Bubenrode (Malsfeld)

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Bubenrode is a group of homesteads in the district of Sipperhausen , a district of the municipality of Malsfeld in the Schwalm-Eder district in northern Hesse .

location

The small hamlet is located at an altitude of 310 m above sea level about 1 km east of Sipperhausen on the district road K 31, the Bubenroder Straße, from Sipperhausen to Niederbeisheim , immediately east of the A 7 motorway . The Bubengraben rises in Bubenrode and soon afterwards flows into the Beise .

history

The Bubenrodt farm is first mentioned in a document in 1406, when the von Berlepsch family inherited a quarter of the farm. 1438 Bubenrad is mentioned as a Hersfeld fiefdom of the von Wolfershausen family , which came to the von Berlepsch family through marriage. 1456 were the von Berlepsch by the Hersfeld Abbey with Bubinrade fief and gave the court as after fief on to a Homberger aldermen. The von Berlepsch family were still in the possession of the Hersfeld fief in 1523, but the place in the Bubengraben was described as desolate that year and also in 1537 , but then again as a farm in 1562.

With the gradual transition of the territory of the Hersfeld Abbey from 1525 to the Landgraviate of Hesse , Bubenrode also became Hessian. It belonged to the Homberg office from 1575 at the latest and then until 1821 . The lower and embarrassing jurisdiction , however, remained as a Hessian fiefdom with the Lords of Heßberg until at least 1742 . They held the farm from 1562 to 1642 as a landgrave's fief and then sold (pledged?) It to Andreas Baurmeister. After that, the farm changed hands several times, although the sources are not always clear. In 1657 the lords of Berlepsch were enfeoffed with the court again, and they held this fief repeatedly, but not continuously, until 1825. In 1669, CH von Oynhausen acquired the farm, whether it was an after-fief or a pledge. From 1747 to 1772 Bubenrode was again owned by the von Berlepsch family. Then Landgrave Friedrich II of Hessen-Kassel enfeoffed Johann Christoph Kruse with Bubenrode in 1772. The estate finally came into the possession of the Lords of Malsburg , who probably leased it repeatedly . During the time of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Westphalia (1807-1813) Bubenrode belonged to the canton of Homberg , then again to the Kurhessischen Amt Homberg and from 1821 to the district of Homberg . Around the middle of the 19th century it was leased by the father of the later anti-Semitic member of the Reichstag, Ludwig Werner , and from 1878 to 1893 by Richard Carl Albrecht Heydenreich. At the beginning of the 20th century it was the family fideikommiss of the von Malsburg family.

In 1956, the “Hessische Heimat” settlement company acquired the estate and divided it into five settlement sites, each of 15 to 23 hectares.

Sons and daughters of the place

Coordinates: 51 ° 3 ′ 42 "  N , 9 ° 29 ′ 48"  E

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