Heinsen (Eime)

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Heinsen
Stains Eime
Heinsen coat of arms
Coordinates: 52 ° 3 ′ 45 ″  N , 9 ° 39 ′ 40 ″  E
Height : 154 m above sea level NHN
Area : 34 ha
Residents : 19  (Nov. 1, 2016)
Population density : 56 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : 1900
Incorporated into: Deilmissen
Postal code : 31036
Area code : 05182
Heinsen (Lower Saxony)
Heinsen

Location of Heinsen in Lower Saxony

Heinsen manor
Heinsen manor

Heinsen is from the Good Heinsen existing local situation of the hamlet Deilmissen the patch Eime in the joint community Leinebergland in Hildesheim in Lower Saxony .

geography

Heinsen is located northeast of Thüster Berg on Heinser Straße (Kreisstraße 5) between the Salzhemmendorfer district of Ahrenfeld in the northwest, 1.5 km away, and the Eimer district of Deilmissen in the east, 1.5 km away. Eime is 5 km northeast. The Heinser Bach , a tributary of the Akebeke in the Leine (Aller) river system, flows through Heinsen .

history

Jakob lamp

Heinsen is mentioned as a village in 1382 under the name Heynhusen . At the beginning of the 17th century the village consisted of 5 Kothöfe . Heinse and Hönze are also mentioned as place names in 1553 and Haensen around 1600 .

Jakob Lampadius , born as Jakob Lampe in Heinsen, made a career from prince educator to vice chancellor of the Duchy of Braunschweig-Lüneburg . From his income he acquired the farms in Heinsen and another in Ahrenfeld. On October 6, 1626, Duke Friedrich Ulrich granted him and his descendants various tax exemptions and privileges for the estate resulting from the merged farms . The later German Chancellor Christian Ulrich von Hardenberg acquired the estate in 1711 and received noble rights for the manor in 1726 and 1729 through royal and imperial documents . His son Christoph Friederich von Hardenberg had the manor house and the current building layout built between 1735 and 1745.

From 1796 to 1926, the unincorporated was Gutsbezirk Heinsen possession of the von Hammerstein . Since around 1900 the administration was connected to that of the municipality of Deilmissen. The patronage of the chapels in Deilmissen and Dunsen and the church in Esbeck , which has been associated with the estate since 1726, has expired. Deilmissen became a member of the joint municipality of Eime in 1964 and on March 1, 1974, part of the Eime patch.

Good Heinsen

Gut Heinsen is an ensemble of buildings that is roughly symmetrically arranged in a west-east direction. The manor house in the west is separated from the adjoining auxiliary and farm buildings to the east by a semicircular front garden. The access to the county road is in the east of the village. The garden around the manor house and the paddock extending to the county road in the north of the property are surrounded by a stone wall built around 1741 . The stones are said to come from the ruins of the Ahrenfeld castle.

The manor house, built in 1724 or around 1735, is a one-story rectangular building made of quarry stone. The eleven- axis courtyard front is structured by a two-storey risalit formed from the three central axes . Wall surfaces are plastered, some areas are veneered with sandstone. The building burned down in 1924. The manor archive was also destroyed. During the reconstruction, the room layout in the interior destroyed by the fire and the shape of the roof were changed. During the renovation work, the skeleton of a dog walled in as a construction victim was found in a niche in the foundation .

In the now more simply designed semicircular front garden east of the manor house there was once a water art with fountains over 20  feet high . For this purpose, a 4,000-foot pipeline was built from Kanstein (Thüster Berg) in 1738 . Like the Heinser Bach, which was dammed up into several ponds, it also served to supply the kitchen, brewery, stables and the property's watermill, which was later converted into a residential building .

Most of the outbuildings on the estate were rebuilt in the 19th or 20th century on the old brick and half-timbered foundations, adapted to the appearance of the existing components.

politics

City council and mayor

Heinsen is at the local level by the council represented the patch Eime.

Culture and sights

Buildings

  • Good Heinsen

Natural monuments

An oak in the estate park and 7 beeches in prominent places on the edge of the forest of Heinser Holz on the northeast slope of the Thüster Berg southwest to south of Heinsen were protected as natural monuments.

Economy and Infrastructure

Heinsen is connected six times on weekdays in each direction by buses of the Hildesheim regional traffic with Eime, Gronau and Elze , among others .

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the place

  • Jakob Lampadius (1593–1649), lawyer and statesman from Brunswick-Lüneburg

Web links

Commons : Heinsen  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. Population figures . (PDF; 14 kB) In: Internet site Samtgemeinde Leinebergland. November 1, 2016, accessed March 25, 2019 .
  2. a b c d e f Heinsen. (PDF; 23 MB) In: The art monuments of the Alfeld district, II. The former Gronau district . Self-published by the Provinzialverwaltung, Hanover, T. Schulzes Buchhandlung, 1939, pp. 140–142 , accessed on March 12, 2017 .
  3. a b c d Flecken Eime. In: Internet site for the Leinebergland community. Retrieved March 25, 2019 .
  4. Esbeck. (PDF; 23 MB) In: The art monuments of the Alfeld district, II. The former Gronau district . Self-published by the Provinzialverwaltung, Hanover, T. Schulzes Buchhandlung, 1939, p. 78 , accessed on March 12, 2017 .
  5. The nature reserves of Lower Saxony on the interactive environmental map. In: Website of the Lower Saxony Ministry for the Environment, Energy and Climate Protection. Retrieved March 12, 2017 .