List of soil monuments in the Obermühlhausen district

literature

  • M. Aquinata Schnurer OP: Home book of the market in Dießen a. Ammersee . Ed .: Markt Dießen am Ammersee. Dießen am Ammersee 1976 (329 pages).
  • Pankraz Fried, Sebastian Hiereth: Altbayern row I issue 22-23: Landsberg district court and Rauhenlechsberg nursing court . In: Historical Atlas of Bavaria . Komm. Für Bayerische Landesgeschichte, Munich 1971 (327 pages).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Map for those interested in history - local researcher Dießen. Retrieved January 18, 2019 (German).
  2. ^ Heide Weißhaar-Kiem: Landsberg am Lech district . Ed .: Landsberg am Lech district. 1st edition. EOS Verlag St. Ottilien, 2010, ISBN 978-3-8306-7437-5 , p. 217 .
  3. ^ Pankraz Fried, Peter Fassl: From Swabia and Altbayern . Thorbecke, 1991, ISBN 978-3-7995-7073-2 , pp. 123 .
  4. Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official city directory for Bavaria, territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census . Issue 260 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1964, DNB  453660959 , Section II, Sp. 109 ( digitized version ).
  5. Markt Diessen am Ammersee - churches and chapels. Retrieved January 8, 2019 .