Wüllersdorf (Pommelsbrunn)

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Wullersdorf
municipality Pommelsbrunn
Coordinates: 49 ° 27 ′ 50 ″  N , 11 ° 34 ′ 41 ″  E
Height : 480 m above sea level NN
Residents : 27  (Jul 1, 2009)
Postal code : 91224
Area code : 09154
View of Wüllersdorf
View of Wüllersdorf

The hamlet of Wüllersdorf is located in the district of Nürnberger Land at a height southeast of Hersbruck on the border between Middle Franconia and the Upper Palatinate , not far from Hofstetten. The small town is one of 22 districts of the large municipality of Pommelsbrunn .

Place names

In the course of the local history, the place name changed:

  • Willhartsdorf (1275)
  • Wilherstorf (1300)
  • Wilhartztorf (1326)
  • Wilhalmstorf (1366)
  • Villersdorf (1510)
  • Willersdorf (1596)
  • Wüllersdorf (first time 1730)

history

Boundary stone near Wüllersdorf

The first documentary mention of Wüllersdorf goes back to the Salbuch from around 1275 commissioned by Duke Ludwig the Strengen of Bavaria. In this list of income and rights, two hubs and seven fiefs are mentioned, i.e. nine properties. In the Baierisches Salbuch of 1326 almost the same information is given as in 1275. In the land register (register of goods and taxes) of the Provost's Hersbruck from around 1300, two hubs and seven fiefs are also listed for “Wilherstorf”. In addition to cash benefits, cheese, autumn chickens and carnival chickens are also demanded after the farmers had their farms under fiefdom from the manor, namely the provost of Hersbruck (as administrator of the Bergen monastery near Neuburg an der Donau ). However, the exercise of secular power such as higher jurisdiction was not with religious institutions, so that in 1163 the bailiwick of the goods of the Bergen monastery was transferred to the bailiff at Hohenstein Castle as administrator, patron and judge. He too was entitled to income; Wüllersdorf was part of the Hohenstein office at that time. In the little Salbüchlein of Charles IV from 1366/68, only six fiefdoms are registered in "Wilhalmstorf". In the 14th century, the Reicheneck taverns also owned some parcels of land which, like most of their stately estates, were largely fiefdomed from the bishops of Eichstätt and Bamberg . When the family of the taverns died out in 1411, these fiefs came to the Lords of Parsberg and the Egloffstein .

After the Landshut War of Succession in 1504/05, the village became a border village and now belonged to the territory of the Imperial City of Nuremberg and under the administration of the Hersbruck Care Office , whereby the demarcation process was quite arbitrary. In the “Description of the Herßpruckische Grenitz, Anno 1596” the individual “Marckstaine” and their position are described in detail. There were particularly acute border problems, for example, with customs and hunting; these gave rise to much anger.

The first Wüllersdorfer known by name were, according to "Salbuch der Frauen von Berg vber die Zinß vnd gilt der Brobstey bey Herspruck" in 1529 Lienhart Tanner, Hanß Fuchs, Hanß Schmyd, Hanß Resch and Fritz Kayserman, so the six fiefs were managed by five provost farmers . In 1730 Leonhard Fischer and Michael Schmied gave the following information: “…. The subjects would be 5, including 4 behind the Probstey Zu Herrspruck and 1 behind Johann Nicol Herel (old Hersbruck family). They did not hold a Kirchweyh. If they sent their children to school in Fürrenrieth in Sultzbachischen… They didn't have a Heb-wet nurse, but their wives used the one from Nunhof in Ober-Palatinate… ... ”Around 1800 there were eight properties in Wüllersdorf. In 1806 the entire territory became part of the Kingdom of Bavaria and, during the second territorial reform in the 1970s, it became part of the large community of Pommelsbrunn.

literature

  • Nuremberg country . Karl Pfeiffer's Buchdruckerei und Verlag, Hersbruck 1993, ISBN 3-9800386-5-3 .

Web links

Commons : Wüllersdorf (Pommelsbrunn)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Community of Pommelsbrunn, Wüllersdorf district , accessed on March 9, 2016