Trugenhofen (Rennertshofen)

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Trugenhofen
Coordinates: 48 ° 46 ′ 26 ″  N , 11 ° 0 ′ 5 ″  E
Height : 406 m
Area : 5.91 km²
Residents : 114  (Jul 31, 2020)
Population density : 19 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 1978
Postal code : 86643
Area code : 08434

Trugenhofen is a parish village and part of the market Rennertshofen in the district of Neuburg-Schrobenhausen in the administrative district of Upper Bavaria . The parish also includes the church village of Kienberg and the two wastelands of Dünsberg and Störzelmühle .

geography

Trugenhofen and its districts lie in the middle of the hilly landscape of the southern Franconian Jura . Kienberg is north of Trugenhofen, Störzelmühle to the west and Dünsberg to the south.

The north-west-south-east flowing Ussel flows through Trugenhofen and previously through Störzelmühle .

Störzelmühle and Trugenhofen are located on the ND 20 district road , which , coming from the district boundary ( Gansheim ) in the west, continues to Rennertshofen .

The neighboring towns of Trugenhofen are in the south-west, west and north-west the Marxheimer districts Neuhausen , Gansheim , Boschenmühle and Burgmannshofen , in the north Ammerfeld , in the east Rohrbach , in the south-east Gallenmühle and the main town Rennertshofen and in the south Erlbach .

history

The Roman road from Stepperg to Weißenburg , which followed the Ussel Valley , ran through Trugenhofen as early as Roman times .

Trugenhofen was the seat of a knight dynasty, the Lords of Trugenhofen , who were ministerials to the Counts of Graisbach . The exact location of the headquarters is unknown, either on one of the two castle mountains near Trugenhofen or on the Dünsberg. In 1282 a moated castle was built in the middle of the village next to the church (three floors high, with a circular wall and moat), which was also rebuilt at that time. At the end of the 14th century Trugenhofen was appointed Hofmark . In 1593 the line of the Lords of Trugenhofen with Ruland from and to Trugenhofen died out.

The Eisack (descendants of a sister of Ruland) followed as further owners of the Hofmark from 1594 to 1639. In 1632 the old castle was destroyed by the Swedes (in 1860 the foundation walls and the moat were still visible). From 1639 to 1701, the Berling von Bertoldsheim were Hofmark owners. After the Thirty Years War, Hans Berling built a new castle northwest of the old castle site.
The following families owned the Hofmark: 1701 to 1714 the Barons von Quentell , 1714 to 1759 the Barons von Isselbach zu Bertoldsheim , 1759 to 1783 their heirs, 1783 to 102 Jakob von Tautphoeus zu Schlachteck (Palatinate Council in Mannheim ) and from 1802 the Counts You Moulin-Eckart . The castle later went into private ownership and is now used as a brewery.

Trugenhofen belonged to the Swabian district of Neuburg an der Donau and then came in the course of the regional reform in Bavaria on July 1, 1972 to the enlarged now Upper Bavarian district of Neuburg an der Donau, which was given the name of Neuburg-Schrobenhausen on May 1, 1973 . On January 1, 1978 it was incorporated into the Rennertshofen market .

The Catholic parish of Sankt Peter in Trugenhofen belongs to the parish community Rennertshofen in the deanery Neuburg-Schrobenhausen in the diocese of Augsburg . The parish includes the old parish with its districts Kienberg, Dünsberg and Störzelmühle.
The parish church was originally located on the Dünsberg and was moved into the valley in its current location in 1282. The current church dates from 1752/53.

Individual evidence

  1. Population figures in Rennertshofen
  2. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer GmbH, Stuttgart and Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 601 .

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