Dietersdorf Castle

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The Dietersdorf Castle is a castle in the village Dietersdorf the Upper Palatinate town Windischeschenbach .

history

Dietersdorf was a Leuchtenberg knight mannlehenn and belonged to the Stift-Waldsassischen judge office Neuhaus . The affiliation to the community office Parkstein-Weiden was disputed. In Dietersdorf the Gleißenthalers had tithe rights and free float according to the Wittelsbach land register of 1301 . In the 16th century, Dietersdorf developed into an independent economic body with the landlord's basic rights of a land brawl.

In the Landsassenmatrikeln are from 1526 Michael , William , Jorg and Gleißenthaler Utz as joint owner of the land aces good Dietersdorf and also from Döltsch recorded. Georg Gleißenthaler is mentioned on July 9, 1571 in the homage in the Parkstein office. In 1571 Hans Sigmund von Gleißenthal is the owner and in 1577 his son Hans Sigmund von Gleißenthal is mentioned. Until the beginning of the Thirty Years' War , the Gleißenthalers remained in the possession of Dietersdorf.

From 1623 Jobst Heinrich von Künsperg owned the estate on Haunritz . He was initially a Calvinist , but converted to Catholicism in the course of the Counter-Reformation . As early as 1625 he sold the estate to Michael Hartung , Richter and Kastner zu Kemnath . His ancestors Peter and Sigmund Hartung were raised to the rank of nobility by Emperor Maximilian I on August 5, 1508. After Michael Hartung's death († 1646), he was followed by his son Hans Caspar , who was only able to pay homage in 1652 when he was of legal age. His heirs have been the owners here since 1676, in 1695 it is Johann Ludwig Hartung , in 1718 his son Hans Ludwig Heinrich and in 1754 it is Joseph Sigmund ; During a parish visit, he is referred to as a very bad Christian, he neither attends church services nor fulfills the Easter obligation. He had a picture of Mary put up in the forest and an offering box underneath, whereby the pastor assumed he wanted to keep the money for himself. In addition, he has reserved the tithe for the Windischeschenbach pastor Maximilian von Wiotha , for which he was sentenced to compensation by the government in Amberg . Joseph Sigmund used the suffix von und zu Dietersdorf , which led to lengthy disputes about the right to use this title. Florian von Hartung succeeded him in 1797 . With the transfer to the new administrative structure of the Kingdom of Bavaria at the beginning of the 19th century, Florian von Hartung was granted the establishment of a second class patrimonial court in the Tirschenreuth district court , to which the 25 Grundholden von Dietersdorf belonged; In addition to the village and Dietersdorf Castle, the Iglhof extension also belonged to the community. In 1841 fiefdoms were issued for the sons Klemens Franz Bernhard , Franz Pius Amandus , Philipp Maria Leander , Karl Baptist Maximilian and Joseph Adam Daniel Ludwig von Hartung of the aforementioned Florian von Hartung . Baron Clemens Ludwig von Hartung smashed the estate in 1910.

In 1848 the aristocratic jurisprudence was repealed and Dietersdorf was incorporated into the regional court Ä. O. Neustadt an der Waldnaab in 1857 . In 1946 Dietersdorf came to the community of Neuhaus , against which the Dietersdorfer defended themselves without success. Due to the municipal reform of 1972 Dietersdorf was incorporated into Windischeschenbach.

Construction

The current castle building dates from 1850. It is a two-storey eaves-standing pitched roof building with granite window frames and a stepped gable . Windows with a round finish are installed on the ground floor.

According to the Regensburg Bishop's Central Archives, there was once a prayer room in the castle. In 1960, a small church was built in Dietersdorf by the Neustadt architect Quirin Punzmann and consecrated to Nikolaus von Flüe on July 17, 1961 by Cathedral Chapter August Kuffner .

literature

Web links

Coordinates: 49 ° 47 ′ 38.6 ″  N , 12 ° 11 ′ 20 ″  E