Headquarters Eitting

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The lost seat of Eitting was in the eponymous district of the Dietersburg municipality in the Rottal-Inn district of Bavaria in Lower Bavaria .

history

A Sigmund Hernitzer is proven to be the owner of Eitting from 1494 to 1505. 1510 Achaz Albertsheimer is mentioned here. Eitting remained in the possession of this family until 1542; to be mentioned are: Wolf Albertsheimer (1514), Wolfgang Albertsheimer (1522–1527), Achaz Albertsheimer (1533) and Hans Albertsheimer (1542). How the seat became the property of the Offenheim family is not known; However, these are located here from 1549 and in Burg Guteneck , Dummeldorf and Obergrasensee , named are Caspar Offenheimer (1549), Eustachius Offenheimer (1560, 1597), Georg Offenheimer (1609), the widow of Georg (1616) and Georg Offenheimer's heirs ( 1638).

From 1640 the von Siegershofen family were owned by Eitting, although nothing is known about the way of transition. Maximilian of Siegersdorf, electoral spurs and captain in Munich , is admonished this year because he had not sent a report to the district court. Further changes to the court marrow are known from a report by the nurse dated December 20, 1672 . The Landgütl Eitting is the time of Johann Adolph fighting to Hilgertshausen at Dominicus Khray, chamberlain to Eggenfelden passed. In 1680 (until at least 1696) Eitting and the lower jurisdiction were in the hands of Maria Franziska Baroness von Lerchenfeld . Then information about Eitting is only available again around 1780.

In 1780 Count Johann Nepomuk Goder, Count von Kriestorf, is named as the owner of the court brands Eitting, Postmünster, Brombach , Afterhausen and Hofstetten. After his death († March 1, 1789) Eitting came to his widow Maria Anna Violanda Reichsfreifrau von Dachsberg , born Countess von Goder. After their death († August 9, 1792) their inheritance was divided between their two daughters: Maria Anna Freifrau von Herold and Maria Josepha Reichsgräfin von Lamberg received communiter Brombach, Postmünster and Afterhausen, the seat Eitting was sold to Walburga Reichsgräfin von Lamberg; in 1802 the seat was still in their hands. In 1820 Eitting passed to the Baroness von Venningen, who already owned Postmünster, Thurnstein , Brombach and Hofstetten. Eitting existed as a second class patrimonial court until 1848.

In 1597 Eitting said that it was just a small Hofmärchl without a manor house or seat ; Eitting was viewed as a single-layer property as a pertinence to Schloss and Hofmark Guteneck and Dummeldorf.

The Albert Heimer have one for Eitting Holy Blood relic purchased and for this the Chapel branch and Sanctuary Hl. Blut built. A report from 1558 speaks of the sanctuary “zum Heyligen Pluet zu Eitting” and the register from 1643 speaks of “capella ad Sanguinem Christi”. In place of the older building, the current Holy Blood Chapel was built in 1729 by Adam Schreypaur from Pfarrkirchen , which is still there today. The single-nave, three-bay room has a barrel vault on fluted pillars. Here is a baroque four-column altar from the 2nd half of the 17th century with the late Gothic figure of Christ as Man of Sorrows from around 1520, whose blood rays are caught by four angels in goblets. Above is a depiction of the coronation of Mary. Eight votive tablets have also survived.

literature

  • Ilse Louis: Parish churches. The nursing courts Reichenberg and Julbach and the rule Ering-Frauenstein. (= Historical Atlas of Bavaria, part of Old Bavaria, volume 31) (pp. 239–241). Verlag Michael Laßleben, Munich 1973, ISBN 3 7696 9878 9 .

Web links

Coordinates: 48 ° 30 ′ 19.8 "  N , 12 ° 54 ′ 29.4"  E