Frielinghausen (Wuppertal)

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Frielinghausen
City of Wuppertal
Coordinates: 51 ° 12 ′ 46 ″  N , 7 ° 17 ′ 21 ″  E
Height : 300 m above sea level NHN
Frielinghausen (Wuppertal)
Frielinghausen

Location of Frielinghausen in Wuppertal

View in Frielinghausen with the building of the former school
View in Frielinghausen with the building of the former school

Frielinghausen is a hamlet in the Wuppertal residential area of Herbringhausen in the Langerfeld-Beyenburg district .

geography

The place, surrounded by agriculturally used areas, lies on a plateau at 300  m above sea level. NHN west of the Wuppertal and north of the Remscheid district of Hackenberg . The Frielinghauser Bach, a tributary of the Wilhelmstaler Bach, rises south of the village .

The Beyenburg-Cologne branch of the Rhenish Jacobsweg and the Wuppertaler Rundweg cross the town.

Etymology and history

The ending -inghausen indicates a settlement in the 9./10. Century by the Borchter close that on the middle Ruhr lived up to Charles Saxon Wars under Saxon stood rule. In 1715 the hamlet is called Freilinghusen on the Topographia Ducatus Montani .

In the Middle Ages, Frielinghausen, first mentioned in a document in 1325, belonged to the Garschagen Honschaft in the Beyenburg district . In 1547 four homes are occupied. At that time the court was part of the Mosblech court association , which was an allod of the Bergisch dukes . One of the estate of the living space did not belong to the honor, but to the outside citizenship of Lennep .

In 1815/16 there were 104 residents in the village, 90 of whom belonged to Garschagen and 14 to Lennep's citizenship. 1832 Frielinghausen was still part of the Honschaft Garschagen, since the French occupation of Luettringhausen mayor was a member, and the outer citizenship Lennep the mayoralty Lennep . Which according to the statistics and topography of the district of Dusseldorf as a village community designated place had at that time 17 houses (15 for Honschaft and two for foreign citizenship) and 17 agricultural buildings (15 and two). At this time there were 141 inhabitants (130 and 11), all of whom were Protestant. In the municipality lexicon for the province of Rhineland from 1888, 17 houses with 193 inhabitants are given.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Gerd Helbeck : Beyenburg. History of a place on the Bergisch-Mark border and its surrounding area. Volume 1: The Middle Ages. Basics and advancement. Association for local history, Schwelm 2007, ISBN 978-3-9811749-1-5 .
  2. ^ Hermann Kießling: Courtyards and farm associations in Wuppertal. Bergisch-Märkischer Genealogischer Verlag, Wuppertal 1977.
  3. ^ E. Erwin Stursberg , "Alt-Lüttringhausen" , contributions to the history of Remscheid, No. 6, Remscheid, 1950, p. 29f
  4. Johann Georg von Viebahn : Statistics and Topography of the Administrative District of Düsseldorf , 1836
  5. Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland Province, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1885 and other official sources, (Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII), Berlin 1888.