Hulshofen

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Hulshofen (also Hülshofen, Huleshofen, Heitzhofen or Uleshofen ) is a deserted area in the urban area of Karben in the Wetteraukreis in Hesse .

Geographical location

Hulshofen is located between Okarben , Petterweil and Groß-Karben to the east of today's Neumühle. Possibly this is identical to the former local mill. The Heitzhöfer Bach and the field names Heitzhöfer Wiesen and Heitzhöfer Feld indicate the desert.

history

The place is mentioned for the first time in 1232 as Hvleshouen in a comparison of the pastor of Diebach with the Teutonic Brothers of Sachsenhausen . Other documentary mentions are very numerous:

  • In 1304 fields in vila Huleshoven were sold to the Teutonic Order of Sachsenhausen.
  • In 1317 the Teutonic Order sold half a mansus in terminis ville Hulishouen with the consent of the Arnsburg monastery .
  • In 1352, with the consent of Friedrich von Bellersheim , the Arnsburg Monastery bought his Fronhof zu Petterweil from the Fulda Monastery with land above the Holshober weg and dy bunde geyn Holshoben .
  • In 1375 a citizen of Friedberg sold property in Okarben, again to the Teutonic Order, and gave up this in the courts of Okarben and Hulshofen .
  • In 1395 the Teutonic Order bought two acres of land on Hulshofferfelde .
  • In 1430 the Friedberg burgrave Eberhard Löw von Steinfurth and his sons Eberhard and Henne confessed that they had received two Hubs of land in Hulshoffen as a fief from Count Reinhard II von Hanau .
  • In 1440 Herrmann Wais von Fauerbach sold two and a half Huben land to Hulshouen
  • In 1528 the Frankfurt captain Johann Wais von Fauerbach sold two hubs, 1 acre and three quarters of land in the Hulshoffer district to the Teutonic Order.
  • In 1539, the Arnsburg monastery exchanged a hat to Hulshofen with the Teutonic Order .
  • In 1585 there were disputes between the villages of Okarben and Kloppenheim due to grazing rights in the Heutzhoffer Termini , which were settled with a division between the two villages.

The latter is only conceivable after the village was abandoned, which perhaps took place in the 15th century. The documents show that the Teutonic Order acquired a substantial part of the property, which was concentrated in Kloppenheim with the later Teutonic Order Castle Kloppenheim (previously a larger court). In 1659 he was able to remove this from the Kaichen Free Court , to which Hülshofen also belonged.

Local nobility "von Hülshofen"

As in many places in the Wetterau , a local ministerial family can also be identified in Hülshofen . Markolfus de Vlishofen is mentioned for the first time in 1226 among the Frankfurt castle men . Around 1400 other relatives can be found among the Friedberger Burgmannen . The family probably had an ancestral home in Hülshofen, and it is assumed that it was a permanent house . The last time in 1460 is Johann von Hülshofen, a male member of the family, mentioned. The last evidence is Anna von Hülshofen , mentioned in 1525 , prioress of the Nieder-Ilbenstadt monastery , according to other information in the Engelthal monastery .

literature

  • Wilhelm Braun: Places and farms gone out in the Friedberg district. In: Wetterauer Geschichtsblätter 1, 1952, pp. 1–26, here: pp. 19f.
  • Georg Wilhelm Justin Wagner : The devastation in the Grand Duchy of Hesse. Volume 1: The Province of Upper Hesse. Publishing house of the historical association for the Grand Duchy of Hesse, Darmstadt 1854, pp. 334–337 .
  • Dieter Wolf : Castles, permanent houses and palaces in the Karben area. In: Magistrat der Stadt Karben (ed.): Karben. History and present. Lilienwald-Verlag, Karben 1973, ISBN 3-88004-000-1 , pp. 245-256, esp. Pp. 250f.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Dieter Wolf: Castles, permanent houses and palaces in the Karben area. In: Magistrat der Stadt Karben (ed.): Karben. History and present. Lilienwald-Verlag, Karben 1973, ISBN 3-88004-000-1 , pp. 245-256.
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k Wagner: The desert areas in the Grand Duchy of Hesse. Volume 1. 1854, with further sources.
  3. Hulshofen. Historical local lexicon for Hesse (as of November 11, 2014). In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS). Hessian State Office for Historical Cultural Studies (HLGL), accessed on January 1, 2015 .
  4. Ludwig Falck: Mainzer Regesten 1200-1250. On the history of the city, its spiritual and secular institutions and inhabitants. Volume 1: Text (= contributions to the history of the city of Mainz. Vol. 35, 1). City of Mainz, Mainz 2007, ISBN 978-3-924708-26-9 , p. 369, no. 691.
  5. ^ Ludwig Baur: Document book of the Arnsburg monastery in the Wetterau. Booklet 2: The unprinted documents from 1300 to 1355. Historical Association for the Grand Duchy of Hesse, Darmstadt 1850, p. 487, no. 788 .
  6. ^ Johann Friedrich Böhmer (ed.): Document book of the imperial city of Frankfurt. = Codex diplomaticus Moenofrancofurtanus. Volume 1: Friedrich Lau: 794-1314. Revision. Publishing house by Joseph Baer &. Co, Frankfurt am Main 1901, p. 46.

Coordinates: 50 ° 14 ′ 33.37 "  N , 8 ° 45 ′ 1.15"  E