Reicheneibach

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Reicheneibach
Gangkofen market
Coordinates: 48 ° 27 ′ 56 "  N , 12 ° 37 ′ 6"  E
Height : 459 m above sea level NN
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Parish Church of St. Simon and Jude Thaddeus
Parish Church of St. Simon and Jude Thaddeus

Reicheneibach is a district of the Gangkofen market in the Lower Bavarian district of Rottal-Inn . Until 1972 it formed an independent municipality.

location

Reicheneibach is located in the Isar-Inn hill country about five kilometers northeast of Gangkofen.

history

Rectory (2015)

In 1304 the Ekker von Eibach family appears in a document from the Gangkofen Order of the Teutonic Order . They were owned by the closed Hofmark Reicheneibach for over 200 years . In 1510 the heirs of Georg Preuer are named as the owner, and from 1549 to 1580 Veith Zachreis owned the Hofmark. After his death it was shared among his daughters, and so the Puchberg-Starzhausen-Tattenbach community of heirs was formed. In 1631 the entire Hofmark Reicheneibach came into the hands of Hans Jakob von Starzhausen zu Ottmaring and Markelkofen . Until 1686 the Starzhauser are registered in the land boards.

In 1703 Ferdinand Josef Freiherr von Kleis became the owner of the Hofmark through his marriage to Maria Josefa Corona von Starzhausen. 1725 appears as the owner Dr. Ferdinand Franz Baron von Stromer and in 1775 Baron Michael von Schreckleben. On July 4, 1776 the Hofmark Reicheneibach was acquired by Johann Baptist Nikola Reichsfreiherr von Pienzenau. In 1795 the von Pienzenau married Emmerich Josef Reichsgrafen von Böthi. In 1804 Reicheneibach came to Karl August Count von Yrsch auf Niederpöring through an inheritance settlement .

The Bavarian original cadastre shows Reicheneibach in the 1810s as a church village with 36 hearths, the church and its sacred field and three ponds .

As a successor to Hofmark, the Patrimonial Court 2nd Class Reicheneibach was approved on February 10, 1821 , which was responsible for 45 courts of law.

At the beginning of the 19th century, the Reicheneibach tax district was formed into the Reicheneibach I patrimonial community with only the Reicheneibach patrimonial court and the Reicheneibach II district court with the surrounding areas. Only after the end of the patrimonial courts in 1848 were the municipalities of Reicheneibach I and II united by order of August 28 and September 1, 1851. The municipality of Reicheneibach belonged to the Eggenfelden district court, Eggenfelden district or (from 1939) Eggenfelden district .

On January 1, 1972, it was incorporated into the municipality of Gangkofen as part of the regional reform in Bavaria . In 1987 Reicheneibach had 137 inhabitants, in March 2002 166 inhabitants.

Architectural monuments

In addition to the late Gothic parish church of St. Simon and Judas Thaddäus, the rectory, a residential stable and an inn have been preserved in Reicheneibach . The school building, built in 1869 and expanded in 1910, was demolished at the end of January 2008. see also: List of architectural monuments in Reicheneibach

societies

  • regular table
  • Catholic rural youth Reicheneibach
  • SC Reicheneibach. It was founded in 1974.
  • Women's and mothers' association Reicheneibach with mother-child group
  • Reicheneibach volunteer fire department. It was founded in 1886.
  • Warrior and soldier comradeship Reicheneibach
  • Fruit and horticultural association Reicheneibach. In 2006 it celebrated its 100th anniversary.
  • Marian Congregation for Men Reicheneibach
  • Reicheneibacher youth choir
  • Fire Support Association. The private support association in case of fire in Reicheneibach was founded in 1881.

literature

Web links

Commons : Reicheneibach  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Reicheneibach on BayernAtlas Klassik