Adelbylund

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Coordinates: 54 ° 46 ′ 54 ″  N , 9 ° 27 ′ 12 ″  O Adelbylund is the name of a district in the Sandberg district ofthe independent city of Flensburg . The district is located in the east of the city not far from the Johanniskirche Flensburg-Adelby . The Anglo-Danish name refers to a small wood (Lund = grove) near the old main village (Adelby).

history

In the 17th century Adelbylund consisted only of the two large farms Groß and Klein Adelbylund, which were the largest estates in the Adelby parish after Sünderuphof . The production of dairy products was important, for which there was a large market in the nearby city of Flensburg. By the 18th century at the latest, a small Katensiedlung including the Angelsund inn was built along the Flensburg- Kappelner Landstrasse . However, the houses belonged to the nearby Klein Adelbylund farm. A nearby inn Adelby also belonged to Groß Adelbylund on the old road from Flensburg to the Adelby Church , and in the 19th century the two parcels of Löwenberg (close to the south of the church) and Adelbylunder Meierhof (later called Tarupfeld ) to the northeast of Tarup were laid down .

As long as the Duchy of Schleswig existed, Adelbylund belonged to the Flensburg office and the Husbyharde . After being incorporated into Prussia in 1867 , the office was converted to a district, and Adelbylund became part of the municipality of Sünderup . In 1889 Adelbylund became the administrative seat of the Adelby district, but was drastically reduced in size in 1900 and 1910 by incorporation into Flensburg. Structurally, Adelbylund grew together with Flensburg along Kappelner Strasse in the 19th century, but the two courtyards north of Hauptstrasse still existed. In the 1950s, Adelbylund grew considerably southwards.

In an area swap in 1966 and 1967, an area with 78 inhabitants was transferred from Sünderup to Tarup. In addition, the area of ​​the Adelby Church with 30 residents was transferred to Sünderup. On January 1, 1970, the parishes of Tarup and Sünderup merged to form the parish of Adelby. The Adelbylund belonging to Sünderup, where the municipal administration was located, was ceded to the city of Flensburg on April 26, 1970. On March 24, 1974, Tarup and Sünderup were also incorporated into Flensburg.

The street name for this part of the old Flensburg-Kappelner Landstrasse is reminiscent of the old Adelbylund. The Klein Adelbylund farm still exists as a farm. Groß Adelbylund is now a workshop and residence for mentally handicapped people, which bears the name Holländerhof , a later name for the Groß Adelbylund farm. Of the old buildings, however, only the new imperial building of the Adelby inn remains. Around 2000, the last fields and meadows in the Adelbylund area were cultivated, almost exclusively with single-family houses.

literature

  • Gerret L. Schlaber: Administrative tilhørsforhold mellem Ejderen and Kongeåen. Flensborg 2007.
  • Gerret L. Schlaber: Fra opland til bydele. Flensborg's game bymark and de indlemmede landsbyer in photo and text approx. 1860–1930. From the country to the district. Flensburg's old town field and the incorporated villages in pictures and words approx. 1860–1930. Flensburg 2009.

Individual evidence

  1. Gerret Liebing Schlaber: From the country to the district. Flensburg's Stadtfeld and the incorporated villages in pictures and words approx. 1860-1930 . Flensburg 2009. pp. 115 and 119
  2. Gerret Liebing Schlaber: From the country to the district. Flensburg's Stadtfeld and the incorporated villages in pictures and words approx. 1860–1930. Flensburg 2009. p. 116
  3. ^ A b State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein (ed.): The population of the communities in Schleswig-Holstein . Historical Parish Directory: Notes on Adelby Parish (footnote). Kiel 1972 ( digitized from genealogy.net [accessed on April 21, 2015]).
  4. On January 1, 1966, the parishes of Tarup and Sünderup apparently "did not" merge to form the parish of Adelby. Obviously misrepresented in: Gerret Liebing Schlaber: From the country to the district. Flensburg's Stadtfeld and the incorporated villages in pictures and words approx. 1860–1930. Flensburg 2009, page 31, or Gerhard Nowc: Engelsby, Mürwik, Jürgensby - city history on the doorstep, in: Flensburger Tageblatt , February 5, 2009; accessed on April 9, 2014; the misrepresentation in the more frequently used book is probably based on the incomplete consideration of the directory also used by the author: Statistisches Landesamt Schleswig-Holstein (Ed.): The population of the communities in Schleswig-Holstein . Historical municipality register. Kiel 1972 ( digitized from genealogy.net [accessed on April 21, 2015]).

Web links

Commons : Adelbylund  - collection of images, videos and audio files