Stolzenmühle

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Stolzenmühle
City of Prichsenstadt
Coordinates: 49 ° 50 ′ 52 ″  N , 10 ° 21 ′ 13 ″  E
Height : 232 m
Residents : (1987)
Postal code : 97357
Area code : 09382
map
Location of the Stolzenmühle (bold) in the Prichsenstadt municipality

Stolzenmühle (also Stolzmühle , Stolzemühle ) is a wasteland in the area of ​​the Prichsenstadt district of Brünnau in the Lower Franconian district of Kitzingen . The mill is, however, in the immediate vicinity of the Prichsenstadt district of Neuses am Sand .

Geographical location

The Stolzenmühle is located in the north of the Prichsenstadt municipality on the Schwarzach tributary of the Main . Brünnau can be found further north, connected by the KT 40 district road. To the east begins the area of Oberschwarzach in the Schweinfurt district . In the south, Neuses am Sand adjoins the mill. In Neuses am Sand the federal highways 286 and 22 meet, the federal road 286 runs west past the Stolzenmühle. Järkendorf can be found further to the west .

history

The mill was first mentioned in 1577. At that time, a miller Wielant was sitting on the mill. He was mentioned again in 1581. It is unclear, however, whether that Wielant was the owner or a leaseholder . In 1585 Michael Lindner held the Stolzenmühle as miller, perhaps he acquired it from a certain Simon Vogel in the same year. Because of the location of the plant, there were repeated disputes between Brünnau and Neuses over the taxes of the mill.

The mill buildings were built in 1711 and were to last until the 1970s. From the middle of the 18th century, the mill was owned by the Glos family, who are now the eighth generation to own it. The first owner from the ranks of the family was Valentin Glos the Elder (1740–1772). He died of an accident at the age of 32 and left behind the widow Anna Maria, née Gernert. Valentin Glos the Younger (1772–1839) married Margarete Lutz from Geiselwind in 1800 and continued to run the mill.

He bequeathed the facility to his son Joseph Glos (1802–1871), who took over the business on June 13, 1837 together with his wife Anna Maria Firsching from Weyer . Michael Glos (1844–1903) started a series of five millers with the name Michael. He married Elisabeth Röll from Frankenwinheim . Michael Glos, called the "Leiber" (1875–1938), emerged from the marriage. Before he took over the mill, Michael served in the royal Bavarian infantry body regiment . He married twice.

Michael Valentin Glos (1908–1955) then took over the business after 1938. In 1943 he married Ida Schmitt from Buch bei Ebrach . After his untimely death, Ida Glos continued to run the mill. In 1965 she handed the facility over to her son Michael Robert Glos (* 1944), who would later become Federal Minister for Economics and Technology. After his election to the Bundestag , his son Michael Glos (* 1970) took over the Stolzenmühle.

The mill was constantly renewed by the Glos family. In the 1960s, four large silos were built , the old mill buildings have to give way to these systems. Until the 1980s, the company expanded steadily. At the same time, livestock was kept in the corridors around the mill until the 1970s. In 1994 the mill operation was stopped, today Michael Glos operates exclusively agriculture with estates in Neuses and Düllstadt .

literature

  • Volker Bolesta, Karl-Heinz Leibl: Mills in the large community of Prichsenstadt (= Prichsenstädter Eulenspiegel 10) . Prichsenstadt 2015.

Web links

Commons : Stolzenmühle  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Bavarian State Office for Statistics and Data Processing (Ed.): Official local directory for Bavaria, territorial status: May 25, 1987 . Issue 450 of the articles on Bavaria's statistics. Munich November 1991, DNB  94240937X , p. 397 ( digitized version ).
  2. Bolesta, Volker (among others): mills in the large village Prichsenstadt . P. 22.
  3. Bolesta, Volker (among others): mills in the large village Prichsenstadt . P. 23.
  4. Bolesta, Volker (among others): mills in the large village Prichsenstadt . P. 24.
  5. Bolesta, Volker (among others): mills in the large village Prichsenstadt . P. 25.