Bornen

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Bornen
Kurten municipality
Coordinates: 51 ° 3 ′ 5 ″  N , 7 ° 17 ′ 27 ″  E
Postal code : 51515
Area code : 02268
Bornen (Kürten)
Bornen

Location of Bornen in Kürten

House Forstenhöhe
House Forstenhöhe

Bornen is a district of Kürten in the Rheinisch-Bergisches Kreis . It is on the high road , the south of the Sülztal running street Wipperfürther runs.

history

The Bornen farm was first mentioned in 1505 as in the Boernen . The place name has the meaning source , well .

The Topographia Ducatus Montani by Erich Philipp Ploennies , Blatt Amt Steinbach , shows that the residential area had two farmsteads as early as 1715, which are labeled as Bonnen . From the chart of the Duchy of Berg from 1789 by Carl Friedrich von Wiebeking it emerges that the place under the name Bonen was part of the Olpe honor in the parish of Olpe at that time .

The place is recorded on the topographical survey of the Rhineland from 1824 as Born . The Prussian first recording from 1844 shows the residential area under the name Bornen . From the Prussian new admission from 1893-1896, the place is regularly recorded as Bornen on measuring table sheets .

Under the French administration between 1806 and 1813, the Steinbach office was dissolved and Bornen was politically assigned to Mairie Olpe in the canton of Wipperfürth . In 1816 the Prussians converted the Mairie to the Olpe mayor in the Wipperfürth district . In 1822, 23 people lived in the place categorized as a farm , for the year 1830 there were 26 inhabitants. In 1845, Bornen counted as a hamlet under the name Bonnen six houses and 31 residents of Catholic faith.

The municipality and estate district statistics of the Rhine Province show Bornen 1871 with six houses and 50 inhabitants. In the list of the Kingdom of Prussia for the 1885 census, Bornen was listed as a place to live for the rural community of Olpe in the Wipperfürth district. At that time five houses with 30 residents were counted. In 1895 the place had five houses with 24 inhabitants, in 1905 five houses and 28 inhabitants are given.

The Bergische Diakonie Aprath maintained a boys' home here in the middle of the 20th century. After the Second World War , girls from the Gut an der Linde in Moitzfeld were temporarily housed here. The home consisted of a wooden building next to today's sports field, which was taken out of use in the late 1950s. It was demolished in the 1970s. The Forstenhöhe house was brought into being by Pastor H. Hieronymi as a school camp.

The artist Fritz H. Lauten lived in Bornen . Here he also had his workshop.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heinrich Dittmaier : settlement names and settlement history of the Bergisches Land . In: Journal of the Bergisches Geschichtsverein . tape 74 , parallel edition as a publication by the Institute for Historical Regional Studies of the Rhineland at the University of Bonn. Schmidt, Neustadt ad Aisch 1956.
  2. ^ Wilhelm Fabricius  : Explanations for the Historical Atlas of the Rhine Province ; Second volume: The map of 1789. Division and development of the territories from 1600 to 1794 ; Bonn; 1898
  3. Friedrich von RestorffTopographical-statistical description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Province , Nicolai, Berlin and Stettin 1830
  4. Alexander A. Mützell: New topographical-statistical-geographical dictionary of the Prussian state . tape 1 . Karl August Künnel, Halle 1821.
  5. Overview of the components and list of all the localities and individually named properties of the government district of Cologne: by districts, mayor's offices and parishes, with information on the number of people and the residential buildings, as well as the Confessions, Jurisdictions, Military and former state conditions. / ed. from the Royal Government of Cologne [Cologne], [1845]
  6. Royal Statistical Bureau Prussia (ed.): The communities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population . The Rhine Province, No. XI . Berlin 1874.
  7. Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland Province, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1885 and other official sources, (Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII), Berlin 1888.
  8. Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland Province, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1895 and other official sources, (Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII), Berlin 1897.
  9. Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland Province, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1905 and other official sources, (Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII), Berlin 1909.
  10. Paul Reinehr : Moitzfeld - Chronik der Kapellengemeinde from 1920–1952, Moitzfeld 1986, p. 94ff.
  11. Wilma Kürten: Playing, Education, Slumber Hour - Schullandheime: Upbringing and teaching favorably connected, in: Rheinisch-Bergischer Calendar 1987, p. 159