Glockenhof

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City of Nuremberg
Coordinates: 49 ° 26 '27 "  N , 11 ° 5' 39"  E
Height : 300-310 m above sea level NHN
Area : 83 ha
Residents : 17,835  (Dec 31, 2015)
Population density : 21,488 inhabitants / km²
Postcodes : 90478, 90461
Area code : 0911
map
Location of the statistical district 11 Glockenhof in Nuremberg
Memorial stone place of the victims of fascism in Glockenhof
Memorial stone place of the victims of fascism in Glockenhof

Glockenhof is a district of Nuremberg and the name of the statistical district 11 . The district belongs to the zip code districts 90461 and 90478.

location

Glockenhof lies south of the statistical district 02 ( Marienvorstadt ) and north of the statistical district 12 ( Guntherstrasse , "Nibelungenviertel"). East of Glockenhof lies the statistical district 10 ( Ludwigsfeld ) and to the west the statistical district 13 ( Galgenhof ). Narrow streets with perimeter block development and in some cases little green along the street largely characterize the image of Glockenhof. Glockenhof is right next to St. Peter , which is the eastern part of the statistical district of Glockenhof, and therefore also in the immediate vicinity of St. Peter's Church (with tram and bus stops). In the district there are another six trams - (Schweiggerstrasse, Harsdörfferplatz, Wodanstrasse, Holzgartenstrasse, Widhalmstrasse, Platz dOdF and Scheurlstrasse) and two bus stops (Köhnstrasse and Untere Baustr.).

Neighboring statistical districts
Marienvorstadt
Gallows Court Neighboring communities Ludwigsfeld
Guntherstrasse

Streets

  • Allersberger Str. (Northern part)
  • Anton-Müller-Platz
  • Brunhildstrasse (northern part)
  • Husbandstr.
  • Enderleinstr.
  • Findelwiesenstr.
  • Forsthofstr.
  • Glockenhofstrasse
  • Grenzstrasse
  • Guttenbergplatz
  • Harsdörfferplatz
  • Hartmannstrasse
  • Heideloffplatz
  • Heideloffstrasse
  • Holzgartenstrasse
  • Keplerstrasse
  • Kirchenstrasse
  • Koehnstrasse
  • Kurtstrasse
  • Lamprechtstrasse
  • Obere Baustr.
  • Regensburger Str. (Northern part)
  • Ritterplatz
  • Scheurlstrasse
  • Schwanhardtstrasse (northern part)
  • Schweiggerstrasse
  • Siegfriedstrasse
  • Sophienstrasse
  • Strauchstrasse
  • Sturmstrasse
  • Untere Baustr.
  • Walter-Meckauer-Str.

history

Glockenhof manor

The place was originally called "Oberer Galgenhof". In 1527 the town, which consisted of three farms and five Sölden estates, became the property of the Nuremberg patricians Haller , who sold it to the Glockengießer family in 1528. In the Second Margrave War (1552–1554), the manor house was burned down by the imperial city of Nuremberg . It was rebuilt as early as 1555 on two floors and surrounded by a wall. In 1569, Christoph I. Glockengießer renamed the place to Glockenhof. In 1760 the Muncker family, the heirs of the bell founders, built the present three-storey palace building (Glockenhofstraße 47) next to the dilapidated old seat. In 1765 the place (2 half courtyards, 4 estates, 1 tavern) came to the patrician family landlord von Altenthann and Weiherhaus .

Towards the end of the 18th century there were 11 properties in Glockenhof (1 castle, 1 gardener's house, 1 tavern, 2 half-yards, 4 small farms, 1 house, 1 laundry). The high court exercised the imperial city of Nuremberg, but this was disputed by the Brandenburg-Ansbach Oberamt Schwabach and Burgthann . The von Grundherr family continued to be the sole landlord , the manor house (Glockenhofstrasse 47) is still owned by the Grundherrische Familienstiftung

As part of the community edict, Glockenhof was assigned to the Gleißhammer tax district formed in 1808 . It also belonged to the rural community of Gleißhammer founded in the same year . In 1825 Glockenhof was incorporated into Nuremberg . In voluntary jurisdiction, the entire place was subject to the Glockenhof Patrimonial Court from 1823 to 1835 .

From the middle of the 19th century, Glockenhof grew together with St. Peter to form a separate district and was built over urban areas. In 1913, today's Heumann Pharma GmbH was the most important company founded in Glockenhof. During the Second World War, Glockenhof and St. Peter were significantly destroyed.

Population development

year 001818 001824 001840
Residents 49 66 70
Houses 11 9 13
source

religion

The place has been predominantly Protestant since the Reformation. The residents of the Evangelical Lutheran denomination parish to St. Peter (Nuremberg) , the residents of the Roman Catholic denomination to St. Kunigund (Nuremberg) .

Architectural monuments

  • Former warehouse and administration building of the mechanical woolen factory in Lichtenhof
  • professional school
  • Glockenhof Manor (owned by the Landlord Family Foundation)
  • Former flower pavilion
  • Wooden garden school (former boys' wing)
  • Evangelical Lutheran Parish Church of St. Peter
  • Evangelical Lutheran Parish Office of St. Peter
  • Various tenement houses

Facilities

  • International children's and youth center
  • St. Peter student residence

literature

Web links

Commons : Glockenhof  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. ^ City of Nuremberg, Office for Urban Research and Statistics for Nuremberg and Fürth (ed.): Statistical Yearbook of the City of Nuremberg 2016 . December 2015, ISSN  0944-1514 , 18 Statistical City Districts and Districts, p. 244–245 , p. 244 ( nuernberg.de [PDF; 6.3 MB ; accessed on November 1, 2017]).
  2. ^ City map service Nuremberg District 11 Glockenhof
  3. Glockenhof in the Bavaria Atlas
  4. a b H. Beer, p. 366f.
  5. HH Hofmann, p. 149.
  6. a b H. H. Hofmann, p. 238f.
  7. Only inhabited houses are given. In 1818 and 1824 these were referred to as hearths and in 1852 as houses .
  8. Alphabetical index of all the localities contained in the Rezatkkreis according to its constitution by the newest organization: with indication of a. the tax districts, b. Judicial Districts, c. Rent offices in which they are located, then several other statistical notes . Ansbach 1818, p. 30 ( digitized version ).
  9. Eduard Vetter (Ed.): Statistical handbook and address book of Middle Franconia in the Kingdom of Bavaria . Self-published, Ansbach 1846, p. 16 ( digitized version ).