Schlößl (municipality of Nußdorf am Haunsberg)
Schlößl ( Rotte ) village |
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Basic data | ||
Pole. District , state | Salzburg area (SL), Salzburg | |
Judicial district | Oberndorf | |
Pole. local community | Nussdorf am Haunsberg ( KG Weitwörth) | |
Coordinates | 47 ° 55 '50 " N , 12 ° 59' 12" E | |
height | 435 m above sea level A. | |
Residents of the village | 165 (January 1, 2020) | |
Building status | 49 (2015) | |
Statistical identification | ||
Locality code | 13836 | |
Counting district / district | Nussdorf am Haunsberg (50 325 000) | |
Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; SAGIS |
Schlößl is a village in the municipality of Nußdorf am Haunsberg in the north of the state of Salzburg in the Salzburg-Umgebung district (Flachgau). In the village located in the Oichtental at the foot of the Haunsberg there was a castle, Burg Haunsperg , from the Middle Ages to the 17th century . Today you can find the church of St. Pankraz am Haunsberg and a geological nature trail in the village .
geography
The 0.88 km² large town of Schlößl is part of Weitwörth , the southernmost of the three cadastral communities of Nussdorf. The place Schlößl is 14.6 km north-northeast of the state capital Salzburg on the state road 204 from Weitwörth to Berndorf near Salzburg .
The following villages border on Schlößl:
Lukasedt | Kemating (municipality of Göming ) |
Kroisbach |
Schröck | Hochberg | |
Gastein |
The local area extends from the Oichtenbach in the north, which forms the municipal boundary to Göming , to about half the height of the Haunsberg and lies at about 420 to 560 meters above sea level. The "Mohauser Bach" flows in a south-north direction from the Haunsberg to the Oichten.
history
Remains of household crockery and fine crockery made from clay were found from the Bronze Age , a total of over 400 pieces of settlement ceramics (no grave ceramics) and pottery shards. Around 450 BC Then there were the first hill settlements of the Latène period . In the 11th century, the Haunsberg family, who took the name of the mountain, built a castle on the rocky promontory above today's church. Around 1211, Haunsberg Castle was sold to Archbishop Eberhard II of Salzburg . In 1583 the castle was struck by lightning. The castle was renovated in 1589 and then gradually fell into disrepair. The former ancestral castle of the Haunsburger experienced a small renaissance between 1615 and 1646, when the castle was again restored for defense. From 1646 it was left to decay. In 1693 a new construction of the castle was planned on the rock below the old castle chapel, but the crack presented in 1700 was not implemented.
A year later, the Salzburg Prince Archbishop Johann Ernst von Thun decided to have the church built at his own expense, which was completed in 1706 almost exactly on the site of the former castle chapel by the Salzburg master mason Jacob Huber, with the influence of Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach being evident is. Material from the ruins of the castle chapel and various remains of the lower castle were probably used in the construction. Remnants of this castle were uncovered during renovation work between 2000 and 2004. The church was consecrated to St. Pancras on September 18, 1707 by Archbishop-Coadjutor Franz Anton Prince Harrach . Since then it has been called St. Pankraz Church. The town itself is sometimes called St. Pankraz after the church. In 1711 stones were again stolen from the castle for a new building in Weitwörth. In 1727 an application was even made to demolish the already largely ruined castle ruins.
In 1758 the sacristan house - today the Schlössl inn - and a little later the “Geistliche Stöckl” (probably a gatehouse before and now the back room in the inn) was built. In 1790 the pillars of the former castle were removed to create a former pheasant garden in the forest. This pheasant garden was a hunting garden for small game and feathered game. The garden existed until approx. 2000. The church was first restored in 1962 and later from 2000 to 2004 at the urging of the Nussdorf pastor.
Events
- Mountain slalom (auto slalom) on the first Sunday in September
- Stock car race on the last Sunday of September
literature
- Veronika and Wolfgang Mayregg: Nussdorf history and stories. 2002.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Statistics Austria, population on January 1, 2015 by location
- ↑ a b Measurement on the map of the Geographical Information System of the State of Salzburg ( SAGIS ( Memento of the original from June 6, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and remove then this note. ).