Hallway types

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Hallway types and hallway shape types are terms of the order, description and interpretation of agricultural areas.

Examples of hallway types

Hallway types are:

  • District : A district is the total area belonging to a settlement. Originally it was determined according to customary law, later measured by cadastre.
    • Corridor : Part of the district that is subject to individual or private use, divided into plots.
      • Parcel (plot): Smallest owned unit in the hallway. (There are different ways of speaking in the land registers for each country.)
        • Property parcel
        • Business parcel (several owned parcels, areas of various uses)
    • Allmende : In contrast to the corridor, the communal area included the meadow, but also pastures and forests.

Examples of hallway types

Hallway types are:

  • Pure hallway - one type of parcel prevails
  • Mixed corridor - there are several types of parcels

Corridor shapes

  1. Block corridor - plot ratio length to width 1: 1–1: 5/1: 10
  2. Striped land - parcel ratio length to width from 1:10
    • Broad corridor : 1: 10–1: 20
    • Long strip corridor:> 1:20
  3. Gewannflur - parcel association of narrow, parallel, strip-shaped basic parcels in a mixture
    • Number of parcels in Gewann = number of houses

literature

  • Felix Bachofer: The structure of the hallway: Forms genesis. Seminar paper Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen (Geographical Institute), 2002, ISBN 978-3-638-17285-1 ( e-book , grin.com).
  • H. Uhlig: The rural settlements. In: Materials on the terminology of the agricultural landscape, Vol. II, Giessen 1972.

Web links