Beukenbeul

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Beukenbeul
City of Attendorn
Coordinates: 51 ° 7 ′ 48 ″  N , 7 ° 50 ′ 56 ″  E
Residents : 278  (Jun. 30, 2019)
Postal code : 57439
Area code : 02722
Beukenbeul (North Rhine-Westphalia)
Beukenbeul

Location of Beukenbeul in North Rhine-Westphalia

Chapel of St.  Heart of Mary in Beukenbeul
Chapel of St. Heart of Mary in Beukenbeul

Beukenbeul is a district of the town of Attendorn in the Olpe district ( North Rhine-Westphalia ) and has 278 inhabitants.

geography

Beukenbeul is located west of the core town of Attendorn and south-east at the foot of the Ebbegebirge . The Wesebach, a left tributary of the Ihne, flows west of the village . Beukenbeul's local mountain is the 466 m high Ringelsberg.

history

Beukenbeul was first mentioned in a document in 1361, making it the oldest settlement in the lower Ihnetal. On April 25, 1411 sold Wilhelm Graf zu Limburg and Mr. von Broich his Lehnware from the tithes from the estates Boikenboile , Werschede , Alverinchusen and Waymbeke to a Cologne citizens. The place name is probably a formation with the basic word -buhil (hill) and the qualifier böke (beech) or böken from beech wood. The place name can therefore be interpreted as " hill with beech trees ".

Politically, Beukenbeul belonged to the Waldenburg office and in the Gogericht and parish Attendorn to the Albringhausen peasantry , which also included surrounding places such as Weschede, Papiermühle , Wamge u. a. belonged to. In the appraisal register of 1543, a Heineman Buckenbuel with a tax of 2 gold guilders is named in the Ailberinghausen bureau with 26 taxpayers . In the register of 1565, Tylmann zu Boeckenbull and Meuß ibidem each had to pay 1 gold guilder tax.

After a few previous owners, the Ewig monastery was the main landowner in Beukenbeul from 1440. Managed by Dietrich Klöwer from 1540 to 1557. In 1558, all properties were combined and two leasehold farms of the same size were made of the monastery: the foremost property and the other property . On the foremost estate, later also called Balven Hof , there was the tenant family Balve for almost 200 years. In 1829 it was classified as 2nd class. The first known tenant was Cornelius Balve († 1674). When Johann Balve (* 1742) was the tenant, the monastery got lease annually around 1789: 2 Malter 9 quarters of rye, just as much barley, 11 Malter 2 quarters of oats, 40 pounds of butter, 1 fat pig at 150 pounds, 2 pounds Wax, around the other year a yearling's hammer, 8 chickens, 2 Rtlr. from a meadow to fertilize with horses on 3 days, to drive 6 wagons Herrenholz.

On the other hand, on the other estate, later also called Jaspes Hof , the tenants changed several times. In 1829 it was classified as 1st class. The first known tenant was Johann von Beukenbeul (Kranz), who died in 1666. Around 1789 Johann Eberhard Fernholt had to pay a rent comparable to that of the Balven Hof. The state replaced both goods in 1860. Over time, an upper village (with a chapel) and a lower village developed from the two estates.

From 1819 Beukenbeul belonged to the Attendorn municipality in the Attendorn-Land community . The address book from 1929 in Beukenbeul has the names "Fernholz (4), Frieling, Henze (3), Kampschulte (2), Köster, Nies, Ransone, Rauterkus (4), Schmitz (5), Schöneweiß, Schulte (2), Spit, stump (2) and Teipel ”. The one-class village school was directed by the teacher Ransone. The farmer Alwin Frieling was a member of the municipality of Attendorn-Land.

In 1936 there were 12 houses in Beukenbeul with 14 households and 76 inhabitants. In 1988 the village had 292 inhabitants.

In 1969 the municipality of Attendorn-Land was dissolved and incorporated into the city of Attendorn. In 2011 Beukenbeul celebrated its 650th anniversary.

Religion, associations

Beukenbeul belongs to the parish of St. Josef in nearby Listerscheid. The club life takes place for both places in the club house or the Schützenhalle Ihnetal and on the soccer field on Wesetalstraße in Weschede .

Individual evidence

  1. Population statistics of the city of Attendorn (as of June 30, 2019) , accessed on August 18, 2019.
  2. Norbert Scheele (Ed.): Regesten of the former Ewig Monastery , Olpe 1963, Urk 3 page 1 and Urk 26 page 7
  3. Michael Flöer: The place names of the district of Olpe , in: Westfälisches Ortsnamenbuch, Volume 8, Bielefeld 2014, page 39/40
  4. ↑ Estimation register from 1543, page 68 [1]
  5. The 16th century appraisal registers for the Duchy of Westphalia, Part 1 (1536 and 1565), Münster 1971, page 218
  6. Julius Pickert: The farms of the Attendorn parish in the 17th century , in: Heimatblätter des Kreis Olpe, 4th century. 1926/27, page 32/33
  7. Otto Höffer in: Attendorn - yesterday and today, Association for Orts- und Heimatkunde Attendorn eV, No. 11 (1987), pages 47-54
  8. ^ Listerscheider Schützenverein 1868 eV - History of Beukenbeul
  9. Official address book of the Olpe district 1928/29, section Attendorn-Land municipality, page 75
  10. Official residents' register of the district of Olpe 1938, Attendorn Office, page XIV
  11. ^ Attendorn - Gestern und heute, Verein für Orts- und Heimatkunde Attendorn eV, No. 14 (1990), page 15/16
  12. 650th anniversary. Beukenbeul celebrates vigorously. WAZ on June 14, 2011