Reuentaler mill

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The Reuentaler Mühle on the Wutach near Oftringen

The Reuentaler Mühle , also Reuenthaler Mühle , is a former grinding and sawmill in the Wutöschingen district of Ofteringen in the Waldshut district .

history

The village of Rŭwental , first mentioned in the Habsburg Urbar , probably refers to Oftringen in Aargau. The Rúwental , mentioned in 1489, should also refer to the Full-Reuenthal , which today belongs to Switzerland . Ferdinand Hasenfratz mentions a Rewental family , but cannot provide any evidence. In Laufenburger fief directory but Hasenfratz according explicitly by Taler remorse mill's speech: In 1318, had the brothers Johann and Friedrich von Ofteringen of Bogner Hube and the mill to Reuental and a mill nearby , as a fief of the Habsburgs . The Lords of Ofteringen are named in some documents. The first is probably Mr. Huc von Ofteringen (1257), further among others the knight Hainrich von Ofteringen and a Gerung von Ofteringen. They also owned the Ofteringen Castle in Laufenburg. Their coat of arms corresponded to the current local coat of arms with the three lying silver crescent moons on a red shield.

In 1428 Heinrich von Erzingen bought the Reuentaler Mühle, the Lords of Erzingen also owned the Wunderklingen mill above .

On January 17, 1489 Junker Symon von Aerzingen and his wife, b. Truchseß von Hefingen to Michael Schwarzberer as the authorized lawyer of Baron Bernhard Gradner zu Eglisau twelve Mutt kernels and ten guilders perpetual validity Schaffhauser coin from their mill in Reuental and the tithe in Ofteringen for 356 Rhenish guilders .

On November 3, 1550, Pankraz von Ofteringen, known as Gutjahr, received some feudal rights and tithes of the Reuentaler mill from the Counts of Lupfen .

In 1568 the Reuentaler Mühle winery was built. During the Thirty Years' War the mill was plundered and destroyed several times. On December 12, 1676, the last Junker of Ofteringen, Karl Gutjahr, wrote his will in favor of the Rheinau Abbey . Franz Maximilian von Fürstenberg († 1681) protested that it was a settled fiefdom of the county of Stühlingen . But since he died soon and his successors were minors and their guardians were loyal to Rheinau, the monastery was awarded the goods and Ofteringen Castle in a settlement, with the Fürstenberg house being compensated with money. The ownership of the mill was then controversial for about 70 years until a settlement was also made.

In 1718 J. (ohann) M. (artin) Ofteringer is named as the owner of the mill. In 1785 the buildings were rebuilt. A saw belonged to the mill, which still exists but is no longer in use. The same family continues to run the gastronomy with a popular knight's meal in historic rooms.

literature

  • Ferdinand Hasenfratz : The herb bed hunter and other adventurous spider tubs, real forest trampolines and chats from the Wutach valley. 1984, ISBN 3-925016-00-7
  • Wutöschingen - then and now. The reader: Degernau, Horheim, Ofteringen, Schwerzen, Wutöschingen. Municipality of Wutöschingen (Ed.), Wutöschingen 2006
  • Father Hieronymus Haas (OSB Mariastein ): Marienburg Abbey 1862-1962.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ferdinand Hasenfratz: The Reuentaler mill. In: Der Krautbettjäger and other adventurous spinning nubs, genuine forest strolls and chats from the Wutach valley. P. 134 ff.
  2. Ferdinand Hasenfratz: The Reuentaler mill. In: Der Krautbettjäger and other adventurous spinning nubs, genuine forest strolls and chats from the Wutach valley. P. 152 ff.

Coordinates: 47 ° 40 ′ 36.3 "  N , 8 ° 22 ′ 54.9"  E