Feuerschützenbostel
Feuerschützenbostel is a district of the city of Bergen belonging village of Eversen . It is 2.5 km west of Eversen and has 23 residents.

history
Feuerschützenbostel was first mentioned in a document in 1526 in a loan document from Duke Ernst the Confessor , in which a Balthasar von Kimme was enfeoffed with a Feuerschützenbostel. The von Kimme are said to have received the fief as an afterfief of the von Hodenhagen . Based on a note in the main register of the Amtsvogtey Bergen in 1571, it can be assumed that the von Kimme family had owned the farm since the first half of the 15th century. In 1541, the so-called Mielmannshof was the first Kötner position in Feuerschützenbostel. In a cattle register from 1589, three farms subject to tax are already mentioned, of which only the Mielmannshof remains. The other two farms are no longer listed in registers of the Vogtey Winsen from 1667 and the parish Sülze from 1657, the reasons for this are not known.
Feuerschützenbostel belonged to the parish in Winsen until the end of the 18th century. Feuerschützenbostel has been part of the Fabian and Sebastian Church in Sülze since 1790 .
In the 19th century, more farms were created, in 1824 a directory of the parish of Sülze mentioned 4 farms and 24 residents.
At the end of the 20th century, tourism gained increasing importance in Feuerschützenbostel, so today the owners of the Mielmannshof run a country café and the manor rents holiday apartments to tourists. In addition, agriculture and forestry continue to be of central importance for the place. The place is located, away from any through traffic, directly on the Örtze . The NLWKN ( Lower Saxony State Agency for Water Management, Coastal Protection and Nature Conservation ) has set up a gauge and a solar-powered hydrological measuring point for the collection of environmental data on the river . The owners of the manor to which the mansion, built in 1901 belongs, is the von Harling family. They have provided a quiet forest in one of their forest areas with old mixed oak and beech forests .
On January 1, 1973 Eversen was incorporated into the city of Bergen.
Politics and administration
Feurschützenbostel belonged to the Amtsvogtey Winsen from its inception until the political reforms in the Kingdom of Hanover in the first half of the 19th century. In the course of the general divisions, the political community of Feuerschützenbostel was created, which remained independent until it was incorporated into Eversen in 1929.
Personalities
- Gert G. von Harling - hunting writer
literature
- Franz Rathmann: Village book Eversen. A house and reader , 1998. ISBN 3-921744-09-1
Individual evidence
- ^ 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 GmbH, Stuttgart and Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 224 .
Web links
- Website of the Feuerschützenbostel Manor ( Memento from January 10, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
Coordinates: 52 ° 44 ' N , 10 ° 2' E