Wolpertsau (Rennertshofen)

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Wolpertsau
Coordinates: 48 ° 47 '36 "  N , 11 ° 7' 34"  E
Height : 460 m
Postal code : 86643
Area code : 08427
The wasteland of Wolpertsau
The court chapel

Wolpertsau is a wasteland part of the market Rennertshofen in the district of Neuburg-Schrobenhausen in the administrative district of Upper Bavaria . It belongs to the district of Hütting with the desert fields of Feldmühle and Giglberg and the church village of Ellenbrunn .

location

The wasteland is located about one kilometer from Hütting to the southeast on the Jura height about 60 meters above the bottom of the Wellheimer dry valley in the middle of an extensive forest area. It can be reached from Hütting on a local connecting road that branches off from the Waldauweg.

Place name interpretation

"Wolpertsau" is said to go back to the name of the Eichstatt diocesan saint Walburga . The wasteland belonged to the parish Hütting; this was awarded in 1392 to the Benedictine convent Bergen in the diocese of Eichstätt .

history

Today's Wolpertsau consisted of eight fiefdoms in the Middle Ages . Presumably the wasteland consisting of a property with the wastelands Feldmühle and Giglberg as well as the village Hütting belonged to the 10/11. Castle Hütting , built in the 16th century, burnt down in 1421 , old property of the Counts of Lechsgemünd-Graisbach ; When the counts died out in 1342, all four locations were incorporated into the Bavarian-ducal bailiff's office in Neuburg, while the district court of Neuburg took care of the lower jurisdiction. In 1524 in the Palatinate-Neuburg period, the city of Neuburg acquired a half-yard for their Heilig Geist-Spital from the Wolpertsau farmer Sixt Computer, including a 240 “Jauchert” (day work) forest near Wolpertsau, with which the hospital was to a considerable extent until the 20th century was co-financed.

After the end of the Old Kingdom , Hütting and with it Wolpertsau became royal Bavarian in 1806. In 1808 the wasteland with the parish village of Hütting, the church village of Ellenbrunn and the wastelands of Feldmühle and Giglberg belonged to the Hütting tax district in the district court of Neuburg an der Donau and when the community was formed in 1818, it belonged to the community of Hütting, which was an independent community in Swabia until the regional reform in Bavaria in 1972 District Neuburg an der Donau remained, then came to the now Upper Bavarian district Neuburg an der Donau (from 1973 district Neuburg-Schrobenhausen). On May 1, 1978, Hütting and with it Wolpertsau were incorporated into the Rennertshofen market.

In 1858 Anton Löffler acquired the wasteland. In 1864 there were two courtyards here that were inhabited by 18 people. A handbook from 1867 describes Wolpertsau as a wasteland of new buildings in which 20 people lived. In 1910 nine people lived in Wolpertsau.

The two current residential buildings in the desert, which include an agricultural area of ​​19 hectares, were built by the Löffler family after 1945. After giving up the dairy farm in 1991, the Löffler family opened a horse boarding house. There is a court chapel. A small catering establishment is called “Zum Saustall”.

literature

  • [Albert Ludwig] Heim: Wolpertsau near Hütting . In: Kollectaneen-Blatt for the history of Bavaria, especially of the former Duchy of Neuburg / ed. from D. Historic Association Neuburg a. D., 56 (1892), 1894, part 2, pp. [11] -17.
  • Markus Nadler: Historical Atlas of Bavaria. Neuburg on the Danube. The district court of Neuburg and the nursing courts of Burgheim and Reichertshofen . Munich 2004.
  • The forest determines life in Wolpertsau . In: Augsburger Allgemeine from July 20, 2014; see [1]

Web links

Commons : Wolpertsau  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Ludwig Rochholz: Three Gaugöttinnen Walburg, Verena and Gertrud as German church saints. Leipzig 1870, p. 17
  2. ^ Archives for the pastoral conferences in the Augsburg diocese . Volume 2, Augsburg 1850, p. 379
  3. Nadler, p. 25
  4. Nadler, pp. 85, 148, 324
  5. Nadler, p. 256; Heim, p. 12; Augsburger Allgemeine from July 20, 2014
  6. ^ Intelligence sheet of the Königlich-Baierischen Oberdonau-Kreis dated June 30, 1818, column 504 f.
  7. Nadler, p. 410
  8. ^ 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. 602 .
  9. p. 17
  10. ^ Anton Steichele: The Diocese of Augsburg, historically and statistically described . Volume 2, Augsburg 1864, p. 607
  11. J. Heyberger and others: Topographical-statistical manual of the Kingdom of Bavaria together with an alphabetical local dictionary. Munich 1867, column 1366
  12. ^ Meyers Orts- und Verkehrslexikon des Deutschen Reichs . Leipzig and Vienna 1912
  13. Augsburger Allgemeine from July 20, 2014