Sallach (Geiselhöring)

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Sallach
City of Geiselhöring
Coordinates: 48 ° 48 ′ 45 ″  N , 12 ° 21 ′ 32 ″  E
Height : 358 m above sea level NN
Residents : 532  (May 25 1987)
Incorporation : May 1, 1978
Postal code : 94333
Area code : 09423
Sallach (Bavaria)
Sallach

Location of Sallach in Bavaria

St. Nicholas Church
St. Nicholas Church

Sallach is a church village and part of the town of Geiselhöring in the Lower Bavarian district of Straubing-Bogen .

The place is in the valley of the Kleine Laber at about 358  m above sea level. NHN around three kilometers southwest of Geiselhöring on the SR 52 district road .

history

The oldest finds of a human settlement date from the Younger Stone Age (4000–2000 BC). From the urn grave bronze age (approx. 2000 BC) comes a living pit found at the sports field with shards and remnants of hut clay. The Latène period or Celtic period (approx. 550 BC) left behind numerous finds in the village and the surrounding area, two square entrenchments northeast of Sallach, one of which seems to have been a Celtic sanctuary due to its construction. After the Romans left, the Bavarians , a peasant people from Bohemia, immigrated around 500 to 525 . At the Lohmühle there were bavarian row graves with rich additions of utensils and jewelry, as well as numerous weapons.

Salath (Sallach) got its name from pre-Roman times and is derived from Salath (= willow trees) or Salland (= Herrenland). The oldest documentary mention of Sallach is in the year 1010 (original excerpt): “When the church in Obermünster, which burned down in 1002, was inaugurated in 1010, on April 17th, King Heinrich the Holy gave the order for the salvation of his predecessor, Emperor Otto , and to to return to his and his wife Kunigunde Seelenheil this royal Hofmark Salath, located in the county of Ruotperts in Duonochgowe (Donaugau), to the monastery ... "

On April 30, 1028 Emperor ordered Konrad the return of the royal Hofmark Salath to the monastery Obermünster on after it returned from a Carolingian, Louis the Pious was passed to this, but later in the time of Hungarian invasions of Arnulf evil that snatched away again has been.

In the course of the regional reform in Bavaria , there were several changes for Sallach. The independent community, consisting of the districts Sallach, Gallhofen , Haagmühl , Lohmühle , Obergallhofen and Weingarten , came to the newly created district of Straubing-Bogen on July 1, 1972 because of the dissolution of the Mallersdorf district . The incorporation into the city of Geiselhöring took place on May 1, 1978.

Buildings

Sallach Castle

Sallach Castle and six other listed buildings are located in Sallach .

See also: List of architectural monuments in Geiselhöring

traffic

On the southern outskirts which has neufahrn-radldorf railway the required breakpoint Sallach that the Gäubodenbahn is operated.

societies

  • Sallach volunteer fire department
  • Women's Association Sallach
  • Sallach Warrior and Soldier Association
  • KLJB Sallach
  • OGV (Fruit and Horticultural Association) Sallach
  • SV Sallach
  • Sallach ice hockey club
  • Fisherman friends Sallach
  • Schloß-Schützen SV Sallach
  • Blue Garden Gnomes eV

literature

  • Josef Reindl: Sallach-Hadersbach. History of the provost and parish of Sallach and the associated parishes of Sallach and Hadersbach . Michael Laßleben , Kallmünz 1938 ( transcript ).
  • Donatus Moosauer, Günther Michler, Ulrich Pietrusky: Niederbayern - rediscovered in flight , Morsak Verlag, Grafenau, 2nd edition 1982, ISBN 3-87553-135-3
  • Wolfgang Brand, Otto Strasser: Sallach. The local history . Update of the Reindl Chronicle. Anniversary edition to commemorate the 1000th anniversary in Sallach, City of Geiselhöring, 2010

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing (Ed.): Official local directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 25, 1987 . Issue 450 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich November 1991, DNB  94240937X , p. 234 ( digitized version ).
  2. Bavaria Atlas of the Bavarian State Government ( notes )
  3. ^ Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official place directory for Bavaria . Issue 335 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1973, DNB  740801384 , p. 116 ( digitized version ).