Eddelak

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the municipality of Eddelak
Eddelak
Map of Germany, position of the municipality Eddelak highlighted

Coordinates: 53 ° 57 '  N , 9 ° 8'  E

Basic data
State : Schleswig-Holstein
Circle : Dithmarschen
Office : Burg-Sankt Michaelisdonn
Height : 1 m above sea level NHN
Area : 9.21 km 2
Residents: 1330 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 144 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 25715
Area code : 04855
License plate : HEI, MED
Community key : 01 0 51 024
Office administration address: Holzmarkt 7
25712 Burg
Website : www.eddelak.de
Mayor : Hauke ​​Oeser (EEC)
Location of the community Eddelak in the district of Dithmarschen
map

Eddelak is a municipality in the south of the Dithmarschen district in Schleswig-Holstein .

geography

Districts

Besides Eddelak, Behmhusen, Theeberg and Warferdonn are also located in the municipality.

Neighboring communities

Neighboring municipalities are the municipalities of Dingen , Kuden and Averlak , the city of Brunsbüttel and the municipality of Ramhusen (all in the Dithmarschen district), starting clockwise to the north .

history

The earliest traces of Eddelak settlement go back to the Roman Empire . In 1877, a Germanic flat settlement layer about 6 hectares in size was archaeologically established to the southwest of the village . Numerous ceramic finds (shards and urns) temporarily led to the assumption that the settlement was used for ceramics production or salt boiling, furthermore the settlement area was discussed in the context of the formation of the Saxons with the involvement of the Chauken in the research.

The history of Eddelak is divided into the history of the Eddelak parish and the history of the modern Eddelak parish.

In the Eddelak settlement area, agriculture was so successful in 1140 that the cathedral chapter of Hamburg was awarded the tithe by Ethelekeswisch on this basis. Around 1200 the parish of Eddelak emerged from the settlement area , which first appeared in writing in 1281 through a contract with Hamburg . The parish of Eddelak (seal inscription: Eddelake) and the land of Dithmarschen assured the Frühhanse nationwide protection of merchants, their vehicles and their goods and also promised, although as few neighbors of the Elbe as most of the twelve other Dithmarsch parishes involved, traditional beach robbery to abolish.

The parish of Eddelak originally consisted of the five farmers Averlak, Behmhusen, Dingen, Warfen and Westerbüttel, since 1811 by splitting off Blangenmoor-Lehe from Averlak from now six farmers with a common church in Eddelak (which is divided in half between Warfen and Behmhusen).

With the ordinance of September 22, 1867, the independent rural communities were introduced in the Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein . In contrast to the rest of the province, there was a special form of municipal administration in the west of Schleswig-Holstein, namely in Dithmarschen and in the Husum district. This was taken over untouched. The parish areas in which secular structures already existed became political parishes, the parish land parishes.

The village communities and village communities existing in the parish rural communities as "sub-units" became independent municipalities / rural communities on April 1, 1934. On that day, the parish of Eddelak was also dissolved. The communities of Averlak , Behmhusen, Blangenmoor-Lehe, Dingen , Warfen and Westerbüttel were newly formed in their place .

The community Eddelak was created on June 1, 1953 by renaming the community Warfen. The municipality of Behmhusen gave up its municipality independence on January 1, 1966 by joining the municipality of Eddelak.

The communities of Averlak and Dingen remained independent. The municipality of Westerbüttel joined the city of Brunsbüttel on January 1, 1970 . The municipality of Blangenmoor-Lehe was added on January 1, 1972.

politics

Community representation

Of the 13 seats in the municipal council who Wählergemeinschaft EEC since the municipal election in 2018 seven seats and the CDU six.

coat of arms

Blazon : "In green over a golden heraldic crown, a silver Dutch windmill with a gallery almost at ground level."

Culture and sights

Windmill god with us
Mill head

Buildings

The baroque brick church St. Marien (Eddelak) was built in 1740 by the builder Johann Georg Schott over the foundations of the predecessor. It is designed as a simple hall with high, arched windows over a rectangular floor plan. The interior is closed off by a wooden hollow vault under a gable roof that is hipped to the east. In the north and south, a front rectangular porch protect the side entrances. Directly in front of the west gable stands the wooden bell tower, which was renewed in 1676, on its own foundation.

The bell tower and church are the oldest buildings in the former parish of Eddelak.

In Eddelak there is still the Zwickstelldolland God with us from 1865, who was the model for the coat of arms. The mill was partly built from the remains of an older mill, which Christian Harms, the brother of the theologian Claus Harms , moved from Meldorf to Eddelak in 1802 and had a stamping mill converted into a grain mill. In 1976 a storm damaged the mill, whereupon miller Albert Haalck stopped the mill. The mill, which was listed as a historic monument in 1986 and renovated for the first time in 1990, is theoretically still fully functional today, but only turns, but no longer grinds. Today they are looked after by the local mill association, and civil weddings can also be held here. The Sankt Michaelisdonn registry office counts around 25 to 30 such weddings annually.

Economy and Infrastructure

education

At the end of the 1960s, a village community school was built in Eddelak. The communities of Averlak , Dingen and Eddelak jointly financed the project. The building was not built on a green meadow, but on a shifting dune. Construction sites were designated around the school, single-family houses were built and a kindergarten followed.

traffic

The Eddelak station on the Marschbahn , opened in 1878 by the Glückstadt-Elmshorner Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft , was closed for passenger traffic between Brunsbüttel-Nord and St. Michaelisdonn on May 27, 1988. The industrial company Sasol takes care of daily goods traffic between Hemmingstedt and Brunsbüttel through Eddelak. The bus routes 2507, 2508 and 2509 (Dithmarschenbus / Autokraft ) connect Bahnhofstrasse in Eddelak with Brunsbüttel , Burg , Meldorf and Marne almost exclusively in school traffic .

Sons and daughters of the church

Web links

Commons : Eddelak  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. North Statistics Office - Population of the municipalities in Schleswig-Holstein 4th quarter 2019 (XLSX file) (update based on the 2011 census) ( help on this ).
  2. a b Schleswig-Holstein topography. Vol. 2: Boren - Ellerau . 1st edition Flying-Kiwi-Verl. Junge, Flensburg 2002, ISBN 978-3-926055-68-2 ( dnb.de [accessed June 11, 2020]).
  3. State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein (Ed.): The population of the communities in Schleswig-Holstein 1867-1970 . State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein, Kiel 1972, p. 13 .
  4. State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein (Ed.): The population of the communities in Schleswig-Holstein 1867-1970 . State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein, Kiel 1972, p. 250 .
  5. State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein (Ed.): The population of the communities in Schleswig-Holstein 1867-1970 . State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein, Kiel 1972, p. 43 .
  6. State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein (Ed.): The population of the communities in Schleswig-Holstein 1867-1970 . State Statistical Office Schleswig-Holstein, Kiel 1972, p. 41 .
  7. ^ 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. 181 .
  8. Community representative of the community Eddelak (PDF; 33 kB)
  9. Schleswig-Holstein's municipal coat of arms
  10. ^ Wilhelm Johnsen: The church in Eddelak, its history and its renewal , special edition of the Eddelaker Nachrichten 1950