Bodenhausen (Wolfhagen)

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Coordinates: 51 ° 18 ′ 59 ″  N , 9 ° 7 ′ 58 ″  E

Map: Hessen
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Bodenhausen (Wolfhagen)
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Hesse

Bodenhausen was a village settlement in what is today the district of the north Hessian city ​​of Wolfhagen , district of Kassel . The place was mentioned for the first time in 1239 and for the last time in 1556. It is not known when he was left.

Geographical location

The place was about 2.5 km southwest of Wolfhagen or 1.5 km northwest of Leckringhausen , at 301  m altitude on the Siegenbach (Alveringhäuser Bach) in the Wolfhagen city forest. The exact location of the settlement is not known, however, based on the field name “Am Bodenhäuser Weg” and other references, it is assumed in the immediate vicinity of the two fish ponds dammed up on the Siegenbach. The Sundern desert is located about 2.5 km to the southwest .

history

The place is mentioned in writing for the first time in 1239, when Provost Burkhard of the Fritzlarer St. Petri-Stift stated that Johann von Helfenberg and his brothers, their father brother Eberhard as well as Arnold I. Wolff von Gudenberg , Conrad von Elben and Gumpert von Hohenfels the church on the Schützeberg a "Lata" next to the source near Bodenhausen, the way to Geppenhagen and a farmstead with two fields and a garden at the height of the same village would have transferred, with the condition that the settlers (settlers) of Bodenhausen this church with the same right like those of Gasterfeld, have always been obliged . In 1255 Eckhard von Helfenberg still owned two hooves in "Budenhusen". In 1315 the nobleman Heinrich von Schöneberg sold the Tile von Twiste, among other things, property in Bodenhausen. In 1336, von Helfenberg gave Landgrave Heinrich II of Hesse two men in "Bodenhusen" as a fief . In 1414, after the death of Rudolph V. von Helfenberg, the last male representative of his gender, this property in Bodenhausen came entirely to the Landgraviate as a fallen fief . The Lords Wolff von Gudenberg are still known to be the owners of two Hufen Electoral Mainz fiefs in Bodenhausen in 1423 and 1556 .

Footnotes

  1. ^ Bodenhausen, Kassel district. Historical local dictionary for Hessen. In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
  2. Hessisches Staatsarchiv Marburg, Fonds, Urk. 27 No. 20
  3. As early as 1409, Rudolph had documented the reversal of his entire fiefdom and allodial property to Landgrave Hermann II of Hesse, which had not yet been assigned elsewhere (e.g. to the Aroldessen monastery ) .
  4. Whether expressed in 1448 acquisition of those of Helfenberg about Werner of the Bodenhausen and his widow massacre of Johann von Oeynhausen -down tithe to Bodenhausen by Landgrave Ludwig I to this site refers is doubtful.

literature

  • Georg Landau : Historical-topographical description of the desolate localities in the Electorate of Hesse and in the grand-ducal Hessian parts of Hessengaue, Oberlahngaue and Ittergaue (= journal of the Association for Hessian History and Regional Studies. Supplement 7, ZDB -ID 200295-4 ). Theodor Fischer, Kassel 1858, p. 166 .
  • Heinrich Reimer (Hrsg.): Historical local lexicon for Kurhessen (publications of the historical commission for Hessen). Elwert, Marburg, 1974, p. 54.
  • Paul Görlich: Wolfhagen; History of a North Hessian city . Historical city history Thiele & Schwarz, Kassel 1980, p. 290 .
  • Anna Schroeder-Petersen: The offices of Wolfhagen and Zierenberg, their territorial development up to the 19th century (writings of the Hessian State Office for Historical Regional Studies, Volume 12). Elwert, Marburg, 1936, p. 106.

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