Trippach

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Trippach
Community Weiherhammer
Coordinates: 49 ° 38 ′ 59 ″  N , 12 ° 5 ′ 10 ″  E
Height : 430 m
Residents : 160
Postal code : 92729
Area code : 09605

Trippach is a part of the community Weiherhammer in the Upper Palatinate district of Neustadt an der Waldnaab ( Bavaria ).

Geographical location

The district is located about five kilometers northeast of Weiherhammer and one kilometer south of the state road 2166 on Heilinglohbach, which rises one kilometer further northeast on the northern slope of the 501 meter high Seebühl and three kilometers further southwest at Weiherhammer flows into the Haidenaab .

history

Trippach (also Truebach, Triepach, Trybach, Tripach, Truppach, Trüppach ) was first mentioned in writing in the Salbuch in Parkstein in the middle of the 15th century and was called a desert . In 1441 Jörg Zenger gave the Trippach forest, used as a Zeidelweide , to his son-in-law Ulrich Dreßwitzer as a Palatine fief . Wenzel Püchelbacher received Trippach in 1468. In 1480 it came to Hans Dreßwitzer, the district judge at Amberg and in 1502 to Friedrich Mendel zu Steinfels . The Mendel family kept Trippach in the following. Friedrich Mendel was followed in 1507 by Hans Mendel zum Steinfels with his brothers Jeronimus, Fabian and Gabriel, among whom Trippach was divided in 1510. Trippach was sold in 1534 to the landlord of Rothenstadt Georg Waldau , who sold it on to his brother-in-law Ernst von Seeberg in 1546, who, however, could not pay the purchase price. Through Rothenstadt, Trippach, which had previously belonged to the Electoral Palatinate and the Young Palatinate, came under the control of the Bohemian Crown, the German fiefdom of the emperor in Prague. The Fuchs family (1546–1582) followed as owners of Trippach in the 16th century, the Sazenhofen family (1592–1708) in the 17th century and the Schwab family in 1709, with Mallersricht asserting claims to Trippach as early as the 18th century. Peter zu Sazenhofen auf Rothenstadt had Trippach expanded into an estate in 1618 after taking over the fiefdom, but as early as 1661 it was said that Trippach was desolate, overgrown with wood and that there was only a house with a barn. In 1759 there are two existing farmers, a resident and a shepherd.

The last fiefdom holder on Trippach was Georg Ferdinand von Schwab († 1799). Thereupon his son Joseph Carl von Schwab, a former electoral Bavarian soldier, claimed the fiefdom as the eldest of five siblings. He held Trippach until 1810 and afterwards his brother Joseph Anton wanted to take over the highly indebted property; his brother had "gone away without knowing where". The estate was leased to several people by order of the General Commissariat of the Naab district . The castle was given to several families to live in. Joseph Carl von Schwab was followed by his daughter Babette von Schwab, widowed Hörwarth, married to the royal court judge Metschnabel from Tirschenreuth . Under her it came to the abolition of the fiefdom, decided in 1816, but only documented in 1821, and to the destruction of the property. The castle, a modest two-story adobe half-timbered house , burned down on April 25, 1866 and was only rebuilt as a single story. The building with a pitched roof still exists. In 1834 Baron von Pölnitz acquired the remainder of the smashed property, followed in 1840 by Michael Vetter from Groschlattengrün (now part of Pechbrunn ), in 1879 by ironworker Johann Kneidel and the Vetter power tool company has existed here since 1999.

Trippach lay desolate until the end of the 18th century and was used as pasture for cattle and for wood production for the needs of the Weiherhammer blast furnace and hammer mill. It was not until the 1880s that houses began to be built in Trippach.

On March 23, 1913 (Easter), Trippach belonged to the parish of Neunkirchen near Weiden and had 14 houses and 82 inhabitants.

Trippach was part of the municipality of Mallersricht . In 1972 this was dissolved in the course of the municipal reform and Trippach was incorporated into Weiherhammer.

On December 31, 1990 Trippach had 108 inhabitants and belonged to the parish of Neunkirchen near Weiden.

literature

  • Lothar Kraus: Weiherhammer: History and cultural development of a hut village. Cape. Trippach pp. 223-225. Weiherhammer community, Weiherhammer 2017.

Individual evidence

  1. Fritsch hiking map of the Northern Upper Palatinate Forest Nature Park, scale 1: 50,000
  2. Historical Atlas of Bavaria: Altbayern series I issue 47: Neustadt an der Waldnaab, Weiden, pp. 229-233.
  3. ^ Antonius von Henle (Ed.): Register of the Diocese of Regensburg . Verlag der Kanzlei des Bischöflichen Ordinariates Regensburg, 1916, p. 575.
  4. Manfred Müller (Ed.): Register of the diocese of Regensburg . Verlag des Bischöflichen Ordinariats Regensburg, 1997, p. 437.

Web links