Hoinkhausen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hoinkhausen
City of Rüthen
Coat of arms of Hoinkhausen
Coordinates: 51 ° 33 ′ 33 ″  N , 8 ° 23 ′ 48 ″  E
Height : 212 m
Residents : 175  (December 31, 2014)
Incorporation : 1st January 1975
Postal code : 59602
Area code : 02954
War memorial
War memorial

Hoinkhausen (spoken: Hönkhausen ) is a district of the city of Rüthen in the Soest district in North Rhine-Westphalia . On December 31, 2014 the village had 175 inhabitants.

location

Hoinkhausen is a small town about 2 km from Nettelstädt .

history

middle Ages

Hoinkhausen was first mentioned in a document as Hoijanusini in 950 . The name is said to be derived from the Celtic word "small hill house".

Modern times

Hoinkhausen, school, inscription

1536 was the name for Hoinkhausen Hoynnghuißen , the place consisted of 15 houses. In 1563 the place was called Hoenghausen .

In 1815 Hoinkhausen came to the Kingdom of Prussia and in 1816 was assigned to the Lippstadt district. On January 1, 1975, Hoinkhausen was incorporated into the city of Rüthen.

In 1593/94 Johann Winter got into a witch trial . From 1652 to 1660 37 people from Hoinkhausen were executed after the Rüthen witch trials, 21 of them were male. On March 31, 2011 the city council of Rüthen decided on a socio-ethical rehabilitation of those innocently convicted and executed in the area of ​​today's city of Rüthen during the 16th and 17th centuries as part of the witch hunt, including Johann Winter.

Population development

  • 1817: 194 inhabitants
  • 1861: 186 inhabitants
  • 1885: 200 inhabitants
  • 1939: 200 inhabitants
  • 1950: 271 inhabitants
  • 1951: 272 inhabitants
  • 1961: 183 inhabitants
  • 1970: 180 inhabitants
  • 1974: 180 inhabitants
  • 1975: 173 inhabitants
  • 2011: 170 inhabitants
  • 2013: 175 inhabitants
  • 2014: 175 inhabitants

Catholic Church

Catholic Church of St. Pankratius

The village church of St. Pankratius is a three-aisled, two-bay hall church. The south aisle was built in the 13th century, the choir in 1718.

Pastors of the parish of Hoinkhausen

  1. 1629–1674 Henrieus Kegel
  2. 1674–1703 Rhabanus Lotharius Berghoff
  3. 1703–1730 Casparus Godde Wertensis
  4. 1730–1756 Joes Fridericud Blume
  5. 1756–1780 Melchior Linnemann
  6. 1780–1810 Melchior Ludolph Herold
  7. 1810–1823 Bernhardus Schulte
  8. 1823–1837 Ferdinand Burgharz
  9. 1837–1839 Vicar Anton Löser, parish administrator
  10. 1839–1859 Johann Ferdinand Stöver
  11. 1859–1890 Anton Löser
  12. 1890–1891 Clemens Mönig
  13. 1891–1920 Josef Kipshagen
  14. 1920–1951 Konradus Schütte
  15. 1951–1968 Wilhelm Schulte
  16. 1968–1977 Herbert Höckenschnieder
  17. 1978–1983 Anton Behrendes
  18. 1984–1997 Michael Hennemann
  19. 1997–2000 Georg Laube
  20. 2000–2010 Andreas Neuser
  21. Since 2010 Theobald Wiechers

Economy and Infrastructure

economy

dairy

In 1894 a dairy was founded in the village center. It was initially a branch of the Geseke dairy. In 1900 the amount of milk delivered annually was around 800,000 liters. In 1931 the Geseke dairy was separated; since 1951 the company had a large potato steaming system. In 1954 the amount of milk processed in the dairy was 5 million liters. In 1987 all production was stopped.

traffic

Two bus routes from Busverkehr Ruhr-Sieg , the R62 from Rüthen via Oestereiden and Bökenförde to Lippstadt and the 672 from Rüthen to Oestereiden, which only runs on school days, run through Hoinkhausen. Another line, from which Hoinkhausen is only served on school days, is the 558 of Regionalverkehr Ruhr-Lippe GmbH from Oestereiden to Anröchte .

schools

school

The oldest school was founded in 1786 by Pastor Herold as the first industrial school in Westphalia. In 1802 Pastor Herold founded a boys' school in Hoinkhausen. The school building was demolished in 1877 and replaced by a new building in 1878. A girls' school was built in its own building in 1791. This was demolished in 1937 and the boys' school was expanded. In 1969 the schools were closed.

literature

  • Westereiden 750 years.
  • Art historical hiking guide Westphalia.

Web links

Commons : Hoinkhausen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Stadt & Tourismus> Ortsteile , accessed on May 17, 2016
  2. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 335 .