Aspe (Kutenholz)

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Aspe
community Kutenholz
Aspe Coat of Arms
Coordinates: 53 ° 27 ′ 48 ″  N , 9 ° 22 ′ 11 ″  E
Area : 12.49 km²
Residents : 465  (Aug 2002)
Population density : 37 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : July 1, 1972
Postal code : 27449
Area code : 04762
Aerial view of Aspe
Aerial view of Aspe

Aspe ( Low German Aasp ) is a place in the municipality of Kutenholz in the Stade district ( Lower Saxony ). Aspe has 465 inhabitants (August 2002). The place consists of the actual village ( Groß Aspe ) and the residential area Klein Aspe .

geography

Geographical location

Aspe is located between Kutenholz and Bargstedt on the Stader Geest , about 43 km west of Hamburg .

Neighboring places

Kutenholz frond
Sadersdorf Neighboring communities Frankenmoor , Bargstedt
Brest

history

The time when the town of Aspe was founded can no longer be determined, as the village chronicle fell victim to the flames in the last war. Aspe was first mentioned in a document as Aspa between 1111 and 1116 .

When it was founded, the size of the town was approx. 1249 hectares. There used to be a huge tree (an aspen ) in the middle of the village . The place name Aspe is believed to have been derived from this aspen. The Asper coat of arms is an aspen leaf. Aspe was a heather , moor , and wasteland. Sheep keeping and beekeeping were mainly carried out. In 1854, Aspe received the first school building. The teacher had taken over the office of cowherd at the same time and his apartment was the cowherd's house. In 1909 it burned all over the place (sparks from Heidehaufen). In 1910 the new school building (now the play area) came.

The volunteer fire brigade was founded in 1902 and the shooting club in 1951. Until 1959 there was a dairy and a freight station in the village without passenger traffic. Passenger traffic on the re-established Bremerhaven – Buxtehude railway only began in 1993.

Administrative history

Before 1852, Aspe belonged to the Börde Mulsum in the Harsefeld district . However, the Börde Mulsum moved to the Stade Office in 1852 , which became the Himmelpforten Office in 1859 . After 1885 Aspe belonged to the Stade district and since 1932 to the current Stade district .

With the community reform, which came into force on July 1, 1972, Aspe came to the community of Kutenholz.

coat of arms

The coat of arms shows a green aspen branch with three leaves on a silver background .

The aspen branch stands for the village name, which is derived from the Old Saxon word Espa for aspen. On December 3, 1952, the coat of arms was issued by the Lower Saxony Ministry of the Interior .

religion

Aspe is evangelical-Lutheran and belongs to the parish of the parish of St. Petri Mulsum .

Population development

year Residents
1824 13 fire places
1848 221 people, 38 houses *
1871 217 people, 38 houses *
1910 289

* with Klein Aspe

Culture

Monuments

A memorial for those who fell from both world wars stands in the cemetery.

societies

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

Aspe is on the L 123, which leads in the east via Kutenholz to Bremervörde and in the north-west via Bargstedt and Ohrensen to the federal highway 73 near Horneburg . There is also the K 61, which leads to Wedel and the K 58, which leads to Brest .

The town shares the Brest – Aspe station on the Bremerhaven – Buxtehude railway line with Brest .

school

The first elementary school was built in 1854, and a school bus was installed in 1910 . Today it houses a play group .

literature

  • Heinz Hauschild: Kutenholz with the hamlets of Aspe and Essel - then and now. 1983

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Hamburg Document Book . Perthes-Besser, 1842 ( google.de [accessed December 21, 2018]).
  2. ^ 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 GmbH, Stuttgart and Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 246 .
  3. CHCF Jansen: Statistical Handbook of the Kingdom of Hanover . In Commission of the Helwings̓chen Hofbuchhandlung, 1824 ( google.de [accessed on December 21, 2018]).
  4. FW Harseim: Statistical Manual for the Kingdom of Hanover . Schlueter, 1848 ( google.de [accessed December 21, 2018]).
  5. Prussia (Germany) Royal Statistical Bureau: The communities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population: Based on the original materials of the general census of December 1, 1871 . Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Bureau, 1873 ( google.de [accessed on December 21, 2018]).
  6. Welcome to Gemeindeververzeichnis.de. Retrieved December 21, 2018 .