Stieldorf

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Stieldorf
City of Koenigswinter
Coordinates: 50 ° 43 ′ 49 ″  N , 7 ° 13 ′ 10 ″  E
Height : 123  (100-140)  m
Residents : 6711  (Dec. 31, 2019)
Incorporation : 1st August 1969
Postal code : 53639
Area code : 02244
Stieldorf (North Rhine-Westphalia)
Stieldorf

Location of Stieldorf in North Rhine-Westphalia

View of Stieldorf from Bockeroth
Look at Stieldorf of Bockeroth from
St. Margareta
Stieldorf, aerial photo 2015
Stieldorf (left) and Rauschendorf (right) in June 2018
Stieldorf (left) and Rauschendorf (right) in June 2018

Stieldorf is a district of the city of Königswinter in the Rhein-Sieg district in North Rhine-Westphalia . With its surrounding villages it has 6,711 inhabitants, the district of Stieldorf itself 1115 (as of December 31, 2019).

geography

Stieldorf is located in the Pleiser Hügelland northeast of the Siebengebirge in a depression that is traversed by the Lauterbach Pleisbach tributary and its tributary, the Eichenbach . It has the appearance of a multi-row cluster village . The district of Stieldorf has grown together with the district of Oelinghoven and merges with the district of Rauschendorf in the northwest. The district of Stieldorf borders in the north on the area of ​​the federal city of Bonn (about 9 km), namely on the Bonn districts of Hoholz and Holtorf . In recent decades it has acquired suburban character as a result of immigration. The distance to the district town of Siegburg is 8 km.

Districts

The district of Stieldorf includes the districts of Bockeroth , Düferoth , Frankenforst, Freckwinkel , Friedrichshöhe, Heiderhof, Höhnerhof, Niederscheuren , Oberscheuren , Oelinghoven , Rauschendorf , Sonderbusch, Sonnenbergerhof, Stieldorf, Stieldorferhohn and Vinxel .

Sonnenbergerhof, aerial photo (2015)

history

A church in Stieldorf was first mentioned in 895. The tower of today's Roman Catholic church building St. Margareta (see picture) dates from the 12th century. The nave was completely rebuilt around 1850 in the neo-Romanesque style according to plans by Ernst Friedrich Zwirner . Until the beginning of the 20th century, Stieldorf was known nationwide for its passion play . This was performed over several weeks in a temporary Passion Playhouse.

Passion play 1902: Christ before Herod

Vinxel , Oelinghoven , Bockeroth , Rauschendorf, Oberscheuren, Niederscheuren and also Birlinghoven (today part of Sankt Augustin ) belonged to the parish of Stieldorf . The parish was part of the state of Blankenberg . In 1363 Gottfried II. (Heinsberg) , Count von Loon and Chiney, Lord von Heinsberg, Blankenberg and Löwenburg pledged the land of Blankenburg to the county of Berg . Until 1806 the parish of Stieldorf was part of the Bergisch office of Blankenberg .

In 1845/1846 the community of Stieldorf was created by amalgamating the previous tax and cadastral communities of Birlinghoven , Oelinghoven, Rauschendorf and Vinxel (whose districts remained). The community belonged to the mayor's office Oberpleis (from 1927 "Amt Oberpleis") in the Siegkreis . In addition to the main places of the former municipalities mentioned and today's districts of the Stieldorf district, the municipality also included Ettenhausen ( Gut Ettenhausen ), Hoholz , Ungarten (today Bonn ), Hähnchen (today Sankt Augustin), Uthweiler , Schnorrenberg and Winkel.

After the Versailles Treaty came into force in 1920, the municipality of Stieldorf laid the boundary between the five-year occupation zone and the unoccupied area in the Rhineland (see Allied occupation of the Rhineland ). The unoccupied area included Bockeroth (4/5), Düferoth, Freckwinkel, Friedrichshöhe, Höhnerhof, Sonderbusch, Sonnenberg, Stieldorferhohn and Uthweiler, the remaining districts in the north of the community belonged to the zone of occupation. As a result of the war in the Ruhr , the previously unoccupied area was occupied by French troops on February 25, 1923 as part of the so-called "burglary area" in the southern Siegkreis and northern Neuwied district . After the London Conference , the occupation evacuated the burglar area on November 17, 1924, and the regular occupation zone in January 1926. In October 1929 a memorial for those who died in the First World War was inaugurated in the community.

In the course of the municipal reorganization of the Bonn area by the Bonn Act, Stieldorf was on August 1, 1969 in the city of Königswinter, the previous district of Birlinghoven with a large part of its district in the community of Sankt Augustin and the districts of Hoholz and Ungarten from the district of Vinxel in the city of Bonn (district Beuel ) incorporated. The municipal council of Stieldorf, on the other hand, had spoken out in favor of full integration into the former city of Beuel, to which the Stieldorf population was more oriented than to Königswinter. In 1971, the Stieldorf planning group named after the town , an architecture firm that was particularly active in the Bonn government seat , settled in a newly built studio (Raiffeisenstrasse 2) based on their own plans, after they had established the Volksbank branch there. According to a design by the planning group, the Catholic parish hall and community center with an attached sexton apartment (An der Passionshalle 13) was built in 1970, which the parish sold in 2007 to the city of Königswinter to set up an open all-day school belonging to the Stieldorf primary school .

Population development

year Residents
1816 1353
1843 2060
1871 2045
1905 2129
1961 2929

Infrastructure

Evangelical Church (2014)

Stieldorf is the location of a primary school and a Catholic kindergarten. In addition to a few shops there is a Protestant (a wooden structure built in 1965 as a tent church ) and a Catholic church. Three bus routes provide all-day connections in the Königswinter-Siegburg-Bonn area.

sports clubs

  • TuS Siebengebirge 1913 Heisterbacherrott / Stieldorferhohn e. V.
  • Gymnastics Club "Gut Heil" Rauschendorf 1913 e. V.
  • HSV Bockeroth 1931 e. V.
  • SV Oelinghoven 1963 e. V.
  • Leisure rider Stieldorfer Mühle e. V. 1999
  • Re (h) active e. V. 2015

Personalities

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b without secondary residences ; Population statistics of the city of Königswinter (PDF)
  2. Official Journal for the Cologne District , 1841, page 11
  3. ^ Fr. Halm: Statistics of the administrative district of Cöln , Boisserée, 1865. ( Online Google Books )
  4. Population register of the Siegkreis 1910
  5. ^ Dieter Lück: Occupation of the Rhineland . In: North Rhine-Westphalia. Landesgeschichte im Lexikon , 1st edition, Patmos, Düsseldorf 1993, pp. 341–343.
  6. Occupied Territories of Germany , Prussian State Statistical Office 1925, p. 182
  7. ^ Jens Klocksin: Separatists in the Rhineland , Bonn 1993, 41–64.
  8. ^ Ansgar Sebastian Klein : Rise and Rule of National Socialism in the Siebengebirge . Klartext Verlag, Essen 2008, ISBN 978-3-89861-915-8 , p. 114 (also dissertation University of Bonn, 2007).
  9. Martin Bünermann: The communities of the first reorganization program in North Rhine-Westphalia . Deutscher Gemeindeverlag, Cologne 1970, p. 84 .
  10. ^ Franz Möller : The Rhein-Sieg-Kreis in the area of ​​tension between the federal government and the state 1949–2000 . Rheinlandia Verlag, Siegburg 2006, ISBN 3-938535-20-2 .
  11. ^ Wilfried Täubner : Stieldorf planning group. Buildings and projects . Cologne 1974.
  12. ^ City buys Stieldorfer Pfarrheim , Kölnische Rundschau, January 9, 2007
  13. Census results from 1816 to 1970 of the cities and municipalities . Contributions to the statistics of the Rhein-Sieg-Kreis, Vol. 17 / Siegburg 1980, pp. 62–63.
  14. Evangelical Church District on the Rhine and Sieg - Evangelical Church Stieldorf

Web links

Commons : Stieldorf  - collection of images, videos and audio files