Ox seat

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The Einödhof Ochsensitz in the Isar Valley near Vorderriss

The Ochsensitz , a 800 m southwest of Vorderriß and the confluence of the Rißbaches in the Isar at 818  m above sea level. NN located Einödhof , is one of the 27 districts of the municipality of Jachenau . With the number 60, the farm has the highest of the original house numbers in Jachenau.

600 m west of the Ochsensitz, the Rißbachstollen crosses under the Isar as a feed line for the Niedernach power plant with a culvert .

history

The farm goes back to a re-establishment around 1619. In 1639, its inhabitants were commissioned by the Benediktbeuern monastery - the landlord of this region - to "take diligent care of the monastery wood and hunting". Through the allocation of wood from the monastery, the ox seat has grown into a stately property over time. As 1/8 Gütl it was the largest Sölde in Jachenau . After poaching by the owners in the winter of 1899/1900, the royal Bavarian forest of ärar took over the farm.

Today the Bavarian State Forests leased the property.

The Bavarian writer Ludwig Thoma (1867–1921) mentions the ox seat in his poaching story "Die Halsenbuben".

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Karl Meichelbeck: Chronicon Benedictoburanum I . Benediktbeuern 1751, p. 308
  2. ^ Jost Gudelius: The Jachenau . Jachenau 2008, ISBN 978-3-939751-97-7 , p. 139

Coordinates: 47 ° 33 '  N , 11 ° 26'  E