Untensiebeneick

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Untensiebeneick is a district with the key number 3067 in the area of ​​the city of Velbert (district of Neviges ). The district emerged from a medieval peasantry .

history

etymology

The name of the district was derived from seven oaks at Hof Siebeneick on the Hardenberger Bach , located in the Dönberg area, the last of which with a trunk diameter of two meters was felled 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 .

Farmers in the Duchy of Berg and the Napoleonic era

The district arises from the medieval and modern farming community Unterste Siebeneick in the lordship of Hardenberg in the Duchy of Berg .

With the takeover of the duchy by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1806, he introduced new administrative structures from 1808. The Bergisch offices and subordinates were dissolved and the Untensiebeneick peasants were assigned to the Hardenberg municipality (renamed Mairie Hardenberg at the end of 1808 ) in the canton of Velbert in the Düsseldorf arrondissement in the Rhine department of the Grand Duchy of Berg .

Prussian administrative structures

In 1813 the French withdrew from the Grand Duchy after the defeat in the Battle of the Nations near Leipzig , and from the end of 1813 Untensiebeneick fell under the provisional administration of the Berg Generalgouvernement, which was controlled by the "High Allied Powers" . Due to the agreements made at the Congress of Vienna (1815), considerable parts of the Rhineland were assigned to the Kingdom of Prussia . With the formation of the Prussian province of Jülich-Kleve-Berg (1816) it was finally assigned as a peasantry of the Hardenberg mayor in the Elberfeld district and from 1861 to the Mettmann district of the Prussian Rhine province , which was renamed Hardenberg-Neviges in 1894 and Neviges in 1935.

Ecclesiastical affiliation and residential areas in Untensiebeneick around 1832

In 1832, Untensiebeneick belonged to the parishes of Langenberg (Protestant) and Neviges (Catholic). At that time there were 137 inhabitants in the peasantry. As living spaces in the are statistics and topography of the district of Dusseldorf at this time on the Bredden , under the Great-Asch , to Oethers and on the Kottstadt listed, each with several surrounding non-listed by name courtyards.

Untensiebeneicker living spaces around 1888

According to the municipality lexicon for the Rhineland province in 1888, Untensiebeneick included the residential areas Asch , Ascherfeld , Beek , Bredde , Galgenbusch , Grünthal , Hessenkothen , Jägerhof , Jungshaus , Kaiser , Kopfstation , Korzert , Langenkamp , Markeick , Oberste Heeg , Öters , Otterberg , Piepenburg , Scheven , Schnappbrücke , Staude , Straße , Untere Heeg , Untere Straße , Vettenhaus , Wolbeck and Zur Mühlen . At that time, 310 people lived in 36 houses in these places.

Territory assigned to Wuppertal in 1975

With the municipal reform , which came into force on January 1, 1975, parts of Untersiebeneick were split off from Neviges and incorporated into the city of Wuppertal ( district of Uellendahl-Katernberg ).

Individual evidence

  1. Gemeindeververzeichnis.de
  2. Johann Georg von Viebahn : Statistics and Topography of the Administrative District of Düsseldorf , 1836
  3. 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.
  4. ^ 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. 292 .