Schweinersdorf

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Schweinersdorf
Wang Parish
Coordinates: 48 ° 30 ′ 29 ″  N , 11 ° 52 ′ 8 ″  E
Height : 490 m
Residents : 46
Incorporation : April 1, 1971
Incorporated into: Inzkofen
Postal code : 85368
Area code : 08764
Schweinersdorf (Bavaria)
Schweinersdorf

Location of Schweinersdorf in Bavaria

Schweinersdorf is a village in the municipality of Wang in Upper Bavaria .

Description and location

The place is a street village , all houses or farms are arranged along the village street. The farm names still exist today as they did a few hundred years ago: Moar, Wirt, Huber, Lehner, Mesner, Schuster, plus the former schoolhouse and the Moarhäusl. Two new buildings were added in the 1970s, each at the beginning of the village.

Schweinersdorf is on the edge of the Hallertau, 6 kilometers northwest of the core town of Wang. The Isar flows southeast at a distance of 6 kilometers; the A 92 motorway runs south-east, 10 kilometers away.

Naming

The original name Suanahiltatorf goes back to a female being called Suanahild, meaning Schwanhilde. This change in the village name came about either through the use of language or corruption .

Parish Church of St. Peter

history

Schweinersdorf was first mentioned in a document in 908. A barter transaction is confirmed in this document: The clergyman Chuono left the Moosburg "Abbaiola" (small abbey) St. Castulus to the Freising Bishop Dracholf and received two fiefdoms through Count Voigt Sigihard: one in Humbula, today's Hummel, and one in Suanahiltatorf, today's Schweinersdorf. Suanahiltatorf was described as a "small, almost desolate fiefdom".

The certificate was confirmed by Arnulf von Bayern. For reasons unknown today, the barter was viewed as "unworthy" and doubts arose as to its credibility. Therefore Chuono asked Duke Arnulf for an additional confirmation of the agreement with Dracholf. Another undated document with the Duke's seal was created so that the transfer of ownership would be "better believed in future times". The document from the year 908 shows that Suanahiltatorf already existed as a property. The Moosburg historical researcher Weh suspects that there was a prehistoric signal station here, from which enemy approaches and other important messages from other signal stations were received and passed on with signal boards or flags.

The church historian Fastlinger suspects that instead of the parish church of St. Petrus (Petruskirchen are often very old churches) there was a Germanic, i.e. non-Christian place of worship for the Germanic god Donar. This is possible because there were Celto-Roman crooks and field names in the area. 1902 reported the Moosburger Kaplan Braun of the establishment of a "baptism site in walls, with two Seelsorgkirchen to Peter Wahl and welding former village" around the year 850th

In the 11th and 12th centuries Schweinersdorf was administered by royal ministerials. Mathuni von Haindlfing, Schweinersdorf and Haslach, Fritilo von Haindlfing and Schweinersdorf, Konrad von Haindlfing and Schweinersdorf and Forchtlieb von Schweinersdorf (1159 to 1180) are mentioned in a document.

The village developed after the original form of old Bavarian settlement. After the church with the Mesnerhäusl, the most important property was the Moarhof. Most of the time, as in Schweinersdorf too, it was only separated by the rectory next to the church. This was followed by the Huberhof and the Lehnerhof. There was also a mercenary house and later the Lehrhäusl. This tradition of house names is still preserved in Schweinersdorf today, the farmers are still the Moar, the Huber and the Lehner.

Like neighboring Inzkofen and Hagsdorf, Schweinersdorf became an independent political municipality in the course of the administrative reforms in Bavaria in 1818. Land registers were created in the last third of the 19th century. The field names of the first Schweinersdorf land register show that the place was much larger than it is today. Some of these field names: Scheckenhofener Arbitracker, Mönchsberg, Hanslmühle and Pfettrachmühle in the Niederndorf hall, Zigelfeldacker, Wanger Gemeindeholzweg, Mauerner Bach in the Alpersdorf hall, Hörgertshausener Bachl in the Hartshausen hall.

On March 1, 1935, the previously independent community of Hagsdorf was incorporated into Schweinersdorf. On April 1, 1971, the municipality of Schweinersdorf with its 21 districts (Aselmühle, Alpersdorf, Beslmühle, Freundsbach, Gandorf, Hagsdorf, Hanslmühle, Hörgersdorf, Kleidorf, Kronwinkl, Mönchsberg, Niederndorf, Pfettrach, Riedlmühle, Scheckenhofen, Schlag, Schlagsimmer, Schwarzberg, Thal, Wölflmühle, Ziegelberg) was dissolved and divided between the communities of Inzkofen (Schweinersdorf, Hagsdorf and Schlag), Mauern and Wang.

Since May 1, 1978 the former municipality of Inzkofen and thus also Schweinersdorf belongs to the municipality of Wang.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Wilhelm Volkert (Ed.): Handbook of the Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 464 .
  2. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer GmbH, Stuttgart and Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 575 .

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