Gut Holzhausen (Preussisch Oldendorf)
The Good Holzhausen is a former manor and manor house in the district of Bad Holzhausen the city Preußisch Oldendorf in the Minden-Lübbecke . The historical name for today's building ensemble was Haus Holzhausen or Gut Hudenbeck . It should not be confused with the ensemble of buildings known today as the Hudenbeck Manor , which is located at the south-western end of the spa park between Gut Holzhausen and Crollage Castle . Today's specialist literature again lists the estate under the title “Gut Holzhausen” to distinguish it from the (later superordinate) “Gut Hudenbeck”.
The estate is located on the northern slope of the Wiehengebirge and the Große Aue .
history
The Holzhausen manor was first mentioned together with the Gutswassermühle and the neighboring Holzhauser church in 1529. At that time the owners were the von Schloen family called Gehle , who also owned the Hollwinkel manors in the Hedem and Hüffe manors in the Lashorst district of the city of Preußisch Oldendorf and the Burgmannshof was in Lübbecke. Heinrich Blesse's farm used to stand here. The Von Schloen family called Gehle converted the farm into a noble knight's seat. Permission for the renovation was given by Duke Johann von Jülich and Berg - Graf von Ravensberg. Johan von Schloen called Gehle served as a follower and was related to Lubbert von Wendt, the Ravensberg Drost of Limberg Castle in what is now the town of Preußisch Oldendorf. In 1558 (the year is engraved on the east side of the house) the manor was converted into a manor in its complex that is still visible today. The builder was probably Wilke von Schloen called Gehle. Originally the manor house was surrounded by a broad moat , the access was via a stone bridge and a drawbridge . Due to inheritance disputes, the manor came to Johann von Steding in 1586 (Margarete von Schloen was a born von Steding). Heinrich Wilke (Wilhelm) von Steding married Hedwig von Spiegel zu Peckelsheim around 1650, whose descendants are still the owners of Groß-Engershausen in the Engershausen district. Substantial land sales raised funds to repay debt. In 1812 Heinrich Karl Wilhelm von Steding sold the Holzhausen manor with all its accessories to Wilhelm Friedrich Christian von Oheimb zu Enzen, who was already the owner of the neighboring Hudenbeck manor and Limberg Castle. In 1866 extensive renovations were made to the house. The politician Ferdinand von Oheimb died there in 1905. At the beginning of the 1980s, the city of Preussisch Oldendorf acquired the estate and set up the manor house as the “House of the Guest”.
Todays use
The mansion is available as the "House of the Guest" for all kinds of events. The park is open to the public. The destroyed mill was rebuilt in 1983 after a fire and is part of the Westphalian Mühlenstrasse .
literature
- Dieter Besserer: Gutswassermühle Holzhausen-Hudenbeck (= mills on the Westphalian Mühlenstrasse. Issue 3). Mill association in the Minden-Lübbecke district, Minden 1993.
- Thomas Bufe: Garden trip. A guide through gardens and parks in Ostwestfalen-Lippe. Landwirtschaftsverlag, Münster-Hiltrup 2000, ISBN 3-7843-3037-1 , pp. 20-23.
- Ernst Maoro: Hudenbeck manor in Holzhausen became the “guest house”. In: The Minden-Ravensberger. 57. Jg./1985, ISSN 0947-2444 , pp. 44-45.
Web links
- Entry on Gut Hudenbeck in the scientific database " EBIDAT " of the European Castle Institute
- State Archives
Coordinates: 52 ° 17 ′ 11 ″ N , 8 ° 31 ′ 59 ″ E