Posch (Linz)

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Posch ( district )
cadastral community Posch
Posch (Linz) (Austria)
Red pog.svg
Basic data
Pole. District , state Linz (city)  (L), Upper Austria
Judicial district Linz
Pole. local community Linz
Locality Linz
Statistical district Ebelsberg
Coordinates 48 ° 14 '48 "  N , 14 ° 22' 14"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 14 '48 "  N , 14 ° 22' 14"  E
height 253  m above sea level A.
Area  d. KG 6.52 km²
Post Code 4030 Linz
Statistical identification
Cadastral parish number 45207
Districts also in the KG Pichling ;
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; DORIS
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BW

Posch is a place in the Linzer Feld on the Danube in Upper Austria and a district and cadastral municipality of Linz , and belongs to the Ebelsberg district .

location

Posch is located in the northeast of the Ebelsberg district in the south of Linz, on the Danube below the confluence of the Traun .

The locations Schwaigau and Traundorf belong to Posch . In the north Posch borders along the middle of the Danube on Steyregg and Luftenberg , in the east the city limits run to Raffelstetten . In the west or southwest Posch borders on the Ebelsberg cadastral communities Ufer and Pichling . Opposite Pichling, the border runs along Oidenstrasse and the Altau. The border to the shore is also formed by the Oidenstrasse and the Aumühlbach .

The Posch cadastral community covers an area of ​​652 hectares, making it the largest cadastral community in the Ebelsberg district. It stretches from the mouth of the Traun down the Danube to Raffelstetten and in the floodplains to the Ausee . Some parts of the local area, on Oidenstraße between Falterweg and Westbahn, belong to the Pichling cadastral community.

Neighboring towns and municipalities:
Steyregg   (KG,  Gem.Steyregg , Bez.Perg )
Danube
Luftenberg  (KG, Gem.  Luftenberg a. D. D. , District Perg )

Ufer  (Stt. U. KG)

Neighboring communities Campingdorf Hohenlohe (locality  Abhaben , district  Luftenberg a. D. D. , district Perg )
Pichling  (Stt. And KG) Raffelstetten  (Ortsch. U. KG,  Gem.Asten , District Linz-Land )
The camping village on this side of the Danube, opposite the towns of Pulgarn and Luftenberg

History and infrastructure

Posch's name comes from the word pasche ('bushes'). The Poschhof was mentioned in a document as early as 1283, but it is uncertain whether this farm was in Posch. However, there is a deed of ownership from 1313 that relates to a farm in what is now the Linz district. In 1471, one farm and five Sölden buildings in today's Posch appear in the tithing register of St. Florian Monastery as subject to tithing. In 1566 eight houses are named in subjection to the rule of the monastery. In 1717 Posch consisted of twelve houses. The 1934 census recorded a population of 112 people in 17 residential buildings.

Posch was separated from Pichling by the establishment of the Empress Elisabeth Railway (Westbahn) in 1860, the two small localities of Anger (the houses north of Pichling) and Oiden (directly northwest of Anger) were destroyed in their context, and their farms are now accessible got lost.

Construction activity was only boosted by the sale and parceling of the grounds belonging to the Posch 1 house (formerly Anger). As a result, the houses were built along the Sperberweg and Schwaigaustraße. The construction activity was only stopped for a short time in 1954 by a flood and resulted in a relatively dense settlement of Posch. The agricultural areas of the village are cultivated by the Schwaigau farmers. In Posch itself there are no longer any noteworthy farms.

Originally, significant parts of Posch belonged to Steyregg , but in the course of the incorporation of Ebelsberg (to which Posch had belonged after the creation of the local communities in 1851 ) to Linz in 1938, the border of the cadastral community was moved in favor of Posch in the middle of the Danube. Instead, the center of the village is now on Oidenstrasse in the Pichling cadastral community; this border runs closer to the Danube on Falterweg (the parish church of St. Paul zu Pichling, on the other hand, is in the Posch cadastral area). Overall, Posch, Traundorf and Pichling - apart from the separation by the Westbahn - are now completely grown together.

literature

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

Individual evidence

  1. a b c On the old maps of the 19th century, such as the Josephinische and Franziscäischen Landesaufnahme (around 1780 and 1830 respectively), the place Posch is located at the farmsteads east on Traundorfer Straße, while the houses north of Pichling, including the today's Posch No. 1 belonged to the local area of Anger . Oiden and Anger are listed in the Franzisco-Josephische Karte (around 1880) to the north of the Western Railway. Today Posch is located on the Austrian map at Posch 1, Oiden is still listed (as of 2017), Anger is no longer. The 2001 list of places only lists Posch (as a district).
    All regional recordings online at Arcanum / Austrian State Archives: mapire.eu ; Original folder also DORIS, various
    map themes, e.g. B. First land surveys .