Siglohe (Rennertshofen)

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Siglohe
Coordinates: 48 ° 46 ′ 1 ″  N , 11 ° 4 ′ 41 ″  E
Height : 501 m
Residents : 42  (1964)
Postal code : 86643
Area code : 08434
Siglohe manor
Lady Chapel

Siglohe is a hamlet in the district of Neuburg-Schrobenhausen in the administrative district of Upper Bavaria that belongs to the district walls of the Rennertshofen market . The church village Treidelheim also belongs to the district of Mauern.

location

Siglohe is north-northeast of the main town Rennertshofen and at the beginning of the Wellheimer dry valley on the eastern plateau of the southern Franconian Alb . The hamlet can be reached via a road that branches off from the state road St 2047 at the brickworks in Mauern or via the Sigloher Weg from Treidelheim . From Siglohe, a branching farm road leads east into a larger forest area with the 554 meter high Hainberg.

history

The hamlet "Siglloe" is described in a Pfalz-Neuburg border description from 1571 as belonging to the county of Lechsgemünd-Graisbach . A nobleman named Golder from Sachseln in Switzerland owned the farmstead here, which was divided into three parts under his heirs and eventually developed into a village. This remained in the Old Kingdom at the Graisbach Regional Court, later Graisbach- Monheim .

After secularization , "Sigloe" belonged to the Rennertshofen tax district in the Monheim district court as a result of the district division of 1817 ; Rennertshofen was spun off and assigned to the Neuburg an der Donau district office only in 1880.

On January 1, 1859, Count Aloys von Arco-Stepperg bought Siglohe with his 12 farms, in which 72 people lived, for his Hofmark Stepperg . He founded a large economic estate here. The previous residents left Siglohe, their houses were demolished. Only three buildings remained for employees. From 1948 to 1961, Georg Graf Henckel von Donnersmarck owned the estate , a member of the German Bundestag in the 1950s and 1960s . In 1961, 42 people lived in Siglohe in five residential buildings. In the same year, the current owners, the Geißler family, acquired the estate.

In 1867 the estate comprised 24 buildings; 13 residents lived here. In 1879/80 the community of Mauern, to which the hamlet Siglohe also belonged, came to the district office and district court of Neuburg an der Donau, which later became the Swabian district of Neuburg. In this district, Mauern and its districts remained an independent municipality until June 30, 1972. This district came to Upper Bavaria as part of the regional reform in Bavaria and was given the name Neuburg-Schrobenhausen district on May 1, 1973 . On May 1, 1978, walls with Siglohe and Treidelheim were incorporated into the Rennertshofen market; Since then, Siglohe has been one of 28 officially named districts of Rennertshofen.

chapel

The former village of Siglohe already had a chapel around 1600 dedicated to St. Sebastian was consecrated and probably passed away in the 17th century. Today's chapel was built in 1758 on the western edge of the estate and was dedicated to St. Consecrated to Joseph . Count Arco restored it as a Lady Chapel in 1860/61. It belongs to the parish of Mauern in the diocese of Augsburg .

To the east of the farm there is a forest chapel from the 2nd half of the 18th century.

literature

  • Doris Pfister: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Donauwörth. The former county. Munich 2008.
  • Markus Nadler: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Neuburg on the Danube. The district court of Neuburg and the nursing courts of Burgheim and Reichertshofen . Munich 2004.
  • Ludwig Wagner: Gut Siglohe - from village to farm . In: The same: Foray through Neuburg and the district . Berlin 2008, pp. 246-250.

Web links

Commons : Siglohe  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Nadler, p. 415
  2. On the life of the landlord . In: Donaukurier from February 14, 2011
  3. Pfister, 341; Nadler, p. 407
  4. Nadler, p. 242; Wagner, p. 246
  5. Bavarian State Statistical Office (ed.): Official city directory for Bavaria, territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census . Issue 260 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich 1964, DNB  453660959 , Section II, Sp. 1002 ( digitized version ).
  6. ^ Joseph Heyberger, Chr. Schmitt, v. Wachter: Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical local dictionary . In: K. Bayer. Statistical Bureau (Ed.): Bavaria. Regional and folklore of the Kingdom of Bavaria . tape 5 . Literary and artistic establishment of the JG Cotta'schen Buchhandlung, Munich 1867, Sp. 1282 , urn : nbn: de: bvb: 12-bsb10374496-4 ( digitized version ).
  7. Pfister, p. 370; Nadler, p. 410
  8. ^ Adam Horn and Werner Meyer: The art monuments of Swabia. V. City and district of Neuburg an der Donau . Munich 1958, p. 693
  9. Wagner, pp. 247-249
  10. Monuments in Bavaria. Volume I.2. Upper Bavaria . Munich 1986, p. 488