Seebach (Deggendorf)

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Seebach
City of Deggendorf
Coordinates: 48 ° 47 ′ 50 ″  N , 13 ° 0 ′ 32 ″  E
Height : 315 m
Residents : 681  (1987)
Incorporation : April 1, 1976
Postal code : 94469
Area code : 09901

Seebach is a district of the Lower Bavarian town of Deggendorf in the Deggendorf district .

location

The place is six kilometers southeast of Deggendorf not far from the Danube north of the A3 motorway on the road from Deggendorf to Hengersberg . The village at the foot of the Streubugel is traversed by the Seebacher Bach, which shortly afterwards flows into the Danube.

In the Seebach district there are still the following places (all belonging to the former municipality): Bucha, Burgstall, Eichberg, Graben, Grillenberg, Grimming, Halbmeile, Helming, Hintertausch, Hochreut, Kleineichberg, Konseehof, Krösbach, Ledersberg, Oberdorf, Pumpenberg, Scheidham and front exchange.

history

Property of the Passau bishops

Probably as early as the 8th century AD Duke Odilo gave the area to the Bishop of Passau . At that time the Danube flowed past much more closely; only when it turned its way further south and an oxbow lake formed here , the village received the name Seebach, corresponding to the stream flowing into the lake.

This name appears for the first time in 1073, when Bishop Altmann donated, among other things, three vineyards and a fish pond near Seebach to the Augustinian canons of St. Nikola , which he founded . In the 13th century, the Passau bishopric had 19 estates here with a Maierhof . Seebach then formed a court marque with a chamberlain and a provost .

In 1228 Bishop Gebhard gave the Seebach Hofmark to Count Albert von Bogen as a fief. After his death it fell to the Wittelsbach family , who returned it to the bishopric in 1262. The bishop sold the Hofmark to the Knights of Marsbach , who sold it to the Niederaltaich monastery in 1308 .

Hofmark of Niederaltaich Monastery

The parish church of St. Stephan in Seebach

The church, which has existed since the middle of the 13th century, was elevated to a parish church in the middle of the 14th century. In 1598 the name Seebach is mentioned in a border description, in which the Seebach denotes the border between the regional courts of Deggendorf and Hengersberg and between the dioceses of Regensburg and Passau .

The rectory burned down on February 24, 1645, and all parish offices were lost. From 1735 to 1737, Benedikt Schöttl and Andreas Weiß built today's parish church of St. Stephanus on the basis of the existing structure, which was completed in 1776. It has a baroque interior. The parish of Seebach also includes the pilgrimage church of Mater dolorosa in half mile, built by Andreas Weiß from 1779 to 1782.

Seebach community

Until the secularization in Bavaria in 1803 the Hofmark Seebach belonged to the Niederaltaich monastery, but without feudal nexus and jurisdiction . In the 19th century, hemp and millet cultivation and fruit tree growing flourished in the Seebach area.

In 1913 Seebach received a railway connection with the opening of the Deggendorf – Kalteneck railway line. Since 1981, only goods traffic has taken place on the remaining route.

On April 1, 1976, the Seebach community was dissolved as part of the municipal reform. Its smaller part (the districts of Boxbach, Hinterweinberg, Lichtenöd, Oberfrohnstetten, Obersimbach, Unterfrohnstetten, Vorderweinberg and Wessenhof) came to the Hengersberg market , the larger part was incorporated into Deggendorf.

economy

In 1964 the Deggendorf textile factory (today TWD Fibers ) settled in Seebach , but handicrafts and agriculture remained the main sources of income. The TWD Fibers have been owned by the holding company 4K Invest since 2015.

societies

  • TC Seebach (tennis, year of foundation: 1967, members: 140 (as of 2016))
  • TSV Seebach (divisions: football and skiing, year of foundation: 1965, members: 450 (as of 2017, club colors: red-black))

1st men's team: regional league

literature

  • Joseph Klämpfl: The former Schweinach and Quinzingau. A historical-topographical description , 1855, reprint 1993, Neue Presse Verlags-GmbH, Passau, ISBN 3-924484-73-2

Individual evidence

  1. ^ 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. 605 .