Ottmaring (Buchhofen)

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Ottmaring
Community Buchhofen
Coordinates: 48 ° 42 ′ 57 ″  N , 12 ° 56 ′ 28 ″  E
Height : 330 m
Incorporation : May 1, 1978
Postal code : 94533
Area code : 09938
map
Ottmaring Castle

Ottmaring is a part of the municipality of Buchhofen in the Lower Bavarian district of Deggendorf .

location

Ottmaring is located in the Gäuboden about two kilometers northeast of Buchhofen.

history

In 831 King Ludwig the German gave Ottmaring to the Obermünster monastery . On February 4, 1064, King Henry IV confirmed this possession.

The noble von Hals had the property right over Ottmaring . Since the middle of the 12th century the Lords of Ottmaring sat here as ministerials of the Obermünster monastery. The most important among the owners of the Ottmaring rule was Schweicker von Ottmaring, who was the councilor and financier of Duke Heinrich the Natternberger from 1331 to 1332 . After the Lords of Ottmaring died out at the end of the 14th century, they were followed by the nobles of Resch.

After they died out, the Hofmark Ottmaring came into being through the marriage of the widow Anna Resch geb. von Puchberg zu Winzer in 1501 to Heinrich Starzhausen zu Oberlauterbach. The Starzhausen owners of Hofmark Ottmaring remained until 1764. On March 19, 1764, with the death of Johann Reichhard Wenzeslaus Reichsfreiherr von Starzhausen, the male line of the baronial Starzhausen line went out.

In 1786, the widowed Electress Maria Anna acquired the rule from Franz Xaver von Leyden and gave it to her Stift Damenstift in Osterhofen . When the women's pen was sold to the Bavarian state in 1833, Ottmaring fell to them. In addition, the Obermünster Abbey still ran a provost's office in Ottmaring, which still existed in 1752 and belonged to the Counts of Thun . It was last administered by a chamberlain and a bailiff.

The Ottmaring community was formed from the tax district of the same name in 1818/21. As part of the regional reform in Bavaria , the previously independent municipality of Ottmaring joined Buchhofen on May 1, 1978.

Attractions

The Expositurkirche St. Johannes
  • The castle, a Renaissance building with two corner towers from 1582 and most of the land belonging to it, was sold to a private person as early as 1790. The brewery was converted into an inn.
  • A church probably stood in Ottmaring as early as the 12th and 13th centuries. It was a branch church of Kirchdorf bei Osterhofen and from 1865 of Wisselsing . The Ottmaring branch was built in 1902. The Expositurkirche St. John the Baptist is mostly baroque with Gothic parts. The high altar was renewed in 1664 and 1760.
  • In addition, many historic farms such as B. the Kammerbauer-, Moser- or Passauerhof the village

education and parenting

The town received its first school at the beginning of the 19th century, and the Ottmaring primary school is still attended today.

societies

  • Ottmaring volunteer fire department
  • Tennis club Ottmaring eV
  • Warrior and reservist comradeship Ottmaring
  • Cultural Association Ottmaring eV
  • Shooting club Hubertus Ottmaring
  • Catholic Women's Association
  • Catholic rural youth Ottmaring
  • Theater Association Ottmaring

literature

  • Joseph Klämpfl: The former Schweinach and Quinzingau. A historical-topographical description , 1855, reprint 1993, Neue Presse Verlags-GmbH, Passau, ISBN 3-924484-73-2

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer GmbH, Stuttgart and Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 605 .

Web links