Starkholzbach

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Starkholzbach
Coordinates: 49 ° 5 ′ 6 "  N , 9 ° 39 ′ 47"  E
Height : 374 m above sea level NN
Incorporated into: Bibersfeld
Area code : 0791
Map of the path blocked by the Hallers in the hamlet of Starkholzbach near the forests of Comburg Abbey near Michelfeld
Map of the path blocked by the Hallers in the hamlet of Starkholzbach near the forests of Comburg Abbey near Michelfeld

Starkholzbach is a hamlet in the Bibersfeld district of the city of Schwäbisch Hall in the district of the same name in north-eastern Baden-Württemberg .

geography

Starkholzbach, excerpt from the map

The small hamlet with fewer than twenty house numbers and a number of agricultural outbuildings is located on a low range of hills about a kilometer west of the Beaver at the foot of the Mainhardt Forest , whose hillside forests begin about half a kilometer to the west. The right-hand beaver tributary, Starkholzbach, drains the area, including the Starkholzbacher See , which begins less than a hundred meters south of the houses, and in summer is a bathing water with a beach, jetties and sunbathing areas. The rest of the surrounding field is used for agriculture, the fields occupy the high elevations above the rather damp lowlands used as grassland. The hamlet is accessed by the K 2592, which leads from Bibersfeld in the southeast to Michelfeld in the northeast.

history

At the place formerly called Starkelsbach - the name was derived from a personal name - was, according to Eugen Gradmann, an abandoned castle of the Lords of Starkelsbach (1386). Originally Mannlehen , the hamlet gradually came to the abbot of Comburg monastery from the 14th century, and then belonged to Comburg until 1806, but was subject to Hall's highness in the rose garden office of the state territory of the imperial city of Hall . Starkholzbach was part of the Protestant parish Michelfeld. In 1822 it had 29 inhabitants, and in 1847 the population had risen to 44, all of whom were Protestant. In 1862 39 were registered. In 1972, Starkholzbach and Bibersfeld were incorporated into Schwäbisch Hall during the municipal reform.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Tobias Würth: We do it for 150,000 euros . In: Haller Tagblatt . February 9, 2009, p. 15 ( starkholzbachersee.de [PDF]).
  2. Tobias Würth: The lake should be renovated by summer 2009 . In: Haller Tagblatt . February 6, 2009, p. 15 ( starkholzbachersee.de [PDF]).
  3. mainhardterwald.de
  4. ^ Eugen Gradmann : Bibersfeld - Weiler Starkholzbach . In: The art and antiquity monuments of the city and the Oberamt Schwäbisch-Hall . Paul Neff Verlag, Esslingen a. N. 1907, OCLC 31518382 , pp.  93 ( archive.org ).
  5. TK25-6924 shows a moat about one kilometer south of the village center of Bibersfeld, to the right of the Bibers and south of the Sülzbach, which flows from this side.
  6. ^ A b Rudolf Moser: Description of the Oberamt Hall: with a map of the Oberamt, a view of Hall and four tables . In: Description of the Kingdom of Württemberg . tape 23 . Cotta, 1847, p. 185 ( books.google.de ).
  7. ^ Rudolf Moser: Description of the Oberamt Hall. With a map of the Oberamt, a view of Hall and four tables . In: Description of the Kingdom of Württemberg . tape 23 . Cotta, Stuttgart / Tübingen 1847, p. 181 ( books.google.de ).
  8. JD Memminger (Hrsg.): Württemberg year books for patriotic history, geography, statistics and topography . First issue. FG Cotta'sche Buchhandlung, Stuttgart and Tübingen 1822, p. 164 ( Starkholzbach in the Google book search).
  9. Royal. statistical-topographical Bureau (ed.): Royal-Württembergisches Hof- und Staats-Handbuch . Karl Aue, Stuttgart 1862, p. 384 ( 7. Starkholzbach in the Google book search).