Imbshausen

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Imbshausen
City of Northeim
Imbshausen coat of arms
Coordinates: 51 ° 45 ′ 36 ″  N , 10 ° 2 ′ 29 ″  E
Height : 213 m
Residents : 433  (Jul. 2019)
Incorporation : March 1, 1974
Postal code : 37154
Area code : 05553
Imbshausen (Lower Saxony)
Imbshausen

Location of Imbshausen in Lower Saxony

Imbshausen is a district of Northeim , the district town of the Northeim district , Lower Saxony . It has 433 inhabitants.

geography

The village of Imbshausen is about 6.5 km north-northeast of the Northeim core city (as the crow flies). A little north of the village rises the Bierberg ( 268  m above sea  level ), to the east the Imbshausen forest extends (max. 323.3  m above sea level ), a little south of the Denkershäuser pond and the Rethoberg ( 252  m above sea level ), west of the Edesheimer Wald (max. 270  m above sea level ), west-northwest of the Aßberg (approx. 225  m above sea level ) and northwest of the Windmühlenberg (approx. 220  m above sea level ). Imbshausen is located between 195 and 230  m above sea level. NN .

The federal highway 248 , which here shares the route with the Deutsche Alleenstrasse , leads in a north-northeast direction to the federal highway 7 which leads past Imbshausen to the west (junction Echte ).

history

Prehistory and early history

The area near Imshausen was first settled during the Neolithic Age , which goes hand in hand with the conquest of the Kalefelder Basin by the first farming cultures. Corresponding artefacts were found on the Asberg during site inspections and rescue excavations before the construction of the BAB 7 motorway in 1956. In the course of excavations before the six-lane extension of the motorway in 2017 and 2018, further Neolithic remains were uncovered, which were associated with the Bandkeramischen discovery site of Imbshausen and Eboldshausen a settlement site from around 5200  BC. . AD prove.

Middle Ages and Modern Times

Church in Imbshausen

The place name was derived from Count Immad, who bequeathed his entire property to the Corvey monastery from 826 to 853 . Immadehusen, Immedeshusen, Hymmedeshusen and Immetshusen finally became Imbshausen. During the Middle Ages , the estate in Imbshausen changed hands frequently. It came to Sievert von Steinberg around 1561 . His successor, Adrian von Steinberg, had a new castle, a church and a windmill built, the latter was destroyed on June 28, 1880 by a lightning strike. Sievert and Adrian von Steinberg are buried in the church in front of the altar. Friedrich von Steinberg had a new church built from 1722 to 1726 and founded the church library. The old school was built in 1750, while a new classroom was added in the school garden in 1883, where lessons were held until 1959. In 1777 the Steinberg estate fell to the barons of Kipe, descendants of Justus Kipius . The property passed to this family via Wilhelmine, who married a Freiherr von Stralenheim . From 1832 Imbshausen was judicially part of the Westerhof office . In 1851/1852 the Oldershausen-Imbshausen office existed . In 1853 the Imbshausen court was repealed.

Imbshausen Castle

Imbshausen Castle

From 1862 to 1864 the current castle was built on the foundations of the previous one. It was designed by Julius Rasch , probably as the first picturesque palace in the asymmetrical style of the Hanover Building School . In 1919 Baron Henning von Stralenheim took over the estate. After the Second World War , the von Stralenheim family had to vacate the castle, which then served as emergency accommodation. From 1946–1951 there was a Polish cadet school , and since 1952 a seminary of the Evangelical Lutheran regional church of Hanover . In 1963 Baron Henning von Stralenheim donated the castle to the regional church. From 1998 to 2013 the castle was owned by Campus for Christ . Thereafter, Carl-Christian von Plate Freiherr von Stralenheim acquired the property back as a descendant of the original noble family.

20th century

From 1945 to 1950, Imbshausen was the seat of the Institute for Agricultural Work Science and Technology, which was founded in Wroclaw in 1940. After the institute was taken over by the Max Planck Society , the institute was relocated to Bad Kreuznach in 1950 .

On March 1, 1974 Imbshausen was incorporated into the district town of Northeim.

politics

Local council election 2011
Turnout: 61.39%
 %
60
50
40
30th
20th
10
0
59.52%
40.48%
IWG

The local council in Imbshausen consists of seven councilors:

  • CDU 5 seats
  • independent 2 seats

(Electoral term 2016-2021)

Local mayor

The local mayor is Else Heidelberg, and the deputy mayor is Alexander Schieberle.

Personalities

  • Paul Jacobshagen (1889–1968), pastor from 1919 to 1927 in Imbshausen, joined the NSDAP in 1925.

Web links

Commons : Imbshausen  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b City of Northeim: Imbshausen (as of 07/2019) . Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  2. Otto Rochna: Prehistoric investigations on federal highways in Lower Saxony in the customer 1957, pp 84-89
  3. ↑ Planning approval decision for the 6-lane expansion of the BAB A 7, section VAE 2, VKE 2 of the Lower Saxony state authority for road construction and traffic from August 30, 2013 (PDF, 970 kB)
  4. Archaeologists uncover 7,200-year-old settlement remains in the Göttinger Tageblatt of March 5, 2018
  5. A7 expansion: Archaeologists find ceramic shards that are more than 7000 years old at HNA.de on March 3, 2018
  6. 7,000 year old finds - directly on the A 7 at ndr.de from April 3, 2018
  7. Erich Haberkamp: Imbshausen . In: Northeimer Heimatblätter . tape 5 , no. 3 , 1974, p. 104 .
  8. Günther Kokkelink, Monika Lemke-Kokkelink: Architecture in Northern Germany. Architecture and handicrafts of the Hanover School 1850–1900. P. 116.
  9. ^ 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 GmbH, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 215 .
  10. http://wahlen.kds.de/2011kw/Daten/155011_000058/index.html
  11. ^ Karl-Friedrich Oppermann : JACOBSHAGEN, Paul Friedrich Hermann. In: Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein, Hugo Thielen : Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9 , p. 185; online through google books