Dederinghausen

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Dederinghausen (also Dederinchusen) is a desolate place in Brilon .

It was a larger farm between the Derker (Dederinghauser) stone and the Faulen Siepen (Bach). Remains can still be seen today. In 1482 the place was mentioned as a side courtyard of the place Lederke . At that time the farm was owned by the Meschede Monastery . Derker Straße, Derkerborn and Derker Tor are named after the former location . A quarter of the medieval city of Brilon was also called Derker's quarter . The location is recorded in the local cadastre from 1482.

Like many other places, the place fell victim to the great desolation process in the late Middle Ages . It must have been a creeping, slow process. This began around 1300. There are different theories about the reasons for leaving the place. For example, the attraction of the city of Brilon is being considered. Another reason was plague epidemics and residents' need to seek shelter in fortified cities .

literature

  • Local history of the Brilon district, by Josef Rüther, 1957, Regensberg publishing house in Münster
  • Rudolf Bergmann Soil antiquities of Westphalia, the desertions of the Hoch- and Ostsauerland 2015 Verlag Philipp von Zabern ISBN 978-3-8053-4934-5

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rudolf Bergmann soil antiquities of Westphalia, the desertions of the Hoch- and Ostsauerland 2015 Verlag Philipp von Zabern ISBN 978-3-8053-4934-5 , page 99
  2. ^ Gerhard Brökel: Past Times, Volume 3, Page 57

Coordinates: 51 ° 22 ′ 55.7 "  N , 8 ° 33 ′ 49.8"  E