Dingholz

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Dingholz
Coordinates: 54 ° 44 ′ 12 "  N , 9 ° 42 ′ 26"  E
Postal code : 24972 (Steinbergkirche)
24996 (Sterup)
24966 (Sörup)
Area code : 04637 (Steinbergkirche)
04637 (Sterup)
04635 (Sörup)
Dingholz (Schleswig-Holstein)
Dingholz

Location of Dingholz in Schleswig-Holstein

Dingholz ( Danish : Tingskov ) is a scattering village , the area under the municipalities Steinbergkirche , Sterup and Soerup is divided and each have a district represents.

location

The northern part of Dingholz consists of the road leading to Großquern, which is called Quern-Dingholz (Kværn Tingskov) . Quern-Dingholz used to be part of the Quern community , which was incorporated into the Steinbergkirche community in 2013. The addition "Quern" comes from the time before the integration. The Steinbergkirche community now officially calls this part of its district Dingholz, although the street name has been retained. The southeast part of Dingholz, with the street of the same name there, belongs to Sterup and is therefore also called Sterup-Dingholz. The southwest part of Dingholz, with the street of the same name, belongs to Sörup and is therefore also called Sörup-Dingholz. State road 21 runs through Dingholz from Flensburg to Kappeln. The small town of Löstrup , which belongs to Sörup, is located directly southwest of Dingholz .

background

At the place was the Thingplatz (or Dingplatz) of the Nieharde and several trees . The place name refers to it. The first mention of the Thingstätte comes from 1621. It was therefore used as a court and place of execution. The last execution took place in 1737. The widely scattered settlement is mainly on Landesstrasse 21 (L 21). Until 1993 there was a grocery store ( Lage ) at the confluence of Kreisstraße 100 with L 21 , with customers from the surrounding villages. Today there is only residential development at the confluence area. Around 2010, Dingholz had a total of 186 inhabitants (Sterup-Dingholz: 68 inhabitants, Quern-Dingholz: 48 inhabitants, Sörup-Dingholz: 70 inhabitants).

Legend of the Dingholzer Frauenschuh

At Sörup-Dingholz there is a strange stone ( location ) on Kappelner Straße , in which the imprint of a flat, pointed woman's shoe with a heel can be recognized. Traces of impact on the stone reveal that an attempt was apparently made at some point to process the stone into a paving stone . This plan was obviously not pursued any further. Apparently the stone was erected as a memorial during the expansion of the road around 1870. There is now a bench next to the stone to linger on. A sign points to the legend.

The legend about this stone, probably first recorded around 1845, has the following content: “On the Roest estate , a serf was once supposed to be severely punished for an offense. The serf's wife asked the rulership for the life of her husband, who was sentenced to death. But the Lord refused to give in to their supplication for a long time. In the end, however, the gentleman declared that he would pardon her husband if she could measure and designate half of the way between Flensburg and Kappeln before sunset. The poor woman went to work in a hurry to complete the impossible task. But already at Dingholz's, the desperate woman sat down wearily on a stone that lay there by the way to rest. Something strange happened. During her rest, her shoe sank deep into the stone in question. When she wanted to get up again, her shoe was stuck in the stone. A miracle had happened, she sensed that the middle of the path must be at this point. It was true and so she saved her husband's life. "

Individual evidence

  1. a b Steinberg Church. Dingholz , accessed on: February 25, 2020
  2. Office Geltinger Courier Book April / May 2010 , p 36; accessed on: April 16, 2020
  3. Karl Müllenhoff : Der Frauenschuh im Stein , accessed on: April 9, 2020
  4. ^ Office of Geltinger Buch. The Dingholzer Frauenschuh, p. 39 , accessed on: April 9, 2020
  5. Table of Contents. Karl Müllenhoff: Legends, fairy tales and songs. First printing: Kiel (Schwerssche Buchhandlung) 1845
  6. The legend was evidently told by the surveyor Nissen from Löstrup to the legend collector Karl Müllenhoff . See Karl Müllenhoff : Der Frauenschuh im Stein , accessed on: April 9, 2020
  7. ^ Gundula Hubrich-Messow: Legends and fairy tales from fishing , Husum 1987, page 65 f.
  8. Karl Müllenhoff : Der Frauenschuh im Stein , accessed on: April 9, 2020