Seitzermühle

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Seitzermühle
Community Sengenthal
Coordinates: 49 ° 14 ′ 17 ″  N , 11 ° 27 ′ 28 ″  E
Height : 420 m above sea level NHN
Residents : (2012)
Postal code : 92369
Area code : 09181

Seitzermühle is a district of the municipality of Sengenthal in the Neumarkt district in Upper Palatinate in Bavaria .

location

The wasteland lies west of the Albstufe of the Upper Palatinate Jura, east of the Wiefelsbach flowing into the Sulz , which drove the mill wheel for one of the grinding stages (as in 1836).

history

According to a directory from 1616, the "Seitzmühle", certainly named after an owner named Seitz, was liable to pay a tenth of the parish of Berngau with its Reichertshofen branch . The Berngau tithe description from 1670 describes the mill as "deserted", probably as a result of the Thirty Years' War . In 1675 Georg Kemnather sold the mill to Konrad Sendlwecker; whether it was already rebuilt at this point remains to be seen.

At the end of the Old Kingdom , in 1800, the Seitz mill belonged to the Upper Hofmark Berngau and was under high court the Duke of baierischen office of mayor Neumarkt . At that time the miller family Birkammer was sitting on the mill.

In the new Kingdom of Bavaria (1806), the tax district of Forst was formed between 1810 and 1820 , then the rural community of the same name , which consisted of Forst itself, Braunshof , Rocksdorf and Stadlhof . Before 1867, the Wiefelsbach community of the Reichertshofen tax district was integrated into this community with its ten wastelands, namely the Seitzenmühle, the Birkenmühle , the Braunmühle , the Dietlhof , the Gollermühle , the Kastenmühle , the Kindlmühle, which was demolished around 1883, and the oil cake mill , which is also not today more existing Schmidmühle and the Schlierfermühle .

The District Court (1862 district office, 1879 County) assigned Neumarkt, included the community forest just before the municipal reform in Bavaria , the twelve vilage forest, birch mill, Brown mill Braunshof, Dietlhof, Gollermühle, Greißelbach , Canal Lock 31 (1960 uninhabited) Canal Lock 32 (Uninhabited in 1987), Kastenmühle, Schlierferhaide / Schlierfermühle and Stadlhof, while Seitzermühle had already become part of the municipality of Sengenthal before 1867. According to the census of December 1, 1875, the mill consisted of one building at that time; it had seven inhabitants and five head of cattle. In 1905 the then owner Engelhard sold the mill to the Königsdörfer family.

At the mill, the Seitzermühlmoos expanded to the west, which dried up due to the construction of the Ludwig-Danube-Main Canal .

In 2007, the municipality offered the Seitzermühle farm for sale, consisting of a residential building with attached stables and a large barn, with outbuildings (garage with workshop, pig and chicken shed, tractor garage with 2 wooden gates, machine hall with 3 sliding gates). Approximately 4500 m 2 of land were allocated to the yard .

In 2010/11, two single-family houses with half-timbered upper floors were built on the mill area.

Population numbers

  • 1830: 4 (1 house)
  • 1836: 7 (1 house)
  • 1867: 7 (2 buildings)
  • 1875: 7 (1 building)
  • 1900: 6 (1 residential building)
  • 1937: 5 (Protestants; belonging to the Protestant parish Neumarkt)
  • 1961: 3 (1 residential building)
  • 1987: 3 (1 residential building, 1 apartment)
  • 2012: 4

traffic

The mill can be reached via a spur road that branches off north of Sengenthal from the NM 18 district road in a north-westerly direction. Immediately to the east of the mill, the former Sulztalbahn passes, today a siding for the freight traffic of the Max Bögl concrete block works , after the last passenger train ran between Neumarkt and Beilngries in 1987 .

literature

  • Kurt Romstöck (text) and Alfons Dürr (drawings): Die Mühlen im Landkreis Neumarkt id Opf. , Neumarkt id Opf. 2004, p. 162
  • Franz Xaver Buchner : The diocese of Eichstätt. Volume I and II, Eichstätt: Brönner & Däntler, 1937 and 1938.
  • Bernhard Heinloth: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Part Altbayern, Issue 16: Neumarkt , Munich: Commission for Bavarian State History, 1967

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Repertory of the topographical atlas sheet. Ansbach. 1833, pp. 29, 53
  2. Buchner I, pp. 100, 102
  3. a b c Romstöck / Dürr, p. 162
  4. Heinloth, p. 280
  5. Heinloth, p. 322 f. (wrong there "Wieselsbach")
  6. ^ Official register of places for Bavaria. Territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census , Munich 1964, column 548 f.
  7. Kgl. Statistical Bureau in Munich (edit.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria ... based on the results of the census of December 1st. 1875 , Munich 1876, column 885
  8. Bulletin of the community of Sengenthal , 17th vol., No. 7 from July 2007, p. 4
  9. fachwerk.de
  10. ^ Karl Friedrich Hohn: The rain district of the Kingdom of Bavaria, described geographically and statistically , Stuttgart and Tübingen: Cotta, 1830, p. 142
  11. Popp, Th. D. (ed.): Matrikel des Bissthumes Eichstätt , Eichstätt: Ph. Brönner, 1836, p. 41
  12. ^ Joseph Heyberger: Topographical-statistical handbook of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical local dictionary , Munich 1867, column 710
  13. Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria ... based on the results of the census of December 1st. 1875 , column 885
  14. ^ Localities directory of the Kingdom of Bavaria ... [based on the results of the census of December 1, 1900] , column 869
  15. Buchner II, p. 453
  16. ^ Official register of places for Bavaria. Territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census , Munich 1964, column 553
  17. Official directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 25, 1987 , Munich 1991, p. 260
  18. Müller's Großes Deutsches Ortsbuch 2012 , Berlin / Boston 2012, p. 1278