Unterzögersdorf
Unterzögersdorf ( cadastral community ) locality |
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Basic data | ||
Pole. District , state | Korneuburg (KO), Lower Austria | |
Judicial district | Korneuburg | |
Pole. local community | Stockerau | |
Coordinates | 48 ° 22 '53 " N , 16 ° 10' 33" E | |
Building status | 144 (January 1, 2020) | |
Area d. KG | 5.62 km² | |
Statistical identification | ||
Locality code | 04133 | |
Cadastral parish number | 11151 | |
Counting district / district | Unterzögersdorf floodplain (31230) | |
Local chapel Unterzögersdorf |
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Source: STAT : index of places ; BEV : GEONAM ; NÖGIS |
Unterzögersdorf is a village and a cadastral municipality of the municipality of Stockerau in Lower Austria with 376 inhabitants (as of January 1, 2020).
geography
Unterzögersdorf is a line village three kilometers west of Stockerau and two kilometers east of Oberzögersdorf . It has a closed eaves structure made up of courtyards and hook courtyards . The house front is closed to the street. In the area of Hintausgasse there is a loosened barn and cellar construction, which in the further course develops into a winding thoroughfare with more recent construction.
history
After the battle of the Lechfeld against the Hungarians on August 10, 955, the area in which Unterzögersdorf is located today was placed under the control of the Bishop of Passau . He was responsible for the resettlement and management of the goods. The area assigned to the bishop was bordered by Schmidabach , Göllersbach and Danube . To the north, the border ran a little north of today's towns of Stetteldorf , Pettendorf , Wolfpassing and Zissersdorf .
"Zegendorf" was first mentioned in writing in 1171 in a deed of donation, although it probably referred to today's Oberzögersdorf . In 1230 the spelling "Zeggendorf" was used, later also "Zegennsdorf", "Zekersdorf" and "Zeckersdorf".
In 1832 the rule of Sierndorf was owned by Unterzögersdorf.
The villages along the Au were already of considerable importance in the Middle Ages as a transition from the waterway to the land routes to the north. Before the Danube was regulated in the 19th century, this river consisted of a large number of channels spread across the entire Au.
Around 1835 the village had 216 inhabitants in 28 houses. Most of the residents were active in agriculture.
Infrastructure
Unterzögersdorf is connected to local public transport by a bus line and a collective taxi. The Stockerauer Schnellstraße runs south of the village .
Culture and sights
- Löwenberg : The Löwenberg is a listed six-meter-high burial mound of the Hallstatt culture in the floodplain of the Danube below the Wagram . In 1873, Count Colloredo-Mannsfeld unearthed a deposit there.
- Unterzögersdorf local chapel : The chapel was built in 1879 and 1880 and consecrated to St. Charles Borromeo .
- Wooden crucifix: At the eastern end of the village there is a wooden crucifix from 1893.
- Wayside shrine: At a field path crossing north of the village there is a baroque wayside shrine, which consists of a three-sided pillar with a niche top.
- Tullnerstraße : The Kellergasse is a one-sided single cellar street on the level. It consists of 15 buildings and is 200 meters long.
Soviet Unterzögersdorf
Soviet Unterzögersdorf is based on an idea by monochrom founder Johannes Grenzfurthner . As a child he spent a lot of time in Unterzögersdorf, on his grandparents' farm. The multimedia project was initiated by the stories of his grandparents about the time of National Socialism , the resulting Second World War and the subsequent Soviet occupation . Many real existing buildings and sights of Unterzögersdorf are embedded in the fictional story of Soviet Unterzögersdorf, such as the Tumulus (Löwenberg), which represents the controversial border with US Oberzögersdorf .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d e DEHIO manual. The art monuments of Austria: DEHIO Lower Austria. North of the Danube. Unterzögersdorf Bundesdenkmalamt (Ed.), Verlag Anton Schroll & Co, Vienna 1990, ISBN 3-7031-0585-2 , p. 1213.
- ↑ a b History of Oberzögersdorf
- ^ A b Franz Xaver Schweickhardt: Representation of the Archduchy of Austria under the Ens, through a comprehensive description of all castles, palaces, lordships, cities, markets, groups. Seventh volume. Quarter under Manhartsberg, Vienna 1835, p. 302.
- ^ Andreas Schmidbaur: The Lower Austrian cellar lanes. An inventory. Origin - distribution and typology - development tendencies. Attachment. Dissertation at the Vienna University of Technology 1990, Department of Local Spatial Planning at the Vienna University of Technology (ifoer), p. 909.
- ↑ “in soviet unterzoegersdorf, game play you”, ERF_, December 11, 2010
- ↑ FM4: “Short visit to Soviet Unterzögersdorf”, July 23, 2002
- ↑ fm4v2.ORF.at / short visit to Soviet Unterzögersdorf. Retrieved March 4, 2019 .
- ^ Soviet Unterzögersdorf: Sector 1 - Walkthrough (Monochrom / 2005). In: Ultimate Game Solutions. March 11, 2009, accessed March 4, 2019 .