Frickenhaus (Wuppertal)

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Frickenhaus
City of Wuppertal
Coordinates: 51 ° 17 ′ 18 ″  N , 7 ° 8 ′ 19 ″  E
Height : 225 m above sea level NHN
Frickenhaus (Wuppertal)
Frickenhaus

Location of Frickenhaus in Wuppertal

Frickenhaus
Frickenhaus

Frickenhaus is a farm in the north of the Bergisch city ​​of Wuppertal .

Location and description

The listed Klein Frickenhaus courtyard from 1689
Inscription above the door

The Hofschaft is located in the northeast of the Siebeneick residential area in the Uellendahl-Katernberg district at an altitude of 225  m above sea level. NHN in the valley of the Heidacker Bach .

Neighboring places are the immediately adjacent places Brink , Schmitzhaus , Unterrohleder and Heidacker , as well as the surrounding places Obenrohleder , Schneis , Saurenhaus , Schmürsches , Mutzberg , Dümpel , Fingscheidt , Worth , Schevensiepen , Krieg and Wolfsholz . To the northeast is the Woltersberg elevation in the Grosse Busch / An Woternocken forest area.

In the local dialect, the place was also known as kleen Frickenes and groat Frickenes .

history

The Frickenhaus farm was first mentioned around 1490 in a treasure book of Brandenburg subjects. 1500 is mentioned as Hannes Fricken to Sevenecke in a directory of the Kurmede - and wax interest- liable persons of the Werden monastery . In 1703 the membership of the Hardenberger farmers' union Oberste Siebeneick is documented, the name at that time was Frickenhuiß . Klein Frickenhaus split off from Frickenhaus, which is now called Groß Frickenhaus . Both courtyards together form Frickenhaus today.

In the 19th century, Frickenhaus belonged to the Obensiebeneick farmers and the Dönberg parish in the Hardenberg mayor's office , which was renamed Neviges in 1935 . From 1816 to 1861 it belonged to the Elberfeld district and from 1861 to the old Mettmann district .

In the parish dictionary for the Rhineland province from 1888, two houses with seven inhabitants are given.

With the municipal reform of 1929, the eastern part of Obensiebeneick was split off around Frickenhaus and incorporated into the newly founded city of Wuppertal together with southern Dönberger localities, the rest of Obensiebeneick initially remained with Neviges. Due to the regional reform of North Rhine-Westphalia , Neviges came to the city of Velbert at the beginning of 1975 and the rest of Obensiebeneick was also incorporated into Wuppertal.

Listed houses

The half-timbered house of Hof Klein Frickenhaus (today's address: Unterrohleder 3), built in 1689, has been preserved in its original state, except for an extension that was added later. It has been a listed building since 1994 due to the seldom documented regional house type .

literature

  • Rolf Müller: Dönberg, a parish on the edge , Aussaat Verlag, Wuppertal, 1976

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rolf Müller: Dönberg, a parish on the edge, Aussaat Verlag, Wuppertal, 1976
  2. Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland Province, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1885 and other official sources, (Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII), Berlin 1888.