Hohenpeißenberg

Hohenpeißenberg
Hohenpeißenberg
Coordinates
Administration
Country Germany
State Bavaria
Admin. region Upper Bavaria
District Weilheim-Schongau
Mayor Thomas Dorsch (CSU)
Basic statistics
Area 20.44 km2 (7.89 sq mi)
Elevation 780 m  (2559 ft)
Population 3,813 (31 December 2010)[1]
 - Density 187 /km2 (483 /sq mi)
Other information
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Licence plate WM
Postal code 82383
Area code 08805
Website www.hohenpeissenberg.de

Hohenpeißenberg is a municipality in the Weilheim-Schongau district, in Bavaria, Germany. Hohenpeißenberg is situated in the Bavarian Oberland, in the alpine uplan.

It exists only as a local subdistrict.

Contents

Geography

The highest point is the peak of the 988 meter high Hoher Peißenberg (high Peißenberg).

Because of the breathtaking panoramic view from it, it also called the Bavarian Mount Parnassus or the Bavarian Mount Rigi. It is regarded as the most beautiful panoramic mountain of Bavaria and it is also a favourite destination for excursions.

Formerly it was referred to as the Mount Doctus, due to the scholarliness of the meteorological research taking place at its peak.

The largest part of the areas population is found on the south side of the mountain, a smaller part on the west side (districts of Hetten and Buchschorn); a yet smaller part of the population is found on the north and the east side.

The region is situated on the left bank of the Ammer. The Ammer flows south of the local center in a small ravine called the "Schnalz".

Local History

In 1514 a chapel was built on the Hohen Peißenberg. A carved image of the Mother of God was brought there from the castle chapel in Schongau. The figure soon became renowned as being a figure of mercy and pilgrimage to it began. Because of this, a second church, the Pilgrims church, was added to the chapel. Thus the two churches we know today came to be.

The chapel lies west of the church tower, the pilgrims church lies east. The ensemble lends the peak its unique silhouette. In the year 1525, during the farmers uprising, the Hohen Peißenberg was the site where the farmers laid down a vow of fidelity for their duke and their belief. Thousands from the population gathered on the mountain, thus preventing further harm. During the preceding uprising of the part of the subjects of the Swabian Oberland, hordes had combed the land, plundering and burning gentry- and cloister good.[2] The rebelling farmers had gathered at Nesselwang in order to enter the bavarian territory via the town of Füssen. Approximations of their number lie between 2,500 and 20,000 men.[3] Upon reaching the area, we now know as Hohenpeißenberg, the locals vowed fidelity to the duke. Thus the uprising came to an end. A bronze placard on the outer southern wall of the pilgrimage church, which is part of a soldiers commemoration tablet, reminds us of this vow of fidelity.

From 1604 until the secularization in 1803, the augustinian canons regulars in charge of the cloister Rottenbuch also supervised the pilgrimage to the Hohen Peißenberg. The large ceiling fresco by Matthäus Günther inside the chapel of Mercy also depicts the committal of the pilgrimage site to the cloister Rottenbuch.

It was the Augustinian monks who also carried out the first meteorological observations on the site and these have been carried out continuously since 1781, making Hohenpeißenberg the oldest meteorological station in the world. Following the secularization, it was initially the priests and the school teachers who carried on recording and observing meteorological conditions; after World War II the German Meteorological Service took over this duty.

Traditionally, the monks also ran a school on the mountain. The Volksschule was founded by the Augustinian regular Primus Koch (1752-1812) an in April 1802 it first opened its doors to students.[4]

In lieu of the bavarian administrative reform, the community edict gave rise to the local centres as we now know them. Formerly, the district belonged to Peiting. Hohenpeißenberg belonged to the reformation of Munich and to the district of Schongau which in turn is part of the electorate of Bavaria.

The first building section of the former school was built after the monks time there from 1882 until 1883.[5]

Mining

The discovery of pitch coal as the 1600s gave rise to mining activity in the area, mostly on a small scale. State-owned mining began on the 8th of May 1837 with the inset of the so called Hauptstollen (main adit) in the area of Brandach, whereby the initial sinking of the Unterbauschacht (Unterbau shaft) took place from the first of July 1889 onwards.[6] A 3.6-kilometer-long cable car, operating from 1898 to 1928, transported coal from the coal washing plant to the Tiefstollen (deep adit) in Peißenberg.

Old adits exist in the region, the Hauptstollen is open to guided tours several times a year. The air shaft at the Hohenpeißenberg train station was sunk from 1937 to 1939.[6] From mid-October 1960 onwards it was the deepest shaft in Bavaria, measuring a depth of 1150 meters.[7][8] There was also an air shaft in the district of Klausen. Mining in the Peißenberg basin discontinued first in Peiting (in 1968) and in 1971 in Peißenberg. The closure of the Peißenberg pit also marked the end of mining activities in the area.

Until 1972, the border of the administrative districts Schongau and Weilheims ran through the village; the Eierbach steam marked a part of this border. Now Hohenpeißenberg is the local center of the new administrative district of Weilheim-Schongau. In 1978 a large part of the former community of Ammerhöfe was added to the area of Hohenpeißenberg, because of the restructuring of the administrative district of Weilheim-Schongau of April 12, 1976.[9]

Hohenpeißenberg

References

  1. ^ "Fortschreibung des Bevölkerungsstandes" (in German). Bayerisches Landesamt für Statistik und Datenverarbeitung. 31 December 2010. https://www.statistikdaten.bayern.de/genesis/online?language=de&sequenz=tabelleErgebnis&selectionname=12411-009r&sachmerkmal=QUASTI&sachschluessel=SQUART04&startjahr=2010&endjahr=2010. 
  2. ^ L. Boxler: Hohenpeissenbergs gepriesene Höhe und Epfachs merkwerthe Funde, Schongau 1831 (Nachdruck von 2006), pages 13 to 16
  3. ^ Hubert Assum, Max Biller, Prof. Dr. Heinz Haushofer: Der Hohe Peißenberg – ein Gelöbnisberg als Stätte des Treueschwurs anno 1525. In: Max Biller: Hohenpeißenberger Heimat-Lexikon, pages 294 to 300
  4. ^ Hubert Assum, Lepold Mühlegger, Max Biller: Schulgeschichte. In: Max Biller: Hohenpeißenberger Heimat-Lexikon, page 468
  5. ^ Hubert Assum, Lepold Mühlegger, Max Biller: Schulgeschichte. In: Max Biller: Hohenpeißenberger Heimat-Lexikon, page 471
  6. ^ a b Max Biller, Ludwig Stippel: Bergbau und Bergbau-Museum am Hohen Peißenberg, 3. erweiterte Auflage von 2006, page 28
  7. ^ Werksinformation für die Belegschaft des Kohlenbergwerks Peißenberg, Nummer 1, Januar 1961, page 6
  8. ^ Max Biller, Ludwig Stippel: Bergbau und Bergbau-Museum am Hohen Peißenberg, 3. erweiterte Auflage von 2006, page 33
  9. ^ Max Biller: Gemeindegebiet/Gemeindegebietsreform. In: Max Biller: Hohenpeißenberger Heimat-Lexikon, page 219