General cargo (Heuberg)

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General cargo is an abandoned district of the former municipality of Heuberg near Hilpoltstein in the Middle Franconian district of Roth in Bavaria .

location

The wasteland was about 800 meters west of Auholz and about one kilometer east of Heuberg at about 420 meters above sea level on the northern edge of a pond. From Hilpoltstein a road connection led west past general cargo to Göggelsbuch .

Geographical position: 49 ° 12 ′  N , 11 ° 12 ′  E Coordinates: 49 ° 12 ′  N , 11 ° 12 ′  E

Place name interpretation

The place name probably comes from "stöckat", which means "place near tree stumps (stoc)", ie in an earlier forest.

history

General cargo is not mentioned in the description of the goods in Nuremberg from 1544, when the Palatinate-Neuburgian office of Hilpoltstein was pledged to the imperial city , so it must have arisen later. The closest possible source, Christoph Vogel's descriptions of the Palatinate-Neuburgian care office Hilpoltstein from 1604, does not know the settlement either. In 1717, the wasteland was drawn in on the map of the Principality of Brandenburg-Ansbach by Johann Georg Vetter and referred to as "Stickhof". In 1766 the wasteland is named as the "stucco house". In 1789 the name "Stuck-Guth" appears.

In the Kingdom of Bavaria , general cargo belonged to the municipality of Heuberg around 1820, together with the church village of Heuberg, the village of Altenhofen , the deserted Aumühle , the Lochmühle , which was uninhabited at the time , the Grashof (later part of the municipality of Göggelsbuch), the Knabenmühle , the Kronmühle (later belonging to the municipality of Birkach ), the Lösmühle , the village Polsdorf (later part of the municipality of Birkach), the Seitzenmühle and the Stephansmühle .

The following can be said about the development of general cargo using partly official registers:

  • In 1818 there were three houses in "Stükguth" in which four families with a total of eleven people lived.
  • In 1832 three houses are again given, this time with twelve inhabitants.
  • In 1836 the register of the diocese of Eichstätt had 17 residents.
  • In 1867 only Heuberg itself, Auholz, Altenhofen, the Aumühle / lattice mill, the Lochmühle and the hamlet “Stöckgut”, which now consisted of four buildings and ten residents, belonged to the municipality of Heuberg.
  • In 1875 six cattle were kept in the hamlet of “Stöckgut”; Seven buildings with 17 inhabitants were counted.
  • Around 1900 there are talk of three residential buildings with nine inhabitants.
  • In 1938 it says: “General cargo at Hilpoltstein, departed”.
  • As well as the official names gazetteer Bavaria's no longer 1961 under the community Heuberg cargo.

When the municipality of Heuberg was incorporated into Hilpoltstein on January 1, 1972 as part of the regional reform in Bavaria , it consisted only of the districts of Heuberg, Altenhofen, Auholz, Aumühle and Lochmühle.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ General cargo in the Bavaria Atlas: first recording from 1808–1864 ; Aerial view
  2. Collection sheet of the Histor. Eichstätt Association 46/47 (1931/32), p. 70
  3. Carl Siegert: History of the rule, castle and town Hilpoltstein, their rulers and residents. In: Negotiations of the historical association of Upper Palatinate and Regensburg 20 (1861), p. 211 (under "Altenhofen")
  4. Günter Frank and Georg Paulus: Edition of Christoph Vogel's descriptions of the Palatinate-Neuburg nursing office (1598-1604), Part 18: Pflegeamt Hilpoltstein In: [1]
  5. Franz Xaver Buchner: Gapped places of the diocese of Eichstätt, in: Histor. Association Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz and the surrounding area, 15th annual report (1955 with 1957), p. 14
  6. ^ Wolfgang Wiessner: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Part Franken, Series I, Issue 24: Hilpoltstein, Munich 1978, p. 252
  7. Address and statistical handbook for the Rezatkreis in the Kingdom of Baiern , Ansbach 1820, p. 50f.
  8. Alphabetical index of all the localities contained in the Rezatkreise ... , Ansbach 1818, p. 90
  9. ^ Joseph Anton Eisenmann and Carl Friedrich Hohn: Topo-geographical-statistical lexicon from the Kingdom of Bavaria. 2nd volume. Erlangen: Joh. Jac. Palm and Ernst Enke 1832, p. 791
  10. Th. D. Popp: Register of the Bissthumes Eichstätt . Eichstätt: Ph. Brönner 1836, p. 82 (No. 73)
  11. J. Heyberger and others: Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria together with an alphabetical local dictionary. Munich 1867, column 713
  12. Kgl. Statistical Bureau in Munich (edit.): Complete list of localities of the Kingdom of Bavaria , Munich 1876, column 888
  13. ^ Locations directory of the Kingdom of Bavaria with an alphabetical register of locations , Munich 1904, column 1218
  14. ^ Franz Xaver Buchner: The Diocese of Eichstätt, Volume II: Eichstätt 1938, p. 890
  15. ^ Official register of places for Bavaria. Territorial status on October 1, 1964 with statistical information from the 1961 census , Munich 1964, column 795
  16. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 483 .