Dingeringhausen (Korbach)

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Coordinates: 51 ° 18 ′ 29 ″  N , 8 ° 51 ′ 19 ″  E

Map: Hessen
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Dingeringhausen (Korbach)
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Hesse

Dingeringhausen is an estate in the west of the district of Helmscheid , a district of Korbach in the north Hessian district of Waldeck-Frankenberg . At the same place there was previously a small settlement that was still called a village in 1367 and 1398 and later (in the 16th century?) Fell into desolation .

history

The farm is located at 388  m above sea ​​level about 4 km north of Korbach, immediately east of the L 3076 state road from Korbach to Flechtdorf .

The settlement once located there was first mentioned in a document in the period 1028-1036, when a noblewoman named Reinike gave her curtis (= fortified farmyard) in "Thingerdinchusen" to the diocese of Paderborn , but received it back from Bishop Meinwerk for use for life. In addition to this farm there was obviously due course other property at the site: As the two sisters Riclind (also Riklind or Rilind) and Frederun of Itter , nieces and heiresses of the 1123 deceased Folkmar of Itter, in 1126 inherited from her uncle allodial at the Castle and the lordship of Itter entrusted the abbot Erkenbert von Corvey and the monastery Corvey to fiefdom , which also included a hoof in "Dingeringhusen", which the Iterian Ministerial Ordwin held there; around 1350 a Wigand von Engern is known there as a Corveyscher feudal holder.

Over the centuries, various lords and clerical institutions had fiefdoms or their own property or income in the place, including the noblemen von Büren , the monasteries Haina and Flechtdorf , the counts of Waldeck , the lords of Padberg , von Brunhardessen , von Helsen , Rabe von Pappenheim , from Eppe , from Viermund , from Langeln and from Dalwigk .

In the 18th century, the large estate that still existed there was a dairy farm owned by the Princes of Waldeck. At the beginning of the 19th century, Prince Friedrich Karl August sold it to Chamber Councilor Friedrich Kleinschmit (1734–1804) from Arolsen . Since then, the estate has been in the possession of the Kleinschmit family, who in 1878 with Gustav Kleinschmit von Lengefeld (1811–1879) were raised to the status of baron Waldeck . In 1920/21 the Kleinschmit von Lengefeld built a new house made of quarry stone and half-timbered houses on the estate.

Footnotes

  1. Later the place appears in written documents as "Dingerinchosen" (1336), "Dingrikusen" (1351), "Dingerkusen" (1360), "Dingerichusen" (1447), "Dingerchusen" (1482) and "Dingerinkhausen" (1560) ; Dingeringhausen, district of Waldeck-Frankenberg, in the historical local dictionary of Hesse ; and Gottfried Ganßauge, Walter Kramm, Wolfgang Medding (arr.): Circle of the Eisenberg. (The architectural and art monuments in the Kassel administrative region, new series, third volume.) Bärenreiter, Kassel, 1939, pp. 84 & 246

literature

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