Taught

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the city of Lehrte
Taught
Map of Germany, position of the city of Lehrte highlighted

Coordinates: 52 ° 22 ′  N , 9 ° 59 ′  E

Basic data
State : Lower Saxony
County : Hanover region
Height : 61 m above sea level NHN
Area : 127.07 km 2
Residents: 44,030 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 347 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 31275
Primaries : 05132, 05136, 05175
License plate : H
Community key : 03 2 41 011
City structure: 9 districts

City administration address :
Rathausplatz 1
31275 Lehrte
Website : www.lehrte.de
Mayor : Frank Prüße ( CDU )
Location of the city of Lehrte in the Hanover region
Region Hannover Niedersachsen Wedemark Burgwedel Neustadt am Rübenberge Burgdorf Uetze Lehrte Isernhagen Langenhagen Garbsen Wunstorf Seelze Barsinghausen Sehnde Hannover Gehrden Laatzen Wennigsen Ronnenberg Hemmingen Pattensen Springe Landkreis Hameln-Pyrmont Landkreis Schaumburg Landkreis Nienburg/Weser Landkreis Heidekreis Landkreis Celle Landkreis Peine Landkreis Gifhorn Landkreis Hildesheimmap
About this picture

Lehrte is a town and independent municipality in the Hanover region in Lower Saxony and a typical railway town . The center of the city of Lehrte is 16 kilometers as the crow flies from the city center of the state capital Hanover .

geography

Neighboring communities

Isernhagen Burgdorf Uetze
Hanover Neighboring communities Edemissen ( Peine District )
Peine ( Peine District )
Sighted Hohenhameln
( Peine district )

City structure

Districts km² Residents
Ahlten 19.68 5,493
Aligse 5.75 1,696
Arpke 10.69 2,879
Haemelerwald 18.45 4,622
Huge 19.40 2,412
Kolshorn 6.40 368
Lehrte (core city) 20.46 23,493
Röddensen 4.62 238
Sievershausen 6.54 2,375
Stone fronds 13.24 1,799
Altwarmbüchener Moor 1.83 -0

(Source: Area [as of December 31, 2016] and inhabitants [as of December 31, 2015] )

history

First settlement

The oldest archaeological finds in Lehrte date from the Stone Age (2000 BC). On the western slope of the Ramsberg (also Rhamesberg), stone tools and implements were found in living pits. A burial ground was also found there in 1845 during the construction of the Lehrte – Hildesheim railway line. The location of the dwelling pits is not accidental, but rather determined by the stream below, which supplied water and at the same time offered protection.

History of the core site

The village of Lehrte was first mentioned in a document in 1147. Like many Germanic villages, it emerged on a hill and on the water. The village consisted of three paths that were later expanded into streets: Osterstraße, Mühlenstraße (today part of Marktstraße) and Hagenstraße. The three streets meet today as they did then on Lindenberg. For centuries, Lehrte was a relatively insignificant farming village. Between 1147 and 1302, the exact date is not known, a chapel was founded in the village as a subdivision of the church in Steinwedel, today's Nikolauskirche. At that time, Lehrte was already in the historic settlement area of ​​the Great Free .

With the construction of the Hanover – Braunschweig railway from 1843, Lehrte first gained importance in the following years with the extension of the railway lines to Celle , Hildesheim and Berlin ( Lehrter Bahn with Lehrter Bahnhof ). At the beginning of the railway construction the place had 755 inhabitants, 60 years later about ten times as many. In 1898 Lehrte were granted city rights. With the railroad industry settled, so there was a pottery, mineral fertilizer, cement, canning and a sugar factory.

Taught in 1896
The location of the core city in the urban area of ​​Lehrte
town hall
Former potash production facilities

In 1881 Hermann Manske and other limited partners founded the Germania cement factory in Lehrter Feldmark . It was the second factory in the cement industry near Hanover . After Manske had donated a hospital with land to the city of Lehrte in 1892, the city named a street as Manskestrasse in his honor . In the same year he built the Villa Nordstern . In 1910 the cement factory was shut down. In 1911 a cattle sales hall was built, and Lehrte became the most important cattle handling point in northern Germany. In 1912, the Bergmannssegen potash shaft was sunk. During this time schools and especially the grammar school were built, which for a long time was the only one in the Burgdorf district.

In the mid-1930s, a motorway, today's Federal Motorway 2 , was built north of Lehrte . During the extraction of the sand and gravel required for this, the Hohnhorstsee was created , which at that time was still called the Autobahnsee and after which the Autobahn service station at Lehrte in Lehrter See was named. The rest area south of the motorway originally bordered the lake, but was demolished in 1987.

History of the new city Lehrte

By the year 1974 Lehrte was a town in the district of Burgdorf in Lüneburg . The territorial reform that year united the districts of Burgdorf, Neustadt am Rübenberge , Springe am Deister (only partially) and Hanover to form a new greater district of Hanover, which was assigned to the Hanover administrative district . As part of this municipal area reform, the then city of Lehrte and the municipalities of Ahlten, Aligse, Arpke, Hämelerwald (previously in the district of Peine ), Immensen, Kolshorn, Röddensen, Sievershausen and Steinwedel joined forces with the area change agreement of December 14th , 1974 1973 merged to form the "new town of Lehrte". Since November 1, 2001, the former district of Hanover including the city of Lehrte and the state capital of Hanover have formed the Hanover region . As a result of the dissolution of the Hanover administrative district on December 31, 2004, membership of it ended.

Since 1975 the city has changed its urban development. Commercial wastelands that were no longer required were used again (new center). Former railroad crossings crossings were up by independent trough structures replaced. Industrial and commercial enterprises were already established in new commercial areas on the outskirts of the city in the 1970s . Urban development has been severely hindered by Deutsche Bahn for more than 30 years; very large fallow railway areas are still in the Lehrter core city area (Richtersdorf, old marshalling yard). The 115 hectares of inner-city areas freed up in 2002 with the demolition of the former sugar factory were used to expand the city park by 28 hectares as well as for additional inner-city sales areas, which at the same time led to urban sprawl. After violent political disputes, a hardware store was built on another part of the sugar factory site in 2012. The remaining area (C area) is to be settled with companies from the service sector, but so far (as of autumn 2017) no suitable applicants have been found.

On May 25, 2009, the city received the title “ Place of Diversity ” awarded by the federal government .

Population development

Population development of Lehrte.svg Population development of Lehrte - from 1871
Desc-i.svg
Population development of Lehrte. Above from 1000 to 2016. Below an excerpt from 1871
  • 1000: 64
  • 1350: 200
  • 1638: 350
  • 1800: 565
  • 1850: 800
  • 1900: 6.554
  • 1905: 7,875 (December 1st census)
  • 1914: 9.843
  • 1925: 10.714
  • 1939: 11,729 (May 17th census)
  • 1950: 19,172 (June 30)
  • 1961: 21,257 (June 6 census)
  • 1970: 21,974 (May 27 census)
  • 1974: 37,861 (territorial reform)
  • 1981: 38,371 (June 30)
  • 1987: 39,577 (May 25 census)
  • 1990: 40,086 (June 30)
  • 1995: 41,728 (June 30)
  • 2000: 43,683 (June 30)
  • 2005: 44,149 (December 31)
  • 2006: 43,925 (December 31)
  • 2011: 43,248 (December 31)
  • 2015: 44,410 (December 31)
  • 2016: 43,720 (December 31)
  • 2017: 43,932 (December 31)
  • 2018: 43,999 (December 31)

politics

Local election 2016
Turnout: 57.9%
 %
40
30th
20th
10
0
37.0%
34.7%
11.2%
5.3%
3.9%
3.7%
3.2%
1.0%
Gains and losses
compared to 2011
 % p
   6th
   4th
   2
   0
  -2
  -4
  -6
  -8th
-2.4  % p
-0.3  % p
-7.0  % p
+ 5.3  % p
+ 2.1  % p.p.
+1.5  % p
+1.5  % p
+1.0  % p

City Council

The city ​​council has 41 seats. These are divided between 40 council members and the mayor . The council is composed as follows:

Since November 2016, Lehrte has been governed by a council coalition made up of the SPD, Greens and Die Linke. This replaced the coalition of the SPD and the Greens that existed from 2006 to 2016.

mayor

Frank Prüße (CDU) was elected mayor for seven years in the runoff election for mayor's office on June 16, 2019 . He has held this office since November 1, 2019. On this day he replaced Klaus Sidortschuk (SPD), who in turn was elected mayor on September 11, 2011.

Chronicle of the mayor

  • November 1, 2019 - Date: Frank Prüße (CDU)
  • September 11, 2011–31. October 2019: Klaus Sidortschuk (SPD)
  • 2001 to October 1, 2011: Jutta Voß (SPD)
  • 1972 to 1974 and 1976 to 2001: Helmut Schmezko (SPD)

City coat of arms

The design of the coat of arms of the city of Lehrte comes from the heraldist and glass painter Carl Busch .

  • The approval was granted on May 20, 1927 by the Prussian State Ministry .
  • The town of Lehrte, which was newly formed by law on March 1, 1974, has adopted the coat of arms of the previous town of Lehrte, which was approved by the district president in Hanover on May 6, 1974.
Lehrte coat of arms
Blazon : “In red a silver St. Andrew's cross , covered with a golden , blue-armored , right-wing lion . Above a golden shield head in the form of a tinned wall crown with three towers . "
Foundation of the coat of arms: The city of Lehrte belonged to the "Great Free" . Therefore, like the other communities in this area, it leads the golden lion in the red field. The St. Andrew's cross symbolizes the railway junction, which is formed here by the meeting of five railway lines. The city charter is indicated by the crown of the wall with three towers shown on the coat of arms.

Twin cities

Sister cities of the city of Lehrte are Staßfurt in Saxony-Anhalt , Trzcianka (formerly Schönlanke) in Poland and Vanves in France . There are friendship between cities with Mönsterås in Sweden and Ypres in Belgium

There are also church partnerships in the departments of Valle and Cauca in Colombia as well as Borna in Saxony and Johannesburg in South Africa .

religion

The church of the same name on the market square from 1876 and the older Nikolauskirche on Osterstraße belong to the Matthäusgemeinde . The modern Markuskirche, located on the Distelborn and named after the evangelist Markus , was built in 1961–63 by the parish of the same name. Both parishes belong to the Evangelical Lutheran parish of Burgdorf .

The Catholic St. Bernward Church is located on Feldstrasse, it was built in 1894/95 and considerably expanded in 1935/36. Her parish of the same name belongs to the dean's office of Hanover in the diocese of Hildesheim , and it also has a branch church in Ahlten .

The parish hall on the Köhlerheide belongs to the Evangelical Free Church Johannesgemeinde ( Baptists ), the Evangelical Free Church Ecclesia belongs to the Federation of Free Church Pentecostal Congregations and has its seat on Gartenstraße. The New Apostolic congregation has a church on Everner Strasse. The state church community Lehrte was affiliated to the community in Burgdorf in 1986 .

Further parishes are located in the villages incorporated into Lehrte.

The Muslim community has a mosque on the “Zum Alten Dorf” street.

Culture and sights

The cultural center of the city is the Kurt-Hirschfeld-Forum , in which events of the Theater for Lower Saxony (former Hanover State Theater) and traveling stages take place. The city library and the city archive are connected to the forum.

In the half-timbered house in the city park readings, concerts, cabarets and the like take place. Since 1984 the music festival Blues in Lehrte has taken place once a year in the Lehrter Stadtpark , where not only regional bands but also international musicians perform. Art exhibitions can be seen in the Alte Schlosserei Gallery on the site of the former sugar factory and in the Nikolauskirche .

A program cinema ( Das Andere Kino ) offers cinema as part of an open youth work .

In addition, the oldest and largest mechanical signal box in Northern Germany is located in Lehrte , the signal box Lpf is now a museum.

The old water tower at the new city park

Lehrter water tower (location)

The water tower is the landmark of the city chosen by the citizens of Lehrter. It was built in 1912 by the company Robert Grastorf GmbH from Hanover, measures 44.57 meters from the ground to the top of the roof (without the weather vane) and holds 250 cubic meters of water. In spring 2003 the tower went out of service. In a joint project between the municipal utilities and the urban history working group of the city marketing association, the Lehrter water tower has been given outdoor lighting.

Lehrter clarification ponds (location)

The clarification ponds of the former sugar factory can be found in the Thönser Bruch to the east of the city. Their total area is 38 hectares. The biological sewage treatment plant, which became superfluous when the sugar factory closed in 1998, has been transformed into a biotope since it was shut down. The tranquility owed to the poor development with paths primarily favors the biodiversity of birds. Up until 2008 ornithologists counted more than 260 bird species here. The clarification ponds are owned by the Kulturlandpflege Foundation. The water that escapes through evaporation and seepage is fed through deep groundwater and through existing, newly connected receiving waters.

Iron Age House open-air museum

Next to the Naturfreundehaus Grafhorn bei Arpke there is a stable house from the Iron Age . The building reconstruction, inaugurated in August 2016, is used as an open-air museum.

Architectural monuments

Economy and Infrastructure

economy

Exlibris H. Finkenstedt's garden fertilizer;
Artist: Julius Klinger
Share for more than 300 marks in the share sugar factory Lehrte on June 1, 1884

Agriculture has traditionally been a strong industry. For this reason, Lehrte had been the headquarters of the Actien-Zucker-Fabrik Lehrte (renamed Lehrter Zucker AG in 1962), which was merged in 1990 to form “Zuckerverbund Nord Aktiengesellschaft”, a predecessor of Nordzucker AG . There was a large sugar factory in the center of Lehrter , which was closed at the end of 1998 due to the concentration in the sugar industry. The “Sugar Factory Shopping Center” was opened on 23 November 2005 on part of the site of the former sugar factory, while another part was used to expand the city park.

Since 1965 the household appliance manufacturer Miele from Gütersloh has been operating a factory in Lehrte, which u. a. manufactures commercial washing and ironing machines.

There is also diversification in agriculture in Lehrte . In addition to conventional cultivation, alternative farming methods are increasingly represented, one example of which is Gut Adolphshof . New sources of income for farmers are in systems for renewable energies such as biogas and photovoltaics .

The Bergmannssegen Hugo salt mine existed from 1910 to 1994 , and flooding began in 1998. The block conveyor frame has been preserved.

Due to its central location at the intersection of federal motorways 2 and 7 , Lehrte is becoming increasingly important as a traffic junction and logistics center . In Lehrte, for example, there are transshipment warehouses for the discounter Aldi-Nord , the food company Rewe Group , the tire retailer Delticom , the Hornbach hardware store , the Hellmann freight forwarder and the DPD parcel service . The Schäfers Brot large bakery is mainly produced in a bread factory in Lehrte. The factory was completed in October 1999 and supplies around 250 branches.

The chemical industry is represented by an Actega plant (lacquers), the Friedrich Branding GmbH & Co. Efbecol adhesive factory and the Lehrte chemical factory (salts).

Lehrte is the location of a THW local association. A technical train as well as the specialist groups “Infrastructure” and “Management and Communication” are located here.

education

Building of the middle school of the grammar school in the Friedrichstrasse

There are eleven primary schools in the city of Lehrte, seven of them in localities:

  • Elementary school taught I
  • Lehrte-Süd primary school
  • St. Bernward School (Catholic)
  • Albert Schweitzer School
  • Ahlten primary school
  • Aueschule Aligse
  • Aueschule Steinwedel
  • Primary school in the Hainhoop
  • Elementary School Hämelerwald
  • Heinrich Bokemeyer Elementary School Immensen
  • Primary school in the Kleegarten

A secondary school, a secondary school and an integrated comprehensive school exist as secondary schools . In addition, a secondary school will start in the school year 2018/19 at the Lehrte Ost school center in the Hämelerwald district. The grammar school is the oldest in the former Burgdorf district . There is also a special school (learning disabilities).

  • High school taught
  • Realschule Taught
  • Secondary school taught
  • Special school Lehrte
  • IGS Lehrte
  • IGS Lehrte Oberstufe (from school year 2015/2016)
  • Oberschule Hämelerwald (from school year 2018/2019)

The health prevention project “ Lehrter Modell ” started in 2001 at the former orientation level Lehrte Süd .

energy

A large substation has been located in the Ahlten district since the 1920s . From this substation, a test facility for high-voltage direct current transmission to Misburg was set up in 1944 .

traffic

Rail transport

Former signal box where the routes to Hanover (left) and Celle (right) separate
Railway power converter plant in Lehrte

In the middle of the 19th century, Lehrte developed into an important railway junction for the Royal Hanoverian State Railways and became a typical so-called railway town . In 1843 the Hanover – Peine railway line was built via Lehrte, which was extended to Braunschweig in the following years and extended with side lines from Lehrte to Celle (1845) and to Hildesheim (1846). In 1844 the station building was also built in the classical style based on plans by Eduard Ferdinand Schwarz.

The Berlin-Lehrter Railway was built by the Magdeburg-Halberstädter Railway Company (MHE) and opened continuously in 1871. It was in competition with the existing railway line via Magdeburg and Braunschweig . The end of the line was the Lehrter Bahnhof in Berlin , which was demolished in 1958. The new Berlin Central Station , located at this point today, still reminds of this with the addition of "Lehrter Bahnhof" to its name. Further routes led from Lehrte via Celle to Hamburg , Hildesheim and Hanover.

The railway line to Hildesheim , which divided the southern core city into a western and an eastern half, was relocated in 1990 and reconnected to the route network east of Lehrte. This resulted in a long-desired traffic relief in the area of ​​the city center. The old embankment was redesigned as an inner-city green corridor. The railway barriers typical of Lehrte had thus disappeared in the city center.

In 1998 the high-speed line from Hanover via Lehrte was opened along the old Berlin-Lehrter railway via Meinersen , Gifhorn , Wolfsburg , Oebisfelde , Stendal and Spandau to Berlin. Today, Lehrte is purely a local train station, as the ICE and IC travel in the direction of Berlin and the IC in the direction of Leipzig.

For local passenger traffic , Lehrte is an important hub in the Greater Hanover (GVH) traffic with a connection to the Hanover S-Bahn . Among other things, train connections of different categories from / to Bielefeld , Braunschweig, Celle, Hanover, Hildesheim, Rheine and Wolfsburg stop or end in Lehrte.

The former marshalling yard at the intersection of the north-south and east-west freight lines was reduced in size by half of its previous facilities after its closure from 1960 to 1964. Its remains were converted into a container terminal in which freight wagons no longer have to be maneuvered. The facility is called "Megahub Lehrte".

In the district of Ahlten there is a traction current converter plant with substation .

Road traffic

Bundesautobahn 2 at the Lehrter See service area

Taught is up to that of Dortmund Hannover, Braunschweig and Magdeburg until after Berlin leading Bundesautobahn 2 abrupt and is characterized by three connection points (taught, taught East, taught-Hämelerwald).

About seven kilometers west of Lehrte, the federal motorway 7 , which runs from north to south, runs from Hamburg via Hanover to Hildesheim, Göttingen , Kassel and Ulm and crosses the A 2 at the Hanover-East motorway junction , which is in the Ahlten district of the Lehrter city. Lehrte is connected to the A 7 via another junction ( Hanover-Anderten ).

Bundesstrasse 443 runs through Lehrte in a north-south direction . This leads north via Burgdorf to federal highway 37 or federal highway 3 to Celle and to the south via Sehnde in Pattensen to federal highway 6 . The B 443 crosses the federal highway 65 from Hanover to Peine south of Lehrte .

The municipality was honored in 2009 with the title “Lower Saxony's most bicycle-friendly municipality” for its efforts to improve the cycle path infrastructure, for example by converting a former railway line into a cycle path.

In 2016 the old and dilapidated parking garage at the train station was replaced by a new one.

Bus transport

There are seven bus routes in Lehrte, three of which operate exclusively in the city center. A night bus line runs on Friday and Saturday. All of Lehrte's villages can be reached by bus from the city center, as well as the more remote cities of Burgdorf and Sehnde .

Personalities

sons and daughters of the town

Personalities associated with the city

  • Hermann Manske (1839–1918), built the Portland cement factory Germania and donated the Lehrter Hospital
  • Friedrich Schulze-Langendorf (1886–1970), politician (NSDAP), died in Lehrte
  • Hugo Bamberger (1887–1949), chemist, entrepreneur and company founder, until the " Aryanization " partner in the chemical factory Lehrte (CFL)
  • Alfred Schlemm (1894–1986), an officer during the First and Second World Wars, lived on the Schlemmschen Gut in Ahlten until his death
  • August Tünnermann (1896–1982), politician (KPD), 1946 Vice-President of the appointed Hanover State Parliament, died in Lehrte
  • Bogislaw von Bonin (1908–1980), officer and publicist, died in Lehrte
  • Fritz Linde (1917–1967), politician ( FDP ) and member of the Lower Saxony state parliament , died in Lehrte
  • Helmut Schmezko (1939–2013), politician (SPD), honorary mayor of Lehrte
  • Reinhard Mey (* 1942), musician, is one of the former residents of Ahlten
  • Axel Saipa (* 1943), city director from 1980 to 1992
  • Gerhard Schröder (* 1944), politician (SPD), former Prime Minister of Lower Saxony and former Federal Chancellor, lived in Immensen from 1984 to 1997 during his marriage to Hiltrud Hensen . The marriage was concluded in Lehrte and divorced there
  • Joachim Lehrmann (* 1949), engineer, genealogist, local researcher and author for regional history, lives in the Hämelerwald district
  • Werner Lampe (* 1952), winner of national and international swimming competitions and Olympic participant, lives in Arpke
  • Ursula von der Leyen (* 1958), politician (CDU), President of the European Commission from November 1, 2019 , attended the Lehrte high school
  • Ronald M. Schernikau (1960–1991), writer, grew up in Lehrte, attended grammar school in Lehrte
  • Hans-Joachim Deneke-Jöhrens (* 1961), politician (CDU), member of the Lower Saxony state parliament and the city council in Lehrte
  • Hubertus Heil (* 1972), politician (SPD), Federal Minister for Labor and Social Affairs since March 14, 2018, grew up in the Lehrter village of Hämelerwald
  • Tatjana Steinhauer (* 1991), national water polo player and European Championship participant, grew up in Lehrte

literature

  • Wilhelm Behre: Taught in old views . European Library: Zaltbommel / Netherlands 1980, 116 pages, ISBN 90-288-1203-2 .
  • Paul Bode: Documents on the history of the city of Lehrte . Stadtverwaltung Lehrte (Ed.): Lehrte 1954, 216 pages.
  • Ernst Bödeker: Teaching village and town history . Stadtverwaltung Lehrte (Ed.): Lehrte 1948, 34 pages.
  • Hans H. Götting, Ernst Bödeker, Paul Bode: From the beginnings to the development of the village of Lehrte . Verlag der Bucherstube Jens Veenhuis, Lehrte 1996.
  • Lothar Rolf Luhm: Even in the great outdoors, many an old house has its little secret . Volksbank-Lehrte-Stiftung (Ed.): Lehrte 2009, 87 pages.
  • Lehrter Land & People: Magazine on history, culture and local history . Hübner, Lehrte (trade journal published since 1994).
  • Werner Mikus: The effects of a railway junction on the geographical structure of a settlement: using the special example of Lehrte and a comparison with Bebra and Olten / Switzerland . Freiburg Geographical Hefts , volume 3. (Zugl .: Diss. Univ. Freiburg 1966): Freiburg 1966.
  • Gerhard K. Schmidt: 1898–1998 One hundred years of the city of Lehrte . Ed .: Stadt Lehrte 1998, ISBN 3-00-002634-7 .
  • Hans Veit: Taught before the First World War - An illustrated chronicle from 1901 to 1914 . Verlag August Lax, Hildesheim 1987, ISBN 3-7848-4038-8 .
  • Hans Veit: Taught in World War I and in the Weimar Republic: 1914 - 1932 . Verlag der Lehrter Bücherstube, Lehrte 1989.

Web links

Commons : Taught  - collection of images
Wikivoyage: Lehrte  - travel guide

Individual evidence

  1. State Office for Statistics Lower Saxony, LSN-Online regional database, Table 12411: Update of the population, as of December 31, 2019  ( help ).
  2. Population and areas. In: Website of the city of Lehrte. December 31, 2016, accessed April 20, 2019.
  3. ^ Paul Bode: Documentary on the history of the city of Lehrte. Ed .: Stadtverwaltung Lehrte, Lehrte 1954, p. 93, 2nd paragraph.
  4. ↑ Information boards between Hohnhorstsee and Bundesautobahn 2, read on May 15, 2010.
  5. ^ Area change agreement on the occasion of the rebuilding of the city of Lehrte. In: Website of the city of Lehrte. December 14, 1973, accessed on April 20, 2019 (PDF; 17 kB).
  6. Expose on the commercial area Lehrte-Mitte / east of Manskestrasse (C - area). In: Website of the city of Lehrte. February 13, 2015, accessed on February 20, 2019 (PDF; 849 kB).
  7. Frank Prüße (CDU) is Lehrte's new mayor. In: Website Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung . June 19, 2019, accessed November 28, 2019 .
  8. City hall chief Jutta Voss is retiring. In: My Heimat Lehrte website. November 1, 2011, accessed November 28, 2019 .
  9. ^ Mourning the political architect of modern Lehrte. In: Website Marktspiegel. June 5, 2013, accessed November 28, 2019 .
  10. ^ A b Landkreis Hannover (ed.): Wappenbuch Landkreis Hannover . Self-published, Hanover 1985, p. 240-241 .
  11. ↑ Sister cities. In: Website of the city of Lehrte. Retrieved April 20, 2019.
  12. Blues in Lehrte. In: www.blues-in-lehrte.de. Retrieved April 20, 2019.
  13. The Other Cinema.
  14. Hans-Wilhelm Möblitz: "The Lehrter water tower." In: Lehrter Land & People. Issue 34, autumn 2010, p. 1 ff, ISSN  0946-0365 , ISBN 978-3-927359-17-8 .
  15. ↑ The foundation takes over Lehrte Zuckerteich. In: www.stiftungkulturlandpflege.de/Einbecker Morgenpost. September 17, 2005 (PDF; 71.5 kB).
  16. Lothar R. Luhm: Nature has conquered the clarification ponds . In: Anzeiger für Burgdorf / Lehrte. April 30, 2008, accessed on April 20, 2019 (PDF; 153 kB).
  17. Horst-Dieter Brand: The Iron Age House near Lehrte is to have a thatched roof this year. In: Website Marktspiegel Verlag. October 13, 2015, accessed April 20, 2019.
  18. Open-Air Museum - The Iron Age Homestead ( Memento from August 28, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) In: Website Natur- und Kulturhistorische Bildungsstätte Naturfreundehaus Grafhorn. 2016, accessed April 20, 2019.
  19. Sandra Koehler: Open Air Museum Count Horn invites you to travel through time. In: Website Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung . August 28, 2016, accessed April 20, 2019.
  20. The Nordzucker Chronicle. In: Nordzucker website. 2018, accessed April 20, 2019.
  21. Professional information from Lehrte . In: Lower Saxony Economy. November 2017, p. 28.
  22. Gernot-Rainer Storm: World Diabetic Day - Preventing Diabetes. November 14, 2001, accessed on April 20, 2019 (PDF; 24.2 kB).
  23. Dietrich Oeding, Bernd R. Oswald: Electrical power plants and networks. Verlag Springer, Berlin 2004, ISBN 3-540-00863-2 , p. 838 ( excerpt in the Google book search).
  24. Construction of a mega-hub in Lehrte can start in 2012. ( Memento from December 28, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) In: Deutsche Verkehrs-Zeitung . November 21, 2011, accessed April 20, 2019.
  25. Lehrte recognized as the most bicycle-friendly municipality. In: Website image. June 17, 2009. Retrieved April 20, 2019.
  26. Lehrte is Lower Saxony's most bicycle-friendly municipality in 2009. ( Memento from December 22, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) In: Website of the city of Lehrte. May 5, 2010, accessed April 20, 2019.