Wischenhofen Castle

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Wischenhofen Castle with castle chapel

The Schloss Hofen Wipe lies in the district Wipe Hofen of Duggendorf in Upper Palatinate district of Regensburg by Bavaria (high-Straße 13).

history

Wischenhofen is first mentioned in 1170. At that time a Konrad von Lupburg appears in the annals , who hands over an estate near Wischenhofen to the Weihenstephan monastery .

The owners of the Hofmark are known from 1504: The Graßenhütter settled here from 1504 to 1540 , named Lienhart Graßenhütter , citizen of Kallmünz (1504), Hans Graßenhütter and Leonhard Euchar Graßenhütter (1540). In 1541 the Hofmark came into the possession of Christoph von Prand , from whom Jakob Kastner , a citizen of Regensburg , bought the Hofmark in 1549. His heirs followed in 1552. In 1559 Jörg Hirschaider , Leonhard Kastner , Caspar Mayr and Martin Walder , mint masters of Regensburg, are registered. In 1565 Hans Christoph Prand bought Wischenhofen from Caspar Mayr. 1568 followed Lukas Prehm from Regensburg and his wife Agnes.

Then from 1573 the turning tools from Teufstetten followed . The first is Walther Drechsel , Chancellor of Neuburg, then his son Philipp Walther Drechsel (1596, † 1621) and then his wife Anna Katharina Welser von Stepperg , for their three sons Hans Wolf , Walter and Dietrich (guardian was Philipp Ludwig Erlbeck von Etterzhausen ). Dietrich Walther Drechsel is mentioned here in 1655 , followed by Wolf Heinrich Drechsel (1673, nephew of Dietrich Walther). Then follows Wolf Michael Drechsel (1700, Bavarian captain) and on him Wolf Baltahsar Drechsel (1713, lieutenant colonel) and his widow Johanna de Gustin se fuc (1721). In 1738 the property in Kaufweg came to Joseph (P) Bachner von Eggenstorff , a Mannheim government councilor. His daughter married a Count Closen von Arnstorf . In 1782 her daughter Agnes Countess Closen von Arnstorff and her guardian Josef Freiherr von Oberndorf zu Regldorf owned the property. The ownership of the Closens passed to the Carl Josef Freiherrn von Oexle auf Freudenberg by marriage . Agnes was divorced and then married the Count von Königsfeld . In 1809 Wischenhofen came to Baron Johann Christoph von Aretin . He played a major role in the secularization of Bavaria and in the process also acquired the Münchshofen and Rinnenthal castles .

In 1831 the castle came into non-noble hands and the property was shared by three families. It was not until 2001 that Robert and Maria Solleder were able to acquire the other parts, and so the castle came back into one hand.

Construction

The castle and the associated castle church were destroyed in the Thirty Years War and rebuilt towards the end of the 17th century.

The castle is a two-storey building that dates from the 17th century and has a mansard roof from the 18th century. Laterally attached pilaster strips give the building a frame, and the windows are also provided with pilaster strips and wall panels above. There are cross vaults in the basement .

From 2001 the castle was renovated; For the renovation, the owner couple Robert and Maria Solleder was honored with the second place of the monument protection award 2009 of the district of Regensburg .

literature

  • Carl August Boehaimb: The owners of 51 former Palatinate-Neuburg court brands in the royal government district of Upper Palatinate and Regensburg. Negotiations of the historical association for Upper Palatinate and Regensburg, 18, 1858.
  • Georg Hager: The art monuments of the Kingdom of Bavaria. Volume 2. Administrative regions of Upper Palatinate and Regensburg. Issue 5: District Office Burglengenfeld. 1906. Reprint ISBN 3-486-50435-5 .
  • Catholic parish Duggendorf (ed.): The churches of the parishes of Duggendorf. Peter Morsbach Verlag, Regensburg 2007. ISBN 978-3-937527-116 .
  • Manfred Jehle: Parsberg. Nursing offices Hemau, Laaber, Beratzhausen (Ehrenfels), Lupburg, Velburg, Mannritterlehengut Lutzmannstein, offices Hohenfels, Helfenberg, imperial lords Breitenegg, Parsberg, office Hohenburg. (= Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Altbayern issue 51). Commission for Bavarian History, Verlag Michael Laßleben , Munich 1981. ISBN 3-7696-9916-5 .

Individual evidence

  1. Mittelbayerische Zeitung: Monument Protection Prize 2009

Web links

Commons : Hofmarksschloss Wischenhofen  - Collection of pictures
  • Entry on Wischenhofen in the private database "Alle Burgen".

Coordinates: 49 ° 7 ′ 5.1 ″  N , 11 ° 54 ′ 47.3 ″  E