Winn (Seubersdorf in the Upper Palatinate)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Winn
Coordinates: 49 ° 7 ′ 56 ″  N , 11 ° 40 ′ 35 ″  E
Residents : 64  (Dec. 31, 2019)
Postal code : 92358
Area code : 09492
Winn from the south
Winn from the south

Winn is a district of Seubersdorf in the Upper Palatinate , a municipality in the Neumarkt district in the Upper Palatinate Jura in the Upper Palatinate . The place has 64 inhabitants.

history

The place name Winn indicates a settlement of Slavic settlers (see Bavaria Slavica ) or prisoners of war in Carolingian times. The town of Winden was first mentioned in a document in 1145 on the occasion of a donation of a farm by the Pyrbaumer Ministeriale Durinhart to the Weihenstephan monastery .

From the 13th century the place was in the domain of the Wittelsbacher . In 1285 and 1326 the property of the Zenger appeared in the form of two hubs in the land records of the Velburg office. At this time, the Lords of Lupburg ruling over Daßwang exercised the bailiff over the church property in the parish branch of Winn. Around 1300 Kuno von Kemnathen is known as the owner of this Wiedenhof .

Winn later found himself in the northeastern area of ​​the Breitenegg estate . In 1429 the owner of this castle near Breitenbrunn, Hadmar VI. from Laaber-Breitenegg the wood on the Aychach and the estate in Winden the Seiz Peck in Daßwang on inheritance right .

Now Winn, like the neighboring villages Hamberg and Schöndorf, no longer belonged to the Breitenbrunner, but to the Velburg area, as did the neighboring villages of Hamberg and Schöndorf, with the border running at Rasch . In the following years there were disputes between Velburg ( aristocratic family Wispeck ) and the Parsbergers about the extension of power.

The Wispecker made many purchases of goods that were held in their hands by foreign owners in their territory. This also happened in Winn in 1552, where Knight Haug von Parsberg gave up Heinrich Wagner's estate . Nonetheless, Parsberg wanted to continue to have a say in Winn, perhaps because of the wild bans rights in this area two centuries ago or with regard to a Vogtein succession of former Lupburg property.

Towards the end of the 16th century, Velburg had secured dominance in Winn, because the office appeared as the manorial rule over a farm (Lang) and eight estates. The Velburg Council completed this position of power with the two other farms (Ochsenhof / Gschrey and Michl Schmiderl ). The fact that no strangers but only Velburg subjects lived in the small village was emphasized in further ownership versions (compilation of the possessions and rights of a manor ).

A description from 1734 shows that there were 12 stoves in Wündt, otherwise there were no craftsmen .

In 1818 the place was assigned to the political municipality of Daßwang. Since 1972 Winn has belonged to the large community Seubersdorf in the Upper Palatinate.

Chapel Peter and Paul

Chapel of St. Peter and Paul in Winn

In the summer of 1951, the village community of Winn built a new chapel to replace a previously existing Marienkapelle. The altar comes from the chapel of the former district hospital in Pfaffenhofen an der Ilm . On September 9, 1951, the local chapel was consecrated by the church (Peter and Paul). Since 1952, the parish consecration in Winn has been celebrated every year for the patronage festival of the princes of the apostles Peter and Paul .

Web links

Commons : Winn  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Residents' registration office, Seubersdorf municipality . Website of the Seubersdorf community idOPf. Retrieved February 27, 2020.
  2. Andreas Kraus, Max Spindler: History of the Upper Palatinate and the Bavarian Empire up to the end of the eighteenth century and the Bavarian Empire up to the end of the 18th century CH Beck Verlag, 1995, p. 14
  3. ^ Konrad Schmid: Chronik Seubersdorf, home history of all districts of the community MZ-Druck, Regensburg 1993, p. 202
  4. The history of Seubersdorf . Website of the Seubersdorf community idOPf. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  5. Konrad Schmid: Chronik Seubersdorf, home history of all districts of the community MZ-Druck, Regensburg 1993, p. 203