Dottendorf

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Dottendorf
Federal city of Bonn
Coordinates: 50 ° 42 ′ 15 ″  N , 7 ° 6 ′ 44 ″  E
Height : 60 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 6019  (December 31, 2018)
Incorporation : June 1, 1904
Postal code : 53129
Area code : 0228
Alt-Godesberg Auerberg Beuel-Mitte Beuel-Ost Brüser Berg Buschdorf Bonn-Castell Dottendorf Dransdorf Duisdorf Endenich Friesdorf Geislar Godesberg-Nord Godesberg-Villenviertel Graurheindorf Gronau Hardthöhe Heiderhof Hochkreuz Hoholz Holtorf Holzlar Ippendorf Kessenich Küdinghoven Lannesdorf Lengsdorf Lessenich/Meßdorf Limperich Mehlem Muffendorf Nordstadt Oberkassel Pennenfeld Plittersdorf Poppelsdorf Pützchen/Bechlinghoven Ramersdorf Röttgen Rüngsdorf Schwarzrheindorf/Vilich-Rheindorf Schweinheim Südstadt Tannenbusch Ückesdorf Venusberg Vilich Vilich-Müldorf Weststadt Bonn-Zentrummap
About this picture
Location of the Dottendorf district in the Bonn district
Dottendorf, aerial photo (2017)

Dottendorf is a district on the left bank of the Rhine in the federal city of Bonn . It belongs to the city ​​district of Bonn and - after the neighboring districts to the north - is one of the most popular residential areas in the city. Due to the choice of Bonn as the seat of government and the proximity to the area of ​​the former government district , the district developed relatively rapidly. The fields in the south and east were completely built with houses.

location

Dottendorf lies at the foot of the Venusberg , where wine was grown on its slopes, and adjacent to the belonging to the municipality of Bonn districts Venusberg , Kessenich and Gronau , as well as the to the municipality of Bad Godesberg belonging Friesdorf . The new development areas built after 1945 are partly on a silted up arm of the Rhine, the Gumme .

history

Dottendorf Castle
  • 804: First mention of Dottendorf. The name means "village of Dotto".
  • 1491: First mention of Dottendorf Castle
  • 1804: The parish of Sankt Quirin in Dottendorf is dissolved. Dottendorf becomes a branch church of Kessenich.
  • 1850: Carl Baunscheidt becomes the new owner of Dottendorfer Burg and begins its renovation
  • 1870: Restoration of the parish of Sankt Quirin in Dottendorf.
  • 1895: Demolition of the previous Romanesque building of today's Quirinus Church; the oldest known inscriptions on site (11th to 12th centuries) come from this demolition and are now in the Rheinisches Landesmuseum in Bonn.
  • 1899: The factory owner Friedrich Paul Mönkemöller starts building his machine factory and iron foundry in Bonn and builds the Villa Mönkemöller and two prestigious semi-detached houses on Marienstraße, today's Mönkemöllerstraße
  • 1904: incorporated into Bonn
  • 1915: On August 14th, Dottendorf was connected by tram.

The electoral secular court and thing chair Dottendorf included the places Kessenich, Dottendorf, and Friesdorf. The Dingstuhl was a lower court in the Bonn office under the electoral court chamber as the highest authority. He recognized in minor offenses and in private law. He also represented the position of the public notary in the creation of wills and the conclusion of contracts. In ancient times, the court was held outdoors ad valvas ec'lesiae. The contract protocols from Dingstuhl Dottendorf have been preserved from 1600 to 1798, the beginning of the French occupation, and are in the Bonn City Archives.

In 1975 an urban development competition was carried out for a new town center in Dottendorf, which was realized from 1979 to 1983. It is located around 300 m from the historic town center and consists of a park and a pedestrian area as well as condominiums, senior citizens ' and handicapped apartments . The district Dottendorf within the boundaries of the municipality that was dissolved in 1904 still exists today.

Population development
year Residents
1816 296
1828 336
1843 492
1885 1403

education

In Dottendorf there is a Montessori primary school as well as an evening grammar school and college. This school is officially called the “Further Education College of the Federal City of Bonn”. The building was built in 1958: as the Elly-Heuss-Knapp-Gymnasium, it was initially used as a girls' high school, later as a mixed high school with a Montessori branch; In the early 1990s, there was a merger with the Friedrich-Ebert-Gymnasium .

School building of the further education college Bonn

traffic

The left Rhine route forms the eastern border of the district, but has no stopping point here. The B9 also runs beyond the district boundary, so Dottendorf is not affected by regional or national through traffic.

Local transport

Quirinusplatz (with a bunker from the Second World War )

Dottendorf has been connected to Bonn city center by tram (lines 61 and 62 ) since 1915 .

In a feasibility study, the possibility of a cable car as a local transport connection from Hindenburgplatz to the university clinics on the Venusberg is to be examined.

Road traffic

The southern bypass planned along the border to Friesdorf as part of the extension of the A562 has been deleted from the federal transport infrastructure plan and will therefore not be implemented. The significant obstructions caused by the railway line are therefore still a major problem.

Street names and their meaning

St. Quirinus Church
Street meaning
Winzerstrasse Note on viticulture
Quirinstrasse Quirinus is the patron of the Cath. Dottendorfer Church, formerly Dorfstrasse
Hausdorffstrasse named after the jew. Professor Felix Hausdorff , formerly Hindenburgstrasse
Christian-Miesen-Strasse named after the special vehicle supplier (mainly ambulance) Christian Miesen
F.-A.-Schmidt-Weg named after the sports scientist from Bonn and co-founder of the Federal Youth Games Ferdinand August Schmidt
Mönkemöllerstrasse named after the industrialist Mönkemöller, who owned a factory on what is now Damaschkestrasse and Schüllerweg.
Damaschkestrasse named after Adolf Wilhelm Ferdinand Damaschke (born November 24, 1865 in Berlin; † July 30, 1935 there), educator and a leader of the land reform movement in Germany.

See also

Web links

Commons : Dottendorf  - collection of images, videos and audio files
Commons : Dottendorf district  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Population in Bonn by districts (according to the main statute) on December 31 , 2018 , Federal City of Bonn - Statistics Office, February 2019
  2. ^ [1] Reference to the oldest inscription of the place in the Rheinisches Landesmuseum Bonn
  3. ^ Wilhelm Fabricius : Explanations of the historical atlas of the Rhine province, 2nd volume: The map of 1789. Bonn 1898, p. 58.
  4. ^ Ingeborg Flagge : Architecture in Bonn after 1945: Buildings in the federal capital and its surroundings . Verlag Ludwig Röhrscheid, Bonn 1984, ISBN 3-7928-0479-4 , p. 128.
  5. State Surveying Office North Rhine-Westphalia: Directory of the landmarks ( Memento of the original from April 17, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (As of 2005; PDF; 243 kB) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.sead.de
  6. ^ AA Mützell: New topographical-statistical-geographical dictionary of the Prussian state , Verlag KA Kümmel, Halle 1821, first volume, p. 293
  7. ^ Friedrich von Restorff : Topographical-Statistical Description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Province , Nicolaische Buchhandlung, Berlin and Stettin 1830, p. 264
  8. Royal Government of Cologne: overview of the components u. Directory of all localities in the government district of Cologne. Cöln 1845, p. 9.
  9. Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII Province of Rheinpreußen, Verlag des Königlich Statistischen Bureaus (ed.), 1888, pages 134 u. 135 (PDF; 1.3 MB)
  10. ^ [2] Report General-Anzeiger-Bonn