Bremge near Ennest

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bremge near Ennest
City of Attendorn
Coordinates: 51 ° 8 ′ 41 ″  N , 7 ° 53 ′ 32 ″  E
Residents : (Jun 30, 2018)
Postal code : 57439
Area code : 02722
Bremge near Ennest (North Rhine-Westphalia)
Bremge near Ennest

Location of Bremge near Ennest in North Rhine-Westphalia

Hofkapelle Heuel in Unterbremge
Hofkapelle Heuel in Unterbremge

Bremge bei Ennest is a residential area in the town of Attendorn in the Olpe district ( North Rhine-Westphalia ) and has 6 residents.

geography

The Bremge residential area consists of the two courtyards Unterbremge and Oberbremge and is located north of the core town of Attendorn, between Rauterkusen in the north, Mühlhardt in the south and Ennest in the east. The Bremgebach flows through Unterbremge.

history

Bremge was first mentioned in a document as Bremeke in 1320 . Around the middle of the 15th century, the Dietrich von Bonslade estate belonged to the Grube in Attendorn. In a document from the Ewig monastery in 1470, a Heneke van Bredenbeke was named as the seller. In 1491 a certain Rauleff lived on Bremge . The place name is formed from the basic word -bēke (brook) and the qualifier brēd (broad, extended) and can therefore be interpreted as " (settlement) on the broad brook ".

Politically, Bremge formerly belonged to the Waldenburg office and in the Gogericht and parish Attendorn to the farmers of Ennest, to which Rauterkusen also belonged in addition to Ennest . In the treasury register of 1543, a Herman zu Bremick is named with a tax of 1 place (¼ gold gulden ). In the registry of 1565 Herman zu Bremicke was taxed with 1 gold guilder. Before the division in 1898, Bremge was also called Oberbremge, in contrast to Plaßmannshof (Mühlhardt) to the southeast, which was then called Niederbremge.

In the 17th century half of the estate belonged to the Attendorn vicarie St. Francisci et Clarae, according to the pension book, a quarter to Stephan Gertmann and a quarter to Joseph Ferdinand Gertmann. It was managed successively by Johann Köhn, Thomas von Bremge, Bernhard Schulte and until 1664 by Johann von Bremge, known as Harmauer. When he moved away, Bernhard Brinker became a tenant. In 1689 his son Johann took over the farm. Johann's grandson Theodor Brinker had to pay rent at that time: 6 Malter hard grain, half rye, half barley, 12 Malter oats, two lean pigs, 8 chickens, 6 days farm service with 4 horses, 2 cattle to feed in winter and summer. The Brinker family owned the farm until the beginning of the 19th century. According to the inscription above the Deelentür, the manor house was built in 1810 by Johann Brinker and his wife Maria Theresia born. Seldom built. The only daughter Maria Elisabeth married Ferdinand Heuel (1784–1863) from Imminghausen in 1815 , and the farm has been owned by the Heuel family ever since.

In 1898 the property was divided between the brothers Hubert and Emil Heuel. Hubert got the larger part with the old manor house, now called Unterbremge, while Emil built a new manor house on the land that fell to him above the Bremger Valley, which was then called Oberbremge.

The address book from 1929 in Bremge lists the names "Hesse (5 people), Heuel (6) and Klein" and the address book from 1956 lists the names "Buschmann, Friedrich, Heuel (4) and Koch".

From 1819 Bremge belonged to the Attendorn municipality in the Attendorn-Land municipality, until the municipality was incorporated into the town of Attendorn in 1969.

The Heuel court chapel in Unterbremge is an Attendorn architectural monument .

Individual evidence

  1. Population statistics of the city of Attendorn (as of June 30, 2018) , accessed on August 4, 2018.
  2. Westphalian Document Book XI, No. 1621, page 950
  3. Norbert Scheele (Ed.): Regesten of the former Ewig Monastery , Olpe 1963, Urk 159, page 44
  4. Michael Flöer: The place names of the district of Olpe , in: Westfälisches Ortnamesbuch, Volume 8, Bielefeld 2014, page 59/60
  5. ↑ Estimation register from 1543, page 69 [1]
  6. The 16th century appraisal registers for the Duchy of Westphalia, Part 1 (1536 and 1565), Münster 1971, page 220
  7. Julius Pickert: The farms of the Attendorn parish in the 17th century , in: Heimatblätter des Kreis Olpe, 4th century. 1926/27, page 53
  8. Otto Höffer in: Attendorn - yesterday and today, Association for Orts- und Heimatkunde Attendorn eV, No. 11 (1987), pages 8 to 10
  9. Official address book of the Olpe district 1928/29, section Attendorn-Land municipality, page 76
  10. Home address book of the district of Olpe, Münster 1956, section Attendorn-Land, page 147