Schnepfenhof

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Schnepfenhof
Market raft
Coordinates: 49 ° 43 ′ 6 ″  N , 12 ° 14 ′ 35 ″  E
Height : 493 m above sea level NN
Postal code : 92685
Area code : 09603

Schnepfenhof is part of the Floß market in the Upper Palatinate district in the Neustadt an der Waldnaab district .

Geographical location

Schnepfenhof is located about three kilometers southwest of Floß on the western slope of the 530 meter high Buchholz northeast of the Dost nature reserve .

history

13th to 16th centuries

In Duke Urbar 1285 and Duke Urbar of 1301 was Schnepfenhof: mentioned (also Snephenriut, Snepffenreut, Schnepf Hoff) writing. In 1326 Schnepfenhof was listed in the Herzogsurbar as belonging to Störnstein . In the Salbuch of 1366/68 it was referred to as the castle estate of Störnstein and the reign of Pleystein as the owner of a farm in Schnepfenhof with interest of 3 pounds Heller. In 1516 a farmer on the Schnepfenhof was named in the tax register.

Schnepfenhof was mentioned in a list of the teams around 1559. The following localities belonging to Floß were listed in this directory: Bergnetsreuth, Boxdorf, Diebersreuth, Diepoltsreuth, Ellenbach, Fehrsdorf, Gailertsreuth, Gösen, Grafenreuth, Hardt, Haupertsreuth, Höfen, Konradsreuth, Meierhof, Niedernfloß, Oberndorf, Pauschendorf, Plankenreuth, Ritzlersreuth Schnepfenhof, Schönberg, Steinfrankenreuth, Weikersmühle, Welsenhof, Wilkershof, Würnreuth, Würzelbrunn. A team was recorded for Schnepfenhof: Hanns Mayer.

17th century

During the Thirty Years' War in 1620 and 1621 the Mansfeld soldiers marched through Schnepfenhof. They robbed the farmers of 2 oxen, 2 cows, 2 calves, 1 pig, 8 geese, 12 hens, 3 measures of lard, 3 pounds of hemp, 2 hoes, 1 iron rod, 3 pans. The stove was smashed in, 3 chests broken and the locks taken away, 3 windows smashed, 3 ponds dug up and fished. A damage report for Schnepfenhof from 1621 showed damage totaling 85 guilders and 49 cruisers.

In 1650 the hereditary homage to Count Palatinate of Palatinate-Sulzbach Christian August took place in the courtyard of the Friedrichsburg in Vohenstrauss . Schnepfenhof appears on the tribute list with a farm owner: Sebastian Schaller.

In 1652 Schnepfenhof was described with a half courtyard. Its residents at that time were a married couple with one child. The cattle consisted of 2 oxen, 2 cows, 3 young cattle and 2 pigs.

18th century to the present

A description of the Princely Nursing Office Floßerbürg from 1704 recorded 1 team, 1 half yard for Schnepfenhof.

In a historical-statistical description of the Floß care office from 1794, 1 farmer, 1 day laborer, a total of 12 residents were listed for Schnepfenhof.

Around 1800 Schnepfenhof had a house and 7 residents.

Schnepfenhof belonged to the tax district of Diepoltsreuth, which was founded at the beginning of the 19th century and was also a rural community . In addition to Diepoltsreuth, the tax district Diepoltsreuth also included the hamlet of Ritzlersreuth and the wastes Schnepfenhof and Schönberg. The Diepoltsreuth tax district had a total of 190 residents and 19 residential buildings.

The village of Schnepfenhof had 7 inhabitants and 1 residential building in 1817, 7 inhabitants in 1861 and 9 inhabitants and 1 residential building in 1961. In 1946 Diepoltsreuth and with it Schnepfenhof were incorporated into Gailertsreuth.

The immediate rural community of Gailertsreuth initially consisted of the hamlets of Gailertsreuth, Niedernfloß and Oberndorf, the deserted Gollwitzerhof, Meierhof and Würnreuth. From 1946 the community of Diepoltsreuth was added with the hamlets of Diepoltsreuth and Ritzlersreuth and the wastelands Schnepfenhof and Schönberg.

On January 1, 1972, the community of Gailertsreuth and with it Schnepfenhof was incorporated into the Floß market.

Individual evidence

  1. Fritsch hiking map of the Northern Upper Palatinate Forest Nature Park, scale 1: 50,000
  2. Historical Atlas of Bavaria, Altbayern, Issue 47, Heribert Sturm: Neustadt an der Waldnaab Weiden , Commission for Bavarian State History, Verlag Michael Lassleben, Kallmünz, 1978, ISBN 3769699122 , pp. 353, 354
  3. ^ Adolf Wolfgang Schuster : 1000 Years of Floss , 1976, Verlag Marktgemeinde Floss, pp. 104-107
  4. ^ Adolf Wolfgang Schuster : 1000 Years of Floss , 1976, Verlag Marktgemeinde Floss, pp. 105, 106
  5. ^ Adolf Wolfgang Schuster : 1000 Years of Floss , 1976, Verlag Marktgemeinde Floss, pp. 168–195
  6. ^ Adolf Wolfgang Schuster : 1000 Years of Floss , 1976, Verlag Marktgemeinde Floss, pp. 220, 221
  7. Historical Atlas of Bavaria, Altbayern, Issue 47, Heribert Sturm: Neustadt an der Waldnaab Weiden , Commission for Bavarian State History, Verlag Michael Lassleben, Kallmünz, 1978, ISBN 3769699122 , pp. 353, 354
  8. ^ Adolf Wolfgang Schuster : 1000 Years of Floss , 1976, Verlag Marktgemeinde Floss, pp. 247, 248
  9. ^ Adolf Wolfgang Schuster : 1000 Years of Floss , 1976, Verlag Marktgemeinde Floss, p. 276
  10. Historical Atlas of Bavaria, Altbayern, Issue 47, Heribert Sturm: Neustadt an der Waldnaab Weiden , Commission for Bavarian State History, Verlag Michael Lassleben, Kallmünz, 1978, ISBN 3769699122 , pp. 353, 354
  11. Historical Atlas of Bavaria, Altbayern, Issue 47, Heribert Sturm: Neustadt an der Waldnaab Weiden , Commission for Bavarian State History, Michael Lassleben Publishing House, Kallmünz, 1978, ISBN 3769699122 , p. 415
  12. Historical Atlas of Bavaria, Altbayern, Issue 47, Heribert Sturm: Neustadt an der Waldnaab Weiden , Commission for Bavarian State History, Verlag Michael Lassleben, Kallmünz, 1978, ISBN 3769699122 , pp. 428, 433
  13. Historical Atlas of Bavaria, Altbayern, Issue 47, Heribert Sturm: Neustadt an der Waldnaab Weiden , Commission for Bavarian State History, Verlag Michael Lassleben, Kallmünz, 1978, ISBN 3769699122 , pp. 428, 433
  14. ^ Adolf Wolfgang Schuster : 1000 Years of Floss , 1976, Verlag Marktgemeinde Floss, p. 423