House Loh

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House Loh
Castle type : Niederungsburg, location
Conservation status: Burgstall
Place: Duisburg-Walsum
Geographical location 51 ° 31 '53.5 "  N , 6 ° 43' 56.3"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 31 '53.5 "  N , 6 ° 43' 56.3"  E
House Loh (North Rhine-Westphalia)
House Loh

Haus Loh (also Driesenhof ) was a medieval manor in Driesenbusch in today's Duisburg district of Aldenrade, district of Duisburg-Walsum in North Rhine-Westphalia .

history

In 1376 Hermann Rostoc was enfeoffed by Count Dietrich von der Mark with the estate das Loh in the parish of Walsum. In 1414 it is mentioned in a document from Hamborn Abbey gude yn gen Loe . In 1490 a Johann ingen Lohe appears on Haus Loh in Driesenbusch. In 1567 a jury named Johann Inghenn Loe and the Flur ingen Loe are mentioned in a Walsum document . By marriage in the first half of the 17th century, the Lords of Driesch came into possession of the house. They named themselves after a Rennenberg fiefdom Driesch in the Bergisches Amt Miselohe . Around 1640 Junker Adam van Dries was the owner of Haus Loh; from him the name of the adjacent forest, Driesenbusch , is derived.

Like the owners of the Waterheck and Nykerck estates , the owners of Loh also had special privileges to the best seats in the 13th century church of St. Dionysius in Walsum, which was demolished between 1881 and 1883 .

In 1794 the Loh house and the Driesenbusch were acquired by the Fürstenberg convent in Xanten . In 1847, Franz Haniel leased the house along with fields and pastures. In 1865 he bought the house with the farming of more than 62 acres of land. In 1905 the Loh house burned down. Seven years later, in 1912, Haus Loh was sold to the German Emperor's Union .

Web links

literature

  • Emil Dösseler, Friedrich Wilhelm Oediger: The feudal register of the Duchy of Cleves. Siegburg 1974, No. 511, p. 394.
  • Bernhard Schleiken: Gut Hückelhoven and House Loh. In: Heimatkalender Kreis Dinslaken, Vol. 9, 1952, pp. 72–75.
  • Bernhard Schleiken: The forest of the Junkers by DRIES: the Driesenbusch in Walsum and Haus Loh. In: Heimatkalender Kreis Dinslaken, vol. 21, 1964, pp. 67–70.
  • Rudolf Stampfuss: Walsum, from a village to an industrial community. Walsum 1955, p. 47.

Individual evidence

  1. For the location, see LAV NRW, Rhineland Department, Map Collection, Maps No. 999a and 3259.
  2. Dösseler / Oedinger (1974), pp. 107, 201 and 394.
  3. ^ Ludger Horstkötter: Document book of Hamborn Abbey with translation and commentary. Volume 1 (1139-1467), Duisburg-Hamborn 2008, p. 372.
  4. ^ Ludger Horstkötter: Document book of Hamborn Abbey with translation and commentary. Volume 1 (1139-1467), Duisburg-Hamborn 2008, p. 882 ff.
  5. ^ Kurt Niederau : Saarn, Duissern, Sterkrade - additions, corrections, notes. In: Duisburger Forschungen, Volume 41, Duisburg 1995, p. 318.
  6. Heinz Schild: Walsum through the ages. In: Rheinische Post, November 13, 2012 ( online ).
  7. ^ Ludger Horstkötter: Document book of Hamborn Abbey with translation and commentary. Volume 1 (1139-1467), Duisburg-Hamborn 2008, p. 371.
  8. Ulrich Schwenk: The last "Golden Book." In: Rheinische Post, August 24, 2010 ( online ).
  9. ^ Ludger Horstkötter: Document book of Hamborn Abbey with translation and commentary. Volume 1 (1139-1467), Duisburg-Hamborn 2008, p. 371.