Hakenberg (Halver)

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Hook mountain
City of Halver
Coordinates: 51 ° 12 ′ 1 ″  N , 7 ° 26 ′ 21 ″  E
Height : 352 m above sea level NN
Postal code : 58553
Area code : 02355
Hakenberg (Halver)
Hook mountain

Location of Hakenberg in Halver

Hakenberg is a court in Halver in the Märkisches Kreis in the administrative district of Arnsberg in North Rhine-Westphalia ( Germany ).

Location and description

Hakenberg is located in the west of the Halveraner urban area near the city limits to Radevormwald . The neighboring towns are Diekerhof , Bärendahl , Schwenke and Grafweg .

The place can be reached via a set of secondary roads, which branches off the federal road 229 at Schwenke and connects other neighboring villages. The Waldschlenke stream , a tributary of the Hartmecke stream, flows past the place. The brook rises southwest of Hakenberg at the 399 meter high Frerberg elevation.

history

Hakenberg was first mentioned in a document in 1483, but the time of origin of the settlement is assumed to be between 900 and 1050 as a result of the Franconian - Carolingian settlement construction.

At the latest since the early Middle Ages (according to other information since prehistoric times) an important old road from Wipperfürth to Breckerfeld ran past to the east of Hakenberg . To the north-west of the village there is a ring wall on the Bollberg , which, according to excavations (ceramic finds from the 9th century) and recent research, is interpreted as a Franconian expansion and refuge castle to secure this old road.

Around 1500 it is documented by documents that the farm Hakenberg was liable for taxes to the Bergisches Amt Beyenburg . The jurisdiction of the court was subordinate to a Bergisch judge specially appointed for the Bergische Höfe in the otherwise Brandenburg- dominated parish of Halver, which often led to a dispute with the Brandenburg count actually responsible for the parish .

In 1818 there were 26 residents in the village. In 1838, Hakenberg belonged to the Eickhöfer peasantry within the Halver mayor . The place, which was categorized as a courtyard according to the locality and distance table of the government district of Arnsberg , had five residential buildings, a factory or mill and five agricultural buildings at that time. At that time, 27 residents lived in the village, one of them Catholic and 26 Protestant.

In 1840 the place is recorded on the Prussian first recording as Hackenberg .

The community encyclopedia for the province of Westphalia from 1887 gives a number of 19 residents who lived in three houses. The place is also called Hackenberg at this time .

To the west of Hakenberg , iron ore was extracted in mines , the Annaglück and Idaglück collieries . Until 2002, the Bundeswehr's Wuppertal ammunition defeat was located there on the city limits of Radevormwald .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Alfred Jung: Halver and Schalksmühle. Investigation and thoughts on the settlement history of the Halver Office, an old parish in the Saxon-Franconian border area. Friends of Altena Castle, Altena 1978 ( Altenaer contributions. Works on the history and local history of the former county Mark 13, ISSN  0516-8260 ).
  2. ^ Gerd Helbeck : Beyenburg. History of a place on the Bergisch-Mark border and its surrounding area. Volume 1: The Middle Ages. Basics and advancement. Association for local history, Schwelm 2007, ISBN 978-3-9811749-1-5 , p. 236
  3. Johann Georg von Viebahn : Local and distance table of the government district Arnsberg, arranged according to the existing state division, with details of the earlier areas and offices, the parish and school districts and topographical information. Ritter, Arnsberg 1841.
  4. Royal Statistical Bureau (Prussia) (ed.): Community encyclopedia for the province of Westphalia, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1885 and other official sources, (community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume X), Berlin 1887.
  5. Old ore mining around Halver.
  6. 10 years of troop withdrawal and conversion in North Rhine-Westphalia. Archived from the original on January 18, 2012 ; Retrieved March 21, 2011 .