House Dahlhausen

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House Dahlhausen (2015)

Gut Haus Dahlhausen in the Bochum district of Hordel is a former manor whose history goes back to the Middle Ages.

history

It was originally a moated castle . The half-timbered mansion was built in 1794–1799.

In the 14th century the facility was owned by the von Dahlhausen family. In 1546 it came into the possession of Heinrich von Düngelen through marriage .

Goswin von Düngelen married Elisabeth, the daughter of Melchior von Havkenscheid . Her daughter Anna von Düngelen was the capitular of the aristocratic monastery Elsey and married Jörgen Christoph von Schell on October 18, 1644, who was enfeoffed in 1651 by the Count of Styrum with Haus Rake .

Karl Ferdinand Franz Philipp Amalius Freiherr von Düngelen died here without male descendants on June 21, 1802.

From 1809 the estate belonged to the Müller / Schragmüller family. The coal merchant Fritz-Gustav Müller, who lived on what is now Schragmüllerstraße, opened a shop there, from where he delivered the fine Hordel nut coals to the neighboring town of Wanne-Eickel. This coal merchant had, as it is called in the Ruhr area, "a blow" because he mainly grew hemp instead of vegetables in his garden. Therefore, he was called by his neighbors as "The sloping miller", which then became "Schragmüller" in the course of time.

Mining caused damage to the mountains and a drop in the water table. The last owner of the property, Karl Konrad Schragmüller, litigated and finally sold it in 1890 to the Krupp company , which also owned the neighboring Hanover mine . The Dahlhauser Heide workers' settlement was built on the site between 1906 and 1915 by the Krupp company .

Gut-Dahlhausen was leased by the Krupp company together with agricultural land until 1973. The last tenant was the farmer Michael. Since 1974 Haus-Dahlhausen has been owned by the Göbel family, who run a pony farm there and have expanded the facility with 2 riding arenas and a restaurant with home-style cuisine. This is also where the “Bochum-Hordel” riding club has its home.

The manor house has been a listed building under the number A 112 since October 30, 1989.

literature

  • Klaus Gorzny: Ruhr castles. Castles, palaces and aristocratic residences along the Ruhr . Picolo-Verlag, Marl 2002, ISBN 3-9801776-7-X , pp. 72-73.

Individual evidence

  1. Symann, Ernst: The documents of the archive tray-Eickelmann 1600-1800, II, p 140ff.
  2. Haus Laer: Elisabeth von der Leithen Foundation ( Memento of the original from June 3, 2009 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.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.rittergut-haus-laer.de
  3. ^ Günter Höfken: The history of the house rake . In: Bochumer Heimatbücher 1951 . Kortum Society Bochum , Bochum, 1951 ( online )
  4. List of monuments of the city of Bochum

Web links

Coordinates: 51 ° 30 ′ 7.5 ″  N , 7 ° 10 ′ 14.5 ″  E