Adensen
Adensen
Community Nordstemmen
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Coordinates: 52 ° 10 ′ 35 ″ N , 9 ° 43 ′ 45 ″ E | ||
Height : | 78 (75.6-90) m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 4.58 km² | |
Residents : | 900 (March 31, 2018) | |
Population density : | 197 inhabitants / km² | |
Incorporation : | March 1, 1974 | |
Postal code : | 31171 | |
Area code : | 05044 | |
Location of Adensen in Lower Saxony |
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Center of Adensen with the St. Dionysius Church in 2008
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Adensen is part of the municipality of Nordstemmen in the Haller valley and is located in the west of the Hildesheim district in Lower Saxony . It has around 900 inhabitants and is therefore one of the smaller parts of the municipality of Nordstemmen.
geography
Geographical location
Adensen is located west of Hildesheim on the edge of the Hanover region near the federal highway 3 in the Calenberger Land . Adensen includes the rose mill and the Pussensen (Pustessen) desert , which got its name from the Pusse (Puße) spring . Adensen and Hallerburg form a village community with a common church community and joint associations. The Calenberger Weg , a long-distance hiking trail that extends from Bad Nenndorf to Nordstemmen , leads through Adensen and Hallerburg . The Haller flows south of Adensen .
Neighboring places
history
The history of Adensen begins in the years 500 to 800, when the place as well as Bodensen and Pussensen on the Alte Heerstraße arose on a hill north of the Haller. Adensen was formed as a cluster village . Bodensen and Pussensen later fell desolate . In Adensen in the 10th century, the rule began Adenoys . It was practiced by the noble family of Adenoys until March 9, 1322 . The Duke Wilhelm of Braunschweig and Lüneburg, a Guelph , had the “Hallerburg” castle built on the Hallerinsel so that the deposit duty and road duty could be levied on those passing through. It was first mentioned in a document in 1362. The castle was destroyed in the Hildesheim collegiate feud in 1519 . Until 1970 you could see a square with a side length of almost fifty meters surrounded by ditches.
During World War II , a bomber dropped a final bomb on Adensen on November 18, 1944, destroying homes and killing eight residents.
Place name research
According to place name research, Adensen , like Bodensen and Pussensen ( Passensen , Pustessen ), was founded between 500 and 800 AD during the expansion period (Old Saxon land expansion in the early medieval clearing period ) because of the ending in the place name -sen (= group settlement).
An earlier spelling of Adensen was Adenessen (around 1120) in the composition of the personal name and the hometown Theodoricus von Adenessen . Adenhusen (around 1195): this is an abbreviation of Adenhausen or Adonhausen. Further abbreviations of the place name are Ahnsen and Ansen (1638, 1645).
The name of the rule of Adensen Adenoys and the name of their rule area Adenoyshusen or Adenoys are derived from Achim Gercke of St. Dionys , the patron saint of the church.
Incorporations
Adensen was incorporated into the municipality of Nordstemmen on March 1, 1974.
Population development
Population development of Adensen from 1885 to 2014 (source) | |||||||||||||
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year | Residents | year | Residents | year | Residents | year | Residents | ||||||
1885 | 578 | 1925 | 539 | 1933 | 547 | 1939 | 569 | ||||||
1961 | 826 | 1970 | 866 | 2011 | 988 | 2014 | 927 |
religion
Original parish of Jeinsen
To the north of Adensen is the "Teufelsküche" parcel. This name indicates that in pre-Christian times there was a sacred site of the Teutons near the old Heerstraße, which was later demonized by the Christians. After Christianization, Adensen, Bodensen and Pussensen belonged to the original parish of Jeinsen in the 9th century.
The noble family von Adenoys founded the St. Dionysius Church in Adensen at the end of the 10th century, to which the villages of Adensen , Bodensen and Pussensen ( Pustessen ) belonged. After the desolation of Bodensen and Pussensen ( Pustessen ) and the emergence of the village of Hallerburg , the parish includes the villages of Adensen and Hallerburg from the 14th century.
Patronage of the St. Dionysius Church
The patronage of the church remained until 1322 when the family of Adenoys, then went to the Earl of Hallermund and was of those on 14 April 1385 on the former Augustinian monastery and later wife pin in the monastery Wülfinghausen transmitted. The patronage relationship lasted until the end of the 19th century. As long as the parish of Adensen was obliged to collect collections for the maintenance of the Wülfinghausen monastery and to transfer them there.
Roman Catholic parish
Until the Reformation, the parish in Adensen and Hallerburg was Roman Catholic. In 1361 a clergyman from Adensen with the name Johann was first mentioned in a document. Another 8 Catholic clergy from the pre-Reformation period are known by name.
In Adensen there was a lay brotherhood called Our Dear Women until the Reformation . She had her own basic assets and performed tasks for the parish.
Catholics who live in Adensen and Hallerburg are parish members of the Roman Catholic Church of St. Michael Nordstemmen. (As of 2016)
Evangelical Lutheran parish
After the Reformation had prevailed in Adensen and Hallerburg in 1543 and the Adensen parish had become Evangelical Lutheran, Henricus Sanderus (Sander) became the first Evangelical Lutheran clergyman in Adensen in 1544.
The parishes of Adensen and Wülfingen were merged in 1924 as independent parishes under a common parish office . The seat of the parish office has been Wülfingen since 1924. The pastor's residence was initially in Wülfingen and since 1947 in Adensen. With effect from July 1, 2010, the parish connection between the parishes of Adensen and Wülfingen was canceled by the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hanover . The pastor in Adensen continued to exist as a permanently vacant pastor until it, like all permanently vacant pastors in the Evangelical Lutheran Church. Regional Church of Hanover was dissolved on December 31, 2012.
The parish of Adensen belongs in the Evangelical Lutheran parish of Hildesheimer Land-Alfeld, together with the parishes of Burgstemmen, Mahlerten and Heyersum to the parish of Burgstemmen-Mahlerten-Heyersum-Adensen. This and the rectory of Nordstemmen form the Nordstemmen region in the Elze district of the Hildesheimer Land-Alfeld parish, which is part of the Hildesheimer Land-Alfeld parish. The Adensen parish continues to be headed by its own parish council, which is also responsible for the Adensen cemetery administration .
politics
Local council
The local council of Adensen consists of 2 council women and 4 councilors. The local council also has two advisory members (SPD + independents).
- Independent: 6 seats
(Status: local election September 11, 2016)
Local mayor
The local mayor of Adensen is Oliver Riechelmann (Independent). His deputies are Fred Dralle (Independent) and Heike Niederhut-Bollmann (Independent).
Other offices
- The position of local home attendant has been vacant since 2018. On the initiative of Gerhard Fuest, who, after Herbert Pfeiffer, carried out this task until 2018, the website for home care in the municipality of Nordstemmen was created in 2016.
- The arbitrator for the localities of Adensen and Hallerburg is Karl-Erich Mundt from Nordstemmen with simultaneous representation for Burgstemmen (as of 2018).
coat of arms
Blazon : “In the silver coat of arms , a latticed field, covered by an upright blue rafter . In the diamonds there are five-petalled red roses with gold-colored calyxes . " | |
Justification for the coat of arms: The noble family "von Adenoys" had a latticed shield as coat of arms, in the rhombuses of which there were roses, which were divided by an upright rafter. The town of Adensen has adopted this coat of arms in its main features and chosen it as its symbol. |
Culture and sights
The meeting place Thie
The Thie as a meeting place extended in the shape of a rectangle between the courtyard properties of Bollmann-Niederhut (Dorfstrasse 2) and Brückner / Röhnsch (Dorfstrasse 1, 3, 5). It ended in the west in the middle of what is now Adenoyser Straße and in the east on the edge of the courtyard entrances to the residential buildings Röhnsch and Bollmann-Niederhut .
When the village was founded, the level of the earth at the end of the village street and on the Thie property was considerably higher than it is now, and at the same height as the ground at the base of the church tower. During the later expansion of Dorfstrasse and the construction of Adenoyser Strasse, the ground level was significantly lowered.
The Thie towered over the village street by a pile of earth. It was surrounded by stone walls and accessible from the village street and the nearby cemetery via stone stairs. Already by its appearance it was a raised and enclosed meeting place and represented a legal area of its own. Up on the Thie grass grew, and in the shadow of the linden trees stood a stone table which was used by the clerk as a desk and by the chairman as a podium.
In 1467 a court hearing took place on the Thie von Adensen, since in 1462 the von Reden brothers and also the Wittenburg monastery as alleged landlords demanded tithes from the farmer Henning Bennighusen for the same four acres of land. According to the testimony of all of Adensen's farmers, it was decided that the two alleged landlords were only allowed to claim the interest for two acres of land each.
As the competencies of the village community were increasingly curtailed, the Thie experienced a loss of importance. After all, it only served the village population as a meeting place for chatting and as a venue for village festivals.
After the "Lüneburg meanness division Regulation" of 1802, which had for the whole of Germany validity, it was possible to remove the standing in the way Thie be removed and the floor level so low that the village road through the grounds of Thies to now existing Adenoyser street could be continued . With that, Adensen had lost a building steeped in history that is still preserved in some other villages today.
St. Dionysius Church
The church is named St. Dionysius and is named after the first bishop of Paris Dionysius . The Romanesque bell tower of St. Dionysius Church dates from the 13th century and was extended upwards in the 14th century. In the extension of the church tower and in its width stood the single-nave Romanesque church facing east. The current interior of the church with pews, galleries, pulpit altar and organ prospect was carried out in 1852 in neo-Gothic style under the direction of the Hanoverian state architect Anton Eduard Bruno Wellenkamp.
Parish garden and old village well
The former parish garden at the parish hall is extensively managed and contains old fruit trees, bird protection hedges with various native shrubs, a natural meadow and natural pond with a spring and native pond border planting. The garden is a refuge for numerous species of wild plants, insects, butterflies, songbirds and animals that are bound to a wet habitat (newts, dragonflies, bats, etc.).
To the left of the door to the parish garden and the rectory (Adenoyser Straße 3) is the centuries-old village well of Adensen between the bushes. It is a listed building .
societies
Adensen and Hallerburg have the following local associations (as of 2015):
- Local association of the German Red Cross (founded: February 13, 1927)
- Voluntary fire brigade Nordstemmen Local fire brigade Adensen-Hallerburg (founded: 1932)
- Fire Brigade Association Adensen-Hallerburg e. V. (founded: April 24, 2015)
- Association for the Preservation of Historic Fire Brigade Vehicles Adensen-Hallerburg e. V. (founded in 2009)
- Cone groups
- TTC Adensen-Hallerburg e. V. (founded in 1957)
- School development association of the Adensen-Hallerburg primary school (founded in 1993), since 2013 the development association of the CJD primary school Adensen-Hallerburg e. V.
- VfL Adensen-Hallerburg e. V. (founded: June 18, 1949)
- Game community Adensen-Hallerburg and Wülfingen (founded in 1988)
Regular events
- Marienburg Castle Marathon
The sports club VfL Adensen-Hallerburg has been organizing a marathon every November since 2013 under the name “Marienburg Castle Marathon”. The run leads in the Hallertal from Adensen through Hallerburg and the Harberg into the forest area Hallerburger Holz , then over the Adenser Berg and Marienberg to Marienburg Castle and from there back to Adensen.
education
German-speaking school
After the Reformation had prevailed in Adensen and Hallerburg, a German-language school was founded in Adensen in 1543, in contrast to the Latin schools customary at the time , so that everyone could find access to learning the German language and reading the German-language Luther Bible . From 1543 to 1894 the school was sponsored by the Evangelical Lutheran. Parish of Adensen. The teaching post was connected with the organist and the sexton. The teachers lived in the sexton's house, in which the school was also located, and cultivated 8 acres of arable land for their livelihood, which the sextons in Adensen were entitled to as benefices .
The site of the Küsterei and thus the former school building was at Adenoyser Str. 4 (Thiemann's site). The first school was located there in the sexton's house from 1543 until the building collapsed around 1600. From 1591 to 1673, the sexton's shop and school moved into the annex in Adenoyser Str. 5 (Böhnke's property). In 1673 a new sexton's house was built at Adenoyser Str. 4; the second school was located there from 1673 to 1816. This sexton's house had to be replaced by a new building in 1816, which served as the third school until 1893 and is now owned by Thiemann. The inscription above the gate bar reads: " School house built in 1816 ".
The current fourth school in Adensen (Adenoyser Str. 1) was founded in 1893 by the Ev.-luth. Parish of Adensen built next to the rectory in what was then the parish widow's garden on the church's own property. On the triangular gable above the entrance to the school building there is a decorated round disc with the words of Jesus: “ Let the little children come to me! Marcus 10 verse 14. 1893 ". This passage from the Bible reminds us that the school in Adensen was a church school from the Reformation in 1543 until 1894 under the auspices of the Ev.-luth. Parish has been. The inauguration ceremony of the school building took place on April 13, 1894. In the following period from 1894 to 2012 the school was run by local authorities.
Christophorus Elementary School

The Friends of the CJD Primary School Adensen-Hallerburg e. V. acquired the elementary school in Adensen on January 1, 2013 from the municipality of Nordstemmen and concluded a usage contract with the CJD Elze. The task that remains with the development association is to maintain and maintain the school complex. Since February 1, 2013, the primary school has been run by the CJD Elze. The Christian Youth Village Association in Germany has rented the entire school building from the development association on a long-term basis and continues to run the independent primary school in Adensen, which was taught by the Nordstemmen community until 2012, as a CJD-run private school. In 2016, the Adensen primary school received state recognition and the associated financial support from the state of Lower Saxony. School lessons began in the 2013/2014 school year with the first class and will be supplemented with the following class in each of the following years.
Day care center in Adensen
The day care center is located in Adensen next to the sports field. The building was built between 1995 and 1996 by the municipality of Nordstemmen. The foundation stone was laid in October 1995, the opening ceremony of the kindergarten at that time was on September 6, 1996. In addition to well-equipped group rooms, the children have access to a 1,200 square meter outdoor area with old trees, a water and mud area and lots of play equipment.
The sponsorship is owned by the German Red Cross , the day-care center is run by the DRK-Region Hannover e. V. led. The catchment area of the day care center includes Adensen, Hallerburg, Nordstemmen and Mahlerten . The following principles of the German Red Cross are the basis of educational action: humanity, impartiality, neutrality, independence, voluntariness, unity, universality. The day-care center offers childcare places in two kindergarten groups for a total of 43 children and in an after-school care group for up to 12 children. The children take part in a child-friendly lunch. (As of April 2015)
Since the places Adensen and Wülfingen were in the Springe district until the end of February 1974 , the local branch of the German Red Cross in Adensen and Hallerburg still belongs to the German Red Cross in Springe in the Hanover region .
Personalities
Sons and daughters of the place
- Rudolf Wiegmann (1804–1865), architect, professor at the Düsseldorf Art Academy and painter at the Düsseldorf School of Painting
People connected to the place
- Ludwig Christoph Ernst Karl Baldenius (1799–1882), Protestant pastor and theologian, pastor in Adensen (1825–1833)
- Georg Hurtzig (1812–1865), sculptor, teacher at the Polytechnic School in Hanover and gilder, he carved the pulpit figures for the St. Dionysius Church in Adensen
- Achim Gercke (1902–1997), natural scientist, “expert for race research” in the Reich Ministry of the Interior and member of the Reichstag, was a registrar in Adensen
literature
- Conradus Johannes Mullerus: Wedding poems for Conradus Langius, son of Walter Langius, pastor in Adensen, and Adelgunda Coerdes, widow of Bodius Clarus, 1618. Hildesiae (Hildesheim), Verlag Gosselius 1618
- Georg Ernst Rüling: Investigation against Hans Hartmann's wife from Adensen 1653. In: Excerpts of some strange witch trials from the middle of the 17th century in the Principality of Calenberg. Pp. 53-80. Published by Dieterich, Göttingen 1786
- Burchard Christian von Spilcker : Contributions to the history of the noble lords of Adenoys. In: Vaterländisches Archiv für Hannoverisch-Braunschweigische Geschichte, year 1833, vol. I., page 4
- Schambach: Adensen and the surrounding districts, reaching up to the leash in the SE. Publication series: Areas in the Kingdom of Hanover . 1857–1865 without location information
- Brinckmann: The camp near Nordstemmen during the concentration of the 10th Federal Army Corps in 1858 . Images and humor from camp life. Schlueter's Hofbuchdruckerei, Hanover 1858
- Brief description of the field maneuvers carried out by the X Federal Army Corps during Concentration in 1858. Court printing of the Jänecke brothers, Hanover 1858
- August Kreipe: Historical memorials in the Leinetal from Elze to Alt-Calenberg Gerstenberg, Hildesheim 1926
- August Kreipe: Adensen-Hallerburg. Village history from the country between Deister and Leine. Gerstenberg, Hildesheim 1927
- Werner Spieß : The Grand Bailiwick of Calenberg. Studies and preparatory work for the Historical Atlas of Lower Saxony, issue 14. Göttingen 1933
- Achim Gercke : Adensen and Hallerburg. The history of Adenoy's rule in the Calenberger Lande. From the farmer's fiefs and the creation of the Meierhöfe to the present day. Self-published, Adensen 1985
- Achim Gercke: Adensen and Hallerburg. The history of the farms and houses and their owners . Hanover 1990 (German Ortssippenbücher, Series B, Volume 64, special publication 23rd Lower Saxony Regional Association for Family Studies)
- Klaus Michael Gäbler: Parish of Adensen. In: 450 years of the Reformation in the Calenberger Land. Festschrift for the anniversary in 1992. Published by the Lutheran church district Laatzen-Pattensen. Selbstverlag, Laatzen 1992. pp. 119–121
- Herbert Pfeiffer: Professions in Adensen. Self-published by Adensen 2008
- Herbert Pfeiffer: half-timbered houses in Adensen. Self-published by Adensen 2008
- Herbert Pfeiffer: Half-timbered houses in Hallerburg and the rose mill. Self-published by Adensen 2008
- Herbert Pfeiffer: Sankt Dionysiuskirche Adensen. Self-published by Adensen 2008
- Herbert Pfeiffer: Road and canal construction in Adensen and the surrounding area. Self-published by Adensen 2008
- Hilke Rühmkorf, Sarah Matthies, Michael Reich: The importance of biogas plants as a habitat for birds. In: Effects of large-scale cultivation of energy crops on the animal world of the agricultural landscape. Compiled and edited by Stefan Rüter and Michael Reich. Cuvillier Göttingen, 1st edition 2011. pp. 163–179
Web links
- Portrait of the community of Adensen (accessed on September 14, 2015)
- Local homeland maintenance page
Individual evidence
- ↑ Population figures in the municipality of Nordstemmen. In: Website of the municipality of Nordstemmen. March 31, 2018, accessed July 3, 2017.
- ^ Achim Gercke: Adensen and Hallerburg. The history of the farms and houses and their owners. Deutsche Ortssippenbücher, Hanover 1990, pp. 87-89.
- ^ Achim Gercke: Adensen and Hallerburg. The history of Adenoy's rule in the Calenberger Lande. Selbstverlag, Adensen 1985, pp. 127-129.
- ↑ Documents on this long-distance hiking trail can be found here: Calenberger Weg. The hiking trail leads to Marienburg via the following streets: Am Tiergarten, Hallerstraße, Hallerburger Straße, An der Sporthalle, Südstraße, In den Birken, Am Mühlenfeld, Bergwinkelsweg, Schrotacker . At the crossroads there are marking notices on masts, which are marked with an upside-down T.
- ↑ The Alte Heerstraße ran over two fords of the Haller near Hallerburg , as there was a Haller island there. The Alte Heerstraße was relocated to the current route of the Bundesstraße 3 between 1768 and 1770 and expanded into the Chaussee .
- ↑ A place near Bordenau that has become desolate also bears the place name Adensen .
- ↑ The village of Bodensen must not be confused with the village of Bodensuethe .
- ^ Gerhard Meier-Hilbert: Geographical structures: The natural potential. ( Memento from July 16, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Page 33 (PDF Page 27; 1.1 MB).
- ↑ In a document from Bishop Siwart von Minden around 1120 Theodoricus von Adenessen is mentioned (Grupen, Orig. Hann. Page 39f; Würdtwein II page 339).
- ↑ J. Ch. Harenberg: Historia ecclesiae Gandersheimensis. Hanover 1734. Page 1350. Quoted from: Förstemann: Altdt. Name book , vol. 2, reprint of the 3rd edition from 1913, col. 1492 with an addition to Adonhusen n. 5. Adensen Kr. Springe.
- ^ Achim Gercke : Adensen and Hallerburg. The history of Adenoy's rule in the Calenberger Lande. From the farmer's fiefs and the creation of the Meierhöfe to the present day. Self-published, Adensen 1985. Page 15f: A. The place names.
- ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory 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. 205 .
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↑ 1885 to 1935: Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. springe.html. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006). 1961 and 1970: 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.
205 . - ↑ Orig. Wülfinghausen No. 193. C. U. VIII No. 125.
- ↑ Achim Gercke: The St. Dionysius Church in Adensen. Self-published, Adensen 1950, p. 38 (dominus henricus is to be deleted there).
- ↑ Ecclesiastical gazette for the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hanover , No. 4/2010 of August 2, 2010, No. 45, p. 80f.
- ↑ Christoph Bauch: Where is our parish going? In: ... towards each other , community letter of the St. Dionysius Church Adensen, issue 3/2012 from September 2012.
- ↑ a b Adensen local council. In: Website of the municipality of Nordstemmen. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
- ^ Page of the local home maintenance Adensen.
- ↑ The coat of arms of Adensen. In: Google Books website. Retrieved September 17, 2017 .
- ↑ "The Zehntstreit" is documented by Achim Gercke: Adensen and Hallerburg. The history of Adenoy's rule in the Calenberger Lande. From the farmer's fiefs and the creation of the Meierhöfe to the present day. Self-published, Adensen 1985, p. 105 ff.
- ↑ Rolf Wilhelm Brednich represents the state of the art in science : Tie und Anger. Historic village squares in Lower Saxony, Thuringia, Hesse and Franconia. Friedland 2009.
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↑ H. Wilh. H. Mithoff: Art monuments and antiquities in Hanover. Volume 1: Principality of Calenberg. Hannover 1871 (reprint Hannover, Hirschheydt 1974).
Heiner Jürgens, Arnold Nöldeke , Joachim von Welck: The art monuments of the Springe district. Self-published by the Provinzialverwaltung, Hannover, 1941. Series: Die Kunstdenkmäler der Provinz Hannover I, 3, Vol. 29. S. 1-6, Abb. 1a + b, 2a, 3a, 4a + b, 8a, 12a1-4.
Achim Gercke : The St. Dionysius Church in Adensen (Springe district). Festschrift of the Heimatbund Lower Saxony local group Adensen for the 700-year-celebration on the 1st Advent 1950. Self-published, Adensen 1950.
Georg Dehio: Handbook of the German art monuments Bremen / Lower Saxony. Munich and Berlin 1977. -
↑ 50 years of the Adensen / Hallerburg volunteer fire department. Anniversary celebration from September 4 to 6, 1982. Self-published by Adensen, Hildesheim-Itzum 1982.
80 years of the Adensen volunteer fire brigade - Hallerburg 1932–2012.
50 years of youth fire brigade. Anniversary party from September 8th to 10th. Self-published by Adensen, Adensen 2012. - ↑ The Adensen-Hallerburg music train stopped operating on December 31, 2014.
- ↑ The fire engine that the volunteer fire brigade in Adensen / Hallerburg had used for 29 years was donated in 2010 by the municipality of Nordstemmen to the Association for the Preservation of Historic Fire Brigade Vehicles in Adensen-Hallerburg e. V. sold. The former fire engine has been maintained and maintained by this association since then.
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↑ 25 years of TTC Adensen-Hallerburg e. V. 1957-1982; Sports and festival week from May 22nd to 30th, 1982. Self-published by Adensen 1982.
30 years of TTC v. 1957 Adensen-Hallerburg e. V. 1957-1987. Sports and festival program. Self-published by Adensen 1987.
50 years of TTC Adensen-Hallerburg e. V. 1957-2007. Festschrift. Self-published by Adensen 2007. -
↑ Achim Blumberg, Peter Mislisch: Festschrift for the 55th anniversary of VfL Adensen-Haller Castle e. V. Self-published Adensen 2004.
Peter Mislisch: 60 years of VfL Adensen-Hallerburg e. V .: 1949-2009. Festschrift. Self-published by Adensen 2009.
Festival magazine VFL Adensen - Hallerburg e. V. 65 years 1949-2014. Self-published by Adensen 2014. - ^ Website of the Marienburg Marathon Castle.
- ↑ Map for the route.
- ↑ Adensen Primary School 1894–1994. Festschrift. Selbstverlag, Adensen 1994. pp. 18-20.
- ↑ The Festschrift provides information about the time of the municipal sponsorship: Grundschule Adensen 1894–1994. Self-published, Adensen 1994.
- ↑ Adensen Primary School. (No longer available online.) In: CJD Elzeindex website. 2013, archived from the original on January 5, 2014 ; accessed on September 17, 2018 .
- ↑ DRK day care center in Adensen. In: Website of the municipality of Nordstemmen. 2015, accessed on September 17, 2018 (PDF; 41 kB).