Hasenpohl

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Hasenpohl is a district in the area of ​​the city of Königswinter in the North Rhine-Westphalian Rhein-Sieg district .

Hasenpohl was mentioned as Haselpol in 1555 in an inquiry about the court system in the Duchy of Berg . Since then, at the latest, it has been the name of one of the last five honors that made up the Oberpleis parish in the Blankenberg district of Berg . The core of the Honschaft was formed by the parcels of land at Am Hasenpohl and Im Hasenpohl , through which the Hasenpohl stream , which rises above, runs. They are located in the southeastern area of ​​today's Thomasberg district on Hasenpohler Weg . The villages of Ruttscheid and Mittelpütz as well as the farms of Bellinghausen and Kippenhohn belonged to the Hasenpohl community . In the "Explanatory Notes on the Historical Atlas of the Rhine Province" by the historian Wilhelm Fabricius published in 1898 , the honnship was called "Hasenbosen".

After the dissolution of the Duchy of Berg in 1806, the former Honschaft was transferred at the end of 1808 to a dependent municipality or a district of the Mairie Oberpleis (from 1813 "Mayor of Oberpleis"), which administratively belonged to the Canton of Hennef in the Grand Duchy of Berg . In Prussian times (from 1815) Hasenpohl remained as a cadastral or tax municipality part of the Oberpleis mayor and was assigned to the Siegburg district (from 1825 “Siegkreis”). The municipality became part of the newly formed, politically independent municipality of Oberpleis in 1845/46 . The Hasenpohl district that continued to exist remained part of the Oberpleis municipality until 1969 .

Hasenpohl Viaduct

In the area of ​​the Hasenpohl district today, in addition to parts of Thomasberg and Heisterbacherrott , which include the formerly independently named towns of Büsch, Mettelsiefen, Steinringen, Pützbroichen and Wiese, the towns of Bellinghausen, Bellinghauserhohn , Kippenhohn and Ruttscheid as well as most of Hasenboseroth are located . The Hasenpohl viaduct on the high-speed railway line Cologne – Rhine / Main is also named after the district .

Web links

Commons : District Hasenpohl  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Crecelius , Woldemar Harleß (ed.): Journal of the Bergisches Geschichtsverein , Volume 20, 1884, p. 130.
  2. ^ Wilhelm Fabricius: Explanations of the historical atlas of the Rhine province, 2nd volume: The map of 1789. Bonn 1898, p. 311.
  3. Official Journal for the Cologne District , 1841, p. 11. ( Online Google Books )
  4. Allgemeine Zeitung München , 1852, p. 4912. ( Online Google Books )
  5. ^ Fr. Halm: Statistics of the administrative district of Cöln , Boisserée, 1865, p. 255. ( Online Google Books )
  6. State Survey Office North Rhine-Westphalia: Directory of the landmarks ( Memento from April 17, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) (as of 2005; PDF; 243 kB)