Boss buttocks

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Boss buttocks
municipality Birstein
Coordinates: 50 ° 22 ′ 37 ″  N , 9 ° 16 ′ 8 ″  E
Height : 133 m above sea level NN
Area : 1.36 km²
Residents : 88  (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 65 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : December 31, 1971
Postal code : 63633
Area code : 06054

Böß-Gesäß (colloquially Hessisch-Bösgesäß , officially also Bös-Gesäß II ) is a district of the municipality of Birstein in Hesse . Originally, it formed a common place together with evil buttocks . The two parts of the then Bösgesäß , however, already belonged to different courts within the Isenburg rulership in the late Middle Ages . The Bracht flowing through the place was set as the boundary .

history

Sign for the exit of Bösgesäß ("Preußisch-Bösgesäß") with the reference to the Böß-Gesäß ("Hessisch-Bösgesäß") "1 km" away. The two districts are only about 150 meters apart.

The first documented mention of Böß-Gesäß is from the year 1384 as a Bunsgesesze .

This half of the village on the orographically right Brachtufer belonged to the Unterreichenbach court . When the Principality of Isenburg was divided after the Congress of Vienna in 1816, the area fell to the Grand Duchy of Hesse . Böß-Gesäß was first incorporated into the district of Büdingen in 1822, then in 1848 in the administrative district of Nidda and finally in 1852 in the later district of Büdingen (from 1939 district of Büdingen ) of the province of Upper Hesse . As a result of the regional reform in Hesse , the previously independent municipality was incorporated into Birstein on December 31, 1971.

The area on the left bank of the Bracht, however, came to the Electorate of Hesse in 1816 , to Prussia in 1866 and was later incorporated into the Gelnhausen district of the Hesse-Nassau province . On February 1, 1971, Bösgesäß (with the then official municipality name Bößgesäß ) was also incorporated into the municipality of Birstein.

Cultural monuments

See: List of cultural monuments in Birstein # Böß-Gesäß

Individual evidence

  1. a b Böß-buttocks II, Main-Kinzig district. Historical local dictionary for Hessen. (As of June 8, 2018). In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
  2. Birstein community portrait: Figures, data & facts. Population HW , accessed on February 27, 2020
  3. ^ Convention Territorial entre le Grand Duc de Hesse et Electeur de Hesse . - Signèe à Francfort sur Mein, le 29 Juin, 1816. British and Foreign State Papers 1815-1816, Volume 3, Compiled by the Librarian and Keeper of the Papers, Foreign Office, James Ridgway and Sons, Piccadilly, London: 1838, p 812-819
  4. § 1 Paragraph 3 of the Third Ordinance on the Rebuilding of the Reich of November 28, 1938, (Reichsgesetzblatt) RGBl 1938 I p. 1675
  5. a b Federal Statistical Office (ed.): 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 GmbH, Stuttgart and Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 362 .

literature

Web links