Gangkofen

Template: Infobox church in Germany / Maintenance / market

Gangkofen is a market in the Lower Bavarian district Rottal -Inn.

  • 2.1 Amalgamations
  • 3.1 Market council
  • 4.1 Structures
  • 4.2 Media
  • 5.1 Sons and daughters of the town
  • 5.2 personalities who have worked on site

Geography

Geographical Location

Gangkofen is located in the gentle valley of Bina on the B 388, about 17 kilometers west of Eggenfelden, 26 km south of Dingolfing, 40 km southeast of Landshut, 25 km north of Mühldorf and 32 km from the district town parish churches.

Gangkofen is the westernmost municipality of the district Rottal -Inn, bordered to the north by the district of Dingolfing -Landau, on the south by the county Mühldorf and to the west the district of Landshut. Gangkofen overall the red valley region attributed as the market for Altlandkreis Eggenfelden ( in red valley ) was and is economically and culturally oriented more to the east. The more western parts of the community - the former rural communities Dirnaich and Hölsbrunn - originally belonged to Altlandkreis Vilsbiburg ( in Vilstal ) so that their inhabitants are oriented towards in this ( western) until today.

Community structure

The community has 171 districts:

  • Abessen
  • Aich
  • Albanöd
  • Angersbach
  • Apple Thann
  • Asbach
  • Atzing
  • Au
  • Aurolfing
  • Baumgarten
  • Mountain Meier
  • Bermering
  • Binamühl
  • Birding
  • Blankenöd
  • Lead Brunn
  • Brandstetten at Reicheneibach
  • Brandstetten at St. Nikola
  • Bruck
  • Bruckl
  • Bubenöd
  • Book mountain
  • Butzenbach
  • Your Grub
  • Dirnaich
  • Dörfl
  • Corners
  • Eden Eibach
  • Eden Katzbach
  • Edgarten
  • Elsenberg
  • Engersdorf
  • Eppen
  • Eselsberg
  • Fatzöd
  • Box
  • Flexöd
  • Forest
  • Freiling
  • Fuchsberg
  • Fußöd
  • Gangkofen
  • Gate riser
  • Geiging
  • Geiselsberg
  • Gengham
  • Giglöd
  • Gindering
  • Goldbrunn
  • Greaves mountain
  • Grub upper separation Bach
  • Grub Reicheneibach
  • Gruber
  • Hackenberg
  • Hazel Thann
  • Rear
  • Heiligenbrunn
  • Holy City
  • Hermannsöd
  • Hintergindering
  • Hinterreisach
  • Hinzing
  • Hochwimm
  • Hofwimm
  • Höhhaus
  • Hölsbrunn
  • Holzhäuseln
  • Wooden Horse
  • Holzwoferl
  • Hopfloh
  • Stroke
  • Huttenkofen
  • Irlach
  • Kager
  • Klorberg
  • Kobl at Nutzbach
  • Kobl at Reicheneibach
  • Kolbeck
  • Kollbach
  • Kottenöd
  • Kurmer
  • Long Katzbach
  • Leitl
  • Limmer
  • Linn
  • Linnöd
  • Lukasöd
  • Magassing
  • Mailing
  • Maisberg
  • Malling
  • Mandl
  • Marastorf
  • Matzing
  • Mitter Schmid village
  • Lower separation Bach
  • Nußbaumöd
  • Nutzbach
  • Oberalmsham
  • Oberauer mountain
  • Oberbachham
  • Oberndorf
  • Oberried
  • Oberschmid village
  • Upper separation Bach
  • Oberviehhausen
  • Öd
  • Oven
  • Ottenöd
  • Pading
  • Panzing
  • Pavenzing
  • Pech Häusl
  • Plaikamühle
  • Racks village
  • Radlkofen
  • Rauschöd
  • Reicheneibach
  • Riebersberg
  • Riemberg
  • Rohrach
  • Soot burner
  • Bag Stetten
  • St. Nikola
  • Satzing
  • Saueröd
  • Shadow churches
  • Schelnlohe
  • Scherzlthambach
  • Scheuering
  • Schmiedberg
  • Schmiedsöd
  • Schnatzling
  • Schöfthal
  • Schönhub
  • Beautifully Viehhausen
  • Schrettenbrunn
  • Schroell
  • Seemannshausen
  • Seereit
  • Sesselberg
  • Siebengadern
  • Sölgerding
  • Spielberg
  • Spitz Grub
  • Stadlhof
  • Stevedores
  • Steinberg
  • Stockach
  • Strass
  • Room Grub
  • Taubendorf
  • Thalkofen
  • Unteralmsham
  • Under Auersberg
  • Unterbachham
  • Unterholzen
  • Under Schmid village
  • Uttendorf
  • Vohberg
  • Vorderreisach
  • Vorrach
  • Pond
  • Wicke ring
  • Wiedersbach
  • Wiesbach
  • Meadows
  • Wimmersdorf
  • Winterberg
  • Woehr
  • Desolate

History

Gangkofen 889 was first mentioned. It is said to have heard in 1007 at the founding of the diocese of Bamberg to its Ausstattungsgut. In 1279, Count II of Leonberg Wenhard the Teutonic Order the right of patronage of the parish, and thus founded the German Order - Coming in Gangkofen. This meant that the religious area was a part of the Deutschordensballei francs and thus also from 1500 belonged to the Frankish Empire circle. The rest Gangkofens belonged to the Bavarian kingdom circle. Until its resolution 1805/ 06 she was the only branch of the Teutonic Order in today's Lower Bavaria.

In 1379 Gangkofen was granted market rights. The coat of arms was in 1450 by Duke Louis IX. awarded by Bavaria -Landshut. The recovery, however, was by devastating fires ( such as 1590 and 1666) and chaos of war ( invasion of Sweden 1632 and 1648), and plague epidemics ( 1357 and 1649) zunichtegemacht over again.

The market Gangkofen was before 1803 and belonged to Pflegamt Rentamt Landshut of the Electorate of Bavaria. The Coming of the Teutonic Order, which was endowed with the noble freedom ( Hofmarksrecht ) and the Bailiwick exercised over their single-layer ( behausten ) goods, in 1806 dissolved by the Kingdom of Bavaria. Gangkofen possessed beyond a Magistratisches Market Court. In the course of administrative reform in Bavaria, was born with the congregation of 1818 and the territorial reforms of the 1970s, today's community.

On October 15, 1875 Gangkofen received with the rail link opened Mühldorf - Pilsting connection to the railway network. Since the September 27, 1970, this connection is, however, used for freight nurmehr.

Incorporations

On January 1, 1972, the formerly independent communities Kollbach, Upper release Bach, Panzing, Reicheneibach and parts were incorporated Malling. On May 1, in 1978, Dirnaich, sleeve Brunn and parts of the territory of the dissolved municipalities Sallach and Thambach, which belonged to the district Mühldorf, added.

Policy

Market council

At the last municipal election in 2008, it came to the following distribution of votes:

  • CSU 9 seats
  • SPD 2 seats
  • FWG 5 seats
  • UWG 1 seat
  • Wählergemeinschaft Kollbach 2 seats
  • BP 1 seat

Culture and sights

Structures

With 210 meters long and 18 meters wide, the 0.6 -acre marketplace has a typical ratio of approximately 1:8. The houses are partly still the old tail gable. The parish church was rebuilt after the great fire from 1666 to 1670, the steeple was from 1695 to 1697 to do so. Northwest of the church is the 1691 newly built three-winged late baroque complex of the German Order - Coming.

See also: List of monuments in Gangkofen

Media

Two local newspapers include Gangkofen to their area of ​​distribution: The " Rottaler indicator " ( the regional edition of the Passau Neue Presse, PNP) has its editorial office about 20 km east Eggenfelden that Vilsbiburger newspaper ( the newspaper group Landshut Newspaper / Straubinger Tageblatt belong ) in the 17 km westerly Vilsbiburg. For years, every now and then ignited a battle between the leaves to the readership of the market town, now the lines seem disconnected and there is peace.

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the town

  • Sibylle Kynast ( born January 31, 1945), musician
  • Ottmar Edenhofer ( born July 8, 1961), chief economist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
  • Rudolf Ratzinger ( born June 3, 1966), musician, founded the Audio Project Wumpscut

Personalities who have worked on site

  • Johann Evangelist Fischer ( † 1790), pastor, translated a multi-volume history of Christianity from the French
  • Franz Seraph rich Eder (1905-1976), historian and local historian, was from 1933 to 1936 chaplain of the Gangkofer parish.
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