Holte (Halver)

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City of Halver
Coordinates: 51 ° 12 ′ 41 ″  N , 7 ° 26 ′ 5 ″  E
Height : 354 m above sea level NN
Postal code : 58553
Area code : 02355
Holte (Halver)
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Location of Holte in Halver

Holte is a court in Halver in the Märkisches Kreis in the administrative district of Arnsberg in North Rhine-Westphalia ( Germany ).

Location and description

Holte is 354 meters above sea ​​level in the north-west of the Halveran urban area on the city limits of Radevormwald and Breckerfeld . The neighboring towns are Osenberg , Ahe , Burbach , Hartmecke , Grafweg , Köttershaus (to Radevormwald), Jägershaus (to Radevormwald), Schmittensiepen (to Radevormwald) and Borbeck (to Radevormwald).

The place can be reached via secondary roads that branch off from Bundesstraße 229 at Niederennepe or Schwenke and connect the villages in the Ennepetal. The Burbach , a tributary of the Ennepe, rises near Holte . To the east of the village is the 381.1 meters above sea level Nesselberg. The moat of the Elberfeld line of the Bergische Landwehr, protected as a cultural monument, runs on the city limits of Radevormwald west of the village .

history

Holte was first mentioned in a document in 1480, but the time of origin of the settlement is assumed to have been between 1200 and 1300 at the end of the medieval clearing period. Holte was probably a split from Grafweg.

Around 1500 it is documented by documents that the Holte farm was liable to the Bergisches Amt_Beyenburg . The jurisdiction of the court was subordinate to a Bergisch judge specially appointed for the Bergische Höfe in the otherwise Brandenburg- dominated parish of Halver, which often led to a dispute with the Brandenburg count actually responsible for the parish .

In 1818 15 people lived in the village. In 1838, Hol belonged to the Kamscheider peasantry within the Halver mayor and was called Holt at that time . The place, which was categorized as a courtyard according to the location and distance table of the government district of Arnsberg , had nine residential buildings, three factories or mills and five agricultural buildings at that time. At that time, 46 people lived in the village, one of them Catholic and 45 Protestant.

The community encyclopedia for the province of Westphalia from 1887 gives a number of 54 inhabitants who lived in eleven houses.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Alfred Jung: Halver and Schalksmühle. Investigation and thoughts on the settlement history of the Halver Office, an old parish in the Saxon-Franconian border area. Friends of Altena Castle, Altena 1978 ( Altenaer contributions. Works on the history and local history of the former county Mark 13, ISSN  0516-8260 ).
  2. ^ Gerd Helbeck : Beyenburg. History of a place on the Bergisch-Mark border and its surrounding area. Volume 1: The Middle Ages. Basics and advancement. Association for local history, Schwelm 2007, ISBN 978-3-9811749-1-5 , p. 236.
  3. Johann Georg von Viebahn : Local and distance table of the government district Arnsberg, arranged according to the existing state division, with details of the earlier areas and offices, the parish and school districts and topographical information. Ritter, Arnsberg 1841.
  4. Royal Statistical Bureau (Prussia) (ed.): Community encyclopedia for the province of Westphalia, based on the materials of the census of December 1, 1885 and other official sources, (community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia, Volume X), Berlin 1887.