Tugendorf

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Tugendorf
Donnersdorf municipality
Coordinates: 49 ° 58 ′ 39 ″  N , 10 ° 23 ′ 47 ″  E
Height : 262 m
Residents : (2010)
Incorporation : 1861
Incorporated into: Donnersdorf
Postal code : 97499
Area code : 09528

Tugendorf is a wasteland in the district of Donnersdorf in the Lower Franconian district of Schweinfurt .

Geographical location

Tugendorf is located in the northwest of the Donnersdorfer municipality. The district of Haßberge with the municipality of Theres begins further north , while the Donnersdorfer district of Fallesmühle is located in the northeast . Donnersdorf lies to the southeast. In the south, also in the Donnersdorfer area, follows the district of Kleinrheinfeld . In the west begins the area of Grettstadt near Schweinfurt, the district of Dürrfeld is closest to Tugendorf.

history

"Tuchendorf" was first mentioned in 1094. The place name probably goes back to a noble Franconian founder who founded his village here, the "Dorf des Tucho". With the first certificate, Botho von Kärnten gave his wife Judith's possessions to the Theres Monastery . In the 14th century the village appeared several times in the springs. Various peasants held fiefs there from the rulership.

During the later Middle Ages, the Cistercians of the Ebrach monastery acquired rule of the village. Tugendorf became a Vogteidorf in the Schwappach office in 1456 at the latest. After the dissolution of the monastery in 1803, changing private individuals received the village, which only consisted of a few farms. When the Kingdom of Bavaria gave the village to the Lords of Heßberg in 1861, most of the farmers moved to the surrounding villages. Only one manor remained.

In 1874, the Counts of Schönborn acquired the farmsteads through purchase and exchange. In 1926, the Nuremberg academic Sapper bought the estate. His family stayed there until 1975, when the Beyer family bought the building.

Culture and sights

Architectural monuments

The Catholic chapel forms the center of the buildings that still exist today . It was built in the late 18th century and received a small bell tower. The altar was erected around 1720. It has two columns and ends with outward-facing tail gables. Instead of an altar leaf , there is the figure of an Immaculate . A wooden bust of Mother Mary with the child from 1769 has stood the test of time.

The wayside shrines that were set up in the corridors of Tugendorf are typical of the former small village in Franconia. The older of the two with a depiction of the Pietà dates from 1692. The wayside shrine with the relief of the crucifixion of Christ and the Holy Family on the back comes from the 18th century .

legend

A document from the Ebrach monastery mentions a legal dispute for the year 1359 , in which a certain Hermann Hirser von Tugendorf was convicted of false statements. The events were later embellished as legend in the vernacular . Thereafter, Hirser borrowed money from his cousin, but could not repay it. With the conviction, he lost all his belongings and ultimately died from a wizard's curse and a hunter's rifle.

literature

  • Mario Dorsch: Disappeared Medieval Settlements. Desertification between Steigerwald, Main and the Volkach . Hassfurt 2013.
  • Karl Treutwein : From Abtswind to Zeilitzheim. History, sights, traditions . Volkach 4 1987.

Individual evidence

  1. Dorsch, Mario: Disappeared medieval settlements . P. 66.
  2. Dorsch, Mario: Disappeared medieval settlements . P. 66.
  3. ^ Treutwein, Karl: From Abtswind to Zeilitzheim . P. 237.
  4. Dorsch, Mario: Disappeared medieval settlements . P. 66.