Heisenhof

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Main building of the Heisenhof, 2014

The Heisenhof , also called Drübberanlage and formerly Gut "Ramdohr zu Drübber", is a former agricultural property in the village of Barme in the municipality of Dörverden . From 2004 to autumn 2011 the farm belonged to the Wilhelm Tietjen Foundation for Fertilization Ltd., whose partner was the right-wing extremist lawyer Jürgen Rieger , who died in 2009 .

history

Emergence

The Heisenhof was a manor of the von Ramdohr family from 1686 to 1839 . The Kurhannoversche office secretary Albrecht Andreas von Ramdohr acquired the Drübber estate in 1686 and was then able to round off and enlarge it significantly through exchange negotiations with the rulers and private individuals. Basilius von Ramdohr was born on the estate in 1757 . In February 1758 in the immediate vicinity of the property found Ramdohrschen fierce fighting between French troops of General Chabot and kurhannoverschen units under Prince Ferdinand instead that here the crossing of the Weser forced and after Hoya advancing. The estate manager in 1762 was Johann Jacob Neynaber. The Ramdohrs sold the estate in 1839 to the Hanover Crown, which transformed it into a royal domain. In 1898 the estate was acquired by Adolf Heise.

20th century: administrative headquarters of an ammunition factory and officers' mess

Gut Drübber, postcard 1914

From the 1930s until the end of the Second World War in 1945, the property was part of an approximately 380 hectare site of the so-called Weser plant of Eibia GmbH , an ammunition factory in which forced laborers mainly from Eastern Europe had to work. 1945 to 1949 the site was confiscated by the British occupying forces. From 1957 to 1996 the Heisenhof was used as part of the Lower Saxony barracks of the Bundeswehr , most recently as an officers' mess and site administration . The Bundeswehr had rented the site from the industrial management company in Bonn, in which the federal government was involved at the time.

Privatization and sale to the Wilhelm Tietjen Foundation for Fertilization Ltd.

In 2003 the plots of land formerly belonging to the location were offered for sale. Heisenhof and 2.6 hectares of land were acquired by the Wilhelm Tietjen Foundation for Fertilization Ltd. in an auction for € 255,000. In August 2006 the Limited was deleted due to a missing business report in the British register. In March 2007, the Jena District Court appointed a supplementary liquidator for the company's assets in Germany. The remaining company was to be liquidated and the property sold. The company has been active again since the beginning of May 2008. The administration of the estate was legally repealed in July 2008.

Since 2009 the district has been trying to demolish the Heisenhof. A court ruling in April 2011 ruled that this was lawful regardless of concerns about the historic monument protection that existed from 1988 to 2006.

More sales

In October 2011, the entire area was sold by the Wilhelm Tietjen Foundation to the businessman Rüdiger Meyer from Kirchlinteln . With the help of investors from the Middle East, he intended to turn the former manor into a recreation center with spa , wellness and hotel , which is to bear the name Gut Ramdohr , for 10 million euros . He fought for the preservation of the numerous historical buildings and against the existing demolition order . According to the District Administrator Peter Bohlmann , demolition should begin in 2012. However, if the buildings are demolished for around 200,000 euros, there is no building permit for the land. Critical voices from the "Weser-Aller Alliance: Committed to Democracy and Civil Courage" fear that the new owner is just a straw man who should prevent the threatened demolition and later hand the site back to the right-wing scene. Corresponding information was also brought to the Verden district . Dörverden's mayor, Karin Meyer, said that the issuing of a building permit would only be examined if the economic strength and benefits for the general public could be proven, which is currently not the case.

In 2018, the 24,000 square meter property was offered for sale for 500,000 euros. There is still a court-confirmed demolition order for the buildings. In March 2019 it was announced that a farmer was temporarily interested in acquiring the property and at the end of November 2019 the farm was sold for 100,000 euros to a lawyer and businessman from Hesse. The buyer wants to build a park with themed gardens on the area of ​​the Heisenhof, similar to the botanical garden at Bieberstein Castle in his home town of Hahnstätten .

use

After the Bundeswehr left in 1996, the Heisenhof was only used to a limited extent until it was sold in 2004. After separation from the former barracks site, there was no longer any security for sewage disposal. The lower building supervisory authority of the district of Verden took this as an opportunity to prohibit the use of the Heisenhof by the owner and her tenants. Due to the lack of legally effective building permits and the unclear sewage disposal, the use of the property is only possible to a very limited extent. The estate liquidator had a collection of Wehrmacht and other military vehicles that Jürgen Rieger brought here after an arson attack . Nevertheless, the Heisenhof continued to serve as a regional meeting place for the neo-Nazi scene.

Citizens' Initiative

2005 demonstration against right-wing extremism in front of the Heisenhof

When it became known in 2004 that the right-wing extremist Jürgen Rieger was behind the acquisition of the Heisenhof by the Wilhelm Tietjen Foundation, a citizens' initiative was formed. The initiators feared the establishment of a nationwide training center for right-wing extremists. Demonstrations in protest against the right-wing extremists took place repeatedly.

Web links

Commons : Heisenhof  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Lampe, Joachim (1963): Aristocracy, court nobility and state patriciate in Kurhannover : Volume: Official lists and pedigrees , page 540
  2. ^ Heinrich Gade: History of the Fleckens Hoya Chapter III, in: Journal of the Historisches Verein für Niedersachsen, year 1866, p. 185 ff., P.191 ff. Historischer Verein für Niedersachsen, Hahn'sche Hof-Buchhandlung Hannover 1867 preview at books .google.de
  3. Heisenhof in Dörverden is sold in Weser-Kurier from December 2, 2019
  4. Eibia GmbH plant "Weser", munitions factory, description
  5. They are marching again ...: The Heisenhof: Insights and prospects , publisher and publisher: Bremer Tageszeitungen AG, 2005, ISBN 3-938795-00-X
  6. ^ Right training center in Lower Saxony: The Heisenhof is at the end in taz.de, April 22, 2011; Retrieved April 23, 2011
  7. Wellness and leisure at the Heisenhof in Kreiszeitung.de October 6, 2011
  8. http://www.gegendenabriss.de/
  9. No investors for the Heisenhof in Weser-Kurier as of October 6, 2011
  10. For sale: 500,000 euros for the Heisenhof at ndr.de from March 12, 2018
  11. Heisenhof does not want to buy from ndr.de from March 12, 2019
  12. New owner: 100,000 euros for Heisenhof at ndr.de from December 1, 2019
  13. ^ Christian Droop, Hahnstätten - Managing Director of S @ nderson Human Resources Consulting GmbH. Retrieved December 15, 2019 .
  14. Heisenhof: New owner is planning theme gardens at ndr.de from December 4, 2019
  15. Jörn Dirk Zweibrock: Bought a pig in a poke . Retrieved December 15, 2019 .
  16. Nds. Higher Administrative Court of May 11, 2005
  17. 2,000 people in front of the Heisenhof in Rotenburger Rundschau on February 1, 2005

Coordinates: 52 ° 48 ′ 57 "  N , 9 ° 11 ′ 50"  E