Lütgeneder

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Lütgeneder
City of Borgentreich
Coordinates: 51 ° 32 '26 "  N , 9 ° 12' 11"  E
Height : 182 m above sea level NHN
Area : 6.39 km²
Residents : 443
Population density : 69 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : 1st January 1975
Postal code : 34434
Area code : 05643
map
Location of Lütgeneder in Borgentreich

Lütgeneder is part of the town of Borgentreich in the Höxter district in North Rhine-Westphalia .

geography

Lütgeneder is located in the middle of the Warburger Börde on federal highway 241 and is about five kilometers south-west of the city of Borgentreich .

Neighboring places

The neighboring towns are Borgentreich, Rösebeck , Daseburg , Dössel , Hohenwepel (all three in the city of Warburg ), Großeneder and Eissen (the latter in the city of Willebadessen ), starting clockwise in the north .

history

In 1987 the village of Lütgeneder can look back on 1100 years of existence. It was first mentioned in a document in the autumn of 887, when Emperor Karl III. At the request of Bishop Biso of Paderborn, he confirmed the privileges of the Heerse ( Neuenheerse ) canonical monastery, founded in 868, and also gave the monastery ten Hufen with house and yard and all accessories in the "Villa Nadri". The name “Neder” developed from the place name “Nadri” and because the oldest documents did not yet differentiate between West and East Neder or “major and minor neder (Groß- und Kleinneder)”, the town of Großeneder also has its 1100- year of existence on this certificate.

Lütgeneder is located in the heart of the Warburg Börde . At the outskirts of the village the Eder (Eggel) , which rises in Bonenburg below the church and flows through Engar and Großeneder to the east , joins the Eggel ; it takes their name and flows into the Diemel near Haueda .

The Keupermulde , as the Börde is also known, owes its fertility to the loess that was blown in during the last ice age and deposited in layers up to 10 m thick. Wind and water continued to shape the landscape, clearing flat valleys and creating wide ridges. Last but not least, volcanoes of the tertiary period also shaped the landscape . They broke through the Muschelkalk , Keuper and loess layers in several places and formed conical mountains in which the eruptive masses cooled to basalt . This is how Desenberg , Dörenberg and Hüssenberg emerged, as well as the Tannenkopf (also called Wörtenberg) and the flat, wooded hilltop of the Weißholzes in the corridor of Lütgeneder. The basalt stone inside this dome has been quarried since 1835 for the construction of the county roads and has been a welcome source of income for the village for over 100 years. Today the white wood as the only beech forest in the tree-poor bordland landscape invites the residents of Lütgeneder and the surrounding area to take relaxing walks.

Lütgeneder has always been a farming village and has remained so to this day. With an average of 68 soil points , the productive soil is one of the most fertile on the Warburg Börde . Surrounded by large grain fields and lush meadows , the houses of the clustered village crowd around the pointed church tower .

Incorporation

The municipality of Lütgeneder also lost its independence on January 1, 1975 due to the reorganization of the area , which was laid down in the Paderborn Act . It became a district of the area municipality Borgentreich. Instead of the previous council with a mayor at the top now representing mayor alone the interests of the village. This official title is reminiscent of the former mayor who headed the municipalities from 1803 to 1945, but their competencies are much less. Klaus Reddemann has held this honorary position since 1999 ; he is advised and supported by a local advisory board.

Religions

Lütgeneder is a strongly Catholic place. The community belongs to the Pfarrverband Borgentreich at the St. Michael church in Baroque style was built in 1728 and is relatively large and lush failed for such a small place.

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. ^ 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. 328 .