Hübben

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Hübben
City of Solingen
Coordinates: 51 ° 9 ′ 55 "  N , 7 ° 2 ′ 35"  E
Height : about 150-170 m
Postal code : 42655
Area code : 0212
Hubben (Solingen)
Hübben

Location of Hübben in Solingen

Hübben
Hübben

Hübben is a court in the Bergisch city of Solingen .

geography

Hübben is located on the southern slope of the Viehbach valley in the border area of ​​the three Solingen districts of Merscheid , Mitte and Höhscheid . Directly past the Hofschaft, at the foot of the Viehbach, the Viehbachtalstrasse between Solingen-Mitte and Ohligs, named after the stream, runs . In the north, on the other side of the stream, lies the Dahl estate . To the east of it are Bäckershof , Limminghofen and Scheuren with the commercial and industrial area of ​​the same name. Hope and Waardt are east of Huebben . The Mangenberger Straße runs on the ridge to the south, and the Wuppertal-Oberbarmen – Solingen railway line, as well as Schaafenmühle and Nacken , run further south . To the west of Hübben is Schmalzgrube with the industrial park of the same name.

etymology

The origin of the word Huebben has not been conclusively clarified. Perhaps it is derived from a characteristic shape of the terrain .

history

The Huebben court can be traced back to the year 1488, when it was first mentioned as zor Huben in the tithes register of the Altenberg monastery .

In 1715 , Erich Philipp Ploennies recorded Huebben in the map Topographia Ducatus Montani , Blatt Amt Solingen , with a farm and named it Hubben . He belonged to the Barl Honschaft within the Solingen office. The topographical survey of the Rhineland from 1824 lists the place as Hübben and the Prussian first survey from 1844 again as Hübben . In the topographic map of the Düsseldorf administrative district from 1871, the place is also listed as Hübben .

After the establishment of the Mairien and later mayor's offices at the beginning of the 19th century, Hübben belonged to the Merscheid mayor, which was elevated to a town in 1856 and renamed Ohligs in 1891. In 1815/16 there were 48 people, in 1830 56 people lived in the Hubben known as the hamlet . In 1832 the place was still part of the Honschaft Barl within the mayor's office Merscheid, there it was in the corridor V. Merscheid . The place, which was categorized as a Hofstadt according to the statistics and topography of the Düsseldorf administrative district , had nine residential buildings and six agricultural buildings at that time. At that time 39 residents lived in the place, two of them Catholic and 37 Protestant denominations. The municipality and estate district statistics of the Rhine Province list the place in 1871 with 15 houses and 77 inhabitants. In the municipality lexicon for the Rhineland province of 1888, 14 houses with 107 inhabitants are given for Hübben . In 1895 the district had 23 houses with 166 inhabitants.

Wilhelminian style villa on the Hübben

With the town union of Groß-Solingen in 1929, the Huebben court became a district of Solingen. As one of the few actually realized sections of the planned Autobahn 54 , a four-lane motor road through the Viehbachtal was built at the end of the 1970s on the section from An der Gemarke to Mangenberg . This section of the Viehbachtalstraße, dedicated as L 141n, was opened to traffic on August 31, 1979. After numerous complaints from residents about too much noise, a number of measures for improved noise protection were introduced in the following year . The Viehbachtalstraße between Mangenberg and Frankfurter Damm was continued until 1981. However, no further expansion took place; the A 54 was never completed.

Since 1987 the buildings Hübben 19 and 25 of the historical half-timbered houses in the village are under monument protection .

Web links

Commons : Solingen-Hübben  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

swell

  1. Hans Brangs: Explanations and explanations for the corridor, place, yard and street names in the city of Solingen . Solingen 1936
  2. ^ City of Solingen: Street and place names in our city of Solingen , self-published, Solingen 1972
  3. ^ Topographic map of the Düsseldorf administrative district . Designed and executed according to the cadastral recordings and the same underlying and other trigonometric work by the Royal Government Secretary W. Werner. Edited by the royal government secretary FW Grube. 4th rev. Edition / published by A. Bagel in Wesel, 1859 / Ddf., Dec. 17, 1870. J. Emmerich, Landbaumeister. - Corrected after the ministerial amendments. Ddf. d. Sept. 1, 1871. Bruns.
  4. a b c Johann Georg von Viebahn : Statistics and Topography of the Düsseldorf Government District , 1836
  5. Friedrich von RestorffTopographical-statistical description of the Royal Prussian Rhine Province , Nicolai, Berlin and Stettin 1830
  6. Royal Statistical Bureau Prussia (ed.): The communities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population . The Rhine Province, No. XI . Berlin 1874.
  7. 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.
  8. Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Prussia) (Ed.): Community encyclopedia for the Rhineland Province, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1895 and other official sources, (Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume XII), Berlin 1897.
  9. Ralf Rogge, Armin Schulte, Kerstin Warncke:  Solingen - Big City Years 1929-2004 . Wartberg Verlag 2004. ISBN 3-8313-1459-4
  10. Solingen Monument List ( Memento of the original from December 18, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. . City of Solingen, July 1, 2015, accessed on July 3, 2016 (PDF, size: 129 kB).  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www2.solingen.de