Träglhof

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Träglhof
City of Hirschau
Coordinates: 49 ° 35 ′ 28 ″  N , 11 ° 56 ′ 35 ″  E
Residents : 23  (1997)
Postal code : 92242
Area code : 09608
map
Location of Träglhof in Hirschau

Träglhof is a wasteland in the municipality of Hirschau in the Bavarian district of Amberg-Sulzbach in Germany .

origin of the name

The name Träglhof probably goes back to a family name “Trögel” and therefore means “farm of a Trögel”. The Träglhof is mentioned as Trögelshof in the military register of the Hirschau nursing office from 1501. In 1577 the Träglhof is mentioned as Trögleshoff, 1630 as Dröglshoff, 1661 as Drögleßhof, 1766 and 1774 as Träglshof. Finally, in 1783, the spelling Träglhof appears for the first time.

geography

Geographical location

Träglhof is located in the northern urban area of ​​Hirschau on the border between the Upper Palatinate district of Amberg-Sulzbach and the district of Neustadt an der Waldnaab .

Natural allocation

Träglhof is located in the north of the Upper Palatinate hill country . Since sheet 154/155 Bayreuth of the single sheets 1: 200,000 for the manual of the natural spatial structure of Germany has not been published, there is no detailed breakdown for the northern part of the Upper Palatinate hill country .

In relevant specialist literature, the geological subunit in which Rödlas is located is referred to as the Kohlberger ridges .

history

Before the first Bavarian community edict from 1808, Träglhof was always mentioned as belonging to the Hirschau district.

Through the first Bavarian community edict, Massenricht was assigned to the tax district and the district court of Amberg and thus to the Naab district . Träglhof was assigned to Massenricht. After the Naabkreis was dissolved in favor of the Mainkreis and the Regenkreis , Massenricht was assigned to the Regenkreis in 1810 together with the Amberg District Court (from 1838 onwards, Upper Palatinate and Regensburg ). The second Bavarian community edict made Massenricht an independent political community in 1818 and Träglhof a part of it.

On May 1, 1978, the Träglhof was incorporated into the town of Hirschau as part of the community of Massenricht together with the places Massenricht, Obersteinbach , Untersteinbach , the hamlet Rödlas and the desert Hummelmühle as part of the municipal reform.

Religions

The religious confusion of the 16th and 17th centuries also had an impact in the area around Träglhof. It can be assumed that Träglhof, which has always belonged to the Benefice and later to the Ehenfeld branch , changed denominations several times. In 1628 Träglhof together with Ehenfeld finally became Catholic.

Ehenfeld is still independent as a parish, but has formed a pastoral care unit with Hirschau since 2003.

traffic

Träglhof can be reached from Hirschau via Ehenfeld after six kilometers via the AS 18 district road or after seven kilometers via side streets from Kohlberg . From Freihung you can reach Träglhof via the AS 18 via Elbart after about six kilometers.

It is 19 km from Träglhof to the Wernberg-Köblitz junction of the A93 motorway . The A6 motorway can be reached from Träglhof either via the A 93 motorway, Wernberg-Köblitz junction, and then via the Oberpfälzer Wald junction after 22 km or via the Amberg-West junction after 28 km.

Träglhof is connected to local public transport with two bus routes. These are the RBO line 59 via Lintach to Amberg ( VGN line 459) and the Hirschau local line service, which connects some of the districts in the northern district of Hirschaus (RBO line 6334, VGN line 468).

The nearest train stations are in Freihung (6 km), in Röthenbach (7 km), Wernberg-Köblitz (19 km) and in Amberg (25 km).

Sons and daughters of the place

Hermann Fellner (born December 20, 1950 - 2020), born and raised in Träglhof, was a member of the German Bundestag from 1980 to 1990. During his time as a member of parliament, he was, among other things, the domestic policy spokesman for the CSU regional group. Fellner lives in Freudenberg .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Districts - city of Hirschau, district of Amberg-Sulzbach (AS) - Bavarian authorities guide. In: behoerdenwegweiser.bayern.de. Bavarian State Ministry of the Interior , accessed on November 27, 2012 .
  2. a b Hans Frank: Historical book of place names of Bavaria Upper Palatinate . City and district of Amberg. Ed .: Commission for Bavarian State History. 1st edition. Buchdruckerei Michael Laßleben, Kallmünz via Regensburg 1975, ISBN 3-7696-9891-6 , p. 19.20 .
  3. Ignatz Biechl: Complete description of all in the Duchy of the Upper Palatinate, the Landgraviate of Leuchtenberg and other Upper Palatinate imperial rulers, land, nursing and lordship judges, Mauth, forest, mining offices, and iron hammers, abbey, cities, markets, court markets, noble seats, and landed people Gütter, as such are neatly divided into the nursing courts, item of all their castles, villages, and wastelands, rivers, lakes, castles, and forests. Munich 1783, p. 116 (available online on Google Books )
  4. ^ Dietrich Jürgen Manske: Geographical land survey: The natural space units on sheet 164 Regensburg. Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1981, pp. 53–54. →  Online map (PDF; 4.8 MB)
  5. ^ Stefan Glaser, Gertrud Keim, Georg Loth, Andreas Veit, Barbara Bessler-Veit, Ulrich Lagally: Geotopes in the Upper Palatinate . Ed .: Bavarian State Office for the Environment. 1st edition. 2007, ISBN 978-3-940009-92-0 , pp. 47 .
  6. ^ Dietrich-Jürgen Manske: In the mirror of the times . The district of Amberg-Sulzbach. 1978, p. 9–46 ( Online [PDF; 2.0 MB ; accessed on January 19, 2019]).
  7. ^ Commission for Bavarian State History, edited by Georg Leingärtner: Historischer Atlas von Bayern. Issue 24, Munich 1971, p. 141 (available online at Digitale-sammlungen.de )
  8. Handbook of the Bavarian offices, municipalities and courts 1799 - 1980 in connection with Richard Bauer, Reinhard Heydenreuter, Gerhard Heyl, Emma Mages, Max Piendl, August Scherl, Bernhard Zittel ed. by Wilhelm Volkert, full professor at the University of Regensburg, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-406-09669-7 .
  9. ^ Commission for Bavarian State History, edited by Georg Leingärtner, Historischer Atlas von Bayern , Heft 24, Munich 1971, p. 142 (available online at Digitale-sammlungen.de )
  10. Werner Schulz: 40 years ago tough struggle to incorporate Massenrichts after Hirschau. City of Hirschau, May 18, 2012, accessed on October 25, 2012 .
  11. ^ Commemorative publication of the Massenricht volunteer fire brigade for the 125th anniversary of the founding party, Massenricht 2009, p. 47
  12. Amberg - Lintach - Kemnath a. Buchberg - Mass Direction. (PDF; 22 kB) Verkehrsgemeinschaft Amberg-Sulzbach (line 459 - VGN). (No longer available online.) In: znas.de. Zweckverband Nahverkehr Amberg-Sulzbach, November 14, 2011, archived from the original on June 20, 2013 ; Retrieved November 19, 2012 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.znas.de
  13. Local line traffic in Hirschau. (pdf; 14 kB) Verkehrsgemeinschaft Amberg-Sulzbach (line 468 - VGN). (No longer available online.) In: znas.de. Zweckverband Nahverkehr Amberg-Sulzbach, July 25, 2012, archived from the original on June 20, 2013 ; Retrieved November 19, 2012 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.znas.de