Noham Castle

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The abandoned Nöham Castle was located in the district of the same name in the Lower Bavarian community of Dietersburg in the Rottal-Inn district of Bavaria .

history

The word meaning of Nöham is new home indicates a younger Bavarian development settlement. The place belongs to the fiscal estate district on Sulzbach of the Osterhofen monastery .

Owners of Nöham are only known in the first half of the 16th century. Around 1520 Georg Auer , of bourgeois origin, is said to have come into possession of Nöham through his marriage to a Gruber . 1541 Sigmund Auer , nurses to Gangkofen come into possession of Nöham. In 1547 a Georg Auer built a new castle building on the castle stables , where a nobleman’s seat was supposed to have been ... He requested and received noble freedom for himself and his descendants through Duke Wilhelm . In the following years Auers zu Nöham were mentioned again and again: Simprecht Auer (1558–1578), Sigmund der Auer zu Sölgerding (1583), also caretaker from Gangkofen, Isaac Auer from Nöham zu Sölgerding (1593), Isaac Auer from Nöham, Sölgering , Gangkofen and Jellenkofen (1602).

In 1606 the Auers Nöham and some associated goods were transferred to the Pichlmair family , citizens of parish churches . As a result, the lower jurisdiction was withdrawn and Nöham was subordinated to the district court until 1619. In 1620 Nöham was transferred to Ohnopheus Estwurm as a pledge ; even he was not granted court justice . Then Nöham came to the Scheibls at Postmünster and from them to the Pfarrkirchen hospital . Nöham sold this to Maria Gruber zu Grub , a born Freiin von Truchseß. Her son Johann Franz Gruber came here after her . In 1689 the seat was in the hands of Anna Gruber . As a noblewoman, she again exercised lower jurisdiction. In 1752 Nöham still belonged to the noble Gruber rule.

Thereafter (according to other sources but already in 1723) the seat was passed to the Counts of Berchem zu Piesing and Haiming . The Counts of Berchem left Nöham to the state in the course of an exchange for single-layer goods.

In 1809 Nöham forms one of the 36 tax districts of the parish church district court with the two chairmen Hafenbach and Sulzbach as well as the seat of Eitting. In 1818 Nöham is a district court municipality. On April 1, 1971, Nöham was incorporated into Dietersburg.

Nöham was already referred to as a seat under the Auers in 1520 . In 1558 it was noted that there was no Sedelhof . From 1597 and 1606 the news came that the seat at Nöham consisted only of a wooden house, which was by no means unusual. The building is no longer preserved.

literature

  • Ilse Louis: Parish churches. The nursing courts Reichenberg and Julbach and the rule Ering-Frauenstein (p. 292–294). (= Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern issue 31). Commission for Bavarian History, Michael Lassleben Verlag, Munich 1973. ISBN 3-7696-9878-9 .

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 29 ′ 0 ″  N , 12 ° 53 ′ 57 ″  E