Panzing Castle

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Panzing Castle after an engraving by Michael Wening from 1721

The lost Panzing Castle (also known as Paenzing ) was located in the district of the same name in the Lower Bavarian market of Gangkofen in the Rottal-Inn district .

history

Originally ortenburgische Ritter loans Panzing belonged to the rule Gangkofen. A homo Wernhard de Pencign handed over to the Aldersbach monastery by Heinrich I. Count von Ortenburg is probably not to be associated with this place. But Buchardus de Panzingen , co-founder of the Biburg Abbey , may have something to do with Panzing.

Around 1348 a nobility Maroltinger von Pentzing and her grandson Friedrich Maroltinger are mentioned in the Eggenfelden court . However, the Leoprechtinger family has been proven here as early as 1345 : A Rupert Leopertiger is entered in the register of Ortenburg fiefdoms. According to this, the Hoholtinger come into play: In 1348 a Babo von Hochholting , an oath of the Trennbeck family, is mentioned here. On March 31, 1370 a Chunrad of the Paentzing separating beaker is attested here. The Leoprechtinger are said to have regained Panzing in 1384. In 1417 the investiture of Caspar Leoprechtinger is reported, who will remain here in the following.

Through the marriage of Anna Ambstorferin , widow of Hanns Leoprechtinger , with Wilhelm Herbst , the latter became the lord of the court in Panzing on January 2, 1539 . After the death of Anna Herbst , the fiefdom reverted to Georg Leonprechtinger and his siblings on January 10, 1556 . In 1594 Panzing was divided between the brothers Johann and Georg Leonprechting . After the deaths of Rudolf and Ferdinand von Leoprechting , the Ortenburg Panzing fiefdom moved in, as this man knight's fief was now over. In 1708, Ferdinand Franz von Stromer was enfeoffed with both parts .

The knight's fiefdom Panzing belonged to the Gangkofen rule. In 1560 and 1737 Panzing was referred to as the undecided Hofmarch .

However, the unmarried Maria Anna and Maria Josepha von Schwaben were able to enforce their mortgage lending with Panzing on the trial route 1788. The legal basis was as follows: Maria Theresia Rosina was the daughter of Bernhard Leoprechting and married to a Hörwarth . Her daughter Maria Violanda Theresia married Franz Albrecht von Schwaben and the two women named come from this marriage. After the deaths of both unmarried women († November 26, 1807), both the Stromer and a branch line of the Leoprechtinger von Graefling claim to the inheritance. The Munich Higher Appeal Court decided the case in favor of the Leoprechtinger.

In 1803 Panzing appears as incorporated into the Eggenfelden court. The two municipalities Panzing I and Panzing II appear under the municipalities of the regional court in 1818/23, one is the patrimonial municipality , the other includes the other properties of the tax district. On February 26, 1820, Baron von Leoprechting ruled over Panzing. By order of February 3 and 11, 1852, these two communities were merged. Panzing was incorporated into the Gangkofen community for a short time in 1946, but was outsourced again on January 1, 1948. On January 1, 1972, the previously independent parish of Panzing was incorporated into Gangkofen.

Panzing Castle used to be

According to the engraving by Michael Wening from 1721, Panzing consisted of two buildings: The former manor house is a three-storey building with a Renaissance stepped gable . Behind it is a round tower covered with an onion dome. Next to it is a building with a cripple hipped roof and a tower attached to the side. Both are connected by a transverse tract with an arcade and a bay window. The farm buildings of the Sedelhof are grouped around it . While the main buildings are made of stone, the farm buildings are made of timber and are made entirely of wood. Outside the walls there is a private garden for self-sufficiency.

Panzing Castle no longer exists today.

literature

  • Rita Lubos: The Eggenfelden district court. Pp. 152-154. (= Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern issue 28). Commission for Bavarian History, Verlag Michael Lassleben, Munich 1971, ISBN 3-7696-9874-6 .

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 25 ′ 55.6 ″  N , 12 ° 34 ′ 14.5 ″  E