Ramsbach (Schwäbisch Hall)

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Ramsbach
Coordinates: 49 ° 8 ′ 31 ″  N , 9 ° 48 ′ 26 ″  E
Height : approx. 405 m above sea level NHN
Coat of arms of LAMPARTER VON RAMSBACH, Haller Chronik after Georg Widman and Johann Herolt, Hs. Around 1600.jpg
Coat of arms of LAMPARTER VON RAMSBACH, -J.  Siebmacher-- The renewed Teutsche Wappenbuchs, second part ..., Nuremberg (Paulus Fürst) 1655, T. 90, s.  also Vol. 5, T. 260.jpg

Ramsbach is a part of the Schwäbisch Hall district of Tüngental .

history

In the hamlet of Ramsbach, the Ramsbach moated castle of the Ramsbach Lamparter stood . The Ramsbach Castle was acquired in 1375 by Berthold Lamparter from Schwäbisch Hall. After 1429, however, the family became impoverished. The coat of arms of the Lamparter von Ramsbach shows three fish in the field and three fish in the crest.

Lamparter were so named because they fought with the Hohenstaufen kings in Lombardy . Walter von Ramsbach is documented as Count of Siena in 1187. Originally they were Komburg ministerials . The location of the moated castle can be seen at the eastern end of the hamlet as a round, once walled ditch. Inside there is a walled recess. The castle was burned in the city ​​war around 1450.

As a district of Weckrieden, Ramsbach was owned by the imperial city of Hall since the Middle Ages . As a result, it belonged to the Haller Land Territory and was subordinate to the Halle Office (In der) Schlicht .

In 1849, the area of ​​the community of Weckrieden was reduced considerably and Ramsbach was moved to Tüngental.

In 1972 the place was incorporated into Schwäbisch Hall together with the other hamlets belonging to Tüngental, Altenhausen , Otterbach , Veinau and Wolpertsdorf .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Family coat of arms in the city archive of Schwäbisch Hall .

Web links