Schickenhof (municipality of Zwettl-Lower Austria)
Schickenhof ( Rotte ) locality cadastral community Schickenhof administrative district |
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Basic data | ||
Pole. District , state | Zwettl (ZT), Lower Austria | |
Judicial district | Zwettl | |
Pole. local community | Zwettl-Lower Austria | |
Coordinates | 48 ° 36 '26 " N , 15 ° 6' 20" E | |
height | 564 m above sea level A. | |
Residents of the village | 10 (January 1, 2020) | |
Building status | 7 (2001) | |
Area d. KG | 2.56 km² | |
Post Code | 3910 Zwettl | |
Mayor | Josef Stanzl (as of Sept. 28, 2012) |
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Statistical identification | ||
Locality code | 07069 | |
Cadastral parish number | 24373 | |
Counting district / district | Rosenau Castle (32530 030) | |
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; NÖGIS |
Schickenhof is a small town in the Waldviertel in Lower Austria , and a locality and cadastral municipality of the municipality of Zwettl-Niederösterreich in the Zwettl district . The dominant building and namesake is the Schickenhof , an old manor.
geography
The group with seven houses is located 5 kilometers west of the city of Zwettl, on the state road to Groß Gerungs .
The village also includes the Roblmühle near the Zwettl , where the municipal road branches off to Jahrings .
History and sights
The Schickenhof is an estate . He was first mentioned in a document in 1220 on the occasion of a donation to Zwettl Abbey , in 1231 as “ curia quam Pilgrimus miles cognomento Schike tenuit ” (“possession of a soldier named Pilgrimus with the surname Schike”, which means folder, worker ), and in 1280 by name as Shichenhove .
After falling into disrepair in the 16th century, it was rebuilt around 1600. When the owner changed to Leopold Christoph von Schallenberg in 1757, the Schickenhof was united with the Rosenau rulership .
In 1943 the Schickenhof became the property of Baron Ludwig Lazarini. The Walderdorff family is currently the owner of the Schickenhof.
To the east of the Schickenhof there is a Johannes Nepomuk Chapel with a statue of St. John Nepomuk from the mid-18th century and renovated in 2009 .
There were originally three mills on the Kamp.
Building description of the Schickenhof
The estate is a two-storey complex, closed on three sides, under a hipped roof . The current corner risks are former corner towers . On the east wing of the building there is a late baroque four-storey bell tower with flat-arched sound windows and a pyramid helmet from the second half of the 18th century.
The homestead is a listed building .
literature
- Walter Robl: The KG Schickenhof. In: Hans Hakala, Walter Pongratz, Zwettl-NÖ. 2nd volume. The community (Zwettl) . 1982, pp. 536-542.
See also:
- Bibliography for Schickenhof. In: Katastralgemeinden - S. Stadtgemeinde Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on January 21, 2010 .
Web links
- Inauguration of the newly renovated Johannes Nepomuk Chapel
- Census of May 15, 2001 - inhabitants by location (PDF; 12 kB)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Mayor - All. City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on September 28, 2012 .
- ↑ Entry about Schickenhof Palace at Lower Austria Burgen online - Institute for Reality Studies of the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Era, University of Salzburg
- ↑ a b c DEHIO Lower Austria - north of the Danube . 1990, ISBN 3-7031-0652-2 , pp. OA
- ^ Cadastral communities, initial mention and interpretation of names. City of Zwettl-NÖ, accessed on January 21, 2010 . Cf. Elisabeth Schuster: The Etymology of Lower Austrian Place Names . Ed .: Association for regional studies of Lower Austria. Vienna (1989, 1990, 1994). ; Translation ibid
- ^ Franz Strohmayr: Three old mills in Schickenhof. In: Local history news. Supplement to the Official Gazette of the District Authority Zwettl. Vol. 15, No. 1, 1994, pp. 1-3. 15th century; No. 2, 1994 p. 5 f.