Obensiebeneick
Obensiebeneick is a hallway in the area of the city of Wuppertal (residential quarters Dönberg and Siebeneick in the district of Uellendahl-Katernberg ), North Rhine-Westphalia .
history
The corridor was named after seven oaks near Hof Siebeneick on the Hardenberger Bach, located in the Dönberg area, the last of which was felled with a trunk diameter of two meters at the end of the 19th century. The area around Siebeneick was mentioned in 1038 as Sivonekon in a document from the Werden monastery and in 1220 as Siveneken in the small bailiff of Count Friedrich von Isenberg-Altena . Hof Siebeneick itself was first listed in 1355 as a Sevenheken in a list of goods belonging to the Hardenberg domain .
The corridor goes from the medieval and modern peasantry Supreme Seven Eick in the rule of Hardenberg in the Duchy of Berg forth. To the peasantry were in the 17th century courtyards and residential places Brink , Frick House , Heidacker , Mutzberg , Upper Fingscheidt , acid house , Schmitz House , Schmürsches , Schneis , Seven Eick , Worth , Lower Fingscheidt , Untenrohleder and Wolbruch .
After the Napoleonic occupation of the Duchy of Berg, the Bergisch offices and subordinates were dissolved and Obensiebeneick was assigned to the canton of Velbert in the arrondissement of Düsseldorf in the Rhine department of the Grand Duchy of Berg . In 1813 the French withdrew from the Grand Duchy after the defeat in the Battle of Leipzig and Obensiebeneick fell under the provisional administration of Prussia in the Generalgouvernement Berg from the end of 1813 . With the formation of the Prussian province of Jülich-Kleve-Berg in 1816, it was assigned to the Hardenberg mayor in the Elberfeld district (until 1861) and the Mettmann district of the Prussian Rhine province , which was renamed Neviges in 1935.
In 1832 Obsiebeneick belonged to the parishes of Langenberg (Protestant) and Neviges (Catholic). As living spaces with a total of 358 residents in the are statistics and topography of the district of Dusseldorf at this time Untenlohleders , on the Wohrt , Below Fingscheidt and Young House , each listed with several surrounding farms.
According to the municipality lexicon for the Rhineland province in 1888, Obensiebeneick included the residential areas Brangen , Brink, Brunnenhäuschen , Frickenhaus, Heidacker , Jungmannshaus , Krähenberg , Krieg , Mittel Fingscheid , Mutzholz , Obenrohleder , Ober Fingscheid, Pinn , Röttgen , Saurenhaus, Schmittshaus , Schmürsches, Schneis , Siebeneick, Siepken , Steintges , Triebelsheide , Unterrohleder , Unter Fingscheidt, Vogelsbruch , Winkel , Wolfsholz , Worth, Worther Nocken and Wüstenhaus . At that time, 316 people lived in 44 houses in these places.
The immediately neighboring farms Obere and Untere Fingscheid, together with the later Middle Fingscheid, formed a closed settlement area from the 19th century, which is known today under the name Fingscheidt. The development on the site of the Obere Fingscheidt farm was removed between 1993 and 1997.
With the municipal reform of 1929, parts of Obensiebeneick were split off from Neviges and incorporated into the city of Wuppertal, with a further municipal reform in 1975 the rest also came to Wuppertal.
Individual evidence
- ^ Rolf Müller: Dönberg, a parish on the edge , Aussaat Verlag, Wuppertal, 1976.
- ↑ Gemeindeververzeichnis.de
- ↑ Johann Georg von Viebahn : Statistics and Topography of the Administrative District of Düsseldorf , 1836.
- ↑ Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland Province, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1885 and other official sources, (Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII), Berlin 1888.