Maitenbeth

Maitenbeth ( Bavarian: Moabeth ) is a municipality in the Upper Bavarian district Mühldorf and a member of the administrative community Maitenbeth.

  • 2.1 Amalgamations
  • 2.2 Population development
  • 2.3 Coat of Arms
  • 3.1 monuments

Geography

Geographical Location

In the field of community Maitenbeth is the source of Isen, a tributary of the Inn.

Maitenbeth located 40 km east of Munich and 35 km north of Rosenheim on the B 12

Neighboring communities

The community Maitenbeth bordered to the east by Haag in Oberbayern ( MT ), to the south Rechtmehring ( MT ), Albaching ( RO) and Steinhöring ( EBE ), on the west by Hohenlinden ( EBE ) and to the north by Isen (ED).

Community structure

The municipality has 58 Maitenbeth officially named districts:

  • Barthub
  • Mountain
  • Bern riding
  • Fire
  • Brandstätt
  • Bräustätt
  • Dichtldorn
  • Dieblstätt
  • Edgarten
  • Essbaum
  • Etschlohe
  • Feichtenschlager
  • Streets
  • Ginhub
  • Gmain
  • Goldbrunn
  • Haslach
  • Hatzmoos
  • Heilbrunn
  • Hennezogl
  • Court
  • Honau
  • Innach
  • Kopfsöd
  • Kramerberg
  • Cross
  • Kronsöd
  • Paints
  • Light Felden
  • Löfflmoos
  • Blaze
  • Luhestätt
  • Luxstätt
  • Maitenbeth
  • Mars Meier
  • Mitterhof
  • Moss
  • Neukirchen
  • Niesberg
  • Oberöd
  • Ochsenfurt
  • Perzl
  • Pfaff mountain
  • Pointner
  • Rain
  • Rappoltenkirchen
  • Rückert Unterbichl
  • Schellenberg
  • Lists
  • Seilbach
  • Seven hard
  • Steinweg
  • Strass
  • Strasbourg Maier
  • Tegernbach
  • Thal
  • Weinhub

History

Today the district is Etschloh 977 AD, Maitenbeth (as Aetenpeth ) until 1315 AD, mentioned for the first time in a Freising matriculation documented. The name Aetenpeth, composed here of " Aeten " - a variation of the name Aite which arose from Agathe - and " beth " - which means resting place - together. The letter M was probably done by a merger of a ( unknown ) preceding word with the root word. The name Maitenbeth therefore means of literally " place where the holy Agathe rests ."

In the Middle Ages until 1804 Maitenbeth belonged with the surrounding villages and hamlets to the Free Imperial County Hague. The county Hague was not part of Bavaria, but was an independent kingdom own country. The western border of the county still forms the western boundary of the parish Maitenbeth. At this point, it came in 1800 to the collision of the French revolutionary troops with the South German troops ( Austrians, Bavaria, Württemberg, Hesse, Liechtenstein ). On 3 December 1800, the decisive battle of the Battle of Hohenlinden was to Maitenbeth discharged.

In 1882, the two communities Maitenbeth and Innach joined together in a kind of local government reform. After the dissolution of the district Wasserburg am Inn 1972 Maitenbeth was part of the district Mühldorf and 1978 the administrative community Hague, but only for two years. Since 1980 Maitenbeth forms with the neighboring community Rechtmehring administrative matters.

According to the " Chronicle of Maitenbeth " (1858 ) of the Expositus Franz Haistrachers already existed in 1488 in Maitenbeth a church. Its present form was the parish church of St. Agatha from 1680, in 1707 it was inaugurated.

Maitenbeth was part of the county Hague.

Incorporations

On 1 July 1882, until then independent municipality Innach was incorporated.

Population Development

¹ Including the then independent municipality part Innach

Coat of arms

Description: The coat of arms is divided diagonally right up in gold a raven with a bloody woodchip in its beak; below in the blue box, silver mold for the county Hague.

Culture and sights

Monuments

→ List of monuments in Maitenbeth

Public institutions

Maitenbeth has a primary school. The present building was inaugurated in 1964 and 1991 expanded. It forms with the school in Rechtmehring a common main school. A nursery was established in 1974, in 2004 he moved to a new building.

Transport and Infrastructure

At the busy B12 (Lindau - Munich - Passau) and not far from the north- south running B 15. Bus connections to Munich and Hague / Gars am Inn. To monitor the airspace is in the United Hague Forest southwest of Maitenbeth a tower of DFS with a SRE -M radar. Each of these six nationwide facilities has an effective radius of about 145 NM ( nautical miles equivalent to 270 km).

Personalities

The painter Peter Casagrande (* 1946) lives and works in Maitenbeth.

Others

In 2007, the footballer Marek Krejčí dies near Maitenbeth in a car accident.

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