Frankfurt-Bornheim

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Bornheim coat of arms
Coat of arms of Frankfurt am Main
Bornheim
9th district of Frankfurt am Main
Altstadt Bahnhofsviertel Bergen-Enkheim Berkersheim Bockenheim Bockenheim Bonames Bornheim Dornbusch Eckenheim Eschersheim Fechenheim Flughafen Frankfurter Berg Gallus Ginnheim Griesheim Gutleutviertel Harheim Hausen Heddernheim Höchst Innenstadt Kalbach-Riedberg Nied Nieder-Erlenbach Nieder-Eschbach Niederrad Niederursel Nordend-Ost Nordend-West Oberrad Ostend Praunheim Praunheim Preungesheim Riederwald Rödelheim Sachsenhausen-Nord Sachsenhausen-Süd Schwanheim Schwanheim Seckbach Sindlingen Sossenheim Unterliederbach Westend-Nord Westend-Süd Zeilsheimmap
About this picture
Coordinates 50 ° 7 '43 "  N , 8 ° 42' 42"  E Coordinates: 50 ° 7 '43 "  N , 8 ° 42' 42"  E
surface 2.786 km²
Residents 30,917 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density 11,097 inhabitants / km²
Post Code 60385, 60386, 60389
prefix 069
Website www.frankfurt.de
structure
District 4 - Bornheim / Ostend
Townships
  • 24 0 - Bornheim
  • 27 1 - Bornheim
  • 27 2 - Bornheim
  • 28 1 - Bornheim
  • 28 2 - Bornheim
  • 29 0 - Bornheim
Transport links
Highway A661
Federal road B3 B8
Tram and subway U4 U7 12 14 18
bus 30 32 34 38 43 OF-103 n5
Source: Statistics currently 03/2020. Residents with main residence in Frankfurt am Main. Retrieved April 8, 2020 .
Old town hall on the upper Berger Strasse

Bornheim ( listen ? / I ) has been a district of Frankfurt am Main since January 1, 1877 . It is located in the east of the city near the city center and has 30,917 inhabitants. Audio file / audio sample 000000000030917.0000000000

geography

Bornheim is at an altitude of 134 m above sea ​​level , about 2.2 km northeast of the main guard .

Bornheim borders Preungesheim and Eckenheim in the north . In the west is the Nordend , in the east above the Riederwald the Bornheimer Hang and in the south the Ostend . The Seckbach district is located in the northeast of Bornheim .

The boundaries of today's district are not identical to the boundaries of the historic Bornheim community.

history

Prehistory and early history

The area around Günthersburgpark was already settled in Roman times. To the west and north of Günthersburgpark (on Hartmann-Ibach-Straße and Bornheimer Friedhof) the remains of two Roman villas were discovered. The manor as well as a farm building and the courtyard wall at the intersection with Böttgerstrasse were excavated and examined by the Frankfurt architect CL Thomas in the years 1884–1905. This Bornheim villa had nine rooms, some with underfloor heating , and bathrooms in the southern part, it was built around 110 AD. Also murals proven. It belonged to an estate and was located at the apex between the Nidda level and the Main valley . Two Roman roads ran here: in the direction of Nida ( Römerstadt / Frankfurt-Heddernheim ), the capital of the Civitas Taunensium, and in the direction of today's cathedral hill , at that time a Roman control station on an island in the Main. The villa was abandoned around AD 260 during the Limes Falls.

middle Ages

Bornheim was founded around 500 as a Franconian settlement, the oldest surviving mention dates back to 1194. At that time, a Henricus von Bornheim lived in the “ Bornburg ”, a fortified estate that was surrounded by a wall and a moat . The mayor of Frankfurt, Rulmann Weiß von Limpurg , is reported to have kept his place of residence outside of the city even after taking office in 1327 and that he lived in Bornburg. The castle was located in Ossenau (Ochsenau), roughly on the site of the former Gnadenkirche (now orangery ) in Günthersburg Park and was later called Günthersburg . The building has not been preserved.

In the Middle Ages , Bornheim formed together with 18 other villages the Bornheimerberg court , also called "Grafschaft Bornheimer Berg", whose right was recorded in 1303 in the "Bornheimer Weistum ". The court was located in the northern part of the district , about 100 meters behind and at the height of Berger Straße 448; the street name Am Galgenberg still describes the old location today.

In 1320 King Ludwig IV pledged the Bornheimerberg to Ulrich II von Hanau . In 1336 the emperor allowed the city of Frankfurt to redeem the Bornheimerberg in his place from Hanau. In 1351, however, Emperor Charles IV renewed this pledge for Hanau. In 1434, Count Reinhard II von Hanau was enfeoffed with the Bornheimerberg by Emperor Sigismund . When the County of Hanau was divided in 1458, the Bornheimerberg became part of the County of Hanau-Münzenberg . In 1475 Bornheim became a rural municipality of the city of Frankfurt.

The contradicting behavior of the Reich naturally led to a dispute between Frankfurt and Hanau, especially since Frankfurt saw itself "surrounded" by Hanau territory. All attempts by Frankfurt to prevent this failed. Although Frankfurt's claims to the office's nineteen villages were upheld by the Reichsgericht after a process that lasted over a hundred years, neither Frankfurt nor the Reich had the power to enforce the verdict. So the city finally agreed to a settlement: In 1481 Hanau gave up its claim to the villages of Bornheim, Hausen and Oberrad , the three villages - and thus also Bornheim - finally came to the city of Frankfurt and Hanau received the rest of the Bornheimerberg exclusively. Bornheim left the Bornheimerberg, its “capital city function” for the Bornheimerberg was now taken over by Bergen . 1484 then awarded King Friedrich III. the villages of Bornheim, Hausen and Oberrad to the council of Frankfurt as imperial fiefs.

Property in Bornheim was owned by the Teutonic Order House in Sachsenhausen , the rascals von Bergen and the knights von Heusenstamm .

Between 1476 and 1477 the field fortifications Bornheimer Landwehr were built. Bornheim was included in Frankfurt's external defense and the Friedberger Warte , one of the four Frankfurt waiting towers still preserved today, was built on the Eulenberg .

Historical forms of names

  • Burnheim (1194)
  • Burnheym (1232)
  • Burenchein (1242)
  • Burnheim (1280)
  • Burnheim (1281)

Early modern age

Archbishop Albrecht von Brandenburg , Elector of Mainz , stopped the wood deliveries from the Spessart to the city as a reaction to reformatory ideas in Frankfurt . The Bornheimers saw the good business opportunity, cut down the Bornheim forest and sold the wood to Frankfurt. The Reformation was introduced in 1527.

As a result of this deforestation , the Bornheimer Heide was created in 1522 , through which an avenue of poplars ran that connected Frankfurt with Bornheim. The Bornheimer Heide was in what is now Nordend . It was the scene of army marches and many major events. On October 3, 1785, the Frenchman Jean-Pierre Blanchard rose in a hot air balloon in front of 100,000 people and flew to Weilburg an der Lahn in 39 minutes . At that time, the route was calculated at 14 hours. On the occasion of the 200th anniversary of this first balloon ride, a competition of 32 hydrogen- filled gas balloons from the Ostpark in Ostend, which is adjacent to Bornheim , started on September 28, 1985 .

During the Revolutionary Wars , a French army under General Jean-Baptiste Kléber conquered the city of Frankfurt against the resistance of the Austrian General von Wartensleben . The bombardment of the city led to the destruction of the poplar avenue in Bornheimer Heide on July 15, 1796. The French general accepted the capitulation of the Frankfurters at the Goldener Adler inn in Bornheim .

Younger story

With the foundation of the Rheinbund in 1806, the Free Imperial City of Frankfurt and with it the Frankfurt villages came to the Prince Primate Karl Theodor von Dalberg , who received the right to "unite them with his states". The latter happened with the establishment of the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt in 1810; Bornheim belonged to the Landdistriktmairie Frankfurt within the department of the same name . With the restoration of the old imperial city as the Free City of Frankfurt at the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the rule of the city over the former Frankfurt villages was also restored.

With the “ Hohen Brunnen ” Bornheim was connected to the water supply of the city of Frankfurt on December 9, 1827 . The “Bernemer Half-Long Fountain”, crowned by a red obelisk , bears witness to this .

The Günthersburgpark was created in 1837 after Baron Amschel Mayer Rothschild had acquired the former Bornburg . The Frankfurt city gardener Sebastian Rinz was commissioned with the execution . Rothschild's nephew and adoptive son, Mayer Carl von Rothschild , later had the Günthersburg demolished and replaced by a small castle ("summer residence"), which was, however, torn down again in 1891 after his death in compliance with his will. The property became the property of the City of Frankfurt, which shortly after opened the Günthersburg Park to the public. In 1863 gas lighting was introduced in Bornheim .

After the war of 1866 , Frankfurt lost its state independence. Bornheim was incorporated into the Prussian province of Hessen-Nassau , administrative district Wiesbaden , urban district Frankfurt , in 1867 and was incorporated into Frankfurt as the first municipality in the surrounding area on January 1, 1877. Bornheim's fortune of one million guilders fell to the city of Frankfurt.

In 1920, the old stadium at Riederwald was built on Ratsweg and was used by Eintracht Frankfurt until 1943 . After the end of the Second World War , the ruins of the Monte Scherbelino emerged there from the Frankfurt citizens . First of all, rubble from factories destroyed in the air raids on Frankfurt am Main were piled up along Hanauer Landstrasse . In 1949, on the site bordered by the streets Ratsweg, Am Riederbruch and Riederspießstraße, the rubble processing and recycling facility of the Trümmerverwertungsgesellschaft (TVG) ceased production in accordance with the resolution of the municipal authorities of April 29, 1963 .. Since 1968 the Frankfurt Dippemess takes place on the site of the former rubble mountain . In 1981 the Frankfurt ice rink was built on part of this site .

The Frankfurt City Councilor Ernst May built a large housing estate on the Bornheimer Hang between 1926 and 1930 . Construction was accelerated through the use of industrially prefabricated parts, so that 1234 apartments could be completed in four years. At the same time the was initiated by pastor Joseph Hohler as a spin-off of the parish of St. Joseph, the Holy Cross Church of Martin Weber at the eastern end of Wittelsbacherallee.

With the announcement in the Official Gazette for Frankfurt am Main on December 24, 2013, the city district 240, which previously belonged to the Nordend-Ost district, was assigned to the Bornheim district.

Population development

Early 16th century: 300 inhabitants

  • 1726: 01,000 inhabitants
  • 1812: 01,881 inhabitants
  • 1834: 02,663 inhabitants
  • 1840: 02,898 inhabitants
  • 1846: 03,081 inhabitants
  • 1852: 03,365 inhabitants
  • 1858: 03,777 inhabitants
  • 1864: 04,776 inhabitants
  • 1871: 06,397 inhabitants
  • 1875: 10,085 inhabitants
  • 1880: 09,849 inhabitants
  • 1885: 09,884 inhabitants
  • 1890: 10,617 inhabitants
  • 1895: 11,075 inhabitants
  • 1900: 12,194 inhabitants
  • 1905: 16,929 inhabitants
  • 1910: 21,726 inhabitants
  • 1925: 26,982 inhabitants
  • 1933: 29,187 inhabitants
  • 1939: 29,133 inhabitants
  • 1946: 27,503 inhabitants
  • 1950: 32,242 inhabitants
  • 1956: 33,613 inhabitants
  • 1961: 34,526 inhabitants
  • 1970: 29,226 inhabitants
  • 1987: 25,668 inhabitants
  • 1996: 26,550 inhabitants
  • 2013: 29,393 inhabitants
  • 2014: 30,083 inhabitants

Culture

Berger Street
Sign for the former Eulenburg cider pub

Bornheim or "Bernem", as the locals call Bornheim, is also known as the "funny village". The term was created by the inns with rustic dining hall on the dance floors and the widespread there prostitution . In and next to Berger Straße there are traditional cider bars such as the Zur Sonne and Schmärrnche , the latter opposite the Johanniskirche in the old village center. However, the importance of traditional eateries is waning in the 21st century. As part of progressive gentrification , the Local same gradually to the general lifestyle - trend to be carried restaurants replaced or offer international specialties such as sushi , kebab or pizza at. The Eulenburg at Eulengasse 46, which had existed since 1732, closed forever in June 2012 and was replaced by high-quality apartments. The Bernemer Kerb , the parish fair that has been held annually on the weekend of the second Sunday in August since 1608, has existed for centuries . For these reasons, Bornheim was a popular destination for Frankfurt citizens since the late Middle Ages.

Today the district is characterized by Berger Straße, which begins in the Nordend district and runs through the whole of Bornheim to the border with Seckbach .

The Lange Hof , whose origins date back to 1589, is located at Berger Straße 326 near the former Bornheim town hall . This makes the Lange Hof the oldest building in Bornheim after the Friedberger Warte.

The Johanniskantorei is the oldest Protestant church choir in Frankfurt. The Johanniskirche choir was founded in 1877 - the year Bornheim was incorporated into Frankfurt - and, with its classical concerts, has been an integral part of Bornheim's cultural scene since the year it was founded.

The Intercultural Stage has existed at 32 Alt Bornheim Street since 1995 . a. Drama , cabaret , cabaret , readings and dance events offer. The sponsoring association Interkulturelle Bühne e. V. also regularly organizes intercultural projects such as the days of respect cultural festival and is also the initiator of the Rhein-Main Artists Network (RMKN).

Attractions

The tiny museum in Bornheim
Ratskeller seen from below the Bornheimer slope (2011)

museum

The “Bernemer Museuml Small is a small museum at Turmstrasse 11 that organizes exhibitions on the history of Bornheim.

Old Town Hall

The former town hall of the village of Bornheim is located in the upper area of ​​Berger Straße. It is a baroque half-timbered house with a high pitched roof , which was built in 1770 and originally served as a residence and thus also as an official residence for a wealthy farmer who was mayor of Bornheim. It is still a residential building to this day. The richly carved baroque front door is striking.

Günthersburgpark

Günthersburgpark, which was part of Bornheim for a long time, is located on the border to the north end .

Ratskeller

The Ratskeller is located directly on the slope of Bornheimer Hang , until June 2012 a restaurant and garden bar in a castle- like facility, which originally served as a resting place for the carters and their horses . The ice cellar under today's restaurant served as a storage room for ice that was broken on the Main in winter . This ice was previously used for cooling in freezers before refrigerators became more widespread . The Ratskeller is owned by the City of Frankfurt am Main and was closed on June 15, 2012. The new opening was in September 2018.

Churches

Johanniskirche in Alt-Bornheim
View of the Old St. Joseph's Church
Holy Cross Church, east side

In 1955, the bells of the then newly built Evangelical Church of the Savior were matched to those of the Holy Cross Church and St. John's Church so that all bells could sound together without disharmony .

Johanniskirche

The predecessor of the Johanniskirche was the village church of Bornheim in the Middle Ages . It is first mentioned in 1321 that it belonged to the parish of St. Bartholomew . In 1753, a new building was built in place of the dilapidated medieval church . As soon as it was completed, this baroque hall church fell victim to a lightning strike and subsequent fire in 1776 . Thereupon today's Johanniskirche , a baroque hall church, was built in 1778/1779 by city architect Johann Andreas Liebhardt .

St. Joseph's Church

The St. Joseph's Church was in the time of the Kulturkampf in 1877 by the Frankfurt city pastor Ernst Franz August Münzenberger first independent building of the Roman Catholic Church since the Reformation ordained . The plans for the neo-Gothic brick church come from Max Meckel and were modeled on the former Gothic St. John's Church in Frankfurt's old town, which was demolished in 1874 .

The new St. Joseph's Church, built in 1932 at a 90 ° angle to the old nave , is a steel frame construction by Hans and Christoph Rummel . The church tower is located directly on Berger Straße. The Gothic high altar comes from the collection of the Frankfurt city pastor Ernst Franz August Münzenberger , who donated the altar to the community in 1880.

Holy Cross Church

The Holy Cross Church by Martin Weber with artistic furnishings by Arnold Hensler is a former Catholic parish church on Bornheimer Hang (Kettelerallee 45). It was the second Catholic church in the Bornheim district of Frankfurt as a spin-off of the later neighboring parish of St. Josef. The reason was the expansion of the Bornheim district to the east and the associated increase in the number of Catholics in the district. The expressionist white building was built in 1929 by the church builder Martin Weber . The diocese of Limburg has designated it as a profile church and the center for Christian meditation and spirituality is located in the meditation church . At the same time it is a branch church of the parish of St. Josef .

Heilandskirche

The Heilandskirche was the church of the eponymous congregation of the Evangelical Church in Hesse and Nassau in Bornheim, built in 1955 . After the merger with the Johannis parish , the church was demolished in 2005 .

traffic

Bornheim Mitte underground station
Pferdebahn the FTG at the last stop Bornheim school before Nassauer Hof (now Solzer ) in the Berger Street
Tram - railcar of line 14 in the turning loop at the last stop Ernst-May-Platz

Road traffic

The largest traffic axes in Bornheim are Wittelsbacherallee , Saalburgallee and Ratsweg , as well as sections of federal road 3 and federal roads 8 and 40 . On the eastern edge of Bornheim the city motorway A 661 runs with entry and exit 9 via Friedberger Landstrasse and 14 via Ratsweg . The Seckbacher Landstrasse leads to the neighboring district of Seckbach , the street Am Riederbruch to Riederwald .

Local public transport

From 1879 frequented the regular services of the Frankfurt streetcar company regularly a horse-drawn tram from Bornheimer Uhrtürmchen on the dirt road and the Frankfurt main station in the city center. From 1880 a horse-drawn tram connected Bornheim with the three Frankfurt West Train Stations . On October 24, 1881, the horse-drawn tram line in Bornheim was extended from the clock tower to the Kirchner school at Hohen Brunnen. Operation on this route was taken over in 1898 by the Frankfurt tram , which operated the first electric tram in Frankfurt am Main on April 10, 1899, from the Bornheim School on a semicircular route via the local train station to the Palmengarten . The Bornheimer Depot was opened in 1902 and replaced the one opened in 1879 at Berger Straße 228. By 1904 all lines were electrified .

The most important connection in local public transport for the district today is the U4 line of the Frankfurt subway , which opened in May 1980 and connects Bornheim with the Konstablerwache , the main train station , the Bockenheimer Warte and Enkheim . At the Bornheim Mitte underground station, it crosses the tram line 12 , which starts in Fechenheim and also travels through the Nordend to Konstablerwache and then via Hauptbahnhof and Niederrad to Schwanheim . Along the Wittelsbacherallee by the wrong Ernst-May-Platz next tram line 14 to Gallus . Furthermore, the Bornheim-Mitte underground station is the starting point for several bus routes within Frankfurt and to Offenbach am Main .

The U7 line connects the ice rink with Enkheim and in the direction of the city center to Praunheim .

Way of St. James

Below the Bornheimer slope in the east of the Holy Cross Church runs a branch of the German Way of St. James . This is based on the course of the historic long-distance trade route from Leipzig to Frankfurt am Main ( Des Reiches Strasse ). It begins in the episcopal city of Fulda , leads via Schlüchtern , Steinau an der Straße , Bad Soden-Salmünster , Gelnhausen , Langenselbold , Erlensee and Bruchköbel and belongs to the network of the main routes of the Jacob pilgrims in Europe , which lead to Santiago de Compostela . He leads a total of 116 km at the Holy Cross Church passing on the Frankfurt East Park on the new European Central Bank on the grounds of the former wholesale market hall on the banks of the Main river in Frankfurt city center , continue along the Main River to Iron Bridge , on the left Mainuferweg in the direction of Mainz and then on to Trier .

Sports

TG Bornheim
Interior view of the Frankfurt ice rink

Football Sports Club (FSV) Frankfurt

The traditional Bornheimer football club FSV Frankfurt was one of the top clubs in southern Germany until the 1950s and was number one in Frankfurt, but then fell behind the Frankfurter Eintracht and played in the third division for a long time. From the 2008/09 season, the FSV played for the first time since 1995 in the 2nd Bundesliga . After two relegations, the club is currently playing in the Regionalliga Südwest . On April 11, 2017, the Fußball-GmbH also filed for bankruptcy. The FSV Frankfurt stadium, the PSD Bank Arena, is also located in the Bornheim district and with 12,542 seats is the second largest in the city after the Commerzbank-Arena. The women's soccer team was one of the most successful women's teams in Germany until it was dissolved in 2006.

Sports community Bornheim Grün-Weiss

The SG Bornheim Grün-Weiss is a football club that had a dance department for several years. The association has its own youth center, the Children's and Family Center , for whose social and integrative work it was awarded the 3rd prize of the Integration Prize of the State of Hesse in 2011 . The first men's team of SG Bornheim has played in the Verbandsliga Süd for the first time since the 2018/2019 season , and the women in the Hessenliga. The football club plays on the artificial turf field with floodlights at the upper end of Berger Straße .

Bornheim gymnastics community

The Bornheim gymnastics community , with around 30,000 members, is Hessen's largest popular sports club . The association operates a swimming pool in the Fechenheim district , two fitness studios , two large gyms and many smaller gyms and gyms . In addition, many groups train in rented gyms from various Bornheim schools .

Panorama bath

The Bornheim district spa was built on the Bornheimer Hang in the 1970s. After extensive renovation, it became a fun pool with a water slide , outdoor pool and sauna area in 1990 . The 25 meter lap pool is especially popular with recreational athletes in the morning hours. In 2014 it became known that an expensive renovation was discarded for reasons of cost. Rather, today's panorama pool is to be torn down and rebuilt for around 27 million euros in the immediate vicinity of the ice rink and Volksbank stadium.

Frankfurt ice rink

The ice rink , the home stadium of the Löwen Frankfurt ice hockey team, is also located on Bornheimer Hang . Two large ice rinks, a small ice rink and a 400 meter long outer ring are also open to the public in winter. For ice hockey games there is space for 6947 spectators in the stands.

Regular events

Binding of 6 train on the way to preparing the procession of Bernemer notch in the settlement Bornheimer Hang on the bus - stop Ernst-May Square
Burning of the Kerbelisbeth 2013
Weekly market at the clock tower

Dip measurement

The Dippemess is a folk festival on the fairground on Ratsweg. There is the spring dip measurement for about three weeks in April. Until September 2009 there was the autumn dip measurement for about one week in September. Since 2010 it has been held as an event with a more familiar character and fewer rides.

Bernemer curb

Since 1608, the parish fair, known as the “Bernemer Curb”, has always been held on the 2nd Sunday in August (Friday to Wednesday) . The highlights are the Bernemer Blues & Folk Night on Friday, the parade on Saturday, the Gickelschmiss on Sunday, the fairground on Turmstrasse in front of the Johanniskirche and the street festival on "Bernemer Wednesday" with the burning of the "Kerbelisbeth" which originated in a legend Has. According to legend, the Lisbeth, one was quarrelsome woman who would not let celebrate at the notch his husband, in the woods in a treetop tied to a tree. There she continued cursing until a thunderstorm came and she was struck by lightning . Today with the funeral procession and the cremation of the coffin of Kerbelisbeth, the curb is symbolically carried to the grave . From 2007 to 2012, on the initiative of Bornheim restaurateurs, the Nach-Cerb was again celebrated in Bornheim on the following Sunday. The Bernemer Curb is established by the association Bernemer Kerwe Gesellschaft 1932 e. V. in voluntary work.

Weekly market

On Wednesdays from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and on Saturdays from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., the Bornheim weekly market takes place in the pedestrian zone at the clock tower in Berger Straße .

Nikolausmarkt

The Bornheim Club organizes the Bornheim clubs' Nikolausmarkt on the first Friday in December . The scene of the event is Berger Straße at the level of the Bornheim-Mitte underground station between Wiesenstraße and Saalburgstraße .

Mardi Gras opening

Every year on November 11th, the Bornheim carnival clubs organize the joint opening of the new campaign.

Personalities of the district

  • Willi Richter (1894–1972), trade union official and politician of the SPD
  • Diether Dehm (* 1950), formerly deputy party chairman of the PDS, state chairman of the PDS Lower Saxony, qualified pedagogue and songwriter
  • Ludwig Gehm (1905–2002), active resistance fighter in a group of the ISK in the time of National Socialism and survivor of the Buchenwald concentration camp, who carried out educational work against right-wing radicalism and fascism into old age. Gehm was later a member of the Frankfurt city council from 1958 to 1972
  • Eva Heller (1948–2008), writer, color theorist, children's book author and cartoonist. From 1979 to 2006 she lived in Bornheim on Freiligrathstrasse. 51
  • Henry Jaeger (1927-2000), writer
  • Barys Kit (1910–2018), Belarusian mathematician, physicist, chemist and rocket scientist, lived in the Jewish old people's home in Bornheim until his death.
  • Dieter Schwanda (* 1949), actor in The Hesselbach Company
  • Harald Stenger (* 1951) was head of football at the Frankfurter Rundschau and later until 2012 press spokesman and head of the media department at the DFB
  • Stefanie Zweig (1932–2014), writer and columnist for the Frankfurter Neue Presse with Jewish roots

literature

  • Dietwulf Baatz , Fritz-Rudolf Herrmann: The Romans in Hessen . Theiss Verlag, Stuttgart 1989, ISBN 3-8062-0599-X , p. 297 f .
  • Hans-Jürgen Becker: The Bornheimer Berg court - tradition, preservation and design in legal historical research . 1993, p. 1-21 .
  • Heinz F. Friedrichs: The ministerials from Bornheim and the Frankfurt patrician family Goldstein . In: Hanauer Geschichtsblätter . No. 21 . Hanau 1966, p. 11-46 .
  • Wolf Erich Kellner: The Reichsstift St. Bartholomäus in Frankfurt am Main in the late Middle Ages . In: Studies on Frankfurt History . No. 1 , 1962, pp. 22 .
  • Hans Otto Keunecke: The Munzenberger. Sources and studies on the emancipation of an imperial servant family . In: Sources and research on Hessian history . No. 35 , 1978, pp. 274 f .
  • Gerhard Kleinfeldt, Hans Weirich: The medieval church organization in the Upper Hesse-Nassau area . In: Writings of the institute for historical regional studies of Hesse and Nassau . No. 16 , 1937, pp. 94 (reprint: 1984).
  • Anette Löffler: The Lords and Counts of Falkenstein (Taunus): Studies on territorial and property history, on imperial political position and on the genealogy of a leading ministerial family; 1255-1418, 2 volumes . 1st volume. Hessian Historical Commission Darmstadt and Historical Commission for Hesse, Darmstadt and Marburg, Darmstadt and Marburg 1994, ISBN 3-88443-188-9 , p. 238 .
  • Wolfgang Pülm: Bornheim - Frankfurt district with a special character . 1998.
  • Heinrich Reimer: Historical local dictionary for Kurhessen . Marburg 1926, p. 57 .
  • Heinz Schomann u. a .: Monument topography city of Frankfurt am Main . Braunschweig 1986, p. 460-473 .
  • Ph. Fr. Schulin: The Frankfurt rural communities . Frankfurt am Main 1895.
  • Carla and Heinz Schutt (eds.): The Bornheim book. Society in Bornheim . Fulda 1988, ISBN 3-926016-01-9 .
  • Fred Schwind : The "Grafschaft" Bornheimerberg and the royal people of the Frankfurt Treasury . In: Hessisches Jahrbuch für Landesgeschichte . No. 14 , 1964, pp. 1-21 .

Web links

Commons : Frankfurt-Bornheim  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Bornheim's limits . Catholic parish of Sankt Josef, April 9, 2007.
  2. ↑ Site plan. frankfurt-nordend.de, April 9, 2007.
  3. ^ Günther Schell: The Roman settlement of Rheingau and Wetterau. In: Nassauische Annalen 75, 1964, p. 95.
  4. Ingeborg Huld-Zetsche : Röm. Manor in Bornheim am Güntersburgpark. In: Dietwulf Baatz , Fritz-Rudolf Herrmann (Hrsg.): The Romans in Hessen. Licensed edition of the 3rd edition from 1989. Nikol, Hamburg 2002, ISBN 3-933203-58-9 , p. 297f.
  5. Figure. frankfurt-nordend.de, April 9, 2007.
  6. Figure ( Memento from March 1, 2007 in the web archive archive.today ) Catholic parish of Sankt Josef, April 9, 2007.
  7. Article 22 of the Rheinbundakte ( Memento of the original from April 10, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.verfassungen.de
  8. Article 46 of the Congress Act ( Memento of the original of February 4, 2017 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. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.staatsvertraege.de
  9. ^ Harald Fester: Fountain in Frankfurt am Main Bornheim . Retrieved April 9, 2007.
  10. ^ Agreement on the union of the Bornheim community with Frankfurt a. M. v. October 20, 1876 together with the approval note of the royal government of Wiesbaden v. January 14, 1877 in: Incorporation contracts of the City of Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt a. M. 1960
  11. ^ Chronicle of Riederwald. on: frankfurt.de
  12. Official Journal No. 52/2013, p. 1562.
  13. ^ City of Frankfurt - Statistics accessed on Feb. 25, 2020
  14. The "Eulenburg" closes forever. In: Frankfurter Neue Presse . March 14, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
  15. Web presence of the Intercultural Stage in Frankfurt-Bornheim (interkulturelle-buehne.de); Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  16. ^ Ernst Weber: The building committee - The building of the Heilandskirche as a task of the building and working committee. In: Ernst Klöß (Ed.): Festschrift for the inauguration of the Evangelical-Lutheran Heilandskirche Frankfurt / Main on September 4, 1955 . Frankfurt [1955], p. 13.
  17. ^ Harald Fester: Johanniskirche in Frankfurt am Main - Bornheim . As of January 29, 2008.
  18. ^ Hermann Gille, P. Helmut Schlegel : Catholic Holy Cross Church Frankfurt-Bornheim. Schnell & Steiner, Regensburg 2009, ISBN 978-3-7954-6808-8 .
  19. Rhine-Main pleasure - Jacobsweg . ( Memento of the original from March 28, 2016 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. (PDF) Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund ; Map of the Jacobsweg from Fulda to Frankfurt, accessed on July 11, 2011. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.rmv.de
  20. Hiking map Rhine-Main pleasure: The Way of St. James from Fulda to Main . Retrieved July 11, 2011.
  21. Turngemeinde Bornheim 1860 eV - The board (ed.): Annual booklet 2019 . Frankfurt-Bornheim 2019, p. 26 .
  22. Frankfurter Dippemess from March 22 to April 14, 2013. ( Memento from November 16, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) on: frankfurt-tourismus.de
  23. Frankfurt Dippemess from 6. – 16. September 2013. ( Memento from August 18, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) on: frankfurt-tourismus.de
  24. Video of the burning of the Kerbelisbeth 2012
  25. ^ Page on the Bernem curb