Sinzinger (noble family)

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The Sinzingers were a Bavarian noble family who were in the service of the Burgraves of Regensburg and whose task it was to control the traffic and especially the freight traffic that originated from Sinzing between Naab , Schwarzer Laaber and Danube. A burial place or corresponding tombstones of the Lords of Sinzing are not known.

The name of Sinzing is derived from the personal name Sinzo and, as a real ing name, refers to the time of the Bavarian conquest (6th century).

History of the Lords of Synzendorf

Already at the beginning of the 10th century, Uodalfrid , Bishop of Eichstätt (912-933), confirmed a family estate and a ship duty to Sinzing in his will. A Hartwig de Syntzing 1040 with his two sons Engl Mayr and Hademar called. In 1060 a Gotschalk von Syntzingen appears who is married to a Gunigunde and has sons Grimold and Ruprecht . In 1080 his first-born Grimold became his successor, in 1128 his son Gotfried I took over the inheritance, in 1159 his son Gotfried II followed , who was married to Bertha von Werd . The couple has four sons (Gotfried, Ulrich, Engelprecht and Konrad) and two daughters (Adelhait and Leutgart). The first-born takes over as Gotfrid III. The succession. He is followed by his son Grimold III. , mentioned in 1237 with his wife Judith von Arbenhofen . In 1260 her son Gotfried IV took over the inheritance. The last of the Synzendorfer is again his son Wernher (mentioned 1290); with him the Synzendorfer family died out.

Further mentions of the nobles of Sinzingen

A county of Henry of Sintzingen is on July 22, 1080 in Nuremberg at the awarding of a wild ban on the Eichstätter Church under Bishop Udalrich I called. Presumably this was a branch of the Burgraves of Regensburg who named themselves after Sinzing.

Mentions of members of the lower nobility who named themselves after Sinzing appear several times as witnesses in documents. In the traditions of the convent , the following are mentioned: 1145 Isenreich de Sinzingen with his sons Buchardus and Bertold . Buchardus was married to an Elise and a son named Berthold is a canon of the Regensburg Church. Further mentions refer to Eberhard de Svnzingen (1130 and 1140), Sazo de Sinzingen (1140), Albero de Sinzingen (1160 and 1170), Trutmann de Sinzingen (1170 and 1180), Wernher de Sinzing and his brother Frater Girmold (1170 and 1170) 1180), Chunrad de Sinzingen (1200), Wernher , son of Sazos von Sinzingen (1170 and 1200). The following are mentioned in the traditions of the Regensburg Monastery and the St. Emmeram Monastery : Buchardus de Sinzingen (1159/1160), Adalberto de Sincingare (1160, 1170), Wernherus de Sioncigin (1171, 1184), Cunrad's son Rudolfi Sinzingin (1201, 1210 ). In the documents of the Weltenburg monastery , Engilmar de Sinzing is mentioned as a witness before 1089 and in the oldest land fragments of the Rohr monastery a Cunradus , his brother Berenherus and their uncle Werenherus de Sintzungen appear in 1171 and 1178 .

The Ministeriale Burchardus de Sinzingen receives the estate in Sinzing given up by the burgrave Heinrich von Regensburg in exchange for an estate in Horwen and a vineyard for vintners . The Sinzinger Gut comprised a church (probably the St. Gilgenkirche, Fährweg 20), several buildings (the seat of Sinzing is said to have been the former brewery, Donaustraße 13), bodies of water and fisheries, meadows, pastures and vineyards. A Predium (estate) in Sinzing came to the monastery in 1161 through Adelbero de Sinzingen . Further donations to this monastery were made in 1145 by Purchard de Sinzingen .

literature

  • Rudolf Ottlinger: Sinzing from the beginning to the present. Municipality of Sinzing 2005, pp. 32–35.