Hinschendorf

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Hinschendorf
City of Reinbek
Coordinates: 53 ° 30 ′ 21 ″  N , 10 ° 13 ′ 59 ″  E
Residents : 2041  (Dec. 31, 2018)
Postal code : 21465
Area code : 040
Hinschendorf (Reinbek)
Hinschendorf

Location of Hinschendorf in Reinbek

Hinschendorf is a district of Reinbek in the state of Schleswig-Holstein , which borders the Hamburg districts of Bergedorf and Lohbrügge, as well as the municipality of Wentorf.

Hinschendorf was first mentioned as Huncingethorpe in 1238 , when the Hamburg cathedral chapter donated five hooves and the mill to the Reinbek monastery. In 1252 the remaining part of the village was also owned by the monastery. After the Reformation and the associated dissolution of the monastery, Hinschendorf came to Duke Adolf I of Schleswig-Holstein on Gottorf in 1544 and was assigned to the lordly office of Reinbek. Until 1608, the farmers living there were relocated to neighboring villages, the village was laid down and added to the Reinbeker Vorwerk as an agricultural area . In 1772 the area was parceled out again, so that the village emerged again, only to be soon combined to form Gut Hinschendorf. In 1931 it was finally restored as a community and after the Second World War it was incorporated into Reinbek.

Younger story

From 1931, small wooden weekend houses with dry toilets, some even with storage cellars, were built on the parceled out fields of Gut Hinschendorf. There the residents planted orchards and vegetable gardens and kept small animals such as chickens and rabbits. The first solid brick houses were soon added when, in the context of the “Third Reich”, more and more residents preferred to move completely from Hamburg to the periphery. After the war, many refugees and bombed-out Hamburgers were quartered in the undamaged Hinschendorf as part of the forced housing management . The kitchen gardens, which are quite large by today's standards, became essential for survival in the “bad times”.

present

Today's structure is characterized by single-family and semi-detached houses as well as row houses on Schaumanns Kamp . In the third to fourth generation, the plots are increasingly subdivided and the development condensed by new construction of single and multi-family houses. As a mixed area under building law, there are a number of craft businesses, tradespeople and liberal professions in Hinschendorf. The retail trade that once existed has long since been displaced by the nearby shopping center on Täbyplatz. The former Hinschendorf manor house is now separated from the rest of the village by Hamburger Straße and houses medical practices.

traffic

Hinschendorf is connected to the Hamburg transport network. Bus line 136, which runs between the Reinbek and Bergedorf S-Bahn stations , runs the loop once an hour through Hinschendorf to the Schaumanns Kamp, Störmerweg and Am Holländerberg stops. During rush hour, the line runs through the settlement every 20 minutes. In addition, line 237 runs on the adjacent Hamburger Straße, which takes the shortest route to Reinbek station (all as of 2014). The walk to the train station is about 15 to 30 minutes, depending on the starting point. The only access for motor vehicles to Hinschendorf is via the Schaumanns Kamp. The settlement therefore has no through traffic. Pedestrians also cross Hamburger Straße over the Holländerbrücke, which leads from the cul-de-sac on Am Holländerberg to the shopping center.

Personalities

The soccer player Max Kruse grew up in Hinschendorf.

Web links

  • Reinbeker Stadtgeschichte working group at the Volkshochschule Sachsenwald: history. In: Website of the city of Reinbek.
  • Reinbek Museum Association: Hinschendorf. In: Reinbeker stories.
  • Reinbek Museum Association: Hinschendorf settlement. In: Reinbeker stories. March 7, 2017.