The community's name goes back to the von Hirzheide noble family whose
coat of arms were
charged with a
hart, still seen in the community's arms today. Hirschaid lies not far from the former
via regia, an ancient road that since antiquity joined the north in the area around
Lüneburg with the south all the way to
Lower Austria. The name Hirschaid refers to the former landscape and
wildlife (
Hirsch is “hart” in
German). Finds dug up on the Regnitz Valley terraces bear witness to an early settlement beginning no later than the
New Stone Age. Bearing witness to the later
La Tène culture (
Celtic) are above all the finds and wall remains on the nearby
Friesener Warte In 1079, Hirschaid became historical for the first time through a document issued by King
Heinrich IV. In 1979, this date was duly celebrated in the community's 900th anniversary celebration. From 1300, it was the seat of the Lords,
ministeriales and
Vögte (sing.
Vogt – reeve) of
Hirzheide. Their Frankish line died out in 1590, although a
Swedish-
Livonian line still lives today. The coat of arms that they bore then, showing a golden hart in silver climbing out of a blue three-knolled hill (a charge called a
Dreiberg in German heraldry), foreshadowed the one now borne by the community. Although Hirschaid was mostly spared in the
German Peasants' War, the community, lying on the main through road, was hard hit in the
Thirty Years' War. A chronicler reports from this time: “After
Candlemas 1633 the
Swedes also came here and dwelt in the Swedish way. They plundered and robbed whatever they could get; nothing was holy to them. The House of God had its windows and doors beaten in, the inside was demolished, the bells taken away and broken up...” Further plunderings had to be suffered in the
Seven Years' War and especially in the
Napoleonic Wars, when on 6 August 1793 a heavy
cavalry and
artillery battle broke out right near the community between the Imperial Army and
French troops. With
Secularization, Hirschaid, which had been assigned to the tithing area of
Eggolsheim, passed along with its 105 “autonomous houses” to
Bavaria. The building of the Ludwig Danube-Main Canal in 1834 and the opening of the Nuremberg-Bamberg
railway line in 1844 yielded the first industrial incentives for Hirschaid.
Basket weaving, which was introduced about this time, offered others work and a livelihood. About 1900, the population had grown to roughly 1,120, and the number of houses to 173. Because of its favourable location, determined by the
railway station on the Nuremberg-Bamberg railway line and the community's lying right near the highways, but also by administrative reform in 1972, the market community of Hirschaid with its constituent communities has grown to have more than 11,000 inhabitants and is developing itself appreciably into a small transport and economic centre.
Religion •
Roman Catholic: 80% • Evangelical
Lutheran: 10% • Other, no religion: 10% All figures are rough. ==Politics==