Erminghausen

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Coordinates: 51 ° 17 ′ 3 ″  N , 8 ° 50 ′ 16 ″  E

Map: Hessen
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Erminghausen
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Hesse

Erminghausen is a deserted area in the district of Korbach in the northern Hessian district of Waldeck-Frankenberg .

Geographical location

The desert is located on the Waldecker Tafel in the west of the field mark of the Korbach core city at 394  m above sea ​​level not far south of the federal road 251 between Korbach in the east and Lelbach in the west.

history

The place was first mentioned in 1126 when the noble free Riclinde / Riklinde von Itter and her sister Frederun / Friderun, nieces and next heiresses of Folkmar von Itter, who died in 1123, inherited the allodial property of the castle and the Itter rulership of the abbey Corvey under Abbot Erkenbert to fiefdom , including two Hufen in Evermaringhusen, which the Iterian Ministerial Ordwin held there.

Documentary evidence of the history of the place is rare. Possibly it was just an aristocratic court as the nucleus with associated cottages . In 1438 the Lords of Westphalen are named as Waldeck's fiefdom holders of the free chair at Ermighausen. In 1498 belehnte Count Philipp II. Von Waldeck-Eisenberg the Goddert of Brobeck with the tithe in; In 1538 Johann von Brobeck sold this tithe for 400 Rhenish gold guilders to the Neustädter Hospital in Korbach, founded in 1349 and expanded in 1467.

It is not clear when the place was abandoned. Today the name “Ermighäuser Wiesen” and the Korbach street name Ermighäuser Weg remind of the disappeared place.

Local nobility

A lower aristocratic family from Erminghausen is definitely documented from 1327. However, it has probably existed since at least the early 13th century, and the abbot Heinrich I of the Flechtdorf monastery , who was notarized from 1234–1269, may have been a member of the family. They were feudal bearers of the Corvey Imperial Monastery and the Counts of Waldeck , and some later also citizens of the city of Korbach. The sex died out in the male line in 1506 or 1508 with the Waldeck landdrosten Heinrich von Erminghausen.

Place name

The place name or the name of the sex appears in many variations in written documents until the 16th century: Evermurnchusen (1332), Ermelnchuß (1332–1348), Ermrinchausen (1st half of the 14th century), Eurmarinchusen & Eurmaringhusen (1341) , Euermarinchusen (1345, 1364, 1367), Ermerlinchusen (1348), Ermerinchosen (1350), Evermarinkusen (1369), Ermarinchusen (1373), Elmerinchusen (1380), Ermerkusen (1398, 1443, 1478, 1487), Emerinkusen & Erinkusen ( 1399), Emmeringhusen (1406, 1407), Ermenkuß (1417, 1443), Ermerenchusen (1420, 1427), Ermerkhusen (1425, 1448, 1538), Ermerkhussen (1425), Ermerckhuß (1436), Ermerinchusen (1437, 1439), Erminchusen (1449), Ermerchusen & Ermercküsen (1455), Ermichusen (1475), Ermelkusen & Ermerlinghausen (1482), Ermyckhusen (1487), Ermerkusin & Ermerckhausen & Ermkusen (1493), Ermerinckusen & Erminghausen (1495), Ermerckusen & Ermenkusen (1499 ), Ermerkußen (1506), Ermeküsen & Ermeküßen (1512), Ermkchusen (16th century), Ermechusen (1538) and Ermigkhau sen (1563).

Footnotes

  1. ^ Hermann Genthe: History of the city of Corbach: Festschrift for the 3rd secular celebration of the Princely Waldeckische Landesgymnasium in Corbach. Weigel, Mengeringhausen, 1879, p. 7
  2. ^ Johann Christian Lünig: Corpus juris feudalis Germanici , Volume 2, 1727, p. 1871
  3. Gottfried Ganßauge, Walter Kramm, Wolfgang Medding (arrangement): Circle of the Eisenberg. (The architectural and art monuments in the Kassel administrative region, new series, third volume.) Bärenreiter, Kassel, 1939, p. 247
  4. Albert Leiß: The von Evermaringhausen; A contribution to the Waldeck nobility history. In: History Association for Waldeck and Pyrmont (ed.): History sheets for Waldeck and Pyrmont , Volume 2, Mengeringhausen 1902, p. 1
  5. Ernst Friedrich Mooyer: The Flechtdorf Monastery and its abbots, together with some documents. In: Journal for patriotic history and antiquity , eighth volume, Münster, 1845, pp. 1–86 (here 51–52) [new print, Wenner, Osnabrück, 1971, ISBN 3-87898-029-9 ]
  6. Albert Leiß: The von Evermaringhausen; A contribution to the Waldeck nobility history. In: History Association for Waldeck and Pyrmont (ed.): History sheets for Waldeck and Pyrmont , Volume 2, Mengeringhausen 1902, p. 2

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