Notzing Castle
Notzing Castle is a castle in the Notzing district of the Upper Bavarian municipality of Oberding . The castle is a listed building .
Geographical location
The castle is located in a park southwest of the hill on which the Church of St. Nicholas rises.
history
The current settlement of Notzing probably dates back to the 6th to 8th centuries. The name is derived from a personal name, which was reconstructed as "Nozo", and means something like "with the people, the clan of Nozo".
The place name was first mentioned in the time of Bishop Abraham von Freising (957-994), when an Odalrih de Nozingun was mentioned as a witness in a document. The family probably died out in 1261 with Thumhalt von Notzing. The ducal tithe fiefdom was not held by the Erdinger citizen Ulrich Fulls in 1347 and then the Muschelrieder.
The former moated castle from the 14th century came to Jörg Schrenk, a citizen from Munich and a relative of the Muschelrieder, through sale, repurchase and exchange. He was a member of a patrician councilor and merchant family from Munich that was first mentioned in a document in 1269. Bartholomäus Schrenck (* 1450, † 1519) was the city's representative and councilor to Duke Albrecht IV of Bavaria . Until 1519 he left Notzing to the rich Tyrolean mining family Hofer zu Urfarn . Wolf Hofer completely renewed the castle and is likely to be the builder of the current village center. With the entry into the ducal Bavarian service during the 16th century, the Schrenk succeeded in the transition from the urban bourgeoisie to the landed aristocracy, which ended in 1625. Already in 1408 Michael Schrenck († 1429), the Munich Civil Rights had given up and was as Country aces , because of the inherited property to Notzing, a member of the knighthood in Bavaria-Landshut . In the first half of the 16th century the family lost the Notzing parent company. Nevertheless, in 1575 relatives received confirmation of imperial nobility as Schrenck von Notzing .
In 1528 the property came to Wolf Rosenbusch through the female line. The estate came back to Baron Rauber through marriage , who appointed Franz Christoph II Baron Segesser von Brunegg (1742–1812) from a Swiss noble family as heir . His daughter Carolina married Major General and Royal Chamberlain Baron Jakob von Washington in 1833 . In 1846 the Washingtons sold the property and around a dozen new owners followed, until the castle came to the banker Edgar Ladenburg in 1912, who was expropriated by the National Socialists in 1939. In 1946, in the course of reparation, it was returned to the heirs, the Rosewick family from Stuttgart.
Building description
The castle is a former moated castle, a rectangular building with a floor plan of about 15 × 20 meters, from the second half of the 14th century. The access is from the east over a bridge that crosses the former moat. The east and west gables of the palace are stepped gables . There is a small tower on the southeast side.
Web links
- Notzing Castle. In: Notzing local chronicle. Retrieved April 20, 2010 .
Individual evidence
- ↑ Notzing Castle ( Memento of the original from January 8, 2016 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 then remove this notice. at the Bavarian State Office for Monument Preservation
Coordinates: 48 ° 18 ′ 9.9 ″ N , 11 ° 50 ′ 42.2 ″ E