Bubenhausen (Zweibrücken)

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Bubenhausen
City of Zweibrücken
Coordinates: 49 ° 14 ′ 40 ″  N , 7 ° 20 ′ 58 ″  E
Incorporation : 1926
Postal code : 66482
Area code : 06332
map
Location in Zweibrücken

Bubenhausen is a district of Zweibrücken in Rhineland-Palatinate .

geography

Bubenhausen is west of the Hornbach and west of the city center of Zweibrücken. The river, the railway line and the Federal Motorway 8 separate the district from the city center.

history

The place name on "-hausen" belongs to a place name type that was often chosen in the early Middle Ages . The written tradition begins in the 13th century.

Bubenhausen is mentioned for the first time in 1273. It was parish to Ernstweiler and always belonged to the country like Zweibrücken. In 1385 the truce extended around Zweibrücken to "towards Bubenhusen an daz dorff and from Bubenhusen towards Ernswilr". In 1547, Count Palatine Wolfgang decided that the bannes of the city of Zweibrücken and the two villages of Bubenhausen and Ernstweiler should form a communal area with communal use for all times. The subjects of the two villages remained subordinate to the mayor's office in Ixheim , while the citizens of the city continued to be city citizens.

In January 1832 the "German Fatherland Association for the Support of the Free Press" was founded in the hall of the Bubenhauser Gasthaus. The founders were Philipp Jakob Siebenpfeiffer , Johann Georg August Wirth and Friedrich Schüler . This association prepared the Hambach Festival . Industrial jobs have been created since the mid-19th century. The Bubenhauser worked mainly in Zweibrücken and Ernstweiler. With the separation of the Saar area in 1920 and the establishment of the customs border in 1925, Bubenhausen and Ernstweiler came into a border situation.

In 1926 Bubenhausen and Ernstweiler were incorporated into Zweibrücken and have been districts of Zweibrücken ever since.

The “Sturzenhof” and the associated “Sturzenhofstrasse” commemorate Christian David Sturtz (1753–1834), member of the state parliament , to whom the estate once belonged.

See also

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Martin Dolch, Albrecht Greule : Historisches Siedlungsnamesbuch der Pfalz Speyer, Verlag der Palatinate Society for the Advancement of Science 1991, p. 82.
  2. ^ Carl Pöhlmann: Regesten der Graf von Zweibrücken from the Zweibrücken line , edited by Anton Doll, Speyer 1962, p. 309, no. 940.
  3. Ludwig Molitor : Complete history of the former Palatinate-Bavarian residence city of Zweibrücken , Zweibrücken 1885, facsimile reprint Zweibrücken 1989, p. 194. ISBN 3-924171-04-1
  4. Cordula Waldow: Three OLG pioneers , in: Pfälzischer Merkur , Zweibrücken, from June 20, 2015; (Digital view)