Schöneberg

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Schöneberg
Municipality Ehekirchen
Coordinates: 48 ° 37 ′ 51 ″  N , 11 ° 5 ′ 58 ″  E
Height : 406  (401-415)  m
Area : 4.55 km²
Residents : 286  (December 31, 2015)
Population density : 63 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Postal code : 86676
Area code : 08435

Schöneberg is a parish village and district of Ehekirchen in the district of Neuburg-Schrobenhausen , which belongs to the administrative district of Upper Bavaria in Bavaria . The hamlet of Ried also belongs to the district . Schöneberg has 248 and Ried 38 inhabitants (December 2015).

geography

Schöneberg is located directly south of the main town Ehekirchen on the flat tertiary heights of the Aindlinger terrace staircase . In terms of natural space, it belongs to the Donau-Iller-Lech-Platte , which in turn is part of the Alpine foothills , one of the main natural spatial units in Germany . Ried, on the other hand, is directly adjacent to the south-east of Schöneberg. The Donaumoos opens up to the east .

State road St 2035 runs through Schöneberg in a north-south direction from Neuburg an der Donau to Augsburg . Ehekirchen is directly adjacent to the north, and to the east is the Koenigsmoos district of Klingsmoos , south of Ried are Schainbach and Walda and west of Schöneberg is already in the middle of the Haselbach hill country .

history

St. John the Baptist Church in Schöneberg

Even before the place was first mentioned, the ancient aristocratic Schönlein family was already known, who had their seat on the mountain from which the Schönbach rises (see the neighboring village of Schainbach (= Schönbach)). The place was named Schönleinsberg after them .
The following mentions can be found: Shouwenberc (1241), Schönlinsberg (1294), Schönlin (1322), Schönlisperg (1358), Schoenlensperg (1450), Schonleßperg (1498), Schenesperg (1580), Schönnesperg (1663) and, since 1671, Schöneberg . In the local West Central Bavarian dialect, the place is called Scheanasbörg . Over
the years Ried received the following spellings: Ruth (1173), Ruet (1214), Riede (1230), Ryed (1350), Ried (1445), Rüedt (1580), Riedt (1671) and finally Ried (1780). The name refers to a settlement that has arisen on cleared soil . In the local West Central Bavarian dialect, the place is called Riyadh .
In the oldest documents from the middle of the 13th century, the Counts of Lechsgemünd-Graisbach and the Niederschönenfeld Monastery appear as landlords in Schöneberg . In the Middle Ages, Schöneberg was a noble seat with lower jurisdiction. The owners were the Schönlein von Schönleinsberg (late 13th to mid 14th century), the Meilinger von Schöneberg (late 14th century), Eberhard von Bachenstein (from 1417) and finally from 1430 the Wittelsbacher . Duke Ludwig the Rich of Bavaria finally donated his farms to the University of Ingolstadt and dissolved the Hofmark in Schöneberg. The university remained the landlord until 1848. The Barons von Gumppenberg from Pöttmes and the Sandizeller owned further possessions .
The place Ried belonged to the barons of Gumppenberg until 1848.

The Catholic parish Saint Johannes Baptist in Schöneberg belongs to the parish community Ehekirchen. The church building is a uniform structure from the 14th century with a choir in the east tower.

On January 1, 1972, the independent municipality Schöneberg that the district of Neuburg an der Donau belonged to the church Ehekirchen incorporated .

Attractions

  • Parish Church of Saint John the Baptist

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 532 .

Web links

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

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