Lauthausen

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Lauthausen
City of Hennef (Sieg)
Coordinates: 50 ° 46 ′ 34 ″  N , 7 ° 19 ′ 41 ″  E
Height : 81 m
Residents : 571  (Jan 2020)
Incorporation : 1st August 1969
Postal code : 53773
Area code : 02242
Lauthausen (North Rhine-Westphalia)
Lauthausen

Location of Lauthausen in North Rhine-Westphalia

Lauthausen, aerial photo (2015)
Lauthausen, aerial photo (2015)
The chapel in Lauthausen

Lauthausen is a district of the city of Hennef (Sieg) in the Rhein-Sieg district , North Rhine-Westphalia .

location

Lauthausen is delimited between the Bödinger Berg and the Sieg on its northern bank. The old Roman road from Hennef-Warth over the Nutscheid to Siegerland used to lead through the village . Today the main thoroughfare is Kreisstraße 36.

history

The place name is made up of the two words Laut and Hausen . Laut refers to the name "Ludo" in use at the time. The word hausen indicates a Saxon settlement made up of several houses. Accordingly one can translate Lauthausen with the houses of the Ludo .

The village was first mentioned in a document in 1311.

Lauthausen was a separate monastery in the Middle Ages and belonged to the parish Eigen . After the Honnschaft Bödingen Lauthausen was struck, the following localities also belonged to the Honnschaft: Auelsheck, Berg , Driesch , Halberg , Kningelthal , Niederhalberg , Oberauel and Oberhalberg .

Lauthausen and the surrounding villages belonged to the Blankenberg office in the Duchy of Berg until 1806 and to the Grand Duchy of the same name until 1813 . In 1808 Lauthausen became the seat of a Mairie in the canton of Hennef and belonged to the Rhine department .

Lauthausen community

After the treaties concluded at the Congress of Vienna , the region came to the Kingdom of Prussia . Under the Prussian administration the community Lauthausen was the administrative district of the mayoralty Lauthausen assigned to that part of the circle Uckerath in Cologne Region was. After the Uckerath district was dissolved (1820), the Lauthausen community became part of the Siegburg district (renamed Siegkreis in 1825 ). The municipalities of Altenbödingen , Braschoss and Happerschoss also belonged to the Lauthausen mayor .

In 1885, the municipality of Lauthausen also included the villages of Berg , Bödingen , Driesch , Halberg , Kningelthal , Lauthausen, Niederhalberg , Oberauel , Oberhalberg and Oppelrath .

In the year 1885 there were 618 inhabitants in 140 residential buildings; all were catholic and belonged to the parish of Bödingen. The community had an area of ​​605 ha , of which 299 ha were arable, 42 ha were meadows and 178 ha were forest.

In 1933 there were 569 inhabitants in the community in 1939 there were 569 people.

On October 1, 1956, the Lauthausen community became an unofficial community through the incorporation of the previous communities of Altenbödingen and Happerschoss. It comprised most of the original mayor's office, renamed Amt Lauthausen in 1927. As part of the local reorganization of the Bonn area , the Lauthausen community was dissolved on August 1, 1969. Most of the localities belonging to it were assigned to the newly formed community of Hennef (Sieg).

Population development

Based on the results of the census, the community of Lauthausen and its localities had the following population figures:

year Residents
1816 590
1843 736
1871 593
1905 508
1950 737
1961 3705

chapel

The chapel in Lauthausen is a half-timbered building with a small roof turret. It is dedicated to St. Joseph . After the First World War, the originally introduced wooden cross was removed due to decay, instead the clay floor was covered with stone slabs and a stone altar was erected. After shell fire in World War II, the chapel had to be repaired, and a memorial stone was erected for the five dead in the village. In 1965, the post-war work had to be professionally improved again, with the floor and roof also being renewed. After this work, the chapel was rededicated and dedicated to Joseph the worker , on whose feast day a Holy Mass is held here on May 1st .

Others

The Land brewery was founded on Selbach in 1870. It chilled its beer in an ice cellar and also supplied the neighboring communities.

The place has a sports field and several campsites on the Sieg.

swell

  • Eugen Schröter: Streif through the city of Hennef. Renate Schröter Verlag 1998

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hennef: Housing directory , residents ' registration office of the city of Hennef
  2. a b page no longer available , search in web archives: Archives in North Rhine-Westphalia - administrative affiliation Hennef@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.archive.nrw.de
  3. a b Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia , Publishing House of the Royal Statistical Bureau (ed.), 1888, page 116
  4. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. District of Siegkreis. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  5. ^ Law on the local reorganization of the Bonn area (Bonn Law) of July 1, 1969; Sections 15 and 16
  6. Census results from 1816 to 1970 of the cities and municipalities . Contributions to the statistics of the Rhein-Sieg-Kreis, Vol. 17 / Siegburg 1980, pp. 46–47.
  7. P. Gabriel Busch (Ed.): Chapel wreath around the Michaelsberg, 113 chapels in the old dean's office Siegburg, Verlag Abtei Michaelsberg, 1985