Pietzenkirchen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Church hill of Pietzenkirchen seen from the south, in the middle of the picture the church of St. Stephanus and St. Laurentius, on the right a residential building, on the left part of the cemetery complex
Houses on the church hill of Pietzenkirchen, next to the church
Simssee panorama, seen from the church hill

Pietzenkirchen is one of 70 parts of the municipality of Riedering in the Upper Bavarian district of Rosenheim .

Geographical location

The hamlet of Pietzenkirchen is located in the Pietzing district four kilometers northeast of the center of Riedering and a good seven kilometers west of Prien am Chiemsee south of the RO 16 district road .

history

Until the regional reform in Bavaria , the place was part of the municipality of Pietzing. On May 1, 1978 Pietzing was dissolved as an independent municipality and Pietzenkirchen were reclassified to Riedering .

Demographics

Development of the number of inhabitants in the 19th century
year population Remarks
1817 five in a house, counted in 1817 in the deanery Söllhuben
1824 five in one house, counted in the administrative year 1823/24 of the Isar district
1861 five two buildings
1871 seven on December 1, 1871, a residential building

Parish

Catholic branch church St. Stephanus and St. Laurentius with pointed tower from 1882

The church in Pietzenkirchen is a branch of the parish in Söllhuben , and its patrons are St. Stephen and St. Laurentius .

Attractions

  • The neo-Gothic church of Pietzenkirchen, formerly had a tower with a gable roof , was painted in 1810 by Friedrich Wilhelm Doppelmayr (1776–1845). Because of its dilapidation, the old tower was replaced in 1882 by a new building with a pointed roof. A replica of the Annahand relic brought from Istanbul to Vienna by Emperor Leopold I has been preserved in the church, which is shown in an oval vessel in a 46 cm high monstrance . The Viennese relic is said to be the right hand of St. Anna act.
  • From the church hill, the Simssee and surrounding residential areas can be overlooked.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing (Hrsg.): The municipalities of Bavaria according to the territorial status May 25, 1987. The population of the municipalities of Bavaria and the changes in the acquisitions and territory from 1840 to 1987 (=  contributions to Statistics Bavaria . Issue 451). Munich 1991, p. 53–54 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb00070717-7 ( digitized version - Rosenheim district; footnotes 25, 26 and 10).
  2. Martin von Deutinger : Tabular description of the Diocese of Freysing according to the order of the Decanate , Munich 1820, p. 492 ( online ),
  3. Deutinger, loc. cit., Vorerinnerung , p. VII
  4. Adolph von Schaden : Alphabetical directory of all the cities, markets, villages, hamlets, wastelands, etc. located in the Isar district (as an appendix to the topographical = statistical handbook for the Isar district of the Kingdom of Baiern, E copy ), Munich 1825, p. 373 ( online )
  5. Adolph von Schaden : Topographisch = Statistical Handbook for the Isar Circle of the Kingdom of Bavaria , printed and published at the expense of the Königl. Government of the Isarkkreis, Munich 1825 ( online ).
  6. Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical local dictionary . Adapted from official sources by J. Heyberger, Chr. Schmitt and von Wachter. Munich 1867, Sp. 238 ( online ).
  7. Royal. Bavarian Statistical Bureau: Complete register of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria - with an alpabetic general register containing the population according to the results of the census of December 1, 1875 , Munich 1877, column 250 ( online ).
  8. ^ Karl Detterbeck and Konrad Breitrainer: Riederinger Heimatbuch , published by the municipality of Riedering, Riedering 1988, pp. 356–362.

Coordinates: 47 ° 52 '  N , 12 ° 15'  E