Stadelhofen (Titting)

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Stadelhofen
Market Titting
Coordinates: 49 ° 2 ′ 3 ″  N , 11 ° 11 ′ 20 ″  E
Height : 549  (547-551)  m
Residents : 86  (Jun 30, 2009)
Incorporation : January 1, 1972
Postal code : 85135
Area code : 09147

Stadelhofen is a district of the Titting market in the Upper Bavarian district of Eichstätt in Bavaria .

Geographical location

The village is located north of the Anlautertal on the plateau of the southern Franconian Jura .

history

"Stadelhouen" was first mentioned in 1255 in a dispute with the Wülzburg monastery ; Friedrich von “Kezzelberch” ( Kesselberg ) renounced farms in the village and in “Obernkezzelberch”. Stadelhofen belonged to secularization the Middle Hochstift Eichstätt , where it in the Official Raitenbuch or later Pfleg- and Vogt Official Titting- Raitenbuch depending on the basic rule of the court the Hofkastenamt Eichstätt (1548: 11 yards, 3 of which the Bishop of Eichstätt 1473 a Barter deal with the Teutonic Order in Ellingen ), the cathedral chapter judge's office in Eichstätt (1 courtyard, divided in 1727) and the Wülzburg monastery in Weißenburg (1 courtyard and 2 Köblergüter). With regard to marital detention , the village belonged to the marital detention Titting.

During the secularization, the Eichstätt Monastery and with it Stadelhofen came to Grand Duke Archduke Ferdinand III in 1802/03 . from Tuscany and 1806 to the Kingdom of Bavaria and therein to the Raitenbuch regional court , from 1812 to the Greding regional court . From 1808 the village belonged to the tax district Gersdorf , with which it formed a rural community in 1811. From 1818 the village was again an independent municipality. In 1823 109 people lived in the 14 courtyards of Stadelhofen, in 1950 141 people lived in 19 properties. In 1862 Stadelhofen was assigned to the Beilngries district office and in 1879 to the district office and later district of Hilpoltstein .

In 1958 land consolidation was carried out. On January 1, 1972, the incorporation into the Titting market took place in the course of the regional reform . In 1983 there were 18 full-time farms and eight part-time farms in the village with its 108 inhabitants.

Buildings

The local chapel of St. Anthony of Padua , belonging to the Catholic Expositur Biburg , was built in 1747. Before 1865 the northern half was demolished and rebuilt and a small choir (with cross vaults) with a tower and sacristy was added. The consecration took place in 1865. In 1937 the sacred building was expanded.

The earlier two-column altar dates from the middle of the 17th century, the altarpiece was painted by M. Werner in 1864. Today a crucifixion group is attached to the eastern wall of the choir above the tabernacle . Of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Reichersdorf one came late Gothic statue of Mary with baby Jesus segnendem (to 1480/90) in the chapel; it stands today on the left side altar. A figure of Joseph was originally a figure of St. John the Baptist (around 1480/90).

societies

literature

  • Felix Mader (editor): The art monuments of Bavaria. Middle Franconia. III. District Office Hilpoltstein. 1929 (Reprint 1983, ISBN 3-486-50506-8 .) P. 292.
  • Emmi Böck : Legends and legends from Eichstätt and the surrounding area. Eichstätt: Brönner & Daentler 1977. S. 152ff.
  • The Eichstätter area past and present. 2nd Edition. Eichstätt: Sparkasse Eichstätt 1984, p. 285f.
  • Titting. Contributions to the natural and cultural history of the middle Anlautertal. Kipfenberg: Hercynia 1999, especially pp. 185-188, 245-247, 312-314.
  • Gerhard Hirschmann: Eichstätt, Beilngries-Eichstätt-Greding . In: Commission for Bavarian State History at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (Hrsg.): Historical Atlas of Bavaria . Part Franconia, Series I, Issue 6. Munich 1959 ( digitized version )
  • Wolfgang Wiessner: Hilpoltstein . In: Commission for Bavarian State History at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (Hrsg.): Historical Atlas of Bavaria . Part Franconia, Series I, Issue 24. Munich 1978, ISBN 3-7696-9908-4 ( digitized version ).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Volkert (ed.): Handbook of Bavarian offices, communities and courts 1799–1980 . CH Beck, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 , p. 483 .

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