Adendorf

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the municipality of Adendorf
Adendorf
Map of Germany, position of the municipality of Adendorf highlighted

Coordinates: 53 ° 17 '  N , 10 ° 27'  E

Basic data
State : Lower Saxony
County : Luneburg
Height : 23 m above sea level NHN
Area : 16.08 km 2
Residents: 10,853 (Dec 31, 2019)
Population density : 675 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 21365
Area code : 04131
License plate : LG
Community key : 03 3 55 001
Community structure: 4 districts
Address of the
municipal administration:
Rathausplatz 14
21365 Adendorf
Website : www.adendorf.de
Mayor : Thomas Maack ( SPD )
Location of the municipality of Adendorf in the Lüneburg district
Landkreis Lüneburg Niedersachsen Schleswig-Holstein Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Landkreis Lüchow-Dannenberg Landkreis Uelzen Landkreis Heidekreis Landkreis Harburg Rehlingen Soderstorf Oldendorf Amelinghausen Betzendorf Barnstedt Melbeck Deutsch Evern Wendisch Evern Embsen Südergellersen Kirchgellersen Westergellersen Reppenstedt Reppenstedt Mechtersen Vögelsen Radbruch Bardowick Handorf Wittorf Lüneburg Barendorf Vastorf Reinstorf Thomasburg Dahlenburg Boitze Nahrendorf Tosterglope Dahlem Bleckede Neetze Adendorf Scharnebeck Rullstorf Lüdersburg Hittbergen Hohnstorf Echem Artlenburg Barum Brietlingen Amt Neuhausmap
About this picture

Adendorf ( Low German Adendörp ) is a municipality in the Lower Saxony district Lüneburg .

Adendorf is located about four kilometers northeast of the Lüneburg city ​​center and has largely grown together with the city. Together with the towns of Reppenstedt , Vögelsen and Bardowick as well as Deutsch Evern and Wendisch Evern, Adendorf forms the densely populated area around Lüneburg, which together with Lüneburg has around 108,500 inhabitants (as of 2018).

geography

Geographical location

Adendorf lies between the Ilmenau River and the Elbe Lateral Canal about ten kilometers south of the Elbe .

Neighboring communities

Flecken Bardowick in the west, municipality Brietlingen in the north, municipality Scharnebeck in the east and the city ​​of Lüneburg in the south.

history

The medieval "Adenthorpe" was first mentioned in a document in 1252 as a farming village with 18 farmsteads and a chapel dedicated to John the Baptist . This survived the three devastating fires in the town - in 1374 in the War of the Lüneburg Succession , then in the Thirty Years' War and finally in 1895, when dragoons were quartered in Adendorf and were careless with matches. The Johanneskapelle is one of the oldest preserved buildings in the Lüneburg district today . During the Thirty Years' War (1644) a manor was built that was managed until the 20th century, most recently as a state teaching property. While the estate and a total of nine Adendorf-Erbstorfer brickworks did not survive 1970, new businesses, lively construction activity and lavish cultural facilities favored the enormous increase in population in the past century and brought the former farming village to a new economic boom. In 1974 the community of Adendorf was to be incorporated into the city of Lüneburg. Due to sustained resistance, only the districts of Ebensberg and Olm were finally reclassified into the district town. In 1976 the community hit the headlines when the Elbe Lateral Canal broke at an underpass in the Erbstorf district and five million cubic meters of water flooded the surrounding area. The outflow area can still be seen well in aerial photographs.

Religions

Christ the King Church

The Protestant-Lutheran Emmaus parish of Adendorf includes the historic Johanneskapelle on Dorfstrasse and the Emmauskirche, built in 1962 on Bültenweg. The community belongs to the district of Lüneburg .

The Catholic Christ-König-Kirche was built on Wacholderweg in 1963, and in 1971 it was given a branch church in neighboring Bardowick , which has since been profaned . Since 2004 the church belongs to the parish of St. Marien in Lüneburg.

A New Apostolic Church was built in 1976 on Robert-Lehmann-Ring, it belongs to the Lüneburg district of the New Apostolic Church in Northern and Eastern Germany .

Incorporations

On March 1, 1974, the municipality of Erbstorf was incorporated.

Outsourcing

On April 1, 1974, parts of the area (districts Ebensberg and Olm) with then more than 700 inhabitants were ceded to the district town of Lüneburg.

Population development

Population development of Adendorf from 1812 to 2017
  • 1812: approx. 0.176 inhabitants
  • 1885: approx. 0.347 inhabitants
  • 1900: approx. 0.346 inhabitants
  • 1933: approx. 1,009 inhabitants
  • 1939: approx. 1,419 inhabitants
  • 1951: approx. 2,858 inhabitants
  • 1961: approx. 3,921 inhabitants
  • 1963: approx. 4,512 inhabitants
  • 1970: approx. 4,993 inhabitants
  • 1973: approx. 5,400 inhabitants
  • 1978: approx. 7,003 inhabitants
  • 2002: approx. 9,784 inhabitants
  • 2007: approx10,062 inhabitants
  • 2009: approx10,163 inhabitants
  • 2011: approx10,357 inhabitants
  • 2015: approx10,724 inhabitants
  • 2017: approx10,783 inhabitants

Origin of the place name

Old names are: Adendorp (mentioned 1248/1255), Adenthorpe (1252/1254/1290) and Adendhorpe (1275).

In the first part of the place name is a personal name, which probably comes from the abbreviated personal name stem "Athal" from the Germanic aþala , Old Saxon athali 'nobility' . Adendorf therefore means something like "settlement / village of Atha".

politics

Local election 2006 2011 2016
list Share of votes Seats Share of votes Seats Share of votes Seats
SPD 53.7% 13 58.4% 15th 45.9% 12
CDU 30.6% 7th 17.6% 5 22.6% 6th
GREEN 13.4% 3 17.4% 5 16.1% 4th
FDP - - 01.2% - 03.9% 1
(PDS) / Left 02.3% 1 - - 03.9% 1
ABAE * - - - - 07.4% 2
Individual applicants - - 05.4% 1 - -
Total ** 100% 24 100% 26th 100% 26th
voter turnout 51.1% 54.0% 62.0%
* Active citizens of Adendorf Erbstorf ** After correcting the rounding errors000

The municipality of Adendorf belongs to the state electoral district 49 Lüneburg and to the federal electoral district 38 Lüchow-Dannenberg-Lüneburg .

Municipal council

The municipal council is re-elected every five years. The most recent municipal council election took place on September 11, 2016. The table on the right shows their result and that of the two previous elections.

mayor

In the mayoral election on September 11, 2011, Thomas Maack (SPD) was elected mayor with 70%. His competitors Kerstin Roloff (CDU) and Bärbel Sasse (Greens) received 16% and 14% respectively.

Partnerships

Culture and sights

Museums

Us Heimathus is housed in a historic Lower Saxony two- column house from 1661 . The objects shown convey knowledge about prehistory and early history, rural life and the local flora and fauna. The Heimatarchiv is also located here with information about Adendorf's past.

Buildings

Spared from the fires of 1374, 1627 and 1895, the oldest building was the chapel, built in 1258 and consecrated to John the Baptist .

Parks

The Teichaue, a small recreational park with an artificially created watercourse, is located in a former clay pit in northeast Adendorf.

Sports

The ice rink, the Walter Maack ice rink , built in 1975 , is the only one in the district and serves as the home arena for the Adendorfer EC , a regional ice hockey player .

The heated outdoor pool, open from May to August, is located right next to the ice rink.

Popular sports are practiced on the sports grounds (sports hall, soccer fields and tennis courts) of TSV Adendorf. In handball, a syndicate of TSV Adendorf and SV Scharnebeck has formed. In the Erbstorf district there is another sports club, the Tus Erbstorf. He owns a soccer field and several tennis courts.

The Golf Resort Adendorf also has an 18-hole master course, a public nine-hole short course and an indoor golf course.

Economy and Infrastructure

economy

The majority of the resident companies are small and medium-sized service and craft businesses. The best-known company in Adendorf is the Schluckwerder company, which operates two production facilities for confectionery here.

traffic

The community is at the end of the BAB 39 , which is continued here as the B 4 . The B 209 runs through the municipality.

Adendorf is on the Lübeck – Lüneburg railway line ; the station is to be reactivated for passenger traffic. There is a dense bus service to Lüneburg (up to three departures per hour), which also opens up the various parts of the municipality. These are lines 5006 and 5007 of Kraftverkehr GmbH (KVG) . One- way tickets to Hamburg can be purchased as part of the HVV . A car sharing station is available at the town hall as a supplement to public transport .

media

The regional newspaper for the Lüneburg Heath is the current daily newspaper for the region. The weekly Lünepost is also published in Adendorf every Wednesday and on the weekend .

Public facilities

Since 1956 there has been a public library in the municipality of Adendorf, which has been located directly next to the town hall since 1987. In 2018, the “Library at Rathausplatz” was renamed “Library Adendorf” as part of the certification process for “Library with Quality and Seal”. In addition to media lending, various events such as readings, concerts and puppet theater take place.

education

There is a primary school in the village, which is divided between the Dorfstrasse and Weinbergsweg locations. The primary school has been an all-day school since 2005 and looks after around 450 children in 19 classes. The school at Katzenberg is a secondary school and looks after around 460 students. It has also been an all-day school since 2005.

literature

  • Hans-Jürgen Vogtherr: Tile Hagemanns Uelzen - A North German small town at the end of the 16th century (=  publications of the Historical Commission for Lower Saxony and Bremen . Volume 251 ). Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-7752-6051-0 , p. 91 .

Web links

Commons : Adendorf  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. State Office for Statistics Lower Saxony, LSN-Online regional database, Table 12411: Update of the population, as of December 31, 2019  ( help ).
  2. Günther Wagener: Directory of the cities, integrated communities, the member communities and districts in the Hanseatic city and the district of Lüneburg with the entry of the Low German place names. (pdf) In: www.landkreis-lueneburg.de. August 27, 2015, p. 2 , accessed December 20, 2018 .
  3. a b c d e Federal Statistical Office (Hrsg.): Historical municipality register for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 233 and 235 .
  4. ^ From the book The French Kayser State. Volume I.
  5. ^ Jürgen Udolph (research): The "place name researcher". In: website NDR 1 Lower Saxony . Archived from the original on December 7, 2015 ; accessed on August 2, 2019 .
  6. Result of local elections 2011 Result of local elections Adendorf 2011 ( Memento from July 29, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ).
  7. http://www.adendorf.de/gemeinde/gemeinderat.html Adendorf website - results of the 2016 municipal elections
  8. Landtag constituencies from the 16th electoral term. Constituency division for the election to the Lower Saxony state parliament. Annex to Section 10 (1) NLWG, p. 4. ( PDF ( Memento from July 25, 2011 in the Internet Archive ); 87 KB).
  9. Description of the constituencies. Annex to Section 2, Paragraph 2 of the Federal Election Act. In: Eighteenth law amending the federal electoral law. Annex to Article 1. Bonn March 18, 2008, p. 325 ( PDF ( Memento of July 25, 2011 in the Internet Archive ); 200 KB).
  10. ^ Result of the 2011 citizens' election in the Adendorf community ( Memento from September 27, 2011 in the Internet Archive ).
  11. Entry on the partnership with the canton of Saint-Romain-de-Colbosc. Retrieved on April 27, 2019, 1:35 pm
  12. Reactivation of train stops on the Niedersachsen.de website.Retrieved on July 14, 2020
  13. ^ History of the Adendorf Library. In: bibliothek-adendorf.de . Municipality of Adendorf, accessed on January 23, 2019 .