Wiesing Castle

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The lost Wiesing Castle was located in the district of the same name in the Upper Palatinate community of Roding in the Cham district .

history

Wiesing appears in the Herzogsurbar from 1326 under the possessions of the Regenpeilstein office . It was then separated from it and in 1455 became an independent Hofmark . As such, Wiesing is mentioned for the first time in the property of Friedrich Zenger , who gives it with the Regenpeilstein Castle and the Maut am Regen to his third wife, Anna von Parsberg , as a morning gift. In 1462 he gave these possessions to the Duke of the Palatinate as a fiefdom .

Since then, the history of Wiesing has been the same as that of Regenpeilstein Castle . As owner families, according to the Zengers u. a. the Kotzau , the Sparnberger, the Dandorfer, the Mändl zu Dettenhofen, the Klingensberg and the Schott from Regensburg are named. On January 31, 1823, Felix Valois von Schott was granted permission to set up a second class patrimonial court on his estates at Regenpeilstein, Wiesing and Fronau. In 1824 a Gant proceeding had to be imposed , as a result of which the jurisdiction was withdrawn and the Roding District Court was assigned.

Construction

The castle probably dates from the 12th century. It was above the village of Wiesing on a slope rising to the southeast on the connecting road to Regenpeilstein. In the tax description from 1766 the Hofmarkschloss zu Wiesing is still mentioned. The castle was largely demolished in the 19th century; the castle site is now overbuilt with new houses.

literature

  • Ingrid Schmitz-Pesch: Roding. The care offices Wetterfeld and Bruck (pp. 320–321). (= Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern issue 44). Commission for Bavarian History, Verlag Michael Laßleben , Munich 1986, ISBN 3-7696-9907-6 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Entry on Wiesing in the private database "Alle Burgen".