Hagenah (Heinbockel)

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Municipality Heinbockel
Coat of arms of Hagenah
Coordinates: 53 ° 32 ′ 56 "  N , 9 ° 19 ′ 33"  E
Residents : 679  (Jan. 1, 2013)
Incorporation : July 1, 1972
Postal code : 21726
Area code : 04149
Hagenah (Lower Saxony)
Hagenah

Location of Hagenah in Lower Saxony

Stone chest from Hagenah

Hagenah ( Low German Hogenoh ) is a village in the Lower Saxony district of Stade . It belongs since 1 July 1972, the municipality Heinbockel in -Himmelspforten Oldendorf integrated municipality of. The Schwinge flows along the southern edge of Hagenah . The residential areas Willah and Willahermoor belong to Hagenah .

Geography and transport links

Geographical location

Hagenah is located on the Stader Geest on the Schwinge near the Hohe Moors .

Neighboring places

Oldendorf settlement Heinbockel Weissenmoor
Willah , Elmerheide Neighboring communities Swing arm
Mulsum Fredenbeck

traffic

The federal highway 74 , which leads from Bremervörde to Stade , runs through the village . The county road 57 leads north to Heinbockel. Smaller side streets lead to Mulsum and Oldendorf .

The next rail connection is in Hammah, about 10 km away, to the Niederelbebahn

history

Prehistory and early history

A prehistoric settlement can be proven by the stone box of Hagenah , which dates from the Bronze Age (approx. 1500–1250 BC).

Administrative history

Before 1885 Hagenah belonged to the Börde Oldendorf in the office of Himmelpforten , after 1885 to the district of Stade and since 1932 to the current district of Stade .

In the course of the regional reform , the previously independent municipality of Hagenah with its districts Willah and Willahermoor became part of Heinbockel on July 1, 1972.

Population development

year Residents
1824 15 fire places
1848 254 people, 34 houses
1871 272 people, 35 houses
1910 324
1925 315
1933 359
1939 313
2010 689

religion

Hagenah is evangelical-Lutheran and belongs to the parish of the Martinskirche in Oldendorf .

Culture

Buildings

  • War memorial : The war memorial on the Hagenaher cemetery commemorates the fallen from Hagenah and Heinbockel in the two world wars as well as five other soldiers from the eastern regions , whose families came to Hagenah as displaced persons after the Second World War . In the First World War 23 soldiers from Hagenah died or went missing and in the Second World War there were 22.

societies

Volunteer firefighter

Hagenah has its own volunteer fire brigade , which is also responsible for a whole section of the B 74 and therefore has a lot to do with accidents.

In 1970 the fire brigade was still equipped with one vehicle and two trailers. One trailer was equipped with equipment for fire fighting and one with equipment for technical assistance. In 1987, the fire brigade received an LF 8 type fire fighting vehicle for the first time . In 2014 the fire brigade received a new HLF 10 vehicle (cost: around 196,000 euros). A new fire station was built in 2006/08.

TSV Hagenah

The TSV Hagenah plays in the second Fistball Bundesliga .

literature

  • Bernhard Hellweeg, Friedrich Holst: Barrows, villages and farms. The history of the villages Heinbockel and Hagenah. Dammann, Bliedersdorf 1989

Individual evidence

  1. CHCF Jansen: Statistical Handbook of the Kingdom of Hanover . In Commission of the Helwings̓chen Hofbuchhandlung, 1824 ( google.de [accessed on September 19, 2019]).
  2. Friedrich W. Harseim, C. Schlüter: Statistical Manual for the Kingdom of Hanover . Schlüter, 1848 ( google.de [accessed September 19, 2019]).
  3. Prussia (Germany) Royal Statistical Bureau: The communities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population: Based on the original materials of the general census of December 1, 1871 . Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Bureau, 1873 ( google.de [accessed on September 19, 2019]).
  4. Welcome to Gemeindeververzeichnis.de. Retrieved September 19, 2019 .
  5. a b c Sitemap | Redaktionstest.net. Retrieved on September 19, 2019 (German).
  6. Heinbockel-Hagenah, Stade district, Lower Saxony. Retrieved September 19, 2019 .
  7. Michael Puttins: Welcome. Retrieved on September 19, 2019 (German).