Oiden (Linz)

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Oiden (location component f0)
Oiden (Linz) (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Linz (city)  (L), Upper Austria
Judicial district Linz
Pole. local community Linz   ( KG  Pichling )
Locality Linz
Statistical district Ebelsberg
Coordinates 48 ° 14 '52.4 "  N , 14 ° 21' 58.1"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 14 '52.4 "  N , 14 ° 21' 58.1"  E
height 250  m above sea level A.
1851–1938 near the community of Ebelsberg
Source: STAT : Local directory ; BEV : GEONAM ; DORIS
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BW

Oiden is a locality in the Linzer Feld in Upper Austria . The former conscription location belongs to the Ebelsberg district of the city of Linz .

location

Oiden is located in the north of the Pichling cadastral community and is now completely absorbed in this place that has grown together with Posch and Traundorf . The center of Oiden used to be in the area of ​​today's church inn, the Brenneishaus.

When there were still small villages here in the Linzerfeld, Oiden was between Anger directly to the southeast and Traundorf in the north.

history

While Oiden was not yet mentioned in the Steyregger Urbar in 1471, the village appeared in the registers from 1630 under the name Oiden , Oeden , Oign , Oyn , Roiden and Roign . During the conscription of the village in 1771, the buildings of Oiden were numbered consecutively in the course of the reorganization of the military recruitment system, whereby Oiden had eight houses at that time. Since the birdcatcher's house was already divided, but the two parts had house numbers 1a and 1b until 1900, there were actually 9 houses. On the occasion of the census, the building Oiden 8 with the baker's house was assigned to the village of Au and the house Oiden 13 built in 1898 was added to Traundorf. In 1911, Oiden had thirteen houses, one of which was uninhabited. Most of the residents were farmers whose grounds reached north to Knollgutstrasse. With the construction of the western railway line in 1885, the grounds were cut in the south.

In 1940 the Oiden house inventory had hardly changed compared to the early 20th century. It wasn't until the 1950s that the population grew rapidly. During this time, single-family house settlements emerged in the area of ​​Oidenstrasse and on Salamander, Storchen and Starenweg. After the Hießenfeld was parceled out in the area between Rathfeldstrasse and the Westbahn, there was another building boom. Row houses were built on the former Bernhard grounds at the beginning of the 21st century. Oiden has no town center due to party political squabbles, the place name Oiden is only used today because of the street of the same name.

literature

  • Manfred Carrinton; Andreas Bauer: The south of Linz. Past and present of the villages of Ebelsberg, Mönchgraben, Pichling, Posch, Ufer, Wambach. Linz 2007.

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ In 2018 the name was still recorded in basemap.at (local map) , the Austrian map 1: 50000 no longer listed it.