Bellinghauser derision

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bellinghauserhohn is a district of the city of Königswinter in the Rhein-Sieg district in North Rhine-Westphalia . It belongs to the Thomasberg district and the Hasenpohl district .

geography

Bellinghauserhohn is located below Thomasberg in the Pleiser Hügelland immediately west of the high-speed route Cologne – Rhine / Main and federal motorway 3 across from Bellinghausen . It extends on a sloping terrain to the south to the Bellinghauser Bach running on the outskirts, which drains to the Pleisbach tributary Lützbach . On the northern edge of the village runs the state road 268 ( Oberdollendorf - Heisterbacherrott - Oberpleis - Uckerath ), south of which Bellinghauserhohn, Bellinghauserhof, Bellinghausen and Zweikreuzen form an irregular four-way street. In addition to Bellinghausen in the east, the closest localities include Bellinghauserhof in the south-east, Thomasberg in the south and west and Sonderbusch in the north-west.

history

The settlement of Bellinghausen, and thus also of Bellinghauserhohn, was based on the Bellinghauserhof, which was first documented in 1218 and belonged to the Heisterbach monastery from 1432 . After the dissolution of the Duchy of Berg in 1806, Bellinghauserhohn was part of the cadastral or tax community of Hasenpohl in the administrative district of the Oberpleis mayor . In 1845/46 it was incorporated into the newly formed municipality of Oberpleis. In the context of censuses, Bellinghauserhohn was still listed as a farm until at least 1828 . Around 1840, the village grew significantly through the establishment of two courtyards, one of which ( Petteschhof ) was inherited from the Bellinghauserhof. From 1854, Bellinghauserhohn , which had previously been supplied by post from Siegburg , belonged to the postal delivery district of Königswinter, later Oberpleis .

After two bridges on what was then the Reichsautobahn were blown up at the end of the Second World War in March 1945, an emergency driveway and exit running across the road was set up at Bellinghauserhohn, which existed until the early 1950s. By 1947, Bellinghauserhohn was the last village in Thomasberg to be connected to the water pipeline operated by the “Wasserleitungsverein Kuxenberg und Umgebung” (from 1950 “Wasserbeschaffungsverband Thomasberg”). In 1958 Bellinghauserhohn was included in the local association of Thomasberg , which had been founded five years earlier, and has not been shown separately in the population statistics since then. In 1958, the conversion began the hitherto agricultural run Petteschhofs on plantations fruit growing and farming .

In Bellinghauserhohn (Auf dem Büchel 9) was temporarily (status: 1992) the residence of the Ambassador of Mozambique in the Federal Republic of Germany at the seat of government in Bonn .

Population development
year Residents
1816 27
1828 31
1843 54
1871 57
1885 56
1905 57

Attractions

As a monument under monument protection are two (former) half-timbered farm buildings , both built around the 1840th From Petteschhof (Auelweg 22), the residential building has been preserved as a two-storey post structure , while the older farm buildings are no longer there.

Web links

Commons : Bellinghauserhohn  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Angelika Schyma : City of Königswinter. (= Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany , monuments in the Rhineland , Volume 23.5.) Rheinland-Verlag, Cologne 1992, ISBN 3-7927-1200-8 .
  2. a b c d e Willi Schmidt: Die Strüch. A chronicle by Thomasberg , 1993.
  3. a b Obsthof Siebengebirge - History of origin ( Memento from May 4, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  4. Foreign Office (ed.): List of diplomatic missions in the Federal Republic of Germany , as of March 1992
  5. Without the mill at Freckwinkel or the Freckwinkel residential area of ​​the municipality of Oberpleis.
  6. ^ AA Mützell: New topographical-statistical-geographical dictionary of the Prussian state , Verlag KA Kümmel, Halle 1821, first volume, p. 82
  7. ^ Friedrich von Restorff : Topographical-Statistical Description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Province , Nicolaische Buchhandlung, Berlin and Stettin 1830, p. 303
  8. Royal Government of Cologne: overview of the components u. Directory of all localities in the government district of Cologne. Cöln 1845, p. 103. ( Online ub.uni-duesseldorf.de )
  9. ^ The communities and manor districts of the Rhine Province and their population. Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Bureau, Berlin 1874, p. 111.
  10. ^ Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia , Volume XII Provinz Rheinland, Verlag des Königlich Statistischen Bureaus (Ed.), 1888, page 118
  11. ^ Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia. Booklet XII Rhine Province. Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Office, Berlin 1909, p. 152.

Coordinates: 50 ° 42 ′ 16 ″  N , 7 ° 14 ′ 58 ″  E