Gut Posteholz

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Manor Posteholz

Posteholz is a manor and district of Aerzen . The small town of Posteholz lies above the manor.

history

The builder of the property was the Lippe Secret Councilor Arnold Ludwig von Post , who was enfeoffed with it in 1661 after Colonel Hermann Lothar von Post waived it. As a result of the timber robbery, Hanover issued the order in 1678 to dispense with wooden fences, so that an elaborate flagstone fence was erected. After the post office died out (Ludwig Dietrich von Post, 1762–1764), the property changed hands several times. In 1776 Jobst Gabriel von Wülfingen had today's manor house built and the garden laid out.

It was inhabited by the Munchausen (Karl von Münchhausen, † November 21, 1841 in Hameln) for two generations , of whom it was owned by shipowner and captain Julius von Alten (⚭ 1860 Auguste Caroline Reischauer from Hanover (1830–1883); ⚭ 1885 Jenny Wilhelmine) Frieda von Göben from Stade). He closed the canals. His son Siegfried, who took it over in 1906, had a country road built. In 1943 Baron Siegfried Hanach von Alten († 2004) inherited the manor.

literature

  • Siegfried Hanach von Alten: Chronicle of the manor Posteholz. With the farming communities Posteholz, Rodenbeck, Egge, Flakenholz, Boldenkoven, Knepelberg, Scheffelstein, Herkendorf, Dehmkerbrok. Self-published, Aerzen - Rittergut Posteholz 1984.
  • Siegfried Hanach von Alten, Marianne Vogt-Werling, Michael Werling: stone slab fences in the aerzen area . sn, Hannover-Posteholz 1986.
  • Friedel Rekate: The old community of Dehmkerbrock. With Wördeholz, Pessinghausen, Rodenbeck, Posteholz. Lower Saxony Regional Association for Family Studies , Hanover 1986. (= Deutsche Ortssippenbücher. Series B, Bd. 37, ZDB -ID 1011933-4 = Lower Saxony Regional Association for Family Studies . Special publication 16)
  • August Seidensticker : Legal and economic history of North German forests, especially in the state of Hanover, presented in an act-like manner Volume 2. Dieterichische Universitäts-Buchhandlung (L. Horstmann), Göttingen 1896, p. 483f.
  • Manfred Willeke: The history of the knight and baron family from Post to Lügde, Hessisch Oldendorf, Rinteln and Posteholz. Willeke, Lügde 2001. (= contributions to the history of Lügde . Special publication 2001, ZDB -ID 2481418-0 )

Individual evidence

  1. Item 267
  2. Uphill and downhill around Gut Posteholz. In: Deister-Leine-Zeitung. October 2, 2010.
  3. ^ Alida Gundlach: mansions in Lower Saxony. Volume 2, p. 79.

Web links

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

Coordinates: 52 ° 5 ′ 35.1 ″  N , 9 ° 12 ′ 20.3 ″  E