Reckenhofen

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Reckenhofen
City of Velburg
Coordinates: 49 ° 12 ′ 38 ″  N , 11 ° 38 ′ 28 ″  E
Height : 465 m
Residents : 38  (Sep 13, 1950)
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Postal code : 92355
Area code : 09182

Reckenhofen is a former part of the municipality of Oberweiling (now the city of Velburg ) in the Bavarian district of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate . It has now risen in the neighboring village of Finsterweiling .

location

Reckenhofen is the northeastern part of Finsterweiling and can be found there on Reckenhofener Straße. It is still (as of 2020) structurally somewhat different from Finsterweiling.

history

"Rechenhouen" the first time around 1231 in documents comprehensible, in a land register of 1217 since Wittelsbach Office Velburg that there was a fief. For 1288 it is mentioned in a document that the Ehrenfelser , who ruled Helfenberg , pledged goods and the like. a. returned in Reckenhofen (the Maierhof) to the Bavarian Duke Ludwig. In 1432 Duke Johann assured the Nuremberg Carthusian monastery tax exemption for their estate in Reckenhofen. Around 1600 the hamlet consisted of five estates, one of which was a Nuremberg subject.

At the end of the Old Kingdom , around 1800, Reckenhofen, now consisting of 3 large and 5 smaller properties, was still subject to the high court of the Velburg Care Office, which was part of the Palatinate-Neo-Burgess from 1505 . In the Kingdom of Bavaria , the hamlet became part of the newly established tax district and later the rural community of Oberweiling around 1810 . Between 1950 and 1964 Reckenhofen lost its independence as a district and was merged with the neighboring Finsterweiling. He is no longer mentioned in the official register of places from 1987.

In the course of the Bavarian territorial reform on January 1, 1972, the municipality of Oberweiling and thus Finsterweiling / Reckenhofen was incorporated into the city of Velburg.

Population development

Lived in Reckenhofen

  • 1836 59 inhabitants (9 houses)
  • 1867 57 inhabitants
  • 1875 44 inhabitants (19 buildings; 35 cattle from large livestock)
  • 1900 31 inhabitants (7 residential buildings)
  • 1925 35 inhabitants (5 residential buildings)
  • 1938 492 inhabitants (only Catholics)
  • 1950 38 inhabitants (6 residential buildings)

Place name

The place name can be interpreted as "Hof eines Recko" or as Hof an der "Recke" (= forest strip).

Church conditions

Reckenhofen belonged to the district of the Catholic parish of Oberweiling in the diocese of Eichstätt , which is now part of the Velburg parish . From 1548 to 1620 the parish Palatinate-Neuburg and thus the residents of Reckenhofen were Protestant.

literature

  • Franz Xaver Buchner : The diocese of Eichstätt. Volume II, Eichstätt: Brönner & Däntler, 1938
  • Manfred Jehle: Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Old Bavaria, volume 51: Parsberg , Munich 1981

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Official directory for Bavaria, as of 1950
  2. Jehle, p. 237
  3. Jehle, pp. 157, 311
  4. Jehle, p. 240
  5. Jehle, p. 265
  6. Jehle, p. 485
  7. Jehle, pp. 534,556
  8. Official directory for Bavaria, as of 1987
  9. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 547 .
  10. Th. D. Popp (ed.): Matriculation des Bissthumes Eichstätt , Eichstätt: Ph. Brönner, 1836, p. 126
  11. Joseph Heyberger: Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria together with an alphabetical local dictionary , Munich 1867, Col. 797
  12. Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria ... based on the results of the census of Dec. 1, 1875 , Munich 1877, column 980
  13. Kgl. Statistical Bureau in Munich (edit.): List of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria ... [based on the results of the census of December 1, 1900] , Munich 1904, column 903
  14. ^ Localities directory for the Free State of Bavaria according to the census of June 16, 1925 and the territorial status of January 1, 1928 , Munich 1928, Col. 911
  15. Buchner II, p. 298
  16. ^ Collective sheet of the historical association Eichstätt 38 (1923), p. 73
  17. Popp, p. 126; Buchner II, pp. 294-299