Hunting Lodge (Schmallenberg)
Hunting lodge
City of Schmallenberg
Coordinates: 51 ° 6 ′ 22 ″ N , 8 ° 16 ′ 52 ″ E
|
||
---|---|---|
Height : | 641 (600-660) m | |
Residents : | 66 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Postal code : | 57392 | |
Location of the Jagdhaus in Schmallenberg |
||
Aerial view of hunting lodge
|
Jagdhaus is a district of the town of Schmallenberg in the North Rhine-Westphalian Hochsauerlandkreis .
geography
Geographical location
Jagdhaus is located in the extreme south of the Hochsauerlandkreis, in the immediate vicinity of the border of the Siegen-Wittgenstein district to the south . It is located in the Sauerland-Rothaargebirge nature park around 5.5 km south of the Schmallenberg core town, directly south-southeast of the Heidkopf ( 665.9 m above sea level ) at 600 to 660 m above sea level. NHN . The bison wilderness conservation project is located in the vicinity . The Rothaarsteig leads through the village .
Neighboring places
Places bordering Jagdhaus are the Schmallenberg districts of Wulwesort (north-west), Fleckenberg (north-north-west) and Latrop (east-north-east) as well as the Lennestädter districts of Milchenbach (west-north-west) and the district of Wingeshausen in the city of Bad Berleburg (south).
history
The forests around Jagdhaus probably belonged to the noblemen of Bilstein in the Middle Ages . In 1484 the Landwehr was first mentioned in the area of today's hunting lodge. The barons of Fürstenberg had been enfeoffed with the Vogtei since 1573. According to maps from the 17th and 18th centuries, the area around Jagdhaus belonged to the bailiwick of the Grafschaft monastery .
The barons of Fürstenberg built a hunting lodge within their hunting district near Fleckenberg on the Schneisberg. This hunting lodge gave the village its name. The Pieper family took their first permanent residence on the Schneisberg on February 2, 1735.
In 1832 two houses in Jagdhaus were mentioned in the Chronicle of the parish county. In 1878 the farmer Klemens Wiese received a license to run an inn in a hunting lodge. In the same year, the main teacher Ferdinand Linde from Gevelsberg was also the first summer guest to come to Jagdhaus. The inn was expanded and expanded from generation to generation. It is still family-owned today. The house was built in 1842 and is the oldest still existing Jagdhaus house. The first aqueduct was built in 1887.
In 1920 Jagdhaus was incorporated into the new community of Fleckenberg and was part of this community until the local reorganization in North Rhine-Westphalia. Jagdhaus has been part of the town of Schmallenberg since January 1st, 1975.
In 1987 the Jagdhaus had 71 residents and 167 guest beds. Since then, more than half of the population has made a living from tourism.
religion
The St. Hubertus Catholic Chapel, which was built in 1936 to a design by the Gelsenkirchen architect Josef Franke , is located in the Jagdhaus .
Sports
In the village there is a supraregional biathlon facility (state performance base Biathlon NRW and member of the Olympic base Winterberg / Willingen / Schmallenberg-Jagdhaus). The Jagdhauser biathlon facility was built in 1984. It has the following data:
- Competition courses (650 to 690 m above sea level )
- Roller track length: 3000 m
- 13 small caliber stands (50 m) electromagnetic and 13 air rifle stands (10 m)
On the biathlon facility, among others, the German youth u. Junior Biathlon Championships (DSV), the German Biathlon Cup (DSV) and the National Biathlon Ski Games (DSV). The shooting ranges of the facility were closed by the police in 2004. No official competitions have taken place there since then.
economy
The Jagdhaus holiday resort lives from tourism. There are several large restaurants in the village.
literature
- City of Schmallenberg (Hrsg.): From the story of the hunting lodge . In: Our village Fleckenberg , 1996.
- Dorfgemeinschaft Jagdhaus: Festschrift 250 Years of Hunting Lodge 1735–1985 , Grobbel-Verlag, 1985
- Josef Lauber: Stammreihen Sauerland families, Volume IV, parish Berghausen - Fleckenberg - Lenne , Jagdhaus, p. 293 ff., Richard Schwarzbild dissertation print Witterschlick near Bonn, 1977
Web links
- Jagdhaus (Schmallenberg) in the Westphalia Cultural Atlas
Individual evidence
- ↑ Population figures Schmallenberg 2019 , accessed on July 2, 2020
- ↑ 250 years of the Jagdhaus, 1985, p. 7
- ^ History of the Hotel Jagdhaus Wiese
- ↑ Stephanie Reekers: The regional development of the districts and communities of Westphalia 1817-1967 . Aschendorff, Münster Westfalen 1977, ISBN 3-402-05875-8 , p. 234 .
- ^ 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, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 335 f .