Beinrode

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Beinrode
Coordinates: 51 ° 21 ′ 50 ″  N , 10 ° 18 ′ 14 ″  E
Height : 339 m above sea level NHN
Postal code : 37327
Area code : 03605
Beinrode (Thuringia)
Beinrode

Location of Beinrode in Thuringia

Beinrode in the 1930s
Beinrode in the 1930s

Beinrode is a settlement of Leinefelde-Worbis in the Eichsfeld district in Thuringia .

location

Four kilometers south of Leinefelde-Worbis and four kilometers north of Dingelstädt is the district of Beinrode with the castle-like building complex of the former monastery estate of Beinrode north of Kallmerode on federal highway 247 . The place is in the Ohnetal at the foot of the Dün with the Steinberg ( 398.9  m above sea  level ) in the south, the Eulenberg ( 388  m above sea  level ) in the west, the Richteberg ( 376.9  m above sea  level ) in the north and Köpfchen ( 402.1  m above sea  level ) in the southeast.

history

On April 28, 1263, the building complex was first mentioned in the document book of Eichsfeld 359. In 1348 the place was mentioned again as Villa Beyenrode in a document, in the middle of the 15th century it was already mentioned as a desert . The place was probably settled again from the 16th century, a mill was built and later a farm.

On the head there are wall and moat remnants of a medieval castle, whether it is the Davidsburg near Scharfenstein Castle is not known.

At the beginning of the 18th century, the nearby Cistercian monastery Reifenstein bought the estate and converted it into a branch monastery. After Prussia took possession of the Eichsfeld and the monastery at Reifenstein was dissolved, in 1803 Beinrode became part of the Prussian domain of Reifenstein. From 1917 the Reifensteiner Verband used the estate and ran a women's school for agriculture until 1949. After that, various schools were housed in the buildings.

It has been owned by the Provincial Saxon Cooperative of the Order of St. John since 2004. In the building complex, training courses are carried out and apprenticeships are provided for disadvantaged young people and is used at times as a country school home. The place is also an address as a hostel for pilgrims on the Loccum – Volkenroda pilgrimage route .

Estate

The historic manor complex consists of the baroque convent building with a chapel, a mill, gate and servants' house, stables and other ancillary buildings, which was rebuilt in 1738/40 according to plans by the Dingelstadt master builder Johann Christoph Heinemann. The entire area with a large garden and a fish pond is surrounded by an old shell limestone wall. Outside the estate, larger facilities for animal production were built, which were converted into a state-owned estate after 1945 and are now run as a private company. Among other things, the linen sheep , which are rarely found today, are kept and bred there.

Beinrode landfill

Up until around 2005, waste from the Eichsfeld district was deposited on a landfill east of the Köpfchen. The Eichsfeldwerke then began to recultivate the garbage dump and operate gas wells there to generate energy. Today it is still used as a small delivery station for receiving small waste.

See also

For a different spelling, see the Beienrode disambiguation page .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wolfgang Kahl : First mention of Thuringian towns and villages. A manual. Rockstuhl Verlag, Bad Langensalza 2010, ISBN 978-3-86777-202-0 , p. 28.
  2. Levin von Wintzingeroda-Knorr : Die Wüstungen des Eichsfeldes: Directory of the desert areas, prehistoric ramparts, mines, courts of law and waiting areas within the districts of Duderstadt, Heiligenstadt, Mühlhausen and Worbis. Göttingen (O. Hendel) 1903, p. 68
  3. ^ Entry on Davidsburg in the private database "Alle Burgen". Retrieved October 18, 2017.
  4. Jürgen Backhaus: Recultivation of the Beinrode landfill has started. In: Thuringian General. 5th August 2015.

Web links

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