X-Nico

unusual facts about Eching, Freising


Eching

Eching, Freising, a municipality in Freising district, near Munich


Adolf Froelich

He studied brewing technology at the scientific department Weihenstephan of the University of Technology Munich in Freising.

Bishops of Freising and Archbishops of Munich and Freising

St. Corbinian (724–730); founded the Benedictine abbey in Freising, although the diocese was not organized until 739)

Ferdinand Marian

Marian died in a road accident in 1946 near the village of Dürneck (today part of Freising) in Bavaria, probably driving under the influence.

Francesco Antonio Begnudelli-Basso

Francesco Antonio Begnudelli-Basso (born at Trento; died at Freising, 9 October 1713) was an Austrian canon lawyer.

Freising Bishops' Conference

The bishops of these dioceses meet since 1867 twice a year at the Freising cathedral hill, its leader, the Archbishop of Munich and Freising (since 2008 Archbishop Reinhard Marx); Substitute is the Metropolitan of the northern Bavarian ecclesiastical province of Bamberg (since 2002 Archbishop Ludwig Schick).

Freising manuscripts

During the time of the writing of the two manuscripts (sermons on sin and repentance, a confessional form), Bishop Abraham was active (from 957 to 994) in Freising.

Grimoald of Bavaria

It is not certain if the division of the duchy was territorial or a powersharing scheme, but if the former, it seems most probable that Grimoald's capital was either Freising, which he later favoured as a diocesan seat, or Salzburg, which he later treated as a capital of sorts (Vita Corbiniani).

Hitto of Freising

Hitto of Freising (died 835) was the 6th Bishop of Freising from Dec 811 to 835.

He is first recorded as Bishop of Freising in 812, his predecessor, Atto, however, had died over a year earlier.

Innichen

This kind of representation points out that the site was once under the rule of the Bishops of Freising owners of a large area in the region from 769 to 1803.

Jacques Breuer

Born in Munich, Germany, Breuer graduated from the musical Camerloher-Gymnasium in Freising.

Kočevski Rog

This area, known in German as Gottschee, was settled in the late 14th century by the Carinthian Counts of Ortenburg initially with colonists from the Ortenburg estates in Carinthia and Tyrol, and by other settlers who came from Austrian and German Dioceses of Salzburg, Brixen and Freising.

Korbinian Aigner

In the autumn of 1896 he moved to the archbishop's high school in Freising.

Korbinian Aigner, known as Apfelpfarrer ("apple pastor"), (born 11 May 1885, Hohenpolding; † 5 October 1966, Freising) was a Bavarian Catholic priest and pomologist.

Krško Castle

In that year Adalbert of Bogen pawned it to Archbishop of Salzburg Adalbert III, a relative of his wife, for 800 Freising marks.

Metten Abbey

Members of the abbey were not only schoolteachers, but also members of the Bavarian Academy of Science in Munich and professors of philosophy and theology in Freising and Salzburg.

München Moosach station

Track 4 is used by the S 1 services to Freising/the Airport and Regionalbahn services towards Freising and beyond.

On 28 September 1925, Munich-Moosach station was electrified with the line from Munich to Freising.

München-Feldmoching station

Platform 3 accommodates S-Bahn trains to Freising and the Airport and Regionalbahn trains towards Freising and beyond.

Neufahrn bei Freising station

Neufahrn (b Freising) station is located in the town of Neufahrn bei Freising in the German state of Bavaria and is served by the Munich S-Bahn.

Ordo Rachelis

There are the Lamentatio Rachelis from Saint-Martial at Limoges (eleventh century), a lengthy part of an Epiphany play from Laon (twelfth century), a play from Freising (late eleventh century), and another one from Fleury (thirteenth century).

Prince-Bishopric of Freising

In 1821, the former diocese of Freising was absorbed into the newly created Archdiocese of Munich and Freising, whose seat was transferred to Munich.

The Prince-Bishopric of Freising (German: Hochstift Freising) was an ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire from 1294 until its secularisation in the early years of the 19th century.

Seeon Abbey

The Romanesque towers are reminiscent of Freising Cathedral and, like the Frauenkirche at Munich, have copper "onion towers", which were added after a fire in 1561.

Sidonie of Bavaria

Pope Innocent VIII had in February 1490 delegated the investigation necessary for this dispensation to bishop Sixtus of Freising and two clergymen from Munich.

Slovene literature

The earliest documents written in a Slovene dialect are the Freising manuscripts (Brižinski spomeniki), dated between 972 and 1022, found in 1803 in Freising, Germany.

Stara Loka

It is one of the oldest Slovene settlements first mentioned in documents concerning the lands Emperor Otto II granted to Bishop Abraham of Freising in the Duchy of Bavaria, dating to 973 AD.

Sveti Jošt nad Kranjem

St. Judoc's Church was first mentioned in documents relating to the bequest of land by Emperor Otto II to the Bishops of Freising in 973.

Volaka

Volaščica Creek, which runs through the settlement, was set as the original border of the Dominion of Freising in AD 973.

Weihenstephan Abbey

The monastery proper, dedicated at first to Saint Vitus, later to Saints Stephen and Michael, was founded by Bishop Hitto von Freising in approximately 811–835.


see also