Edemissen (Edemissen)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edemissen
municipality Edemissen
Coat of arms of Edemissen
Coordinates: 52 ° 23 '8 "  N , 10 ° 15' 38"  E
Height : 70 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 3346  (Jul 1, 2015)
Incorporation : March 1, 1974
Postal code : 31234
Area code : 05176
Edemissen (Lower Saxony)
Edemissen

Location of Edemissen in Lower Saxony

Martin Luther Church in Edemissen

Edemissen ( Low German Emisse ) is a district of the municipality of Edemissen in the Peine district in Lower Saxony . The place is the administrative seat of the municipality of the same name.

geography

Geographical location

Edemissen is located on the southern edge of the Lüneburg Heath .

history

The first documented mention of the village of Edemissen comes from the year 1295. The place was often confused with Edemissen (Einbeck) in old documents . Even today, a document from 1253 is mistakenly associated with Edemissen (Peine district).

In 1532 the Meinersen office was formed with the Gografschaft Edemissen and the associated villages Edemissen, Abbensen , Ahlemissen , Alvesse , Blumenhagen , Dedenhausen , Eddesse , Eickenrode , Eixe , Eltze , Horst, Mödesse , Ohof , Plockhorst , Rietze , Stederdorf , Voigtholz , Wehnsen , Wendesse , Wipshausen , Ankensen , Tadensen and (Sundern).

After the office of Meinersen was dissolved on March 31, 1885, Edemissen was incorporated into the newly formed district of Peine.

Incorporation

In 1965 the previously independent towns of Edemissen, Alvesse, Blumenhagen, Mödesse, Voigtholz-Ahlemissen and, since 1971, Oedesse were merged to form the joint municipality of Edemissen. Since March 1st 1974 Edemissen has been part of the unified community of Edemissen. Ankensen, Berkhöpen and Oelheim are parts of the village of Edemissen.

Neighboring places

Berkhöpen Wehnsen Ankensen
Oedesse Neighboring communities Blumenhagen
Wendesse Stederdorf Mödesse

Population development

The following is a graphic representation of the population development:

religion

Evangelical Lutheran

The villages of Alvesse, Blumenhagen (with Klein Blumenhagen), Edemissen (with Ankensen, Berkhöpen and Oelheim), Mödesse, Oedesse (with Klein Oedesse), Plockhorst, Voigtholz-Ahlemissen and Wehnsen belong to the parish of the Evangelical Lutheran Martin Luther Parish of Edemissen . Until 1894, the Abbensen chapel community was also part of it - which became an independent parish. Also Eixe with Sundern was associated until 1867 with Edemissen and came to parish officially Vöhrum .

Since the beginning of the 18th century, the parish of Edemissen belonged to the Sievershausen inspection , which was dissolved in 1965 and brought about a further reorganization in the Peine parish. Edemissen has been part of the Peine parish since then.

Roman Catholic

A Roman Catholic parish had not existed in Edemissen or in the northern district of Peine from the Reformation until the 20th century. Only with the influx of bombed out, refugees and displaced persons did an ever-growing community develop in the post-war period after the Second World War .

Services were initially carried out in private apartments, dining rooms, halls or even facilities of the Protestant church. Not until 1959 was the Corpus Christi Church, a Catholic church built in Edemissen. In 1968 a bell tower was added. Since 2006 the Catholic parish of Edemissen has been part of the parish " To the Holy Angels " based in Peine .

politics

The local mayor is Ullrich Kemmer .

coat of arms

The local coat of arms shows a blue linden tree on a gold shield, accompanied by two red eight-pointed stars in the middle of blue rings that grow out of a black soil.

The tree stands for a so-called millennial linden tree that once stood next to the church building. The eight rays of the ring stars correspond to the old ways to the neighboring villages, where Edemissen was the administrative, judicial and ecclesiastical center. They come from ornamental folk art and can be found on house beams and in local weather vanes. The coat of arms was approved by the Interior Minister of Lower Saxony on January 24, 1952; the design was made by Rudolf Dehnke.

Town twinning

FranceFrance Chaulnes Coat of Arms Chaulnes in France , since 1969
Saxony-AnhaltSaxony-Anhalt Zahna coat of arms Zahna in Saxony-Anhalt , since 1991

Culture and sights

  • The branch office of the Edemissen registry office on the Ankensen manor has been a special feature since 2003. Couples wishing to marry can get married here in the restored bakery. The former Guts-Bakhaus from 1886 - many consider this gem to be a chapel - is probably the work of the consistorial architect Conrad Wilhelm Hase , Hanover.
  • The Martin Luther Church consists of a tower that was built around 1200 and the nave built in 1691.
  • The rectory was built in 1737.
  • On the Gografenhof from 1737 there is the tithe store from 1766, in which the crops that had to be delivered as tithe by the taxable farmers were previously stored .
  • The Hiete warehouse from 1573 is also a listed building, as is the entire Wipperstrasse on which it stands.
  • This also includes the Lower Saxony house Wipperhof from 1768 and Smees-Spieker from 1757.

Economy and Infrastructure

In Edemissen there is a municipal administration, a police station, a fire station , financial institutions, a postal agency, doctors, pharmacies, a deaconry, a parish office and a large number of common commercial and commercial operations to supply the region. On the remaining farms, you can buy seasonal products (such as potatoes, carrots, onions, asparagus, lettuce, pumpkin, etc.) directly from the farm.

education

  • In addition to kindergartens, there is a primary school, secondary school and secondary school in Edemissen.
  • A branch of the district library is located in the Edemissen school center.

traffic

Edemissen is on federal highway 444 .

literature

  • Association of local history Edemissen e. V .: Edemissen - At home in the country , 2014.
  • Association of local history Edemissen e. V .: Die Gemeinde Edemissen , Sutton 2007. ISBN 978-3-86680-202-5
  • Adolf Smithmanns: Martin Luther Church Edemissen , Evang.-Luth. Martin Luther Parish 2003
  • Karl Zeinart: Edemisser Geschichte , Heft 5a, Heft 5b, self-published 2003
  • Karl Zeinart: Edemisser Geschichte , issue 4, self-published 2001
  • Karl Zeinart: Edemisser Geschichte , Heft 3b, 3c, self-published 2000
  • Karl Zeinart: Edemisser Geschichte , Heft 2, 3a, self-published 1999
  • Karl Zeinart: Edemisser Geschichte , Issue 1, self-published 1998
  • Jürgen Dieckhoff: Edemissen - Wellbeing Community, Edemissen Municipality 1999
  • Herbert Bahrmann: Edemissen in old views , European Library, Zaltbommel Netherlands 1981
  • Fritz Giffhorn: Edemissen - headquarters of the northern district , municipality of Edemissen (1974)

Web links

Commons : Edemissen  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 217 .
  2. For 1781, 1885, 1936, 1950: Edemissen. Retrieved April 13, 2015 . for 2013: Edemissen. Retrieved April 13, 2015 .
  3. Edemissen. Retrieved September 20, 2018 .
  4. ^ Arnold Rabbow: New Braunschweigisches Wappenbuch. Braunschweiger Zeitungsverlag, Meyer Verlag, Braunschweig 2003, ISBN 3-926701-59-5 , pp. 131/132.