Honor Hohenhagen

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The Honschaft Hohenhagen was in the Middle Ages and the early modern period a Honschaft in parish Luettringhausen in Bergisch Office Beyenburg .

In addition to the Titularhof Hohenhagen, the honors included the farms and living quarters Birgden III , Birke , Buscherhof , Clarenbach , Endringhausen , Farrenbracken , Goldenberg , Grund , Klausen , Mühle , Nüdelshalbach , Rotzkotten , Spelsberg , Stursberg I , Stursberg II , Tackermühle , Ueberfeld , and desert and Wüsterhagen .

According to E. Erwin Stursberg , the west farm also belonged to the Hohenhagen honor, which, according to other sources, belonged to the Erbschlö honor around 1700 .

In 1797 239 inhabitants, 212 fireplaces, 1,058 Bergische acres of arable land, 274 berg. Morning meadows, 1,398 mountains. Acres of forest, as well as 18 horses and 280 oxen and cows recorded. The areas were counted together with those of the Honschaft Lüttringhausen .

The honor survived the communal reorganization in the Grand Duchy of Berg under French administration from 1806. After the French withdrew from the Confederation of the Rhine in 1813 after the defeat in the Battle of Leipzig , the honor was assigned to the mayor's office of Lüttringhausen in the Lennep district under Prussia in 1815 .

Around 1832, according to the statistics and topography of the Düsseldorf administrative district, the residential areas Bärenhammer , Breithammer , Diederichshammer , Eiche , Erbschlöhammer , Felderhof , Flügel , Graben , Gründerhammer , Grüne , Grünenbaum , Halbach , Halbachshammer , Hasenclever , Heusiepen , Hütte , Jupperhammer , Clarenbachhammer , Clemenshammer , Kranen , Kranenholl , Kranenhollerhammer , Klauserdelle , Langenhaus , Lenharzhammer , Leyen , Neuenhammer , Neuenhof , Neuenkotten , Neuenweg , Neuland , Oelingrath , Spelsbergerhammer , Stollen , Westerhammer and Wüsterkotten to the honors.

According to the statistics, the Honschaft had a population of 2213 in 1832, which was divided into 127 Catholic and 2086 Protestant parishioners. The community's living quarters comprised a total of 266 houses, 64 factories and mills, 158 agricultural buildings and four public buildings.

Until 1929 the Hohenhagen area belonged to the town of Lüttringhausen in the Lennep district and was then divided between the independent towns of Remscheid and Wuppertal.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Klaus-Günther Conrads, Günter Konrad: Ronsdorfer Heimat- und Bürgererverein | from 1700 to 1724. In: ronsdorfer-buergerverein.de. www.ronsdorfer-buergerverein.de, accessed on February 1, 2016 .
  2. ^ A b Emil Pauls : A statistical table of the Duchy of Berg from 1797 . In: Bergischer Geschichtsverein (Hrsg.): Journal of the Bergisches Geschichtsverein . tape 39 . Elberfeld 1905, p. 180 f .
  3. a b Johann Georg von Viebahn : Statistics and Topography of the Administrative District of Düsseldorf , 1836