Sack yard

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Sackshof (also Hofstett ) is a deserted area in the district of Markt Einersheim in the Lower Franconian district of Kitzingen . The courtyard was abandoned in the 16th or 17th century and replaced by the new courtyard .

Geographical location

The desert lies in the far east of the Einersheimer district. To the north, the Schloßbergsattel nature reserve can be found at Markt Einersheim . Further to the east, the Ziegenbacher district begins in the area of ​​the municipality of Markt Bibart in the Neustadt an der Aisch-Bad Windsheim district in Central Franconia . The Breitbach tributary Moorseebach rises to the south . Today the new courtyard can be found about 300 m to the west. Until the 1960s, there was a small lake on the site of the former settlement.

history

The place name is derived from a farm owner with the surname Sack. He probably held the court in the 14th century. The complex was the old building yard that belonged to Speckfeld Castle . The Sackshof was first mentioned in 1341. At that time, Ludwig von Hohenlohe enfeoffed the Chunradt Seheimer with the “hoff Hofsteten located under Specuelt”. As recently as 1392, "Höstetten" appeared in a fief book of the Lords of Hohenlohe.

In the 15th century the noble family died out and the possessions were divided between the Counts of Castell and the taverns of Limpurg . The border between the two spheres of influence ran "through the sack", probably a corridor near the courtyard. A year later, in 1414, the Limpurgs held the "Eckern gein des sacks huss". In 1422, however, other noble families reclaimed the illegitimate property from Count Leonhard zu Castell .

In addition, the Münsterschwarzach monastery was wealthy “on the Hochsteet” until 1495 and then ceded the fiefs to the Würzburg monastery . In 1519 the bishopric again granted the rights to the Limpurg taverns. The farm was probably abandoned in the 16th or 17th century. In 1769, a list of the goods that belonged to the Neubauhof also mentioned 48 acres of field in "der Höchstatt". The corridor also included a forest .

literature

  • Roderich Machann: Desolations in the Steigerwald (= Mainfränkische Studien Vol. 5). Diss . Wuerzburg 1972.
  • Wolf Dieter Ortmann: District of Scheinfeld (= historical place name book of Bavaria. Middle Franconia, vol. 3) . Munich 1967. Local name part .

Individual evidence

  1. Machann, Roderich: deserted villages in the Steigerwald . P. 154.
  2. ^ Ortmann, Wolf Dieter: District of Scheinfeld . P. 161.
  3. ^ Ortmann, Wolf Dieter: District of Scheinfeld . P. 160.
  4. ^ Ortmann, Wolf Dieter: District of Scheinfeld . P. 161.

Coordinates: 49 ° 41 ′ 49.9 ″  N , 10 ° 19 ′ 55.8 ″  E