Arster country road

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Arster country road
coat of arms
Street in Bremen
Arster country road
Obervieland 1809; lower right: Arsten with Arster Feld, Brunns Acker, Arster Brim and Arster Hemm
Basic data
city Bremen
district Obervieland
Cross streets Arster Heerstrasse , In der Tränke, Föhlstrasse, Weg zur Handwerkstrasse, Hinter dem Vorwerk, Blendermannweg, Hermann-Helms-Str., Karl-Marx-Str. and Baumhauser Weg
use
User groups Cars, bikes and pedestrians
Road design two lane road
Technical specifications
Street length 1000 meters
St-Johannis in Arsten
Parish and rectory from 1853

The Arster Landstrasse is a central access road in Bremen , district Obervieland , district Arsten and something habenhausen . It leads in a south-north direction from Arster Heerstraße to Karl-Marx-Straße and Baumhauser Weg in habenhausen.

The cross streets and connecting streets were named u. a. as Arster Heerstraße after the place, In der Tränke after a cattle trough, Föhlstraße after the teacher, sexton and organist Jacob Ludwig Föhle (1838–1913), unnamed way to Handwerkstraße, which worked here, Behind the Vorwerk after the Vorwerk of the family estate von Arsten , Blendermannweg 1970 after the architect Otto Blendermann (1879–1944), Hermann-Helms- Strasse 1969 after the owner of the DDG Hansa -Reederei (1868–1942), unnamed route, Arsten motorway slip road, Karl-Marx-Strasse after the philosopher and protagonist of the labor movement and Baumhauser Weg 1905 after a homestead surrounded by trees; otherwise see the link to the streets.

history

Surname

The Arster Landstrasse was named after the village and later district. Arsten could be derived from Arsater (= field), i.e. for those who live in the field. A family name could possibly also stand for the place name. The von Arsten family had their residence on the Vorwerk in the 17th century. Arsten was first mentioned in 1211.

development

Arsten was the old parish village of Vieland with the Romanesque St. John's Church from around 1250, which was first mentioned in 1325. Obervieland was created in 1598 through the division of the Goh Vieland.

In 1390 the Landwehrgraben was built in Arsten, which already existed in the whole of Obervieland. The Landwehr ditch at the former border on the Weser dike ended near the Korbhaus (willow baskets).

After the Second World War , intensive residential development took place next to the old village center in the incorporated Arsten.

traffic

The road crosses the Arsten motorway slip road, which leads to federal motorway 1 . The section Bremer Kreuz – Bremen / Brinkum, also known as the Hansalinie Bremen – Dortmund motorway, was built until 1963.

In transport in Bremen , the bus drives through 51 ( Huckelriede ↔ Kattenturm Klinikum Links der Weser ) the road.

Buildings and facilities

There are mostly one- and two-story houses on the street.

Bremen monuments

Notable buildings and facilities

  • Corner behind the Vorwerk: 3-storey. larger newer house
  • Sports facility Korbhauser Weg from TuS Komet Arsten
  • No. 51: Church (see above) and cemetery with gravestones from the 16th to 18th centuries; the oldest from 1546; Epitaph of the knight Arp Hermeling and his wife from 1589
    • 1- and 2-tier Parish and rectory from 1853
    • St. Johannes Arsten day care center from 1993 with five octagonal pavilions around a center
    • First Bremen memorial from 2018 for the escape victims
    • Korbhauser Weg 1: This used to be the location of the old thatched parish school ; A new building followed in 1858/59, the school became a state primary school in 1888/89, and today (2019) the two-tier Arsten primary school has 239 students.
  • No. 64 to 98 and Blenderweg No. 4 to 48 and the corner of Hermann-Helms-Straße: 2-gesch. Plastered row houses, some as row houses
  • Bridge under the Arsten motorway slip road
  • Bridge over the ditch to the Holzackern , next to it an accompanying path

Art objects

  • No.: Arster market women with Bremen basket ; Sculpture group from 2011 by the sculptor Claus Homfeld , Bremen.
  • First Bremen monument from 2018 for the escape victims as a bronze “carpet” by the sculptor Klaus Effern

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Monument database of the LfD Bremen

Coordinates: 53 ° 1 ′ 57.1 ″  N , 8 ° 51 ′ 4.2 ″  E