Höflarn (Nabburg)

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Höflarn
City of Nabburg
Coordinates: 49 ° 26 ′ 32 ″  N , 12 ° 13 ′ 2 ″  E
Height : 430 m
Postal code : 92507
Area code : 09433
Höflarn (Bavaria)
Höflarn

Location of Höflarn in Bavaria

Höflarn is a district of the city of Nabburg in the Upper Palatinate district of Schwandorf ( Bavaria ).

geography

Höflarn is located on State Road 2040 , about three kilometers east of the federal highway 93 and about four kilometers east of Nabburg.

history

From the beginning to the 16th century

Höflarn (also: Hoflern, Höflein, Höfflern) was first mentioned in writing in the middle of the 14th century. In 1333 it was owned by the Reichenbach Monastery . The following owners included Konrad der Pernhofer and Konrad der Muracher. Elector Ludwig III. allowed the Naburg citizen Paul Sauerzapf to build a house in Höflarn. In 1419 he declared his dwelling in Höflarn to be an open house for the elector. In 1479 this house is referred to in a letter of ten as "Sitz Höflarn". The following owners of Höflarn were Rudolf Alberger, Heinrich Hemerl, Mrs. Dorothea Kembnaterin. Until 1510 the Höflarn estate was freely owned . Then it passed through purchase at Friedrichstein Linger of it as fief to Count Palatine Ludwig V. was. Höflarn stayed with the Steinlinger family until the seventies of the 16th century. When this died out in the male line, it was sold to Niclas Sibenhar, who sold it to Hans Wolf Beheim in 1589.

17th to early 19th century

Höflarn now constantly changed hands until it finally came to Konrad von Knöringen via Hanns Fridrichen and Hanns Ulrichen, who was enfeoffed with Höflarn by Count Palatine Johann Kasimir . He headed the aristocratic Gut Höflarn until 1631 and was very active but unsuccessful in promoting the interests of the Upper Palatinate landscape. During the re-Catholicization under Elector Maximilian , he and his family had to emigrate to Regensburg in 1629 because he did not want to convert to the Catholic faith. During the following years, Konrad von Knöringen was only allowed to visit his property during harvest and sowing time and otherwise two or three times a year. He died in 1631 and his inheritance was provisionally administered by his widow Regina von Knöringen, née Dirrling. The Höflarn estate suffered from the effects of the Thirty Years' War and was heavily in debt. Konrad's sons Johann Friedrich von Knöringen and his brother Johann Bernhard were enfeoffed with Höflarn in 1645. From 1654 the Catholic Johann Friedrich von Knöringen was the sole owner and was enfeoffed a second time with Höflarn. As early as 1655 he sold Höflarn to Hans Albrecht Singer von Moosau. The Singer family owned the estate until 1680. From 1680, Höflarn changed hands at short intervals. About Johann Friedrich Wilhelm von Lilgenau (1680), Joseph Anton von Leopart (1709), Johann Andrä Kammerpauer, Dr. Gottlieb von Schallern from Bayreuth (1801) it came to Karl Christian Freiherr von Morgen (1805). Höflarn was initially a male fiefdom, but from 1727 it was a continuous fiefdom. H. female family members could also inherit it as a fiefdom. It consisted of the seat and Gut Höflarn, a sheep walk, two yards, a pond, meadows, fields, wood and wood wax.

Including Bärnmühle, which belonged to Höflarn, Höflarn had 4 houses in the 18th century, a stately castle, a Meierhof, a shepherd's house, a carpenter, a miller and a tailor.

19th century to the present

In 1805, Höflarn came into the possession of the von Morgen family. The Prussian captain and Saxon-Coburg squire Karl Christian Freiherr von Morgen bought Höflarn together with Eckendorf on October 20, 1803 for 25,100 Rhenish guilders including 100 guilders for the inventory and 500 guilders key money. On February 23, 1805 he was enfeoffed with Höflarn and on the same day had his commissioner, licentiate Franz Joseph Obernberger, discard the compulsory Landsassen. After the death of Freiherr von Morgen in 1808, his widow Gertrud Clementine von Morgen came into possession of Höflarn in 1815 after long legal disputes. Although she tried in a tough fight to get the jurisdiction over the 7 families of Höflarn, the miller family von Bärnmühle and the 9 families von Eckendorf in their hands, but could not achieve this and so the jurisdiction over Höflarn on March 20th 1816 to the district court of Nabburg. After the death of Baroness von Morgen, her universal heiress, the widow Eichwedl from Jena, waived all jurisdiction over the Höflarn and Eckendorf estates in 1828.

In 1811, Höflarn was listed as belonging to the tax district Girnitz and the chairmanship of Diendorf. In 1828, Höflarn with 6 residential buildings, 12 families and 60 residents belonged to the rural community of Diendorf, to the branch church in Perschen and to the Catholic school in Perschen. All residents were Catholic.

As of March 23, 1913 (Easter), Höflarn belonged to the Perschen branch church and thus to the Nabburg parish. It had four houses and 24 residents. In 1964 Höflarn had 6 residential buildings and 27 residents and belonged to the rural community of Diendorf and the district of Nabburg . On July 1, 1972, the district of Nabburg was dissolved and Höflarn became part of the community of Diendorf in the newly formed district of Schwandorf. On January 1, 1975, Höflarn was incorporated into the city of Nabburg as part of the municipality of Diendorf. On December 31, 1990, Höflarn had 41 residents and belonged to the parish of Nabburg.

Höflarn Castle

The history of this place is identical to that of the Landsassengut and Höflarn Castle, today called Modl-Bauer . The former castle is a two-wing complex with a hipped roof , the west wing has a three-sided closure. The core of the listed building dates from the 18th century.

literature

  • Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Old Bavaria, issue 50, Nabburg, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7

Individual evidence

  1. Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern, issue 50, Nabburg, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7 , pp. 182-190
  2. ^ Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern, No. 50, Nabburg, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7 , p. 353
  3. Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern, issue 50, Nabburg, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7 , pp. 182-190
  4. ^ Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern, issue 50, Nabburg, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7 , p. 387
  5. ^ Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern, No. 50, Nabburg, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7 , pp. 398, 409
  6. ^ Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern, issue 50, Nabburg, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7 , p. 418
  7. ^ Antonius von Henle (Ed.): Register of the Diocese of Regensburg. Verlag der Kanzlei des Bischöflichen Ordinariates Regensburg, 1916, p. 352
  8. ^ Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern, issue 50, Nabburg, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7 , p. 418
  9. ^ Elisabeth Müller-Luckner, Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern, issue 50, Nabburg, Munich 1981, ISBN 3-7696-9915-7 , p. 435
  10. Manfred Müller (Ed.): Register of the diocese of Regensburg. Verlag des Bischöflichen Ordinariats Regensburg, 1997, p. 413
  11. List of listed objects in Nabburg

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