House Hückelhoven (Duisburg)

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House Hückelhoven
Castle type : Niederungsburg, location
Conservation status: Burgstall
Place: Overbreak
Geographical location 51 ° 32 '37.9 "  N , 6 ° 43' 0.5"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 32 '37.9 "  N , 6 ° 43' 0.5"  E
House Hückelhoven (North Rhine-Westphalia)
House Hückelhoven

Haus Hückelhoven was originally a medieval mansion (lost moated castle ) in the Duisburg district of Overbruch , district of Duisburg-Walsum . It was at 144 Herzogstrasse.

history

House Hückelhoven, which was built in an area that was dependent on an estate belonging to the Gerresheim monastery , the Nonnenhof , was located in an impassable break ground and was surrounded by moats . Hückelhoven probably took on the role of a school yard. Like the nearby Watereck house in the neighboring Vierlinden district, the Hückelhoven house was still provided with defensive towers at the end of the Middle Ages.

House Hückelhoven belonged to the Counts of Kleve . From 1370 to 1488 a Hysfelt family was enfeoffed with Hückelhoven. By marriage, the house came to the Neukirch ( Nykerken ) family, who held the house for 250 years.

During the Truchsessian War (1583–1588) and the Eighty Years War (1568–1648) and Thirty Years War (1618–1648) the house was destroyed and rebuilt several times. In 1742 the property was divided. A Neukirch said Kate with six Dutch morning remained. It was leased to Jakob Luwen and Katharina Neukirch ( Neykirchs ) in 1775 . The goods came to Hermann Hussmann from Spellen through marriage in 1846. After his son Hermann died in 1935, his widow Anna, née Opgen-Rhein, sold the Kate and associated goods to the municipality of Walsum in 1955. The last tenant was Gerhard Beckedahl before the building was demolished in 1956.

literature

  • Erich Richter: The Overbruch . In: Dinslaken district yearbook 1974, pp. 70–73. Based on the essays of Dr. Rommel, Prof. Dr. Stampfuss and Bernhard Schleiken.
  • Rudolf Stampfuß : Old mansions . In: Walsum - From the village to the industrial community; Walsum 1955, pp. 46-47.
  • Bernhard Schleiken: Walsum - Höfe, Kirche und Kommende, Walsum / Ravensburg 2001 (materials on Walsum history, volume 1), pp. 125–127.
  • Volker Herrmann: Walsum - archeology and history of a district of Duisburg. In: Duisburg Monument Themes No. 8, Duisburg 2010, p. 10. ( PDF (1.25 MB) )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Cf. Lehnsregister der Burg Dinslaken and Lehnsbuch der Landesburg Kleve ( Schwanenburg ).
  2. Walther Zimmermann , Hugo Borger (ed.): Handbook of the historical sites of Germany . Volume 3: North Rhine-Westphalia (= Kröner's pocket edition . Volume 273). Kröner, Stuttgart 1963, DNB 456882847 , p. 634.