Treisma

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The place name, which is no longer used today, Treisma (also Traisma ; Latin Tragisamo ) designates several medieval settlements that lay along the Traisen River . There are several mentions of Treisma in historical documents and documents, especially for the places Traismauer , St. Andrä an der Traisen and St. Pölten .

St. Polten

The research assumes that one of the places called Treisma in medieval texts can be identified with the early medieval St. Pölten. This view was expressed by Gustav Winter, Karl Helleiner and Karl Gutkas , among others . According to Karl Gutkas, Treisma was right next to the Hippolytus Monastery, i.e. in the center of St. Pölten. Peter Scherrer , on the other hand, is of the opinion that these texts refer to a settlement in nearby Pottenbrunn .

Treisma is first mentioned in a copy of a document from 799 in which Count Gerold received the Martinskirche in Linz from Bishop Waltrich von Passau in Treisma as a fief. The second mention comes from the document Confirmatio Ludovico Pii (823) , in which Ludwig the Pious of the Passau Church confirms their possession and a settlement called Treisma is counted as part of Passau's possession.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Karl Gutkas: The Treisma places . In: Our home . Volume 22, 1951, pp. 147-152.
  2. Peter Scherrer: Archaeological overview and find catalogs. In: Thomas Karl et al.: The art monuments of the city of St. Pölten and its incorporated localities. Berger, Horn 1999, ISBN 3-85028-310-0 , S. XVII-LX, here: S. LIX.
  3. Max Heuwieser (ed.): The traditions of the Hochstift Passau, sources and discussions on Bavarian history . NF 6, Munich 1930, pp. 40-41.
  4. K. Ludwig restitutes certain donations from his father to the Hochstifte Passau, which have since been withdrawn by the margraves . In:  Upper Austrian document book . Volume 2, No. VI, Frankfurt, 823, p. 9 (“Treismam” on p. 10).