Lippramsdorf

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Lippramsdorf
"Divided diagonally to the right by gold (yellow) and blue in a wavy cut, above that below the center a blue-yellow bar in alternating colors also divided in a wavy cut"
Coordinates: 51 ° 42 ′ 55 "  N , 7 ° 5 ′ 47"  E
Height : 42 m above sea level NN
Area : 19.44 km²
Residents : 3596  (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 185 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : 1st January 1975
Postal code : 45721
Area code : 02360
Lippramsdorf (North Rhine-Westphalia)
Lippramsdorf

Location of Lippramsdorf in North Rhine-Westphalia

The central square in Lippramsdorf
The central square in Lippramsdorf
The St. Lambertus Church
cenotaph

Lippramsdorf ( Low German : Ranstrop) is the second largest district of the city of Haltern am See in North Rhine-Westphalia with 3596 inhabitants (December 2019).

Geographical location

The place is located in the southwest of Münsterland in the Lippetal north of the Lippe .

history

Hramestorpe, the old name of Lippramsdorf, is first mentioned in a deed of donation from the year 889. At that time, Lippramsdorf was probably still part of the Lembeck parish . The Marienborn Cistercian convent , founded in 1230, was relocated to Coesfeld in 1243/44 . It was about five kilometers north of the church in the Hohe Mark. Lembeck Castle and from 1491 the Ostendorf House had the right of presentation . The Ostendorf family came to the von Raesfeld family in 1358 and remained in their possession for four centuries. It was not until 1825 that it was transferred to the Count of Merveldt zu Lembeck. The Bishop of Münster was sovereign until 1803.

Lippramsdorf was united with Haltern in 1811, separated from the city of Haltern in 1837 and added to the Haltern office in 1843 . During the first (Prussian) communal territorial reform in 1929, the town and office of Haltern, and thus Lippramsdorf as a municipality belonging to the office of Haltern, were removed from the Coesfeld district and encircled into the Recklinghausen district. As part of the (second) municipal territorial reform on January 1, 1975, the previously independent municipality of Lippramsdorf was incorporated into the town of Haltern, which was enlarged by the municipalities of the Haltern office. As a result, Lippramsdorf lost its communal independence and is now part of today's town of Haltern am See.

Shaft 8 of the Auguste Victoria colliery was sunk on the banks of the Lippe in 1963 ( ). 1978 to 1982 the system was expanded as a cable car and material delivery shaft. A depth of 1330 m was reached. Until December 2015, the facility was part of one of the last mining mines in the Ruhr mining industry . Its northern hike shaped Lippramsdorf for several decades. As a result of mining, however, mining damage was also increasingly described, especially in the Mersch district. World icon

Attractions

  • House Ostendorf in the district of Lippramsdorf-Freiheit (former moated castle and residence of the von Raesfeld zu Ostendorf family; today a construction company depot)
  • Biotope in the district of Lippramsdorf-Mersch (stagnant water that was created by subsidence in the 1980s in a former river bed of the Lippe)
  • Ludgerusbrunnen in the district of Lippramsdorf-Tannenberg (allegedly on the first bishop of Münster, Liudger, well digging on a slight hilltop; water level only 2.8 m below the lawn edge; even in extremely dry years, e.g. 1911, despite regular water withdrawal never dry like)
  • Tannenberg chapel in the district of Lippramsdorf-Tannenberg (St. Anna chapel built on the basis of a vow after surviving mortal danger)
  • St. Lambertus Parish Church (destroyed in the war in 1945, today's church building dates from 1951)
  • Heimathaus Lippramsdorf
  • Lady Chapel for Comforter of the Afflicted: The small court chapel was built between 2011 and 2012 to replace an older building and was consecrated on May 25, 2012. The client was the local Belustedde family, who fulfilled a vow they had previously made with the private chapel. The Gnadenkapelle from Kevelaer served as a model . The Lippramsdorfer Chapel has a hexagonal floor plan and a diameter of 7.50 meters. Inside there is space for around 25 people. The windows and some furnishings come from the Münster diocese archive . The Marienkapelle is open to the public and is also used as a pilgrimage station to Annaberg .

Personalities

Economy and Infrastructure

telecommunications

Since Lippramsdorf was an independent municipality until 1975, it has its own area code, despite the small number of inhabitants.

traffic

Lippramsdorf can be reached via the trunk road network via the A 43 Wuppertal - Münster , Haltern exit , and via the B 58 .

From 1877 on, Lippramsdorf had a stop on the Haltern - Wesel - Venlo line that was opened in 1874 . In 1901 this was closed and replaced by a train station further west . The Lippramsdorf station was a stop for passenger trains until 1962 and freight trains until 1986. After the line is closed, the listed building is privately owned. The station area is already outside Lippramsdorf in the area of ​​the city of Marl . Today the bus route 298 of the Vestische trams runs from Lippramsdorf to Haltern Bahnhof and Dorsten - Barkenberg .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Facts and Figures | City of Haltern am See. Retrieved March 10, 2020 .
  2. Facts and Figures | City of Haltern am See. Retrieved March 10, 2020 .
  3. ^ 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. 316 .
  4. ^ Report on Kapelle on the website of the Diocese of Münster from May 23, 2012
  5. ^ Rolf Swoboda: Venlo Railway. Haltern - Wesel - Venlo . VBN Verlag Bernd Neddermeyer, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-941712-04-1 , p. 316-319 .
  6. ^ Rolf Swoboda: Venlo Railway. Haltern - Wesel - Venlo . VBN Verlag Bernd Neddermeyer, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-941712-04-1 , p. 241-242 .