Untergrasensee Castle
The Castle Untergrasensee or the associated Hofmarken top and Untergrasensee were in the district Untergrasensee the city parish churches in the Lower Bavarian district of Rottal-Inn of Bavaria .
history
In Grasensee nobiles are recorded in the 12th and 13th centuries , but it cannot be decided whether they were located in Obergrasensee or Untergrasensee.
Hofmark Obergrasensee
In the 15th century, the Obergrasensee fiefdom was given by Duke Georg to Wolfgang Resch, who inherited it from his father. In 1509 Wolfgang Resch is also registered as the owner of the Hofmark with accessories. In 1531 the daughter Anna des Resch married Hans Offenheimer zu Guteneck. This became the fief of Anna and her three siblings (Georg, Margarethe, Martha). Due to an inheritance, Anna Offenheimer received the shares of her sisters, the brother had already died in the meantime.
Before 1590 the Hofmark passed to the Ramung, a fiefdom letter from Duke Wilhelm dated March 14, 1590 indicates that Wolf Wilhelm Ramung of Seeholzen was the fiefdom bearer. In 1592 Maria Salome Ramung received the fiefdom through a contract with her relatives. Until 1605/06 the family Ramung was based here, vassals was the son of Wolf William, treasurer of the Duke Ferdinand . In 1605 Ernst Ramung was able to sell the seat to his cousin, Hans Jakob Edelbeck, Landau judge. After his death, the seat was passed on to his son Georg Adam Edelbeck, the vintner's caretaker (his brother Caspar Sigmund had transferred his share to him). On November 24, 1745 Joseph Aloysius sold Herr von Edelbeck. Canon zu Freising , the Hofmark Obergrasensee to Carl Sebastian Graf von Baumgarten.
Seat Untergrasensee
In 1423 the Edelbeck bought the Untergrasensee seat from Beatrix von Camer zu Münchsdorf. Untergrasensee was united after the acquisition of Obergrasensee. In 1745 both possessions went to the Counts of Baumgarten.
While there was only a wooden nobleman's seat in Obergrasesee, there had been a brick house in Untergrasensee since 1606. This can also be seen on the engraving by Michael Wening from 1721. It is a two-story, gable -roofed building surrounded by a moat, with stepped gables on both sides. On the side retaining walls are visible, a Baudetail, the typical water castles is. A wooden bridge leads to a two-story porch.
Grasensee remained as patrimonial 2nd class from 1821 to 1848 in the hands of the Counts of Baumgarten. Today the palace building is only supposed to be a castle stable .
literature
- Ilse Louis: Parish churches. The nursing courts Reichenberg and Julbach and the rule Ering-Frauenstein. (= Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Old Bavaria, issue 31). Verlag Michael Laßleben, Munich 1973 (pp. 249-251), ISBN 3 7696 9878 9 .
Web links
- Entry on Untergrasensee in the private database "Alle Burgen".
Coordinates: 48 ° 25 ′ 25.7 ″ N , 12 ° 58 ′ 19.2 ″ E