Hovedissen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hovedissen is the name of an estate in the municipality of Leopoldshöhe in the Lippe district in North Rhine-Westphalia and an old Lippe farmers who surrounded this estate. Until 1921 there was an independent municipality Hovedissen in the Free State of Lippe .

Hovedissen municipality

Since the mid-19th century was the church Hovedissen in the Office of Administration Schötmar the Principality lip resulting from the same peasantry had emerged.

The community included the towns and places of residence Ehrdissen, Evenhauserholz, Hakenheide, Heipke , Hovedissen, Krentrup , Krentruperhagen , Leopoldshöhe, Moshagen, Räkerbrink, Rosenhagen, Schuckenbaum , Schuckenhof and Tannenkrug.

On September 1, 1921, the municipality of Hovedissen was dissolved and divided into the new municipalities of Krentrup , Leopoldshöhe and Schuckenbaum . The communities Krentrup and Schuckenbaum were incorporated into the community Leopoldshöhe on January 1, 1969.

Population development
year Residents source
1875 1505
1882 1554
1898 1797
1911 1865

Good Hovedissen

The titmouse at Gut Hovedissen

The Hovedissen estate was first mentioned in writing around 1226. Originally a Meierhof , the Hovedissen manor , which was free and eligible for parliament, was owned by various noble families from 1570. In 1768 it came under the administration of the Lippe government in Detmold and in 1774 it was acquired by Privy Councilor Franz Christian von Borries . At that time there was also a distillery and a brewery on the estate. Since then, the estate has been owned by the von Borries family and today by their descendants, Counts von der Schulenburg . In addition to agriculture, the estate is now home to a seed breeding company and a biotechnological research company.

The Meisenhaus is a listed building, a four-column house from 1643, which belongs to the Meisenhof, the outbuilding of the estate.

Individual evidence

  1. a b List of localities of the Principality of Lippe 1911
  2. Locality directory of the Principality of Lippe 1875
  3. Locality directory of the Principality of Lippe 1882
  4. Locality directory of the Principality of Lippe 1898

Coordinates: 52 ° 2 ′  N , 8 ° 42 ′  E