Brennhausen
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Brennhausen | |
Coat of arms | Location |
Administration | |
Country | Germany |
---|---|
State | Bavaria |
Admin. region | Lower Franconia |
District | Rhön-Grabfeld |
Municipal assoc. | Bad Königshofen im Grabfeld |
Municipality subdivisions | Sulzdorf a.d.L. |
Honorary Bürgermeister | Werner Fell |
Basic statistics | |
Area | 2 km² (0.8 sq mi) |
Elevation | 333 m (1093 ft) |
Population | 3 (30/03/2007) |
- Density | 2 /km² (4 /sq mi) |
Other information | |
Time zone | CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) |
Licence plate | NES |
Postal code | 97528 |
Area code | 09763 |
Brennhausen (Ger. Burg Brennhausen) is a castle in the municipality of Sulzdorf a.d.Lederhecke in the county of Rhön-Grabfeld in Bavaria in Germany.
Contents |
[edit] Origin of Name - Distinct Views
[edit] Houses of Springs
Josef Braun explains the name Brennhausen in his place-names book as the houses by a water source, meaning, in this case, a spring. Braun bases his statement on the fact that immediately next to the settlement a stream springs forth which flows into the river Saale. Braun discovered that the form Brenn- is a written form, changed from the spoken dialect, which is based on the old form Brünn.
[edit] Houses of Brunicho
Dr. Heinrich Wagner presents a very different view in his Historischen Atlas von Neustadt/Saale (Historical Atlas of Neustadt/Saale). Wagner believes that the origination of the name had nothing to do with the houses by a water source, but rather that the name of the estate is derived from the old German given name, Brunicho. Under this scenario, the founder of Brennhausen used his own name, as was the custom of that time, for the naming of Brunechenhusen.
[edit] 1182 Officially documented
The first known mention of Brennhausen in an official document was the year 1182. In this document, Graf Poppo von Henneberg leased to his faithful Wolfram, among others, a tenth of Brunechenhusen.
On August 29, 1237, Graf Poppo von Henneberg, VII declared that his vassals "Deynodapifer and Theodericus, so-called von Blanckenberg," must repair the damage done to the Brunechenhusen property when it was unjustly withheld from the abbot and the Bildhausen convent.
[edit] Truchseß von Brennhausen
The Truchseß von Brennhausen is a genealogical branch of the Truchessen von Wetzhausen which descends from a Hans Truchseß (1260-1330). He had holdings in Wetzhausen, Brennhausen, Sternberg and Essfeld. In the official property record book of the Bishop of Würzburg, Gottfried III von Hohenlohe, with records from 1317 to 1322, it was written that one Truchseß von Blankenberg, and possibly the so-called Hans Truchseß, had holdings in Brennhausen.
In another record book of the Prince-Bishop Albrecht von Hohenlohe, used from 1345-1372, it was written in 1345: “Johannes Truchseß von Alsleben owns also a tenth of Gabolshausen, a tenth of Poppenhausen, a half-tenth of Ermershausen, a tenth of Brennhausen, and a half-tenth of Maroldsweisach.”
In 1343, Hans Truchseß was mentioned in a directory of Wetzhausen. It was written: “Notation regarding Mr. Hansen Truchseß, soul of a knight of Brünnhausen and his wedded wife. Owned Wetzhausen, Brünnhausen, Eßfeld and part of zu Sternberg.” His four Sons inherited these four places after his death and started four independent lines which later branched out even more. Diez, the actual founder of the Wetzhausen line, was given by his father, Hans, all of Wetzhausen and one third of Brennhausen. Hans Truchseß the Younger (1309-1370) received two thirds of the Brennhausen holdings and part of Sternberg. Hanns had his residence in Brennhausen.
Brennhausen remained in the Truchseß family until 1542 when Georg Truchseß died with a brief intermission around 1500. Anna, daughter of Philipp Truchseß took Brennhausen into a marriage with Hans von Berlichingen, a vassal of Wilhelm Count von Henneberg. After Hans von Berlichingen death, Anna sold Brennhausen to pay her husband’s debts and Brennhausen ended up with Dietz Truchseß.
[edit] Bauernkrieg and the Burning of Brennhausen
Both documentation and physical evidence strongly suggest that Brennhausen burned in 1525 during the Bauernkrieg or Peasants (or Farmers) Revolt. The beams of the roof and the entrance to one of the cellars date from right after 1525. Stone work also suggests that the floor levels changed at some point. Also G.P. Höhn in his 1747 Lexicon Topographicum states that the peasants set fire to it in 1525.
[edit] 1542-1681
In 1587 Brennhausen was occupied by Georg Wilhelm von Kotzau. By 1593, the Truchseß family were back at Brennhausen. In 1619, the brothers Otto, Heinrich and Adam von und zu Bastheim along with Georg Wilhelm and Veit Ulrich Truchseß von Wetzhausen purchased Brennhausen for 24,597 gulden.
[edit] Franz and Hans von Brennhausen
In 1642, a Franz Günther, a simple farmer's son from Kützberg by Schweinfurt, was ennobled “von Brennhausen” and given the fief of Brennhausen from the Bishopric of Würzburg. From 1635 to 1647, Franz was the Commandant of the fortress at Königshofen. Franz’ son Hans received Brennhausen and died without issue. Franz and his wife Felicitas Agnes Leschin von Mülheim coat of arms are in the court yard.
[edit] Brennhausen Goes to Bibra Family
In 1681, the von Bibra family received Brennhausen instead of Burgwallbach as part of an out of court settlement of a lawsuit dating from 1602 when the Prince Bishop Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn refused to transfer family fiefs between cousins. This type of transfer was routine but during the Counter Reformation, the bishop refused a transfer to the Protestant cousins. Brennhausen has remained with the Bibra family ever since.
[edit] Traditions
There is a tradition which states that Brennhausen, in older times, was a monastery, which is where the naming of the surrounding fields, Nonnenäcker (nun’s fields) and Pfaffenpfad (pastor’s path) must have come.
[edit] Brennhausen the Village
In past centuries there were more houses at Brennhausen. In 1832 fifty-one inhabitants in twelve families lived at Brennhausen. Ten of them were Catholic, thirty-six Lutheran, and five Jewish. The Catholics went to church in Untereßfeld and the Lutherans in Sulzdorf. Until 1848, Brennhausen had original jurisdiction over its own affairs. In 1915 (WWI), Brennhausen had six residences besides the castle but only two were inhabited. The other four were dilapidated.
[edit] References
- REINHOLD ALBERT: Chronik der Gemeinde Sulzdorf an der Lederhecke. (2 Volumes, zus. 860 S.) hrsg. von der Gemeinde Sulzdorf a. d. L., Verlag Frankenschwelle (Hildburghausen) Pages. 515 - 534. 1994. This is the most thorough source on Brennhausen and the main source on the history of Brennhausen for initial article.
- JOSEF BRAUN, Historisches Ortsnamenbuch von Bayern, Volume: Koenigshofen im Grabfeld, page 3.
- Hennebergisches Urkundenbuch, Teil V., Page 243, Number 405
- HANS KARLINGER, Die Kunstdenkmäler von Bayern, III, 13. Bezirksamt Königshofen. - Munich, 1915 (Reprint Munich, 1983, ISBN 3-486-50467-3)
- BRIGITTE LOHER, Contributions to the History and Genealogy of the Truchsess’s of Wetzhausen in the Middle Ages, p. 46
- FRITZ MAHNKE, Schloesser un Burgen im Umkreis der Fraenkischen Krone, page 50.
- HEINRICH MEHL,Burgen und Schloesser in Rhoen und Grabfeld, pages 60-63.
- FRANZ SAYN-WITTGENSTEIN, Schlosser in Franken : Residenzen Und Landsitze Im Frankischen, 1974 ISBN-10: 3406035752 ISBN-13: 9783406035753;
- HEINRICH WAGNER, Historischer Atlas von Neustadt/Saale, page 21A.
[edit] External links
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