List of streets, squares and bridges in Hamburg-Langenhorn

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Location of Langenhorn in Hamburg and in the Hamburg-Nord district (light red)

The list of streets, squares and bridges in Hamburg-Langenhorn is an overview of the streets, squares and bridges currently available in the Hamburg district of Langenhorn . It is part of the list of traffic areas in Hamburg .

overview

In Langenhorn (district number 432, land register code 420) there are 46144 inhabitants (as of December 31, 2019) on 13.8 km². Langenhorn is in the postcode areas 22415, 22417 and 22419.

There are 256 designated traffic areas in Langenhorn, including two squares and nine bridges. These include the following groups of motifs (see column "Comments"):

  • Plants in the Raakmoor
  • Cities in the West German industrial area
  • Places north of Hamburg
  • Historical craft trades
  • doctors

Land maps

In the notes, two field maps from the years 1750 and 1804 are often mentioned with regard to the Langenhorn field names .

  • The map from 1750 was made by Georg Ferdinand Hartmann. It is located in the Hamburg State Archives . A copy of the map hangs in the Langenhorn town hall , Tangstedter Landstrasse 41 on the first floor, on the wall in the hallway. It can be viewed there during opening hours (Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.). The street Hartmannsau in Langenhorn was named after Georg Ferdinand Hartmann on May 30, 1920 .
  • The map from 1804 was made by Jacob Kock. A scan of a copy of the map is linked below under Web Links.

Overview of the streets

The following table gives an overview of all named traffic areas - streets, squares and bridges - in the district as well as some related information. In detail these are:

  • Name / location : current name of the street, square or bridge. Via the link ( ♁ Location ), the street, the square or the bridge can be displayed on various map services. The geoposition indicates approximately the middle. In the case of longer streets that lead through two or more parts of the city, it is therefore possible that the coordinate is in a different part of the city.
  • Street code: official street code, consisting of a letter (first letter of the street, the square or the bridge) and a three-digit number.
  • Length / dimensions in meters:
    Note: The length information contained in the overview are overview values rounded up or down according to mathematical rules , which were determined in the Digital Atlas North with the local scale. They are more for comparison purposes and, if official values ​​are known, are exchanged and marked separately.
    For squares, the dimensions are shown in the form a × b for rectangular systems or a × b × c for triangular systems with a as the longest edge.
    The addition ( in the district ) indicates how long the street is within the district if it runs through several districts.
  • Name origin : origin or reference of the name.
  • Date of designation : Year of the official designation or the first mention of a name, in case of uncertainty also the specification of a period.
  • Notes : Further information on nearby institutions, the history of the street, historical names, monuments, etc.
  • Image : Photo of the street or an adjacent object.
Name / location Road
key
Length / dimensions
(in meters)
Origin of name Date of designation Remarks image
Agnes-Gierck-Weg

( Location )

A676 0215 Agnes Gierck (1886–1944), Langenhorn resistance fighter against National Socialism 1997
(February 28)
The street was called Tannenkoppel from July 8, 1936, and Peter-Mühlens-Weg from November 1, 1945 (group of motifs: "Doctors"). Expansion: March 14, 1957. Part of the name was changed to Käkenkamp on December 18, 1980. Since Mühlens had attempted human experiments during the Nazi era, the street was renamed Agnes-Gierck-Weg in 1997 . The Tannekoppel forest was on the other side of Langenhorner Chaussee and was laid out in 1802 by the forest bailiff Johann Ludewig Engelhard Brinckmann . In 1816 and 1820 it was enlarged. In 1893 an agricultural colony for the mentally ill was opened on the site , which later became the Ochsenzoll Hospital. In 1998 the hospital became a location of the North Clinic , in 2006 a location of the Asklepios Clinic North . In 2013, large parts of the site were sold. The two newly created residential areas are called Unter den Linden and Oxpark .
Ahlfeld

( Location )

A046 0735 after a field name 1914
(August 1st)
Created during the construction of the Siemershöh settlement . In old documents and land maps Ohle Haege (land map, 1750), Alter Hag or old enclosure then Ahlfeld ( land map, 1804) or Ohlefeld . Ahl , Low German = sandy, sterile layer below the surface of the earth, in which there is also a lot of iron. Also hardpan or fox earth . The Ohle Haege was originally a forest area.
At the ox toll

( Location )

A301 2765 after a popular name for the customs station that existed until 1867, at which, among other things, the oxen driven to Hamburg via the Ochsenweg were cleared 1903
(November 25)
Before that, called at the border , then route 538 . Before 1903, it was already called Am Ochsenzoll . Construction on February 1, 1950. The result is the way in November 1773 because the northern border between Langenhorn and on October 14, 1773 Kanzleigut Tangstedt associated lands Tangstedter Heide and Harxteheyde was redefined (Harksheide). The northern curb today forms the border with Norderstedt . At the western end of the street on the opposite side of Langenhorner Chaussee was the customs post until 1867. The area on both sides of the border is still called Ochsenzoll today. In 1612, Count Ernst zu Holstein-Schaumburg set up a customs post for the County of Holstein-Pinneberg at Ochsenzoll , where customs had to be paid for goods of all kinds, which bothered Christian IV , King of Denmark and Norway, and the Duke of the Duchy of Holstein . He had it destroyed by Christian von Pentz . Afterwards it was agreed that for three weeks a year for oxen that came to the border via the Ochsenweg , customs could be charged. After the death of the last Schauenburger Otto V , the county was divided. The rule of Pinneberg and with it the ox toll fell to Christian IV, who incorporated it into the Duchy of Holstein. Soon customs were not only paid for oxen, but all year round for goods of all kinds. Seen from Langenhorn, the customs station was at the beginning of Ulzburger Straße . In 1840 it was moved to Langenhorner Chaussee . The customs house (demolished in 1956) was on Langenhorner Chaussee 689, the former home of the customs officer is on Segeberger Chaussee 26. After the German-Danish War in 1864, the Austro-Prussian condominium existed in Schleswig-Holstein , in 1865 Holstein was administered by Austria . After the German War of 1866, Schleswig and Holstein fell to Prussia . In 1867 the Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein was established and the customs post was relocated to the Eppendorfer mill pond in Eppendorf . At Ochsenzoll 62, two stumbling blocks were laid for Bertha and Paul Oppens, who lived there until 1943. The art collector, art historian and patron Gerhard Schack lived at Ochsenzoll 54 until his death in 2007 .
At the Ohlmoorgraben

( Location )

A303 0695 according to the location on the parallel running water 1956
(January 31)
The moat, once also called the Dorfbach , flowed from the Ohlmoor and Reckamp through the village pond and merged further southwest with the Mooreye (today Raakmoorgraben ). During the construction of the underground line in 1913, it was laid in the cut of the railway line parallel to the rails and now flows into the Raakmoorgraben on Flughafenstrasse . The actor, musician, composer and comedian Olli Dittrich moved with his family at the age of 7 to an apartment in the houses on Am Ohlmoorgraben , where he continued to grow up.
At the school forest

( Location )

A577 0590 after a popular name 1974
(January 10)
Before that, from August 1, 1914 Raak , between 1949 and 1953 it was renamed to Weg 685 . Extension on June 11, 1975. The school forest that was once adjacent to the road reached as far as Wördenmoorweg and was laid out on the initiative of teacher Kuno Schneider from the Fritz Schumacher School . With school children, he helped with the planting and monitoring of the young trees. On March 22, 1957, the school forest was inaugurated. Raak means clearing in general .
At the nursery

( Location )

A392 0365 to a tree nursery on the eastern side of the road 1935
(April 7th)
The nursery was established in 1926 on the Wrangel Koppel and Neuen Kamp parcels on the eastern side of Wrangelkoppel street.
At the nursery.jpg
Anita Sellenschloh Ring

( Location )

A690 0835 Anita Hilda Christine Sellenschloh (1911–1997), resistance fighter against National Socialism and teacher 2002
(January 29)
After World War II, teacher at two Langenhorn schools, from 1948 Fritz Schumacher School and from 1952 elementary and secondary school Am Heidberg (today Am Heidberg elementary school )
Annie-Kienast-Strasse

( Location )

A743 0145 Annie Kienast (1897–1984), SPD politician 2016
(May 1st)
Before that from April 10, 1961 on Konjetznystraße (group of motifs: "Doctors"). Because of Konjetzny's proximity to National Socialism, the street was renamed Annie-Kienast-Strasse in 2016 .
In the field

( Location )

A499 0600 after a field name 1903
(November 25)
Before that, path 126 and path 139 . Before 1903, however, it was already mentioned on the field . Expansion July 26, 1950 and September 5, 1960. At the beginning of the 1950s, the Krohnstieg was extended by almost entirely renaming the street Auf dem Felde to Krohnstieg . Only a small part between Krohnstieg and Rittmerskamp was still called Auf dem Felde . With the expansion of the original Krohnstieg up to the Gehlengraben in 1961, the renamed part was renamed back to Auf dem Felde and the little piece that was also called Auf dem Felde was renamed Rittmerskamp . The field name is recorded in the field maps from 1750 and 1804. The corridor area lies on the course of today's street.
Bear Farm

( Location )

B896 0185 after the farm of the same name on the corner of Langenhorner Chaussee and Stockflethweg 2006
(April 28th)
A bear was once kept in the neo-romantic building ensemble, which was built by building broker Ernst Römling around 1890 or 1900 and has been rebuilt several times, reminiscent of a small castle. On one facade there was a relief of a bear with the lettering Bärenhof underneath. The Bärenhof was on the other side of Langenhorner Chaussee at the corner of Stockflethweg until it was demolished in April 2010. The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Bärenhof street .
Bargfelder Weg

( Location )

B059 0330 Bargfeld, part of the municipality of Bargfeld-Stegen in the Stormarn district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg". In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 8 .
Beckermannweg

( Location )

B821 0710 Franz Beckermann (1903–1976), medical director of the Heidberg Hospital 1981
(March 24th)
Motif group: "Doctors". In front of it path 457 . In the late summer of 1945, Franz Beckermann began to convert the former SS barracks on Heidberg into the Heidberg hospital with the Senate of Health Friedrich Dettmann , the senate appointed by the British occupiers , and his later successor Walter Schmedemann . He retired in April 1969.
At the Schäferhof

( Location )

B220 0580 after the former Schäferhof located here 1903
(November 25)
In front of it path 262 . Before 1903, however, it was already known as Beim Schäferhof . Expansion April 8, 1914. The Schäferhof parcel is shown on the 1804 land map. The shepherd's cottage on it was on the corner of the streets at Beim Schäferhof and Tannenweg . School lessons were also given in the cottage until 1750. It was demolished in 1932.
Cherry alley - panoramio.jpg
Belemannweg

( Location )

B235 0110 Hans Belemann, first mentioned blacksmith in Langenhorn in 1580 1952
(March 3)
Before that Heerbuckhoop byway 2 . In 1609, the blacksmith Peter Titkens took over the leased forge (Katenstelle XI) Belemanns as a leaseholder. In 1612 it was expanded. In 1619 he became the owner of the forge. The smithy was located roughly at the location of today's Langenhorner Chaussee 132.
Bergmannstrasse

( Location )

B261 0245 Ernst von Bergmann (1836–1907), surgeon 1945
(November 1)
Motif group: "Doctors". Extension July 14, 1952, partial cancellation November 29, 1968 and November 4, 1975, further extension February 10, 1984. The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° East ) crosses Bergmannstrasse .
Bi de Borner

( Location )

B841 0120 after the name “Börner” for the residents of the Fritz Schumacher settlement 1986
(September 8)
Low German for Bei den Börner or Bei dem Börner . The Langenhorn river with the name or designation Born , sometimes also called the Rheede , is entered on maps or hiking maps from 1859, 1866 and 1871. It was later named Bornbach . On the map of 1750, the source originated on the way to Tangstedt ( Tangstedter Landstrasse since 1898 ) between the Hohe Lieds Barg and the more northerly Bollbrügs Barg (Low German Barg = mountain), which was named Bornberg on the map of 1804 . Both sources were reproduced in 1773. The moor to the south of the mountain had been given the name Bornmoor in 1804 . The fact that areas around the Born brook were also called Born can be found in writings. The Danckers family had a piece of land on Tangstedter Landstrasse in Born . In Born , at today's Tangstedter Landstrasse 509, HH Bockhold got a place on the land in 1767 (today Winkelmann'scher Hof , symbolically occupied in November 1989 ). Opposite today's Heidberg Hospital, the Schwen family got a place on the land in 1769. In the State Archives you can read that the family was granted an economic license in 1843 in Born . In the Hamburg address book of 1877 the southern part of the Landstrasse is already referred to as Tangstädter Landstrasse , but the more northerly addresses are in Born . The northern road itself was also called Born , from the north down, the actual source area Born , over the Hohen Lieth-Grund , down to the Wattkorn . For some, the Born went down to what is now Tangstedter Landstrasse 25, because from there the road was paved. In 1903 the Bornweg got its name, which branched off in a westerly direction from Tangstedter Landstraße (renamed Stockflethweg in 1948 ). When the Fritz Schumacher settlement was being built, the settlers were looking for names for the settlement and the newly founded settlement newspaper in 1921. After a competition, the name Born was chosen in April , on the one hand because a large part of the settlement area had already been named that way, and on the other hand because the settlement should be a source from which settlers can draw good. The settlers now called themselves Börner and the newspaper was named De Börner . Probably shortly afterwards the poet, lyric poet and teacher of the Langenhorn Norderschule Hermann Claudius wrote his Low German poem Wi Börner from 1922 to 1929 ! ( We Börner! ), That starts with Wir sünd de Börner ut den Boorn ( We are the Börner from the Born ).
Bochum way

( Location )

B811 0135 Bochum , city in North Rhine-Westphalia 1979
(August 30)
Motif group: "Cities in the West German industrial area".
Bornbachstieg

( Location )

B489 0065 after the location on the Bornbach , a tributary of the Tarpenbek 1952
(July 14)
Rose = narrow footpath.
Borner Rose

( Location )

B496 0690 after the location on the Bornbach , a tributary of the Tarpenbek 1920
(May 30)
Created during the construction of the Fritz Schumacher settlement . Rose = narrow footpath. On October 25, 2017, a stumbling block was laid on Borner Stieg 34 for Irmgard Meggers, who lived there until 1933. The politician and Hamburg Senator for Health Walter Schmedemann (SPD) lived at Borner Stieg 28. Walter-Schmedemann-Strasse in Langenhorn was named after him.
Boysheide

( Location )

B519 0155 Karl Boy, named as the first farmer who reclaimed heather in Langenhorn 1929
(July 16)
Carl Boy too . Heyde is entered on the land map from 1750 . Today's street Boysheide lies on a small part of the area. Until 1745 there were 7 Hufen (I – VII) and 4 Katenstellen (VIII – XI) in Langenhorn. From 1745 the Hospital St. Jürgen (St. Jürgen, Low German for St. Georg ), which was the owner of Langenhorn at the time, began leasing land to new settlers. In Johann Friedrich Voigt's Geschichtliche Mitteilungen about Hamburgische Landgemeinde Langenhorn from 1909 and Karl August Schlüter's From Langenhorn's Past from 1932, the names of the new settlers are mentioned from 1745, with Schlüter until 1802. However, there is no Carl or Karl Boy among the growers. In Schlüter's book, a blacksmith by the name of Christopher Boy is mentioned elsewhere, who was the owner of Katenstelle X and Katenstelle XI from 1840 to 1858, the smithy at today's Langenhorner Chaussee 132. In 1846 he ceded the actual Schmiedekate to Asmus Friedrich Pries .
Boystwiete

( Location )

B520 0155 see: Boysheide 1929
(July 16)
Twiete = narrow way .
Brennhaus coupling

( Location )

B599 0165 after a field name 1952
(April 3)
The parcel of Brennhauskoppel is shown on the land map from 1804. It was located between today's Brennhauskoppel street and Vogtshufe ( Hufe IV), which owned a jug right and operated a distillery . The Vogtshufe was located at Langenhorner Chaussee 94 from 1752 to 1952 , then it was demolished. Before 1752 it was located further south on Langenhorner Chaussee , on the opposite side of the confluence with the street Beim Schäferhof . Paddock = fenced pasture .
Bruno-Lauenroth-Weg

( Location )

B833 0185 Bruno Lauenroth (1906–1971), SPD politician from Langenhorn and resistance fighter against National Socialism 1982
(December 6th)
Buckhoop

( Location )

B671 0320 after a field name 1936
(November 20)
The parcel is drawn on the 1804 land map and was where Buckhoop Street is. Buck = Short for hump as the name of a raised ground. Hoop = Low German for pile .
Bültenblick

( Location )

B680 0290 after a field name 1938
(October 5)
The parcel is drawn on the land maps from 1750 and 1804, 1750 as Bülten Blück and 1804 as Bültenblick . The parcel was at the southern end of today's Bültenblick street . Bülte is a Low German word for a raised ground in bogs or swampy terrain overgrown with grass or moss.
Bültenmoor

( Location )

B682 0145 according to the terrain 1960
(July 1)
Bülte is a Low German word for a raised ground in bogs or swampy terrain overgrown with grass or moss.
Buurkamp

( Location )

B742 0325 after the field name Buurplaats 1932
(August 18)
The Buurplaats parcel is not shown in the land maps from 1750 and 1804 , but the Bauerplatz parcel in 1804 , roughly where today's streets Buurkamp , Buurredder and Buurstieg are. Buur , Low German = farmer. Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field. The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Buurkamp street .
Buurredder

( Location )

B743 0360 see Buurkamp 1952
(July 8)
Redder = path bounded on both sides by a hedge or a bend.
Buurstieg

( Location )

B744 0060 see Buurkamp 1950
(January 30th)
Rose = narrow footpath.
Cordesweg

( Location )

C050 0415 after the long-established Hufner family Cordes 1932
(August 18)
Before that way 144 . The nameless path is already marked on the map from 1804. From the 1590s onwards, the names of the Hufner were recorded. Members of the Cordes family were at times owners of Hufe I, demolished in 1852 and rebuilt at the corner of Rodenkampsweg and Scharnskamp , then demolished in 1920, (1602–1672, 1694–1772), Hufe II, burned down in the summer of 1930, (1762–1764, 1780–1825, (1825–1837 Lambrecht , husband of the Cordes widow), 1837–1875), Hufe VI, burned down in 1901, (1702–1887), Katenstelle VIII (from 1816 with a tapping license), demolished in 1966, (1740–1849 ). The homestead on Langenhorner Chaussee 171 was mentioned several times in 1764 when the owner Hein Cordes had to sell it publicly. It was probably severed from Hoof VI beforehand. The cultivation site acquired by Peter Cordes in 1798 was sold in the 1880s by a descendant to the building broker Emil Römling, who provided the house (built in 1798) with a bell tower, a relief and a new name, Eber-Hof (demolished in August 1954). From 1857 to 1860 Joachim Cordes was Vogt .
Cordesweg (1) .jpg
Dankerskamp

( Location )

D036 0270 after a field name and the Dankers peasant family 1932
(August 18)
Also Danckers . The parcel is entered on the land map from 1750, but not yet designated. On the land map from 1804, the parcel was given the name Dankerskamp and was roughly where today's Dankerskamp street is. In 1745 the Rademacher H. Dancker received the parcel for arable farming. His cottage , however, was on the later Rodenkampsweg and was later bought by his neighbor, the Hufner Cordes. Later, the Danckers family had a piece of land on what would later become Tangstedter Landstrasse in Born . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field. The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Dankerskamp street .
Dieckmühlenweg

( Location )

D091 0165 after an old water mill , of which remains were excavated around 1850 1937
(May 20)
Partial suspension: September 27, 1968, extension: April 24, 1969. Diek , Low German for pond or dike . Teichmühlenweg . Around 1850, pieces of millstones and "a lot" of burnt oak beams and remains of planks had been excavated on the Schlüs Wisch parcel . By the meanings of the field names , 1750, Möhlen Camp (Mühlenkamp), Schlüs Camp , Schlüs Wisch , Dieck Camp , Dieck Wisch and 1804 Schleusenkamp , Dieckkamp , Dieckwiesen , behind the Dieckwiesen and Ohlendieck , it is assumed that the Born or Bornbach was dammed into a pond in the area to operate the water mill. The watermill is not mentioned in any old document, which is what it should be given its economic importance. Therefore it is assumed that it no longer existed in 1283. In 1283, the people of Langenhorn were already compulsory meals at the water mill in Fuhlsbüttel .
Diekmoorweg

( Location )

D098 0680 after the nearby Diekmoor 1964
(September 21)
Diek , Low German for pond or dike . Marked as Dieck Moor in the land maps from 1750 and 1804. The Diekmoor was a little further south than today's road, behind the Dieckwischen on the opposite side of the Bornbach . The politician and citizen Annie Kienast (SPD) lived at Diekmoorweg 7 . Her sister Elisabeth (SPD) on Diekmoorweg 8. Annie-Kienast-Straße in Langenhorn was named after Anni Kienast .
Diekwisch

( Location )

D101 0205 after a field name 1964
(September 21)
Diek , Low German for pond or dike. Wisch Low German = meadow . Drawn in the land maps as Dieck Wisch (en) in 1750 and as Dieckwiesen in 1804 . The Diekwischen lay further south than the present road, 1750 behind the Born Bach and 1804 partly in front.
Dobenplatz

( Location )

D120 0110 × 35 based on the field name Dobenstück 1914
(August 1st)
Created during the construction of the Siemershöh settlement . Dobbe is a swamp overgrown with grass or reeds.
Top piece

( Location )

D121 0280 after a field name 1914
(August 1st)
Created during the construction of the Siemershöh settlement . The parcel is shown on land maps in 1750 as a doben piece and in 1804 as a doven piece . Dobbe is a swamp overgrown with grass or reeds.
Dortmunder Strasse

( Location )

D266 0505 Dortmund , city in North Rhine-Westphalia 1979
(August 30)
Motif group: "Cities in the West German industrial area". There was a Dortmunder Straße since July 14, 1952 in Langenhorn. At first it was only a short street, but it was then extended. On March 28, 1979 it was disbanded because most of the road was changed. The northernmost part of the old Dortmunder Strasse led into Essener Strasse . The northernmost part of the new Dortmunder Straße lies at the same point and also flows into Essener Straße at the same point , while the southern part now, a little further to the south-west, also flows into Essene Straße .
Dreyer path

( Location )

D191 0395 after the long-established Dreyer farming family 1932
(August 18)
Expansion: January 25, 1960. The Dreyer family owned Katenstelle VIII from 1655 to 1740 (demolished in 1966) and from 1736 to 1762 and 1772 to 1774 owners of Katenstelle IX (burned down on January 5, 2017). At Langenhorner Chaussee 212 corner Krohnstieg was a 1769 Kate who later acquired AL Dreyer. His descendants had a nursery there. The building was demolished in 1965, but the steps leading to the house are still there. During the French period , an armed French rider attacked a girl crying for help and wanted to take her to the Ohlmoor. The farmer Peter Dreyer rushed to her aid and killed the Frenchman with an ax before he could shoot him. In 1932 there was still the French grave . If it still exists today it will be hard to find. Hein Dreyer (1775–1802), the son of the headmaster in Eidelstedt, Hans-Joachim Dreyer, was a teacher at the Langenhorn School from 1800 until his death in 1802. In 1802 his brother Hinrich Dreyer (1779–1846), also from Eidelstedt, became a teacher in Langenhorn. He was this until 1841 and died in 1846. The painter Meinhard Raschke has had his studio and painting business at Dreyerpfad 19 since 1996. His wife, the artist Gerda Maria Raschke, also lives and works there.
Duisburger Strasse

( Location )

D267 0420 Duisburg , city in North Rhine-Westphalia 1979
(December 3)
Motif group: "Cities in the West German industrial area". A Duisburger Strasse already existed in Langenhorn on July 14, 1952. Before that it was called Weg 18 . On April 5, 1979 it was disbanded and nearby, rebuilt elsewhere.
Eberhofstieg

( Location )

E005 0285 see Eberhofweg 1934
(December 15)
Rose = narrow footpath.
Eberhofweg

( Location )

E006 0790 after the homonymous courtyard 1903
(November 25)
In front of it path 327 . Before 1903 it was called Eberhofweg . On November 20, 1962, a section was renamed Timmstieg and Timmweg and a section was dissolved because the Langenhorn market was built and the Krohnstieg expanded. This was followed by an extension of the Eberhofweg to Reekamp . The cultivation site acquired by Peter Cordes in 1798 was sold in the 1880s by a descendant to the building broker Emil Römling, who provided the house (built in 1798) with a bell tower, a relief and a new name, Eber-Hof . Römling had a cannon from 1800 standing there next to the driveway, which he sometimes loaded and fired on New Year's Eve. The relief shows a sitting boar and a standing sow and bears the lettering Eber-Hof . The house at Eberhofweg 65 was demolished in August 1954. The relief was saved and placed with an explanation board in October 2015 at the end of the driveway from Eberhofweg to Langenhorner Markt . The old oak on the front left corner of the Eberhofweg 65 property is said to be one of the two oldest trees in Langenhorn. The second tree stands on the property to the left and stands a little further back. From 1962 , Loki Schmidt taught at the school at Eberthofweg 63 for a while.
Langenhorn, Hamburg, Germany - panoramio (24) .jpg
Eekboom paddock

( Location )

E031 0625 after the planting around a paddock 1949
(February 26)
Before that, part of the Rittmerskamp . Expansion: January 30, 1950. Eekboom , Low German for oak tree . Paddock = fenced pasture . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the street Eeekboomkoppel .
Eichenkamp

( Location )

E060 0180 after planting around a field. 1933
(April 30)
Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field.
Oak bend

( Location )

E283 0085 after planting a kink 1976
(July 12)
Enderskehre

( Location )

E182 0080 Johann Enders (1855–1928), farmer and beekeeper in Langenhorn 1956
(December 1)
In 1895, Johann Enders purchased land between Fritz-Schumacher-Allee and Tangstedter Landstrasse . When the Fritz Schumacher settlement was built , he had to give up most of the land. His son Albert continued the business. The building was demolished at the end of the 1950s. It was located at Tangstedter Landstrasse 156.
Erich-Plate-Weg

( Location )

E203 0170 Erich Plate (1861–1935), senior physician at the Barmbek General Hospital 1945
(November 1)
Expansion: June 27, 1960. Subject group: "Doctors". The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Erich-Plate-Weg .
Warmia way

( Location )

E214 0640 Warmia , Polish , formerly German region 1953
(December 4th)
In front of the Krohnstieg side path 3 . Expansion: January 31, 1956. Named the East Prussian home of many expellees who had to look for a new home in shrunken Germany as a result of World War II . Quite a few found a second home in Langenhorn.
Essen arch

( Location )

E340 0515 based on Essener Strasse 2003
(December 4th)
Motif group: "Cities in the West German industrial area".
Essener Strasse

( Location )

E248 1445 Essen , city in North Rhine-Westphalia 1952
(July 8)
Before that way 4 . Motif group: "Cities in the West German industrial area". On June 27, 2018, fifty stumbling blocks were laid at Essener Strasse 54 in memory of 49 dead children of forced laborers in the Hamburg-Langenhorn subcamp. The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses Essener Straße .
Fassbinderweg

( Location )

F352 0220 after the trade of a cooper 2010
(October 19)
Before that, at least 1898, a street in the Ochsenzoll hospital without a name . Motif group: "Historical craft trades".
Fehnweg

( Location )

F053 0400 according to the terrain 1960
(May 17)
Fehn , Low German for moor .
Feilenhauerweg

( Location )

F353 0180 after the handicraft file cutter 2010
(October 19)
Before that, since at least 1898, a street in the Ochsenzoll hospital without a name . Motif group: "Historical craft trades".
Fibigerstrasse

( Location )

F102 1675 Johannes Fibiger (1867–1928), Danish pathologist 1948
(January 26th)
Motif group: "Doctors". Before that, Weg 472 and from November 25, 1903 Am Fossberg , then from 1941 to 1947 Baltikumstraße . The Voss Barg and 1804 the Fossberg and the Fossbergermoor are shown in the land maps from 1750 . Voss or Foss , Low German for fox . Barg , Low German for mountain . The sculptor Carl Schümann lived at Fibigerstrasse 83 from 1938 to 1974 .
Airport road

( Location )

F163 0890
(in the district)
Road leading to the airport 1948
(January 26th)
Expansion: July 8, 1952, extension by renaming route 154 . Later extended again. South of Zeppelinstrasse in Fuhlsbüttel , east of Raakmoorgraben in Hummelsbüttel .
Railway bridges Flughafenstrasse.jpg
Foorthkamp

( Location )

F183 1005 after a field name 1937
(May 20)
In front of it path 401 . Expansion: March 17, 1950 and December 4, 1953. The plot of land Forthkamp is drawn on the land map from 1804, which was still called Dieck Camp on the land map from 1750 . Forth or Foorth = ford (through the Bornbach ). Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field.
Langenhorn, Hamburg, Germany - panoramio (3) .jpg
Fossberger Moor

( Location )

F194 0440 after a field name 1933
(April 30)
The Voss Barg and 1804 the Fossberg and the Fossbergermoor are shown in the land maps from 1750 . Voss or Foss , Low German for fox . Barg , Low German for mountain .
Fritz-Schumacher-Allee

( Location )

F249 1710 Fritz Schumacher (1869–1947), architect and urban planner 1920
(May 30)
Developed during the construction of the Fritz Schumacher estate he designed . Expansion of the road: July 14, 1952, renaming route 597 to Fritz-Schumacher-Allee . Partial suspension on June 26, 1972 and August 4, 1976. The pavilion school he designed, the predecessor of the Fritz Schumacher school he designed and built in 1931, was built between 1919 and 1920 . A stumbling block was laid at Fritz-Schumacher-Allee 33 for Arthur Koß, who lived there until 1933. The painter and draftsman Paul Buddy (1922–1990) lived at 63 Fritz-Schumacher-Allee .
Fritz-Solmitz-Weg

( Location )

F333 0495 Fritz Solmitz (1893–1933), SPD politician, victim of National Socialism 1987
(December 15)
Gagelstrauchweg

( Location )

G445 0025th after the plant species of the same name, Gagelstrauch 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ".
Gehlengraben

( Location )

G039 0925 after a field name 1914
(August 1st)
Expanded November 7, 1953. June 20, 1975 Extension by partially renaming the Kortenkamp street . In the land maps from 1750 the parcels of Groten Gehlen Graben , Kleine Gehlen Graben and Gehlen Graben and 1804 Gehlengraben and Kleiner Gehlengraben are shown. Gel , Gehl or Gähl can be interpreted as a swamp . If, however, the watercourse that came from the Ohlmoor, if not another watercourse, had a yellowish color, the Low German Geel or Gehl could have stood for yellow . Too much iron in the water of a moat turns the water yellow. The water mixed with the water coming from the Reckkamp , flowed as a village stream into the village pond and merged further southwest with the Mooreye (today Raakmoorgraben ). The village stream was later called Ohlmoorgraben . When the railway line was built in 1913, it was laid in the cut of the railway line parallel to the rails and now flows into the Raakmoorgraben on Flughafenstrasse . The road Gehlengraben is a section of the ring 3 .
Georg-Clasen-Weg

( Location )

G446 0535 Georg Clasen (1881–1968), Langenhorn teacher, headmaster and school reformer 1985
(November 22)
Before that, part of path 314 . In 1920 Georg Clasen was one of the first teachers at the Fritz-Schumacher-Siedlung settlement school . The pavilion building of the settlement school was replaced in 1931 by the building of the Fritz Schumacher School , where he was also a teacher. From March 1933 to July 1933 he was also the headmaster of the school, but then the self-administration of the school was dissolved by the National Socialists. Clasen also sat on the education committee and was the head of the Gaustelle for school parties and celebrations, the school stage and amateur theater as well as the editor of the housing magazine De Börner . In 1947 his book Die Hamburger Staatssiedlung Langenhorn und seine Schule. The history of a settlement between the wars published by the publisher Gesellschaft der Freunde des Väterländischen Schul- und Erziehungswesen in Hamburg.
Götkensweg

( Location )

G144 0505 Andreas Götkens († 1750), first schoolmaster known by name in Langenhorn 1952
(April 3)
Before that, from 1938 onwards, there was no naming street to the houses with officers' apartments that belonged to the Langenhorn SS barracks . From the late summer of 1945 the barracks were converted into the Heidberg Hospital . A schoolmaster from Langenhorn is mentioned for the first time in 1639 in the baptismal register of St. Johannis Church in Eppendorf , who had his son Jochim baptized. Since at the beginning only the names of full and half farmers were recorded in church registers, only the names of the godparents are known. On August 9, 1697, however, the schoolmaster Andreas Götkens from Langenhorn is named, who had his daughter baptized. Götkens was a schoolmaster in Langenhorn until his death in 1750 and taught in a shepherd's cottage that he had to share with a cowherd. The shepherds card was on the road when Schäferhof corner Tannenweg and was pulled down the 1,932th
Götzberger way

( Location )

G145 0420 Götzberg , part of Henstedt-Ulzburg in the Segeberg district in Schleswig-Holstein 1954
(November 2)
In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 13 . Expansion: September 18, 1959. Group of motifs: “Places north of Hamburg”.
Grabauer way

( Location )

G186 0355 Grabau , municipality in the Stormarn district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 7 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Grellkamp

( Location )

G218 0815 after a field name 1935
(October 26)
Expansion: January 31, 1956. In the land maps from 1750 the parcel is marked as Grell Camp and 1804 as Grellkamp . The Low German word garish is ambiguous. It can mean wild, shrill, garish, piercing, sharp, lustful, ravenous, obsessed, violently aroused, angry, grim, or angry among others. Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field.
Grellkamp turn

( Location )

G219 0120 based on the Grellkamp 1956
(January 31)
Grellkampstieg

( Location )

G220 0140 based on the Grellkamp. Rose = narrow footpath. 1950
(January 30th)
Grote Raak

( Location )

G289 0640 after the field name Raack 1960
(July 1)
Raak or Raack generally means clearing . Grote , Low German for big ones . In the land map of 1750 the parcels of Raack (several times in two areas), Op de Raack , In de Raack and Raacks Mohr are drawn, and in that of 1804 the parcels of Raack (several times in one area) and Raacksheide .
Piece of oat

( Location )

H029 0085 after a field name 1938
(October 6)
The parcel is shown in the land maps of 1750 as a Haber piece and 1804 as an oat piece . Haber = oats . The form oat , which comes from Low German , replaced the High German Haber and has been used in literature since the 18th century. Certainly oats were grown on the parcel at some point , but this was not uncommon in Langenhorn. After rye , it was the most widely cultivated type of grain in Langenhorn. In ancient times, rye was used to pay part of the taxes to the authorities and the church. Oats were just as popular as food for humans and cattle. Since there was not enough fertilizer available due to insufficient livestock farming, a three-field economy was operated , which means that the parcel lay fallow every third year .
Hamborner Rose

( Location )

H071 0115 Hamborn , district of Duisburg in North Rhine-Westphalia 1952
(July 14)
In front of it path 4 , byway 7 and byway 8 . Expansion: July 25, 1979, extension: December 3, 1979. Group of motifs: "Cities in the West German industrial area". Rose = narrow footpath.
Hammers Rise

( Location )

H855 0150 according to an old craft 2010
(October 19)
A Hamm makers , Hamenmacher , Hammacher or Hamacher was a saddler , the dishes created for draft animals. Motif group: "Historical craft trades". Rose = narrow footpath.
Urinary tract

( Location )

H145 0740 Carl Johannes Theodor Harnack (1831–1871), landowner in Langenhorn 1920
(May 30)
Created during the construction of the Fritz Schumacher settlement . Expansion: December 15, 1934. Carl Johannes Theodor Harnack was born on December 18, 1831 in Hagenow in western Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania as the son of Johannes Friedrich Harnack and his wife Friederike Charlotte Christiane Amalie, nee. Haacke, born and baptized Protestant on December 25, 1831 in Hagenow. After attending the Gymnasium Fridericianum Schwerin , he studied law and obtained a doctorate in law . From 1860 or 1861 he was based in Langenhorn, according to the entry in the Hamburg address book from 1861. Possibly, but perhaps later, he then became the owner of Katenstelle X and Katenstelle XI, the forge on today's Langenhorner Chaussee 132 (without the actual Schmiedekate, which was sold in 1846), which also included lands. From 1858 the previous owner was Wilhelm von der Beck. Harnack is said to have been the owner of the area around or near today's Harnacksweg around 1865 . Carl Johannes Theodor Harnack died on May 6, 1871 in Hagenow and was buried there on May 11. After his death, most of his former lands were parceled out .
Hartmannsau

( Location )

H148 0255 Georg Ferdinand Hartmann, engineer and cartographer , drew the first land map of Langenhorn from 1749 to 1750 1920
(May 30)
Created during the construction of the Fritz Schumacher settlement . The first map of Langenhorn mentioned is the Schadische Karte or the Schadische Riss from 1702, which can no longer be found in the Hamburg State Archives. In 1749 the Hospital St. Jürgen ( St. Jürgen , Low German for St. Georg ), the owner of Langenhorn, sent the engineer and cartographer Georg Ferdinand Hartmann to Langenhorn to make a map of Langenhorn. The Vogt Heyn Gerhard Krohn received instructions Hartmann to house and him feed. In 1749 the Vogtshof (Hufe IV) still stood on today's Langenhorner Chaussee opposite the confluence with the street Beim Schäferhof . The farmers were instructed not to cause Hartmann any trouble, but rather to support him. The map was completed in 1750. The card is in the Hamburg State Archives. A copy of the map hangs in the Langenhorn Bürgerhaus , Tangstedter Landstrasse 41 on the first floor, on the wall in the hallway and can be viewed there during opening hours (Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.). On June 27, 2017, a stumbling block for Gerd Schulze, who lived there until 1933, was laid at Hartmannsau 4 .
Hasloher Kehre

( Location )

H176 0275 Hasloh , municipality in the Pinneberg district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 12 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Hattinger Rose

( Location )

H187 0200 Hattingen , town in the Ennepe-Ruhr district in North Rhine-Westphalia 1952
(July 14)
In front of it path 18 byway 1 . Expansion: December 3, 1979 Group of motifs: "Cities in the West German industrial area". Rose = narrow footpath.
Heerbuckhoop

( Location )

H221 0335 after a field name 1950
(January 30th)
Before that, Suckweg byway 1 . The parcel is drawn on the land map from 1804 and was at the northern end of the Heerbuckhoop street . Army = shepherd . Buck = Short for hump as the name of a raised ground. Hoop = Low German for pile .
Heerwisch

( Location )

H223 0455 after a field name 1932
(August 18)
Expansion: December 11, 1958. Two parcels next to each other bear the name Heer Wisch on the land maps from 1750 and in 1804 they are referred to as Heerwiesen . Army = shepherd . Wisch Low German = meadow . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Heerwisch street .
Henny-Schütz-Allee

( Location )

H854 0425 Henriette Wilhelmine Schütz (1917–2001), SPD politician, persecuted by National Socialism 2010
(October 19)
Before that, since at least 1898, Hauptstrasse in the Ochsenzoll hospital had been unnamed . Schütz was born Henriette Wilhelmine Winkens on June 1, 1917 in Hamburg-Langenhorn. It belonged to the Socialist Workers' Youth (SAJ) until it was banned by the National Socialists in 1933 . In 1935/36 she suffered a year of protective custody in Fuhlsbüttel , then pre-trial detention in Hamburg for so-called preparation for high treason and finally the Moringen concentration camp . After liberation from National Socialism, from 1945 she was the district cashier of the SPD Langenhorn-Nord. At Langenhorner Chaussee 560 at the corner of Henny-Schütz-Allee , three stumbling blocks were laid for Kurt Gäth, Gerhard Junke (son of August Junke ) and Gottfried Fritz Simon. At house 25 ( Walter-Behrmann-Haus ) of the Asklepios Klinik Nord , Ochsenzoll location, on Henny-Schütz-Allee , 25 stumbling blocks were laid, which remind of 23 murdered children by name.
Langenhorn, Hamburg, Germany - panoramio (16) .jpg
Henstedter way

( Location )

H355 0245 Henstedt , part of Henstedt-Ulzburg in the Segeberg district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 3 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Heart moor

( Location )

H392 0525 after the heart moor 1934
(December 15)
Marked in the land maps of 1750 as Hertz Mohr and 1804 as Herzmoor . In 1732 the area was also called Hattes-Mohr . The Hummelsbüttler Straße Hattsmoor got its name in 1930 and is an extension of the Langenhorner Straße Hohe Liedt in an easterly direction. In 1932 the area was also called Hartsmoor . Hart is an archaic word for deer .
Herzmoortwiete

( Location )

H393 0280 after the heart moor 1929
(May 20)
Expansion: July 16, 1929. Twiete = narrow path . See Herzmoor .
Herzmoorwende

( Location )

H394 0150 after the heart moor 1930
(April 1)
See Herzmoor .
Heynemannstrasse

( Location )

H418 0095 Theodor Heynemann (1878–1951), gynecologist 1960
(July 1)
Motif group: "Doctors".
Hinschenrehm

( Location )

H446 0095 Hermann Hinsch (1844-1922), Brinksitzer and butter dealer 1963
(September 6th)
In 1909 he was a member of the community assembly from the class of Hufner and Brinksitzer. He (in the Hamburg address book H. Hinsch) lived in the cottage at Langenhorner Chaussee 278 on the corner of Wördenmoorweg (demolished in 1969). 1915, his son Hermann (in Hamburg address HH Hinsch) the butter trade until 1931. He himself went into retirement and moved in 1915 into the Langenhorner Chaussee 286, where the architect Adolf Hinsch lived before, the turn in the road 199 (1920 in wiping courts renamed ) moved. Rehm , Low German = narrow overgrown edge strips on fields, meadows and trees. Or a strip of wood or trees left standing in a field.
Hogenlietgrund

( Location )

H536 0295 after the field name Hohe Lieds Grund Mohr 1950
(October 30)
Before that, Hohe Liedt byway 1 . Expansion: September 8, 1986. The Hohe Lieds Grund Mohr is marked on the land map from 1750 . In the land map from 1804, the southern part of the area, where the road is today, is called Holitzgrund and the northern Holitzgrundmoor . The Horitzgrund is mentioned in the Hamburg address book from 1877 . 1909 as Hoheliedtgrund-Mohr , 1932 also known as Hoheliethsgrundmoor , or as Hohen Lieth-Grund . Lieth or Liet , Low German = hill or slope . Hoge , Low German = high .
High song

( Location )

H541 1150 after a field name 1920
(May 30)
Expansion: February 11, 1940. 1932 also Hohe Lieth . See: Hogenlietgrund .
U1 bridge HoheLiedt Langenhorn1.JPG
Holitzberg

( Location )

H571 1100 according to the field names Holitzgrund and Holitzgrundmoor from 1804. See: Hogenlietgrund . 1959
(January 2)
Before that part of path 558 . Extension by partial renaming of the Tweeltenbek street in Holitzberg on January 10, 1974. The Hohe Lieds Barg is shown on the land map from 1750 . The mountain Horitzberg is mentioned in the Hamburg address book from 1877 . In 1909 it is known as the Hoheliedts-Berg . Barg , Low German = mountain . Holitz could possibly linguistic shorthand of the Song of Songs , High Lieths or Hoheliedts be. See also: Hogenlietgrund . The musician, singer and conductor James Last lived first at Holitzberg 71 and then at Holitzberg 61. The painter, graphic artist and author Alfred Philipp Koch (* 1921) lives or lived at Holitzberg 145.
Höltentwiete

( Location )

H500 0090 after the field name Holtkoppel 1935
(April 27)
Before that Keustück (1935 another road Keustück named). Hölten , Low German = wooden or wooded . Twiete = narrow way .
Holtkoppel

( Location )

H601 1225 after a field name 1933
(April 30)
Before that, part of route 179 and Erdkampsweg . Expansion: February 6, 1949, partial suspension: March 28, 1967, extension: September 1, 1967 and January 17, 1968. Marked in the land map from 1804 as a wooden paddock . The street is completely in Langenhorn, only property No. 57 south of Zeppelinstraße is in the area of Fuhlsbüttel . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Holtkoppel street . Holt , Low German = wood , wood or forest . Paddock = fenced pasture .
Höpen

( Location )

H504 0440 after a field name 1914
(August 1st)
Drawn in the land maps of 1750 and 1804. Höpen , Low German = heap , elevation , hill . The Höpen was originally a higher forest. The eugenicist and anthropologist Walter Scheidt lived at Höpen 36 from 1931 to 1966 .
Huerthweg

( Location )

H671 0190 Theodor Hürth (1877–1944), Catholic clergyman 1952
(April 3)
Before that, Tannenweg byway 1 .
Immenbarg

( Location )

I059 0170 after the street Immenhöven 1960
(May 17)
Imme , Low German = bee . Barg , Low German = mountain . The painter and graphic artist Joachim Hudler (* 1931) lives at Immenbarg 31. The graphic artist and illustrator Holger Börnsen, who was born in Tangstedter Landstrasse 225, lived at Immenbarg 15 from 1960 until his death in 2019 with his wife, the artist and ceramist Karin Yvonne Börnsen, born Herd.
Immenhöven

( Location )

I061 0505 after the field name Imhöfen 1950
(March 17th)
Before that, from May 30, 1920 in the Häben . Expansion August 27, 1973. Created during the construction of the Fritz Schumacher estate . In the land maps of 1750 as Im Häben and 1804 as Imhöfen . In an inventory list of Hufe I from 1688, the parcel is mentioned at Bei den Immhafen or Bei den Immhafen . Imm or Imme , Low German = bee . In the 16th century all Hufner in Langenhorn probably had large bee fences or extensive farms for producing honey and wax for candles. These were located on the north-western edge of the Timmerloh forest , so that the bees could easily reach and use the heather north-east. The name Im Häben is said to be a mutilation of the name Immenhöfen . The painter, graphic artist and journalist Friedolin Wagner (* 1942) lives in Immenhöven 14. In the Häben 31 and Immenhöven 31 lived the politically active police officer Willy Jacobs, after whom the Willy-Jacobs-Weg in Langenhorn was named in 1986 . Bruno Lauenroth , after whom the Bruno-Lauenroth-Weg in Langenhorn was named, lived in Häben 32 and Immenhöven 32 .
In the sundew

( Location )

I138 0065 after the plant genus of the same name, sundew 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ".
In the peat moss

( Location )

I139 0180 after the plant genus of the same name, peat moss 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ".
Iserlohner Stieg

( Location )

I129 0245 Iserlohn , town in the Märkisches Kreis in North Rhine-Westphalia 1979
(December 3)
Motif group: "Cities in the West German industrial area". Rose = narrow footpath.
Hunter flag

( Location )

J010 0085 after a boggy hunting area overgrown with thatch 1934
(December 15)
Flag , Low German = area . In the past there was a large boggy area overgrown with reth and bushes in the area, which was used for hunting because of the game population.
Jersbeker way

( Location )

J044 0555 Jersbek , municipality in the Stormarn district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 5 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
John's evil way

( Location )

J063 0210 Johannes Böse (1879–1955), Langenhorn pedagogue and art patron 1959
(April 1)
In 1921 Johannes Böse moved to the Fritz-Schumacher-Siedlung , in the house Timmerloh 25 and in 1923 became a teacher at the pavilion school of the settlement, whose building was replaced in 1931 by the building of the Fritz-Schumacher-Schule . He established art educational working groups and founded the Griffelkunst-Vereinigung Hamburg-Langenhorn in 1925 , which left the school rooms and Langenhorn in 2002. Soon afterwards it was renamed the Hamburg pen art association .
Jutlandring

( Location )

J152 0595 Jutland , region in Denmark 2010
(October 19)
Before that, part of the nameless Ringstrasse in the Ochsenzoll hospital since at least 1898 .
Jugendparkweg

( Location )

J085 0995 after the location at the youth park 1952
(July 8)
Before that, path 166 and path 172 . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Jugendparkweg behind the school grounds on Krohnstieg . The middle section of the street is only permitted for cyclists and pedestrians, which is why the access to house Jugenparkweg 35 was created on Wrangelkoppel street.
Hamburg (39622605154) .jpg
Käkenflur

( Location )

K003 0385 after the field name Käckenkamp 1946
(December 15)
In front of it path 4 byway 3 . Expansion: July 14, 1952, partial renaming: December 4, 1973, partial renaming: March 27, 1979, partial cancellation: January 21, 1982. The parcel is shown on the land maps of 1750 as Käcken Camp and 1804 as Käckenkamp . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field. The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Käkenflur road .
Käkenkamp

( Location )

K004 0145 after a field name 1957
(August 14)
Before that, part of the Peter-Mühlens-Weg . The parcel is shown on the land maps of 1750 as Käcken Camp and 1804 as Käckenkamp . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field.
Käkenkamp 4, 2.jpg
Captain Schröder Way

( Location )

K608 0310 Gustav Schröder (1885–1959), Langenhorn captain 1990
(February)
Or 1989. In 1939 he saved over 900 German Jews from being attacked by the National Socialists with his ship St. Louis . See: odyssey of St. Louis . He had an apartment at Willerstwiete 1 in Langenhorn.
Kayhuder way

( Location )

K116 0190 Kayhude , municipality in the Segeberg district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
Partial cancellation: September 13, 1965. Group of motifs: “Places north of Hamburg”.
Kesselflickerweg

( Location )

K639 0140 after the trade tinker 2010
(October 19)
Before that, a nameless path in the Ochsenzoll hospital . Motif group: "Historical craft trades".
Kesselflickerweg.jpg
Chaste piece

( Location )

K145 0605 after a field name 1935
(April 7th)
Before that way 191 . In the Falk plan of 1949 it is called Köstück . The road Keustück was already nearby. In 1933 it was renamed Höltentwiete . In the land map from 1804 the parcel Keustück is entered. Keu , Köh , , Low German = cows . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the street Keustück .
Keel piece

( Location )

K166 0305 after a field name 1914
(August 1st)
Expansion: November 22, 1954. The parcel Kielstück is entered on the land map from 1804. Kiel , Low German = wedge.
Kisdorf way

( Location )

K207 0140 Kisdorf , municipality in the Segeberg district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 4 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Kiwittsmoor

( Location )

K210 0970 after the field name Kiewite-Moor 1933
(April 30)
The Kiewite Bog parcel is shown on the 1804 land map. Kiewite , Low German = lapwing . Ahmad Alhaw (* 1991), the perpetrator of the knife attack in Hamburg on July 28, 2017 , lived in what was then the refugee accommodation on Kiwittsmoor Street opposite the Kiwittsmoor underground station .
Kiwittsmoor underground station Hamburg-Langenhorn6.jpg
Knee p

( Location )

K294 0435 after a field name 1938
(October 6)
Partial cancellation: March 7, 1967. Either: Kniep , Low German = narrow place, narrow field. Or: Kniep , Low German = Kneif or Kneip , which are both names for shoemaker's knives. The triangular, obtuse-angled parcel Kniep is drawn on the land map from 1804 and has the shape of the blade of a cobbler's knife.
Word

( Location )

K343 0065 after a parcel of the Langenhorn Hufner family Kohrs or Cordes 1938
(October 6)
From the 1590s, the names of the Hufner , among other things, are recorded. Members of the Cordes family (also Kordes , Cors or Kohrs ) were temporarily owners of Hufe I, demolished in 1852 and rebuilt on the corner of Rodenkampsweg and Scharnskamp , then demolished in 1920, (1602–1672, 1694–1772), Hufe II, summer Burned down in 1930, (1762–1764, 1780–1825, (1825–1837 Lambrecht , husband of the Cordes widow), 1837–1875), Hufe VI, burned down in 1901, (1702–1887), Katenstelle VIII (from 1816 with tapping license) , Demolished in 1966, (1740-1849). The cultivation site acquired by Peter Cordes in 1798 was sold in the 1880s by a descendant to the building broker Emil Römling, who provided the house (built in 1798) with a bell tower, a relief and a new name, Eber-Hof (demolished in August 1954). From 1857 to 1860 Joachim Cordes was Vogt . The parcel is shown in the land maps of 1750 as Die Wohrt and 1804 as Worth . The Wohrt was a parcel of one of the three oldest hooves (I-III) in Achterort (also in Hinterort or in the old village were) and with the local associated Altenteiler- and day laborers skating the old village were called. The Achterort was 300 to 400 meters west of Langenhorner Chaussee and south of Rodenkampweg . Since Hufe III did not belong to the Cordes family, Wohrt or Worth must have belonged to Hufe I or Hufe II, both of which (until 1852) were located roughly near the corner of Bültenblick and Wittekopsweg , while Hufe III (burned down in 1932) at an angle on Rodenkampweg opposite the confluence with the road Auf dem Feld was. The undeveloped Wohrt or Worth was a little bit southwest of the first two Hufen, about by the Kohrswort street . In 1750, at the time of the first land map, a Wohrt was a fenced field or pasture near a farm (or near a village). From 1804 onwards, the sequence of letters changed to Worth originally meant what was thrown up , i.e. higher up , later the house square or the courtyard in general. Worth was also the name for a higher-lying field outside of a floodplain, mostly in connection with a dwelling, also known as a terp on the coast .
Royal fern

( Location )

K628 0050 after the plant species king fern 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ".
Kortenkamp

( Location )

K388 0440 after a field name 1914
(August 1st)
Expansion: January 31, 1956. Section renamed Gehlengraben on June 20, 1975. Marked in the land maps of 1750 as Korten Camp and 1804 as Kortenkamp . Kort , Low German = short . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field.
Kraemerstieg

( Location )

K396 0165 Johann Gottfried August Kraemer (approx. 1787–1836), officer in the Wars of Liberation , from 1823 Vogt in Langenhorn 1952
(April 3)
Johann Gottfried August Kraemer from Bleckendorf (today the Egeln-Nord district of Egeln ) was an officer in the Wars of Liberation and administrator of the copper mill in Farmsen . In the 1817 church book of Bleckendorf, his wedding entry was economist as a job title, which was an estate or property manager (or a farmer). His parents were pastor Carl Christian Friedrich Kraemer from Bleckendorf and Johanna Dorothee Auguste Kraemer, née Brandt. On August 10, 1817, at the age of 30, he married the 22-year-old maid Anna Maria Krohn, daughter of the Langenhorner Vogtes from 1789 to 1804, who died on September 8, 1804, Conrad Cornelius Krohn and the late Anna Christine Krohn. The wedding was performed by a preacher in Langenhorn, whether in Bleckendorf or elsewhere is not clear from the church book. His father had already passed away. The bids were made in Langenhorn and Bleckendorf. There was no church in Langenhorn, at that time believers from Langenhorn still had to attend church services in St. John's Church in Eppendorf . Possibly it was his brother Friedrich Erich August Kraemer (1785–1845) who had studied theology and later was a professor at the Johanneum School of Scholars . But he did not live in Langenhorn. From 1819 Johann Gottfried August Kraemer leased the Vogtshufe (Hufe IV), was appointed Vogt in 1823 and also acquired the Vogtshufe in 1823. The Vogtshufe owned a pitcher right and a distillery. It was located at Langenhorner Chaussee 94 from 1752 to 1952 , then it was demolished. Before 1752 it was located further south on Langenhorner Chaussee , on the opposite side of the confluence with the street Beim Schäferhof . Kraemer was Vogt until his death on February 26, 1836. After the French era , the wars of liberation and the Cossack winter , Langenhorn was a very poor village. In addition, there was a strong decline in morality. The economic and moral situation only improved with Krämer as Vogt. Kraemer's wife Anna Maria died early, so Kraemer married a second time, a née Ellerbrook. After his death, this was the owner of the Vogtshufe until Kraemer's son Friedrich Wilhelm Gottlieb Kraemer took it over in 1848. From 1848 to 1894 this owner was the Vogtshufe and from 1848 to 1857 and from 1863 to 1872 Vogt. From 1877 to 1881 he was parish chairman. From 1884 to 1889 Wilhelm Kraemer was the owner of the Hufe V, from 1894 to 1903 the owner of the Vogtshufe and from 1884 to 1887 the chairman of the community. In 1893 he was elected to the Hamburg parliament. Rose = narrow footpath. The zoologist and curator of the Zoological Museum Hamburg Erna Mohr lived in Kraemerstieg 8.
Krefeld way

( Location )

K414 0285 Krefeld , city in North Rhine-Westphalia 1952
(July 14)
Before that, Käkenflur byway 1 . Motif group: "Cities in the West German industrial area".
Finial path

( Location )

K629 0075 after the genus finials 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ".
Kreuzfurth

( Location )

K425 0090 after the estate of the same name in the municipality of Kranenburg , which was owned by the owner of the settlement on the road 1958
(September 10)
The Good Kreuzfuhrt , also home Kreuzfuhrt of the owner of the voltage across the street Kreuzfuhrt settlement Ernst Schulte-Hordelhoff had since October 1874 through the purchase by the economist and landowner Theodor Schulte-Hordelhoff to 1957 in family ownership. Then it was sold to Franz Josef Linderoth. The estate originally had a grain water mill with four houses. It has repeatedly burned down, decayed and rebuilt over time. The Spaen family owned it for a long time. Alexander von Spaen was born there in 1619. In January 1748 it was up for lease or sale, in July 1749 the furniture was up for sale and in November 1754 the property was up for sale. The Kreuzfurth estate planned by architects Hans Atmer and Jürgen Marlow in 1957 was built between 1957 and 1959, comprises 21 terraced houses in three rows and is a listed building .
Krohnstieg

( Location )

K444 02000
(in the district)
after the long-established Hufner family Krohn in Langenhorn, who produced many Langenhorn bailiffs 1932
(August 18)
Expansion: October 26, 1935, July 26, 1950. On December 4, 1953, extension to the west by renaming route 111 to Krohnstieg . In the early 1950s, the Krohnstieg was extended by almost completely renaming the street Auf dem Felde to Krohnstieg . With the expansion of the original Krohnstieg up to Gehlengraben in 1961, the renamed part was renamed back to Auf dem Felde . Further expansion September 5, 1960, November 30, 1961, September 3, 1965. To the west of the Krohnstiegtunnel lies the Krohnstieg in Niendorf , to the east it initially runs for a length of 220 meters in Norderstedt in Schleswig-Holstein , before it goes through in an easterly direction Langenhorn leads. In Fuhlsbüttel it is only located in the course of the tunnel. It is part of the federal highway 433 and from Ring 3 . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Krohnstieg . From the 1590s onwards, the names of the Hufner were recorded. Members of the Krohn family (initially also Kroen and Kron ) were temporarily owners of the Vogtshufe ( Hufe IV), before 1752 on Langenhorner Chausse , opposite the confluence with Straße Beim Schäferhof , from 1752 to 1952 at Langenhorner Chaussee 94, then demolished. The Vogtshufe owned a pitcher right and a distillery. The family lived there from 1572–1588, 1589–1591, 1601–1612, 1614–1621, 1650–1728, 1742–1824 and in Hufe V, 1772–1779, Hufe VII, 1597–1629, 1762–1904 and Katenstelle X. , 1560-1602. Around 1850 Cornelius Conrad Krohn was the owner of the homestead on Langenhorner Chaussee 171, which was first mentioned in 1764 and was probably separated from Hufe VI beforehand. In the period from 1600 to 1817 there were at least eight Langenhorn bailiffs from the Krohn family. In 1806 Napoleon Bonaparte had Hamburg and its surroundings occupied, including Langenhorn. The Vogt and Vollhufner (Hufe IV) Hans Peter Krohn sank his gold and silver things in three boxes in his fish ponds at what is now the Fuhlsbüttel Nord underground station , but later only found one box. During the Hamburger French period Langenhorn belonged 1811-1814 to Mairie Langenhorn , which also includes the other villages Fuhlsbüttel , Alsterdorf , Ohlsdorf , Klein Borstel (now part with to Klein Borstel) Struck Holt and Winterhude belonged. The Mairie Langenhorn belonged to the canton Eppendorf in the arrondissement of Hamburg . The Maire of Mairie Langenhorn became the Vollhufner and previous Vogt Hans Peter Krohn. A member of the Mairie Langenhorn council was Vollhufner (Hufe VII) Claus Carsten Krohn. Rose = narrow footpath.
Sparkasse - panoramio (21) .jpg
Kulenstück

( Location )

K502 0110 after a field name 1949
(February 26)
Before that, part of the Rittmerskamp on both sides of the Heerwisch road . Expansion: December 15, 1960. Shortened at some point after that, then only north of the Heerwisch . The parcel is in the cadastral maps of 1750 as Kuhlen piece and 1804 as hollow piece located. When Hufe I was sold in 1688, the corresponding fields were listed. Two of the fields were on the Kuhlenstück . The parcel was to the east of the street, on the western side of Langenhorner Chaussee . The name Kuhlenstück can be interpreted as a field piece with kuhlen.
Kulenstück-Brücke.jpg
Kulenstückbrücke

( Location )

- 0010 according to location and function 1960 The bridge crosses the Bornbach in the course of the Kulenstück road . Before 1960 there was already a bridge there, which before 1949 was possibly called Rittmerskampbrücke . Before a bridge was built, there was a ford there , which is marked as Sand Fohrt on the land map from 1750 . A parcel named after the ford called Sandfohrtstück was named in 1688. In the land map from 1750 the parcels of land named after the ford are Sanfohrts Stück , Lütje Sandfohrts Wisch and Sandfohrts Wisch (three times), and in the land map from 1804 the parcels of Sandfohrts Wiesen and Sandfohrtsteile .
Kulenstückbrücke Hamburg-Langenhorn.nnw.jpg
Langenhorner Chaussee

( Location )

L046 4835
(in the district)
according to the location in the district 1898 When, on May 12, 1283, Abbot Hermann I of the Reinfeld monastery transferred the rights to the village of Langenhorn to the sovereign, Count Gerhard I of Holstein-Itzehoe , Langenhorn already had six hooves (later seven). The street will be a lot older. Approx. from the 16th to the 18th century it was part of the Ochsenweg or Heerweg . The condition of the road was very bad, and streams also crossed the road. At the fords it was sometimes impassable during floods. It was not until 1805 that two narrow oak bridges were built. In 1825 the connecting road from the Dammtor to the Ochsenzoll , of which it was part, began to be expanded. In 1840 it was finished. The road also received three new bridges in Langenhorn. At the actual village it consisted of cobblestones , otherwise it had only been made more passable by embankments and fortifications. In order to cover the costs, a toll was charged if someone wanted to use it. In Südlangenhorn on Langenhorner Chaussee 64 (demolished in February 1987) and at the Ochsenzoll there were money-collecting houses with barriers. The whole distance from Eppendorfer Mühlenteich to Ochsenzoll was originally called Langenhorner Chaussee , but when the houses were to be given house numbers, the Ochsenzoll came in well over 1000, so that part of the street was renamed Alsterkrugchaussee to solve the problem. After the First World War, Langenhorner Chaussee was given cobblestones along its entire length and was doubled. From 1928 to 1934 it was connected to the sewer network. On April 1, 1938, the border to Fuhlsbüttel was relocated to the current location at the Raakmoorgraben brook within the framework of the Greater Hamburg Act . Before it was further south. House number 17 previously belonged to Langenhorn, so the border was about just before the Kurveneck street , seen from Langenhorn. Langenhorner Chaussee was part of Bundesstraße 433 until May 16, 2000 , when the completed bypass road to the airport was opened. The federal road now leads over the Zeppelinstrasse . The three stumbling blocks of Kurt Gäth, Gerhard Junke (son of August Junke ) and Gottfried Fritz Simon are located on Langenhorner Chaussee 560, at the corner of Henny-Schütz-Allee , at the former porter's house of the Ochsenzoll Hospital (today Asklepios Klinik Nord , Ochsenzoll location) the Long Chaussee who remember 623 three stumbling blocks to Karl-Heinz Barthel and Otto Berger. In 1905 the architect Fritz Höger moved into his own house designed by him at Langenhorner Chaussee 109. He also designed house number 115 from 1900. The multiple world champion in boxing Susianna Kentikian lived as a refugee in the former Süderschule on Langenhorner Chaussee 140. The poet and narrator Hermann Claudius taught between 1922 and 1929 at the Norderschule on Langenhorner Chaussee 515.
Ochsenzoll underground station 2009a.JPG
Langenhorn Market

( Location )

L047 0255 × 235 × 125 × 105 according to location and function in the district 1962
(December 28th)
Before 1962 there was the Jonas-Hof, which was demolished in 1961 when part of the Krohnstiegs , between Tangstedter Landstrasse and Langenhorner Chaussee , and a pedestrian tunnel were built and then the market square was designed. The Jonas-Hof stood roughly on the site of today's Kaufland department store.
Partial view of LaHoMa Living Plaza.jpg
Langenhorner market bridge

( Location )

- 0055 according to location and function 1977
(January 13)
There was a bridge there before that. The bridge crosses the tracks of the U 1 at the level of the Langenhorn Markt underground station .
U1 station LangenhornMarkt15.jpg
Laubenweg

( Location )

L079 0130 freely chosen name 1932
(August 18)
Part of the building was renamed Scharnskamp and expanded: March 10, 1958. When part of the Linne estate was built, it was made up of small rental houses for the unemployed and their families, which could later be acquired. The settlement was planned and built by Otto Linne in his last two years in office. After the seizure of power by the Nazis, he was met with hostility from them and retired the end of the 1933rd Other houses in the settlement are located on the streets Krohnstieg , St. Jürgens Holz and Cordesweg .
Laukamp

( Location )

L089 0915 after the Langenhorn Hufner family Lau (1658 to around 1900) 1920
(May 30)
Created during the construction of the Fritz Schumacher settlement . From the 1590s onwards, the names of the Hufner were recorded. Members of the Lau family (initially also Lauwe ) owned Hufe III (burnt down in 1932 ) from 1658 to around 1900 , which was located on today's Rodenkampweg diagonally opposite the confluence with the street Auf dem Felde . In 1762, Timm Lau also built the cultivation site on the east side of the village pond on Tangstedter Landstrasse . After him, his son Hein Lau was the owner. His daughter, the only heiress, married the Rademacher Hans Timm, whose descendants owned the cultivation position for a long time. The house at Tangstedter Landstrasse 25 at the corner of Timmweg was demolished in 1968. Later there was an Aldi store, then a Schlecker branch. According to a source, the family is said to have "owned their land" in the Laukamp area , but the Hufen not only had their fields in one place, but throughout Langenhorn. The densest parcel, on which the oldest three Hufen (I-III) had their fields, among other things, was Immenhöven ( land map from 1750 Im Häben , 1804 Imhöfen ) on the south side of the street Laukamp . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field. The painter and graphic artist Max Weiss lived and printed at Laukamp 8 . After the bombing in Hammerbrook in 1943 , the songwriter and poet Wolf Biermann lived with his mother at Laukamp 10.
Leegmoor

( Location )

L099 0165 according to the terrain 1960
(July 1)
Leeg , Low German = low , deep , but also empty , uninhabited .
Leemgrove

( Location )

L100 0150 after a clay pit 1929
(July 16)
There is no nearby parcel called Leemgrove or similar on the 1750 and 1804 land maps . Leemgrove , Low German = clay pit.
Leezener way

( Location )

L103 0225 Leezen , municipality in the Segeberg district in Schleswig-Holstein 1954
(December 3)
In front of it Stockflethweg byway 1 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Larkspur

( Location )

L391 0140 after the plant genus Larksporn 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ".
Leyendeckerweg

( Location )

L396 0145 after the Leyendecker , an earlier name for the slater 2010
(October 19)
Motif group: "Historical craft trades".
Dragonfly Path

( Location )

L158 0120 after the insect dragonfly 1940
(February 11)
Partial cancellation: March 19, 1983.
Lütte Raak

( Location )

L292 0285 after the field name Raack 1960
(July 1)
Raak or Raack generally means clearing . Lütte , Low German for little ones . In the land map of 1750 the parcels of Raack (several times in two areas), Op de Raack , In de Raack and Raacks Mohr are drawn, and in that of 1804 the parcels of Raack (several times in one area) and Raacksheide .
Masen

( Location )

M081 0245 after a field name 1938
(October 6)
On the land maps from 1750 five parcels and 1804 one parcel named Maasen are drawn. Mase = moorland . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the street Masen .
Masenkamp

( Location )

M082 0660 after the field name Maasen 1952 Before 43 . On February 7, 1964 extension by renaming from Reekampsweg . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field. See Masen .
Masenredder

( Location )

M083 0225 after the field name Maasen 1938
(October 6)
Extension: February 7, 1964. Redder = path bounded on both sides by a hedge or a bend. See Masen .
Masenstieg

( Location )

M084 0235 after the field name Maasen 1938
(October 6)
Extension: February 7, 1964. Stairway = narrow footpath. See Masen .
Melahnweg

( Location )

M131 0115 Johan Heinrich Wilhelm Melahn (1837–1910), blacksmith 1952
(October 4th)
In front of it Wischhöfen byway 1 . On April 14, 1866, Melahn registered his blacksmiths and carts smiths at Langenhorner Chaussee 391. In keeping with the times, the forge was gradually converted from 1946 to the two-wheel center Melahn and a petrol station was built and operated on the property next to the building. In 2008 the two-wheel center Melahn moved to Kaltenkirchen and later to Neunkirchen . Today there is a fast food delivery service in the old building.
Meyer-Delius-Platz

( Location )

M176 0070 Hugo Meyer-Delius (1877–1965), pediatrician 1968
(January 7th)
Not a square in the traditional sense, but a short street. Motif group: "Doctors".
Middeltwiete

( Location )

M185 0495 after the previous name 1949
(February 26)
Before: Middeltwiete Ost and Middeltwiete West . Central area running parallel between two streets. Twiete = narrow way. The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the street Middeltwiete .
Moorlilientwiete

( Location )

M434 0125 after the plant species moor lily 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ". Twiete = narrow way .
Moorreye

( Location )

M275 0730
(in the district)
after a field name 1914
(August 1st)
To the east of the Raakmoorgraben is the street Hummelsbüttel . It was created during the construction of the Siemershöh settlement . Expansion: July 16, 1929. The parcels are shown on the land maps from 1750 as Mohr Reyen and 1804 as Moorreye , Moorrey's Koppel and Moorreye's Koppel . They were named after the adjacent border brook Moorreye between Hummelsbüttel and Langenhorn. The Moorreye was later renamed Raakmoorgraben . Reye = gutter, brook. In the Mooreye 94 a has been a stumbling block for Walter Mittelbach relocated, who lived there. His brother Ernst Mittelbach also lived there. The entomologist Eduard Wagner lived at 103 Moorreye .
Moorreyen Bridge

( Location )

- 0010 according to location and function 1960
(July 15)
The bridge crosses the Raakmoorgraben on the Moorreye road .
Moorreyenbruecke.jpg
Moss break

( Location )

M293 0150 according to the terrain 1960
(May 17)
Bruch = swamp or moorland.
Mözener way

( Location )

M230 0330 Mözen , municipality in the Segeberg district in Schleswig-Holstein 1954
(December 3)
In front of it Stockflethweg byway 1 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Neelsenweg

( Location )

N021 0085 after the Neelsen farming family, who lived in Langenhorn in the 18th century 1952
(April 3)
In front of it path 166 byway 1 . In 1750 Heinrich Neelsen received land on the northwest corner of Langenhorn to build a Kahlhof. To build the Kate he got an oak paid. In 1762 he added land. Later his son-in-law Hans Christ took over. Buck the land place, which grew almost to the size of a full hoof due to large land assignments. In 1900 Bucks descendants sold the property to the Hamburg state. From 1924 to 1925 he built a state educational institution for the youth welfare office, also called Landheim . The listed building of the Landheim am Bärenhof 32–34 was sold and renovated. Today there are apartments in it.
Neelsenweg.jpg
Nettelkrögen

( Location )

N038 0255 after a field name 1936
(November 20)
The parcel is shown on the land map from 1750 as Nettel Krögen . Nettel , Low German = nettle , nettle . Krögen , Lower German = corner , angle .
Neubergerweg

( Location )

N043 1200 Theodor Neuberger (1856–1938), psychiatrist 1932
(July 3)
Before that, from August 2, 1921, fir surcharge and part of path 472 . Extension: September 6, 1960. From 1906 to January 31, 1924, Neuberger was director of the Langenhorn insane asylum (today Asklepios Klinik Nord , Ochsenzoll location). Major expansions of the Langenhorn institution took place under his leadership. Motif group: "Doctors". On Neubergerweg from 80-82 December 1961 was attended by the former German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt and his wife Loki Schmidt , the 1962 for a time in the school on Eberthofweg taught 63 as a teacher.
Neukoppel

( Location )

N077 0425 after the field name Neue Koueln 1956
(December 1)
The parcel is shown on the land map from 1804. Paddock = fenced pasture .
Ochsenstieg

( Location )

O220 0400 after the reference to the district Ochsenzoll . Rose = narrow footpath. 2010
(October 19)
Ochsenweberstrasse

( Location )

O0221 0865 after a craft, weaving heavy cloth 2010
(October 19)
Before that, at least 1898, a street in the Ochsenzoll hospital without a name . Motif group: "Historical craft trades".
Oehleckerring

( Location )

O029 0850 Franz Oehlecker (1874–1957), Hamburg surgeon 1963
(September 6th)
Extension: August 14, 1964. Group of motifs: "Doctors".
Olenland

( Location )

O090 0460 after a field name 1960
(May 17)
The parcel is shown in the land maps from 1750 as Aufn Alten Lande and 1804 as Ohlenlande . Olen , Ohlen , Low German = old people .
Paalmoor

( Location )

P002 0190 after a field name 1929
(July 16)
Paal , Pahl , Low German = stake . What is meant is the moor at border post No. 25, which is also shown on the field map from 1750. The moor there is marked as a moor on the stake . In the field map from 1804 the area as is pile-Moor drawn, 1900 also pile Moor . When Christian IV , the King of Denmark and Norway, who was also Duke of the Duchy of Holstein , took over the rule of Pinneberg in 1640 , all areas around Langenhorn, with the exception of Fuhlsbüttel , belonged to Denmark. In 1641 he had an army camp built for around 10,000 men in Fuhlsbüttel and took the opportunity to re-mark the border between Langenhorn and the Danish Hummelsbüttel with new stakes bearing the king's mark. He did not stick to the previous limit, but changed it in his favor. Sometimes the piles were 40 rods too far in the Langenhorn area. Because they had enough problems with the king, the Hamburg authorities left it at the new border. In 1689 the border posts were renewed. On October 16, 1732, the new 25th stake was placed next to the old 25th stake. In 1802, boundary post No. 25 was exchanged for boundary stone No. 9 . It bears the inscription "HP" (Herrschaft Pinneberg), "C7" ( Christian VII. ), "1802", "No. 9 ".
Pannsweg

( Location )

P019 0460 after the Langenhorn farming family Pann 1933
(April 30)
The peasant family Pann must have settled after 1807, because by then the owners of the hooves, katen places as well as the brinkitzer and cultivation places are listed in the literature. Johann Peter Pann is recorded in the Hamburg address book from 1867 (previously no Langenhorns were recorded there), with the addition of Landmann und Krämerei . In 1876 his son Johann Joachim took over the business. In 1877 the address was given as the street at the border , by which the later street Am Ochsenzoll is meant. In 1900 route 538 is given as the address, which was renamed Am Ochsenzoll in 1903 . From 1909 the address and house number is also given, Am Ochsenzoll 10. At the beginning, besides Landmann , the shopkeeper was also listed, in 1877 instead of the shopkeeper there was also a distillery owner , so later the job title is only called Landmann . From 1925 it is no longer recorded in the Hamburg address book. The flowing water Pannsgraben , coming from the street Am Ochsenzoll , crosses under the Pannsweg near the eastern end and flows a little further south into the Bornbach .
Poplar wipe

( Location )

P241 0265 to a meadow surrounded by poplars 1979
(May 31)
Wisch Low German = meadow .
Parowstrasse

( Location )

P037 0230 Wilhelm Parow (1887–1959), doctor 1961
(April 10)
Motif group: "Doctors". The Protestant baptized Wilhelm Parow was born on January 12, 1887 as the son of the senior teacher, Professor Doctor of Philosophy Karl Hermann Hippolyt Walter Parow and his wife Dora Ottilie, née Aye, in Charlottenburg . As a medical intern living at Promenadenstrasse 11 in Berlin-Lichterfelde , he married Charlotte Johanna Marie Heintze (born February 4, 1888 in Berlin), daughter of the bank manager Ludwig Wilhelm Rudolf Heintze and his wife, in the Berlin-Mariendorf registry office on September 19, 1912 Auguste Luise, née Schmidt. Parow worked in the Altona hospital before and after the First World War . After the seizure of power by the Nazis, he was a so-called " quarter-Jew discriminated against" and professionally disadvantaged. From 1950 to 1958 he was President of the Hamburg Medical Association . He died on April 7, 1959 in Hamburg. One son, the general practitioner Friedrich Ernst Parow (born November 27, 1913 in Altona) died in the Second World War on January 27, 1942 in Vyasma as an assistant doctor in the reserve at the armored repair department 552. A second son, the medical student Wilhelm Uwe Parow (born November 2, 1924 in Altona) fell on 25 November 1943 as an ensign and sergeant of the 6th company, Grenadier regiment 254 in the eastern theater of war in Kurganje.
Horse climb

( Location )

P264 0080 after an old job title 2010
(October 19)
A horse man was a farmer who had to keep horses to cultivate his fields. Rose = narrow footpath.
Pflugschmiedweg

( Location )

P265 0160 according to an old craft 2010
(October 19)
Ploughsmith = blacksmith specialized in plows . Motif group: "Historical craft trades".
Poppelauweg

( Location )

P163 0195 after the Poppelau peasant family, who lived in Langenhorn in the 18th and 19th centuries 1952
(April 3)
In front of it Wittekopsweg byway 1 . On May 18, 1745 Claus Poppelau (also received Pöppelau ) north of Oak's where a piece of land to build a cottage and a coal yard. Land expulsions increased the property. After him, his son Hinrich was the owner, and as an elderly part he was given free accommodation, corn, meadow and garden land, which his son worked on for him free of charge. In 1840 the site was no longer in family ownership. The cottage was on Langenhorner Chaussee 174 and was demolished in 1963. In a list of residents from 1772, Claus Poppelau is listed as a worker . Claus Poppelau, who had a fairly good knowledge of the principles of the Protestant religion and was able to teach, but knew little about writing and nothing at all about arithmetic, took over school lessons in Langenhorn from 1786 until Easter 1800. He taught and lived in a small school kate, which also served as a shepherd's card in the summer, as there were no lessons in the summer and he earned money as a cowherd on the low school income.
Poppelauweg (3) .jpg
Porsch path

( Location )

P175 0295 after a marsh plant 1940
(February 11)
Porsch = Porst, swamp porst .
Putt meadow

( Location )

P223 0305 after a field name 1959
(January 2)
The small parcel of land is marked as Puttwiese on the map from 1804 , and in 1900 it was also called Puttwiese . Putt, Pott, Pütt, Pütte , Low German = pot . In Middle Low German, among other things, puddles, pits, hollows, water holes, troughs, marshes, swamps, pools, wells .
Cross path

( Location )

Q011 0170 after the function as a cross way 1934
(December 15)
The street Querpfad is a transverse street between the streets Am Ochsenzoll and Stockflethweg .
Raakmoorgrund

( Location )

R418 0120
(in the district)
after the situation at Raakmoor 1977
(May 23)
The street in Hummelsbüttel is to the east of the Raakmoorgraben . Before that, part of the Grützmühlenweg , named in 1950 , which partly disappeared. Raak or Raack generally means clearing . The Raakmoor is shown as Raacks Mohr on the map from 1750 . The Grützmühlenweg is now only in Hummelsbüttel, as was previously the horse-powered Grützmühle built by Nicolaus Andreas Behrmann in 1841 and operated there by his son Hinrich Adolf Behrmann until 1885. Then the building fell into disrepair and had to be demolished in 1962. Before the demolition, the grinding and Göpelwerk was removed and initially stored. In 1966/1967, the Grützmühle building in the Volksdorf museum village was reconstructed according to measurement plans drawn up in 1942 and the old, original, ready-to-use grinding and gopel mill was installed.
Raaksheide

( Location )

R001 0355 after a hallway name 1960
(July 1)
In front of it path 705 . Raak or Raack generally means clearing . The Raacksheide parcel is shown on the 1804 land map.
Reeborn

( Location )

R077 0130 after the headwaters of a brook 1955
(February 19)
From January 11, 1967, private road. Rhee = brook . Born , Low German = stream or source . In this context then source .
Reekamp

( Location )

R078 0790 after a field name 1910
(November 30th)
1910 Reckkamp . Before that, path 351 and path 357 . 1952 or 1953 Renaming to Reekamp May 8, 1942 Partial renaming to Wulffsblöcken and expansion, partial cancellation: June 25, 1963, changed course: February 7, 1964. The parcel is marked in the land maps of 1750 as Reek-Camp and 1804 as Reckkamp . A parcel was also called Rheestück in 1688 . Reek , Low German = weed, Rhee = brook . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field. The marine painter and illustrator Fritz W. Schulz lived and worked at Reekamp 45 from 1955 until his death in 1962 .
Reekamp.jpg
Reestück

( Location )

R089 0070 after a field name 1957
(May 15)
The parcel was designated in 1688 as the Rhine area. Rhee = brook .
Rittmerskamp

( Location )

R214 0600 after a field name 1910
(November 30th)
In front of it path 51 . Expansion: February 26, 1949, January 31, 1956 and September 5, 1960. 1961 Extension by renaming a small section of the street Auf dem Felde . In 1688 the parcel was named Rittmißkamp , in the land map of 1750 Rittmeister's camp and in the land map of 1804 Rittmers Kamp . The Hamburg local history researcher Johann Friedrich Voigt suspected in 1909 that the Rittmeisterkamp was Saatland for the use of the riding servant of the former landlord, but this has not been proven. What is certain is that the parcel was named Rittmißkamp in 1688, 62 years before the land map of 1750 and the name Rittmeister's Camp . For hooves I belonged in 1688 among other 5 piece of land on the parcel Rittmißkamp . Even before 1750, the parcel of seed land was the oldest three Hufen (Hufe I-III). Retmisse , Low German = a swampy forest or meadow with reed . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field.
Rodenkampweg

( Location )

R222 0960 after a field name 1903
(November 25)
Before that way 166 . The Rodenkampsweg was named that way around 1900. On October 6, 1938, a section was shortened by renaming a section to Wittekopsweg , and on April 3, 1952, it was extended to Krohnstieg by renaming route 149 . Where the parcel is located, part of the forest was Hundeskroch (name 1688), Hund Schroht (name 1750) or Hunnenschroh (name 1804). In 1688, Hufe I included 3 and 4 fields on two pieces of Im Hundeskroch . On the land map from 1750 the parcel of Rohn Camp is drawn, consisting of two adjacent parts with 7 fields. One part stretches into the forest, while the other is tight. Maybe these are the two pieces. Others are not in the forest. By 1804, further parts of the forest had been cleared and the size of the parcel approximately tripled. The parcel now bore the name Rodenkamp . The parcel is one of the oldest three hooves (hooves I – III). Rohn , Rohne = cut or fallen tree trunk. Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field. Rodenkamp means something like cleared field . The Rodenkampsweg , along with Langenhorner Chaussee and Tangstedter Landstrasse, is one of the three oldest streets in Langenhorn. Opposite the confluence of Tangstedter Landstrasse, it connected Langenhorner Chaussee with Achterort (also Hinterort or old village ), where the oldest three Hufen stood with the associated retirement and day laborers' cottages. The Achterort was 300 to 400 meters west of Langenhorner Chaussee and south of Rodenkampweg . The section on Langenhorner Chaussee was renamed Wittekopsweg and traffic-calmed. It is no longer possible to enter the location from Langenhorner Chaussee .
Rodenkampsweg (1) .jpg
Rosemary heather

( Location )

R454 0180 after the plant of the same name, rosemary heather 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ".
Röweland

( Location )

R256 0250 after a field name 1964
(September 21)
The parcel is marked in the land maps from 1750 as Röw Land and 1804 as Röfkamp . Röw , Röwe , Low German = turnip .
Rüümk

( Location )

R355 0030th after a field name 1933
(April 30)
The parcel is shown in the land map from 1804 as Rühmk . Rüümk is a free space or an open meadow or pasture in the wood.
Samlandweg

( Location )

S023 0665 Samland , Russian , formerly German peninsula in the eastern Baltic Sea 1959
(May 28)
Expansion: January 25, 1960. Named the East Prussian homeland of many expellees who had to look for a new place to stay in shrunken Germany as a result of the Second World War . Quite a few found a second home in Langenhorn.
Sandfoort

( Location )

S031 0810 after a sandy ford through the Bornbach 1932
(August 18)
Expansion: March 13, 1959. The ford is marked on the map from 1750 as Sand Fohrt . A parcel named after the ford called Sandfohrtstück was named in 1688. In the land map of 1750 the parcels of Sanfohrts Stück , Lütje Sandfohrts Wisch and Sandfohrts Wisch (three times) are drawn, and in the land map of 1804 the parcels of Sandfohrts Wiesen and Sandfohrtsteile . The ford was roughly at the point where the Kulenstückbrücke is today. The Bornbach was formerly also called Born or Rheede .
Schäferhofbrücke

( Location )

- 0040 according to location and function 1960
(July 15)
The bridge leads in the course of the street Beim Schäferhof over the tracks of the subway and the Ohlmoorgraben running parallel to it
Schäferhofbrücke Hamburg-Langenhorn1.jpg
Schäferhofstieg

( Location )

S093 0225 based on the street Beim Schäferhof 1958
(July 19)
The Schäferhof parcel is shown on the 1804 land map. The road leads to the parcel at its northern end. The shepherd's cottage on it was on the corner of the streets at Beim Schäferhof and Tannenweg . School lessons were also given in the cottage until 1750. It was demolished in 1932. Rose = narrow footpath.
Scharnskamp

( Location )

S117 0495 Johann Nicolaus Scharns (1811–1863), teacher in Langenhorn 1958
(March 10)
Before that, the northern part of the street was from August 18, 1932, a section of Laubenweg . Johann Nicolaus Scharns was born on 1811 in Ritzebüttel , Krummendeich . He trained himself practically for two and a half years, attended the seminar in Stade , was a private teacher in Neuhaus for a time and later second teacher at the Rumbaumsche School at Valentinskamp in Hamburg-Neustadt under the senior teacher Johann Jacob Hinrich Rebeling. He had good certificates and played the organ well. In 1841 he became a teacher at the Langenhorn School. Since the old school card could not be used because it served as a part of the old teacher Hinrich Dreyer (1779–1846), a house was rented between the village pond and Langenhorner Chaussee . The newly built school building on Langenhorner Chaussee 202 was then used from 1843 to 1886 (demolished in 1951). In 1844 a second teacher was hired. Pastor Faß occasionally held church services in the school building for the old and sick people who could not make the long journey to St. John's Church in Eppendorf. Scharns then played the organ and probably also held Bible lessons from time to time . He did not have six grades for grading, as today, but twelve: 1 = exemplary, 2 = excellent, 3 = commendable, 4 = very, very good, 5 = very good, 6 = very good, 7 = good, 8 = satisfied , 9 = pretty good, 10 = mediocre, 11 = bad, 12 = very bad. Behavior, diligence and cleanliness were also rated. Since his salary was not very high, he gave private lessons in languages ​​and music. He had also retired children from England and Latin America to be brought up here. Johann Nicolaus Scharns died in 1863 and left a widow. In his will he had stipulated that he would be buried in Elmshorn , his wife's hometown. He was buried in Elmshorn on September 26, 1863. Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field.
Scharnskamp (1) .jpg
Schierenkamp

( Location )

S150 0140 after a field name 1965
(December 14)
Low German: Schir (en), Schier = border, border area. Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field. The street Schierenkamp already existed before, but it was then an extension of the Wrangelkoppel between the streets An der Baumschule and Jugendparkweg (before September 8, 1952, Weg 166 ). With the construction of the new Schierenkamp , which now departed from the old one, the old one was renamed and a section of the Wrangelkoppel , which was extended to the Krohnstieg . The parcel is marked on the land maps from 1750 as Schieren Camp and 1804 as Schirenkamp . On this parcel is now (after the borders of 1802) the part of the Wrangelkoppel (on the edge) and the street Schierenkamp with its houses as well as the house Jugendparkweg 35. The parcel borders on the other sides on the streets or paths Jugenparkweg (as Part used as a pedestrian path ) and at the tree nursery (the part used as a pedestrian path). Nearby there was also the Schieren Böhm (1750) or Schirenbömen (1804) parcel , which was once a forest area. Boom , Bööm , Böhm , Böm comes from the Low German and means tree . Bööm or Böhm can also be the plural of Boom ( tree ), just as Bömen is from Böm .
Schierenkamp.jpg
Schillingswisch

( Location )

S168 0090 after a field name 1950
(February 15)
The parcel is shown in the land maps of 1750 as Schillings Wisch and 1804 as Schillingswiese . The origin of the name is not clear. The grower Eggert Schilling (also 1807), the third owner of the Anbauerstelle and Kate at Langenhorner Chaussee 212 corner Krohnstieg (demolished in 1965), from which today only are the access stairs, the meadow is a namesake of time out of the question because the cultivation place and the cottage only existed since 1769. No landowner is known by his last name before him. The Holzfager Hinrich Schilling mentioned in 1807 is out of the question for the same reasons. Whether the Hamburg mayor Albert Schilling was the landowner in Langenhorn from 1464 to 1480 cannot be found in the literature. In the area of ​​possible origins of names, the schilling as a means of payment cannot be ruled out . Wisch Low German = meadow .
Schlüüskamp

( Location )

S221 0200 after a field name 1937
(May 20)
The parcel is marked in the land maps from 1750 as Schlüs Camp and 1804 as Schleusenkamp . Around 1850, pieces of millstones and "a lot" of burnt oak beams and remains of planks had been excavated on the Schlüs Wisch parcel . By the meanings of the field names , 1750, Möhlen Camp (Mühlenkamp), Schlüs Camp , Schlüs Wisch , Dieck Camp , Dieck Wisch and 1804 Schleusenkamp , Dieckkamp , Dieckwiesen , behind the Dieckwiesen and Ohlendieck , it is assumed that the Born or Bornbach was dammed into a pond in the area to operate the water mill . The watermill is not mentioned in any old document, which is what it should be given its economic importance. Therefore it is assumed that it no longer existed in 1283. In 1283, the people of Langenhorn were already compulsory meals at the water mill in Fuhlsbüttel . Slüüs , Schlüüs , Low German = lock . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field.
Schmalfelder Strasse

( Location )

S231 0330 Schmalfeld , municipality in the Segeberg district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Smuggling bridge

( Location )

- 0010 according to location and function 1960
(July 15)
The bridge is a pedestrian bridge. It crosses the Tarpenbek in the course of the smuggling climb . The northern part is in Norderstedt .
Smuggling Bridge.JPG
Smuggling climb

( Location )

S245 0160 after the smuggling of goods between Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein, which took place at Ochsenzoll until 1867 1950
(February 15)
North of the center of the Tarpenbek in Norderstedt . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Schmuggelstieg . At the time of the Weimar Republic , the northern smuggling route already had its name, but it was nameless on the Hamburg side. After the seizure of power by the National Socialists both sides were called Schlageter way , after the sabotage against the French Ruhr occupation 1923 shot Albert Leo Schlageter . In 1950 both sides were renamed to Schmuggelstieg . In 1612, Count Ernst zu Holstein-Schaumburg set up a customs post for the County of Holstein-Pinneberg at Ochsenzoll , where customs had to be paid for goods of all kinds, which bothered Christian IV , King of Denmark and Norway, and the Duke of the Duchy of Holstein . He had it destroyed by Christian von Pentz . Afterwards it was agreed that for three weeks a year for oxen that came to the border via the Ochsenweg , customs could be charged. After the death of the last Schauenburger Otto V , the county was divided. The rule of Pinneberg and with it the ox toll fell to Christian IV, who incorporated it into the Duchy of Holstein. Soon customs were not only paid for oxen, but all year round for goods of all kinds. Seen from Langenhorn, the customs station was at the beginning of Ulzburger Straße . In 1840 it was moved to Langenhorner Chaussee . The customs house (demolished in 1956) was on Langenhorner Chaussee 689, the former home of the customs officer is on Segeberger Chaussee 26. After the German-Danish War in 1864, the Austro-Prussian condominium existed in Schleswig-Holstein , in 1865 Holstein was administered by Austria . After the German War of 1866, Schleswig and Holstein fell to Prussia . In 1867 the Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein was established and the customs post was relocated to the Eppendorfer mill pond in Eppendorf . This stopped smuggling at Ochsenzoll and other parts of the Langenhorn border. Rose = narrow footpath.
Langenhorn, Hamburg, Germany - panoramio (40) .jpg
Schwelmer way

( Location )

S356 0290 Schwelm , district town of the Ennepe-Ruhr district in North Rhine-Westphalia 1953
(December 4th)
Before that, Käkenflur byway 2 . Expansion: December 3, 1979. Group of motifs: "Cities in the West German industrial area".
Schwenweg

( Location )

S360 0380 after the Langenhorn farmer and innkeeper family Schwen 1948
(January 26th)
Before that, from December 15, 1934 Siedlerweg . An ancestor of the Schwen family is the blacksmith from Garstedt Sven Svennsen (in the burial book of the Quickborn St. Mary's Church Swen Swennsen ), who was buried in Quickborn on December 18, 1708 at the age of around 70. He had lived in Garstedt for about 20 years and had 6 children. He came from the Swedish city of Jönköping and is said to have been sent to Holstein “as a Nordic dragoons ” . On October 11, 1769, Johann received Hinrich Schwen (also Schween ) in Born , on Tangstedter Landstrasse opposite the Heidberg hospital, on which he built a cottage and cabbage farm. On August 1, 1843, Joachim Mathias Schwen was granted a restaurant license in Born , who ran an inn there with an introduction to changing horses (demolished in 1968). In the Hamburg address book , the family name is written from 1867 to 1900 Schwenn . His son Johann Peter Schwen (also Schwenn ) bought land on Wattkorn and built an inn in Tangstedter Landstrasse 230 in 1877 , but also ran agriculture. In 1890 his son Carl August Schwen took over the land and the inn. In 1910 a veranda was added to the back of the inn. Land sales in 1911 reduced land ownership. His older son Carl Wilhelm Schwen (* July 21, 1890) took over the inn and the remaining land in 1915, while Carl August Schwen lived as a pensioner at Rodenkampweg 14. In 1919 the land ownership became smaller again due to land expropriation for the construction of the Fritz Schumacher settlement . The younger son Adolf Schwen ran a coal and feed trade next to the inn on Tangstedter Landstrasse 234 and later had his house at Hartsmannsau 11. Carl Wilhelm Schwen began to redesign the large garden behind the inn. Because of the First World War , in which he had to take part, and the inflation , he was only able to continue working on the garden from 1926, which was adorned with ponds and rare plants. In addition to endangered plants, he also tended sick and endangered animals that were brought to him. He also built bird enclosures, bought rare birds and let them roam free as much as possible. In 1929 his wife, a farmer's daughter from Garstedt, with whom he had twin daughters, died. After the failed attempts to settle nightingales in Langenhorn, he got two white storks from the East Prussian ornithological station in Rossitten in 1934 , which, together with eight other storks from there in the garden of Schwen, were sent on the flight to Africa at the right time. His two storks came back from their winter quarters in Africa to their nest on the barn next to the inn, as they did in the following years. Since then he was not only known in Langenhorn. He was called by many the stork father Schwen . Once he built a prosthesis out of aluminum for the missing upper part of a stork's beak so that it could feed itself. In 1939 he married the concert singer and singing teacher Frida Lindhorst (born November 19, 1900), who died on April 19, 1949. After the Broder Hinrick Church was built next door at Tangstedter Landstrasse 220 in 1954, he tried to have a nesting place also built on the roof, which he succeeded. Storks also settled there. In 1971 the zoologist and ornithologist Günter Timmermann (1908–1979), professor at the Zoological Institute and the Zoological Museum Hamburg , wrote a literary portrait sketch of Carl Wilhelm Schwen in a commemorative publication. Carl Wilhelm Schwen died on December 2, 1972. He was buried at the Ohlsdorf cemetery with his wife in the family grave of Carl Lindhorst. The grave is one of the celebrity graves. His daughters continued to keep storks and run the business for a while. In 1975 a hotel extension was built. After there were no more animals and part of the property was sold and cultivated, the inn was leased in 1982 by the gourmet chef Josef Viehhauser . On the corner of Tangstedter Landstrasse and Krohnstieg , there was then the Schwen pet shop for a while. Since November 2005 the restaurant with Hotel Zum Wattkorn has been managed by the star chef Michael Wollenberg. On the initiative of class 6b of the Heidberg high school , a small sign was attached to the street sign from Schwenweg at the corner of Fritz-Schumacher-Allee below on June 17, 2010 with the district manager of Hamburg-Nord Wolfgang Kopitzsch , three generations of the Schwen family and other guests , with the inscription "After the Langenhorn farming family Schwen, to which the 'stork father' Wilhelm Schwen (1890–1972) also belonged".
Seven oaks

( Location )

S421 0120 after the German translation of the name of the English city Sevenoaks (seven oaks) 1965
(December 14)
On November 26, 1964, the foundation stone of the Siebeneichen settlement was laid by the British consul general in Hamburg, Sir John Dunlop, founder of the Anglo-German Club and later mayor of the city of Sevenoaks. Sevenoaks took over the sponsorship of the settlement and donated seven oaks to the settlement in 1968. Guests of honor at the plantings were the sister Miss J. Dunlop and the councilor of Sevenoaks Miss GE Parrot. The terraced houses of the estate , which look the same, are located on the streets Krohnstieg , Wrangelkoppel , Siebeneichen and Schierenkamp .
Silver poplar rose

( Location )

S448 0100 after the plant species of the same name, white poplar 1952
(April 3)
In front of it Pappelweg byway 1 . Rose = narrow footpath.
Solferinostrasse

( Location )

S479 0380 in memory of the aftermath of the Battle of Solferino 1960
(April 28)
Henry Dunant (1828-1910) was established in June 1859 in the vicinity of the Italian town of Solferino witnessed the appalling conditions concerning the wounded of the battle of Solferino. In his book A Memory of Solferino , published in 1862, he reported how he worked to care for the wounded on both sides and suggested the formation of voluntary aid organizations to prepare in peacetime to help the wounded in war. As a result of the book, the Committee of Aid Societies for the Care of the Wound was founded in 1863 , which has been called the International Committee of the Red Cross since 1876 . The first Geneva Convention , passed in 1864, is also largely based on suggestions from Dunant's book.
Solingen way

( Location )

S481 0090 Solingen , city in North Rhine-Westphalia 1979
(December 3)
Motif group: "Cities in the West German industrial area".
Sun line

( Location )

S498 0465 freely chosen name 1934
(December 15)
Freely chosen name with regard to the north-south course of the street.
Solstice

( Location )

S502 0515 freely chosen name 1936
(January 20)
Extension: March 3, 1986.
Sports rise

( Location )

S951 0155 after the old handicraft profession sporer 2010
(October 19)
Group of motifs: "Historical craft trades". Rose = narrow footpath.
St. Juergens wood

( Location )

S571 0335 after the forest of the longtime owner Langenhorn, the Hospital St. Jürgen 1932
(August 18)
St. Jürgen , Low German for St. Georg . Wood = forest. After 1452, parts of the Langenhorn were gradually bequeathed to the hospital or sold. 1509 owned a third, later half, while the senior citizen Hinrich Wittekop (1563 Oberalter, † 1565) owned the second half. His son Albert Wittekop (1602 Oberalter, 1607 President of the Oberalten) inherited this. After Albert Wittekop's death, his heirs sold the second half to the hospital on April 9, 1615. The hospital remained Langenhorn's owner until 1830. Then the rights to Langenhorn were transferred to the Hamburg state and Langenhorn was incorporated into the rulership of the Geestlande . Where the road is, there was once a part of the forest Hundeskroch (name 1688), Hund Schroht ( land map 1750) or Hunnenschroh ( land map 1804).
Staudenweg

( Location )

S596 0075 after the herbaceous plant perennial 1945
(November 1)
Stockflethweg

( Location )

S697 2050 Daniel Stockfleth (1676–1739), Mayor of Hamburg 1948
(January 26th)
Before that, from November 25, 1903 Bornweg and before that, Weg 530 .
Suckweg

( Location )

S779 1050 after the long-established Langenhorn family Suck 1932
(August 18)
Before that way 53 . Expansion: November 20, 1936 and July 8, 1952. The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° East ) crosses the Suckweg . In 1783 Johann Cord Suck acquired Katenstelle IX, of which the owners are known from 1560. It quickly grew to a half-hoof . His son Johann took over the half-hooves at some point. In 1852 his son Johann took over the half-hooves. From 1869 to 1874 only his widow is listed in the Hamburg address book , from 1875 to 1880 the half-hoofed Joachim Suck. Joachim Hinrich Suck is listed in the address book from 1881. In 1898 Joachim Hinrich Hermann Suck became the owner (in the address book HJH Suck). In 1902 a member of the family built a house not far from the cottage at Tangstedter Landstrasse 12. In 1908, most of the land came into the possession of Edmund Siemers . In 1913 Joachim Hinrich Hermann Suck tore down the old cottage and built the new Suck-Kate , which was later placed under monument protection. The granddaughter of Joachim Hinrich Hermann Suck and his wife Alma was the last owner. She hadn't lived there since early 2013 and tried to sell the Kate. For now, she rented them out. When a buyer was found, the tenants moved out by December 31, 2016. From the late evening of January 5, 2017, the listed building on Langenhorner Chaussee 160 burned down to the ground. The public prosecutor's office assumed it was arson, but ended the proceedings relatively quickly because no perpetrator could be found. After the fire, the purchase price contractually agreed before the fire was paid in full. The children of the last owner of the Suck-Kate no longer live in Hamburg. The family's former home at Tangstedter Landstrasse 12 is still standing.
Sülfeld way

( Location )

S790 0275 Sülfeld , municipality in the Segeberg district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 6 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Marsh calla rise

( Location )

S933 0045 for another name for dragon arum 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ". Rose = narrow footpath.
Marsh violet trail

( Location )

S944 0085 after the violet species of the same name 2002
(January 29)
Motif group: "Plants in the Raakmoor ".
Tangstedter Landstrasse

( Location )

T008 4195 Tangstedt , municipality in the Stormarn district in Schleswig-Holstein 1898 In front of it path 320 . First expansion August 1, 1914. In the Hamburg address book from 1877 the southern part of the Landstrasse is already referred to as Tangstädter Landstrasse , but the more northerly addresses are in Born . The northern road itself was also called Born , from the north down, the actual headwaters of the Born creek (two springs are drawn in 1773), over the Hohen Lieth-Grund , down to the Wattkorn . For some, the Born went below what is now Tangstedter Landstrasse 25, because from there the road was paved. (See also Bi de Börner street ). The northernmost part of the road is in Norderstedt . Before October 14, 1773, about half of the northernmost part also belonged to Langenhorn. After the Gottorp Treaty of 1768 and the Treaty of Tsarskoe Selo of August 27, 1773, the northern border of Langenhorn was redefined on October 14, 1773, so that Langenhorn became a little smaller. When signing the protocol of the trial were from the Hamburg side of Senatssyndicus Jacob Schuback and the Hamburger archivist Franz Michael Poppe (1724-1800) and present the side of the firm good Tangstedt the son of the grand ducal chancellery President and Legationsrat Magnus Holmer with its mandate. By marrying Friederike Wich (daughter of the British envoy in Hamburg Sir Cyril Wich (1695–1756) and granddaughter of Magnus von Wedderkop ), Magnus von Holmer was the owner of the Tangstedt estate, including the Tangstedter Heide and Harxteheyde (Harksheide, today part of Norderstedt), which were on the border with Langenhorn. The border, which described an arc to the north, now became a straight line that ran through the original Langenhorn area. At the present time the old border would run roughly along the streets Alte Landstraße and Segeberger Chaussee to the street Am Böhmerwald , from where it would continue to curve to Poppenbüttler Straße , which it would also walk part of. A stumbling block was laid at Tangstedter Landstrasse 158 for Karl Reese, who lived there. The director and actor Harry Piel lived for a while after his flight to Hamburg in 1945 at Tangstedter Landstrasse 20. The graphic artist and illustrator Holger Börnsen was born in Tangstedter Landstrasse 225 in 1931 and grew up there. The police officer and commandant of the Hamburg-Fuhlsbüttel police prison, Willi Tessmann, lived at Tangstedter Landstrasse 227 until he was arrested in 1945.
Tannenweg

( Location )

T017 0620 to the fir forest there 1903
(November 25)
In front of it path 281 . Expansion August 1, 1914, January 31, 1956, February 16, 1960. The fir forest was almost completely destroyed when the underground line was built .
Tannenweg Bridge

( Location )

- 0040 according to location and function 1960
(July 15)
The Tannenwegbrücke , a pedestrian bridge, leads along the Tannenweg over the tracks of the underground and the Ohlmoorgraben , which runs parallel to it . The forge work on the northern railing is by Ernst Hanssen and shows three martens .
Tannenweg Bridge Hamburg-Langenhorn1.jpg
Fir surcharge

( Location )

T018 0260 after a piece of reforested fir forest 1937
(May 20)
Surcharge = reforested forest parcel added to the forest.
Tarfenbööm

( Location )

T020 0455 after a field name 1937
(May 20)
Expansion: January 2, 1959. In 1672 the parcels were called Tarffenbömen . In the land map from 1750, there are two parcels of land, each with the name Tarfen Böhm , facing each other on both sides of today's Langenhorner Chaussee . On the land map from 1804, only one parcel with the name Tarfgnbömen is drawn on the eastern side of today's Langenhorner Chaussee . In 1909 the parcel was named Tarfenböm . designated. The street Tarfenbööm runs through the parcel. Boom , Bööm , Böhm , Böm comes from the Low German and means tree . Bööm or Böhm can also be the plural of Boom ( tree ), just as Bömen is from Böm . Tarf = need . Tarffen = need .
Tarps

( Location )

T022 0695 after Bach Tarpe, in Tarpenbek was renamed 1948
(January 26th)
Before that, from November 25, 1903 Garstedter Weg , and before that, Weg 4 and Weg 28 . The or the Tarpenbek was between January 25, 1332 and 1640 a border stream between Langenhorn and the county of Holstein-Pinneberg and from 1640 to 1867 between Langenhorn and the dominion of Pinneberg , which was incorporated in the Duchy of Holstein . On October 27, 1732, a border inspection took place in order to exchange old border posts for new ones. At that time the Tarpenbek was still called Tarpe , and the previous name Tarve was still common. Some sections of the Tarpe in the heights of Langenhorn had an expanded name, namely the Ohe Tarpe , the Gahrsteder Tarpe and the Beeren Tarpe , which was called coal tarpe on the side of the Pinneberg lordship . The tarp is marked on the land map from 1750 . Roughly where the Tarpen road crosses the Tarpenbek as a Tarpenbrücke , the section of the Tarpe on the map was called Gahrsteder Tarpe and a little further south a section Ohe Tarpe . The section Beeren Tarpe was in the north and reached about as far as the Schmuggelstieg . On the land maps from 1750 and 1804, no parcels are drawn that specifically refer to the Tarpe . When the Tarpe was renamed, it was followed by an n and the Low German bek for Bach . Why the plural form Tarpen the Tarpe chose for the name change, could possibly be due to the cuts, but also quite other reasons could have. Tarp can be interpreted as swamp , swamp water or morass . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Tarpen road .
Tarpen Bridge

( Location )

- 0010 according to location and function 1960
(July 15)
The Tarpenbrücke crosses the Tarpenbek in the course of the Tarpen road . The western part is in Norderstedt .
Tarpenbrücke Hamburg-Langenhorn.nnw.jpg
Tarp ring

( Location )

T208 0705 based on the street Tarpen 1974
(December 2nd)
See taping .
Tarpenstieg

( Location )

T027 0250 based on the street Tarpen 1952
(July 14)
Rose = narrow footpath. See taping .
Tarpenwiese

( Location )

T028 0145 to a meadow to the creek Tarpe, in Tarpenbek was renamed 1936
(November 20)
See taping .
Theodor-Fahr-Strasse

( Location )

T054 0575 Theodor Fahr (1877–1945), pathologist 1961
(April 10)
Motif group: "Doctors".
Timmerloh

( Location )

T100 0850 after a field name 1920
(May 30)
In front of it path 390 . Expansion: December 1, 1956. The parcels Wilde Timmerlo , Bau Menschen Timmerlo and Kähtner Timmerlo are drawn in the land maps from 1750 , and the land parcels Bauer-Timmerloh and Käthner-Timmerloh in the land map from 1804 . Before that, there was a forest that offered the peasants the timber for room . A parcel of land probably provided the wood for the Kätner . New growers and brinkitzers were always given an oak tree to build their respective cottages . Timmern , Low German = rooms . Loh = forest . The painter Herbert Spangenberg lived for a while at Timmerloh 7. The pedagogue, art patron , teacher at the Fritz Schumacher School and founder of the Griffelkunst-Vereinigung Hamburg-Langenhorn Johannes Böse lived at Timmerloh 25.
Timmerloh Bridge

( Location )

- 0040 according to location and function 1960
(July 15)
The pedestrian bridge leads along the Timmerloh street over the tracks of the subway and the Ohlmoorgraben that runs parallel to it . The forge from 1963 on the southern railing is by Ernst Hanssen and shows an oak .
Timmerloh Bridge in Hamburg-Langenhorn 1.jpg
Timmstieg

( Location )

T106 0145 based on the Timmweg 1962
(November 20)
Before that, from November 25, 1903, part of the Eberhofweg . In front of it path 327 . See Timmweg .
Timmweg

( Location )

T107 0190 after the long-established Langenhorn farming family Timm 1932
(August 18)
1700 or after 1702 Jochim Timm (also Thimm ) became the owner of Katenstelle X. In 1746 it was taken over by his stepson Harm Siemers. 1763 built Ernst Timm at the Lange Chaussee 184 a Kate (1948 demolished). In the list of residents of 1772 he is mentioned as a forehead . In 1784 his son-in-law Jochim Glißmann took over the cottage. In 1767 Hans Timm built himself on the Wörden parcel . In 1769 Johann Timm set up a land post on Langenhorner Chaussee 212 (corner of Krohnstieg ). In 1778 he was bankrupt and had to sell the farm. The cottage was demolished in 1965, but the access stairs to the house are still there. In 1762 Timm Lau built the cultivation area on the east side of the village pond on Tangstedter Landstrasse . After him, his son Hein Lau was the owner. His daughter, the only heiress, married the Rademacher Hans Timm, whose descendants owned the cultivation position for a long time. The house at Tangstedter Landstrasse 25 at the corner of Timmweg was demolished in 1968. Later there was an Aldi store, then a Schlecker branch. Hans Hinrich Matthias Timm was the community chairman from 1887 to 1888 and Joachim Hinrich Timm from 1904 to December 31, 1912, who lived in the house at Tangstedter Landstrasse 25. On December 24, 1912, the Hamburg Senate announced in the Official Gazette of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg that the rural community of Langenhorn had become a suburb of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg and thus belonged to the Hamburg metropolitan area. Formally, membership of the urban area began on January 1, 1913. The Hamburg Senator Justus Strandes , in his function as landlord of the Geestlande, presented Joachim Hinrich Timm, the last mayor of Langenhorn, with appreciative words to a Portuguese man for his previous voluntary work.
Piece of peat

( Location )

T139 0315 after a field name 1949
(February 26)
Before that, Wrietreye . The parcel is shown in the land maps from 1750 as a peat piece and from 1804 as a peat piece . The Peat Lot Road runs through the Wrietreye parcel . The parcel Torfstück is on the other side of the Krohnstieg , a little further west than the Torfstück road . It extends to Wrangelkoppel street . The parcel Wrietreye is shown on the land map from 1750 as Wrieet Reeht and from 1804 as Wrietreye . Wriet , Low German = undergrowth , roots . Reye = gutter , brook . Reeht = thatch , reed . The Wrietreyengraben , which runs through the Wrietreye parcel , flows into the Tarpenbek a little further west .
Tralau turn

( Location )

T146 0210 Tralau, part of the community Travenbrück in the Stormarn district in Schleswig-Holstein 1954
(December 3)
Before that, Am Ochsenzoll byway 1 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Tückobsmoor

( Location )

T179 0070 after a field name 1936
(July 8)
The moor is shown in the land maps from 1740 as Tückobs Mohr and from 1804 as Tückobs Moor . Tückob or Tückop , also Wotersniep or Watersniep are Low German names for the common snipe .
Tweeltenbek

( Location )

T188 0505 after the location at the "forked brook" 1933
(April 30)
Expansion: November 22, 1954, shortening through partial renaming in Tweeltenmoor and Holitzberg : January 10, 1974. The area is marked on the land maps from 1750 as Beim Twehlen Bück and 1804 as Twelten Beek . Twelen , Twehlen , Low German = fork , fork yourself . Twelt , Tweelt , Low German = forked , forked , also twin . Bück , Beek , Bek , Low German = Bach .
Tweeltenmoor

( Location )

T205 0335 based on the street Tweeltenbek 1974
(January 10)
Before that, since April 30, 1933 Tweeltenbek .
Twisselwisch

( Location )

T192 0545 after a field name 1950
(January 30th)
Before that way 70 . Partial cancellation: September 28, 1987. On the land map from 1750, four adjacent parcels with the name Twissel Wisch are drawn, on the land map from 1804 only two with the name Twissel Wiese . Twissel , Low German = double or branching , also double nut . Wisch Low German = meadow .
Uckermarkweg

( Location )

U002 0265 Uckermark , landscape in northeast Germany 1953
(December 4th)
In front of the Krohnstieg side path 2 .
Ursula-de-Boor-Strasse

( Location )

U059 0760 Ursula de Boor (1915–2001), doctor, resistance fighter against National Socialism 2016
(May 1st)
Before that, Max-Nonne-Strasse from December 24, 1942 . Before that, part of the route 410 . Several cancellations of sections until renaming. The renaming took place due to Max Nune's proximity to National Socialism. Motif group: "Doctors" (both).
Vogtshof

( Location )

V073 0110 to the Vogthof located on Langenhorner Chausse, demolished in 1952 due to dilapidation 1952
(April 3)
Before 1750, the Vogtshof, the ancestral home of Hufe IV, was located with the pleasure or manor house on the west side of Langenhorner Chaussee , opposite the street Beim Schäferhof . Since this was too dilapidated, the Vogt and Vollhufner Heyn Gerhard Krohn had it torn down. He planned to build the new Vogtshof a little further south, on the east side of Heerstraße, today Langenhorner Chaussee 90. Since he wanted to move the street a bit, the master of the St. Jürgen Hospital ( Jürgen , Low German = Georg ), the owner, came von Langenhorn was, and the Mayor of Hamburg Martin Hieronymus Schele (1699–1774, brother of Wolder Schele ) on May 1, 1752 for a site visit. The whole village was present. Since no one objected, the construction was approved on October 28th. The Hamburg architect Johann Leonhard Prey made the plans for the Vogtshof . In addition to the finely furnished main building, the courtyard had several farm buildings and a distillery. The west gable was renewed around 1860. In 1908 Edmund Siemers acquired the farm, which then served as a holiday home for a while. The old parter's house (demolished in 1986) of the Vogtshof stood at Langenhorner Chaussee 91, on the other side of the Chaussee. In the Vogtshof there was also the village jug , which was later moved to the old parter's house. In 1952, the main building was demolished because it was in disrepair and the street Vogtshof was named after the farm. The last farm building, last used as an Italian wine shop, was demolished in February 1992.
Wakendorfer way

( Location )

W020 0495
(in the district)
Wakendorf II , municipality in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 1 . The short eastern part of the street is in Hummelsbüttel . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Walter-Schmedemann-Strasse

( Location )

W464 0680 Walter Schmedemann (1901–1976), SPD politician, resistance fighter against National Socialism 1980
(August 7th)
In the late summer of 1945 Walter Schmedemann began to convert the former SS barracks on Heidberg into the Heidberg hospital with the Senate of Health Friedrich Dettmann , the senate appointed by the British occupiers , and Franz Beckermann (1903-1976), medical director of the Heidberg hospital. Schmedemann was Hamburg's health senator for a long time and lived in Langenhorn at Borner Stieg 28. The painter and illustrator Tom Jütz (1965-2020) lived and worked on the ground floor at Walter-Schmedemann-Straße 68 until his death in August 2020.
Wattkorn

( Location )

W094 0250 after a field name 1920
(May 30)
On the land map from 1750, two opposite parcels are drawn on both sides of today's Tangstedter Landstrasse , of which the piece to the west of the road is called Watt Koorn and the piece to the east of the road is nameless. On the land map from 1804, both bear the name Wattkorn . Quite a few have tried to interpret the field name. In 1921 Rudolf and Gretchen Metscher published their Low German poem Sonnenland in the first edition of the magazine De Börner regarding the name Watt Korn . The people Bauer Schult and his neighbor Smitt appearing in it are not historically documented persons (not even with surnames translated into High German). According to the poem, the High German meaning would be something grain . The Hamburg address book also assumed in 1941 that Watt came from something , and concluded from this that some grain had first grown there. In 1955 and 1956, articles on the field name Wattkorn were written in the Hamburgische Geschichts- und Heimatblätter with different results. The name researcher Emil Peter Lüders, who titled the interpretation of the name in the poem as fictitious, concluded the meaning of the mill swamp , where he suspected that the preposition Beim or Am in the field name Wattkorn was lost over time. The namesake researcher R. Rosenbohm was of the same opinion, but considered the swamp mill to be correct, or mill at swamp or mill at shallow water . The teacher and local researcher Armin Clasen (1890–1980) was of the same opinion in relation to the supposedly lost preposition, but he said that the meaning of the field name Waldzipfel was at the ford , whereby he assumed that the Langenhorn, like the Winterhuder Wattkorn comes from Waddinghorn . However, there is no evidence that the Langenhorn Wattkorn was ever called as it is the case with the Winterhuder Wattkorn . The Langenhorn school director Theodor Düring interpreted Armin Clasen's conclusion as the tip of a forest at a ford through the swamp . In 1963, Lüders was convinced that Horn was not a long, pointed shape of a terrain, as is generally assumed, but that Horn should also be interpreted as a swamp . In 1979, in his book on Langenhorn, the Ortsamleiter Wilhelm Schade adopted Lüders' conclusion that the watt indicates a swamp and grain indicates the water mill, which probably once existed. Around 1850, pieces of millstones and "a lot" of burnt oak beams and remains of planks had been excavated on the Schlüs Wisch parcel . By the meanings of the field names , 1750, Möhlen Camp ( Mühlenkamp ), Schlüs Camp , Schlüs Wisch , Dieck Camp , Dieck Wisch and 1804 Schleusenkamp , Dieckkamp , Dieckwiesen , behind the Dieckwiesen and Ohlendieck , it is assumed that the Born or Bornbach was dammed into a pond in the area to operate the water mill. The watermill is not mentioned in any old document, which is what it should be given its economic importance. Therefore it is assumed that it no longer existed in 1283. In 1283, the people of Langenhorn were already compulsory meals at the water mill in Fuhlsbüttel. If the water was dammed there, the Diekmoor would have been more watery and, at the closely enclosed Wattkorn swamp. At Wattkorn 15 a stumbling block was laid for Adele Rühl, and at Wattkorn 7 a stumbling block for Carl Suhling, who lived there with his parents and his wife Lucie Suhling . Carl Suhling, who kept the secret archives of the Hamburg KPD in their shared apartment after the Nazis came to power , was the first person to be arrested by the KPD in Langenhorn in 1933, but was previously warned by a police officer from Langenhorn who was secretly a SPD member Burn archive. Agnes Gierck lived at Wattkorn 8. The Agnes-Gierck-Weg in Langenhorn was named after her in 1996 .
Path no.360

( Location )

W468 0520 At the time, paths marked with numbers were assigned by the building and surveying office in what was then still rural areas as an orientation aid and are to be successively given street names.
Path no.396

( Location )

W110 0595
Path no.410

( Location )

W111 0135
Path no.414

( Location )

W112 0520
Path no.651

( Location )

W113 1335
Westedestieg

( Location )

W190 060 after the Westede family, from 1461 to 1538 landlords in Langenhorn 1952
(November 1)
Before that, Heerbuckhoop byway 1 . From 1461 to 1493 the councilor Johann Westede (also Wetstede ) administered half of Langenhorn, the inheritance of his wife Elisabeth, née. from the mountains . The Hamburg councilor Eler Nannen inherited after the death of Beke Westede, b. vom Berge , the income two and a half eighths Hufen Landes in Langenhorn, Klein Borstel and Neuengamme and sold them in 1488 to the Hamburg mayor (1480–1490) Nicolaus de Sworen (also de Swaren ). When the son of the councilor (1494–1517) Albert Westede († 1517) died on July 15, 1538, who was also called Albert and was councilor (1518–1533) and Hamburg mayor (1533–1538), his daughter Cäcilie inherited who had married Hinrich Wittekop, half of Langenhorn. The Wittekopsweg in Langenhorn was named after the Wittekop family. During Mayor Albert Westede's term of office, he traveled to England with the councilor Hinrich Hesterberg and the Hamburg superintendent Johannes Aepinus , where, at the request of Henry VIII, he took part in negotiations on matters relating to his divorce from Catherine of Aragon and the reorganization of church conditions in England.
Westerrode

( Location )

W197 0570 after a field name 1935
(December 20)
In the land map from 1750, a forest is marked west of the old village, which is called Westerrode , which means roughly western raw dung . Rode = clearing . In the land map from 1804, the parcel of Westeroh is shown at this point . The meaning of the designation Oh from 1804 is not clear. If there was a stream there, like the Westerrodegraben today , Oh could perhaps be shortened for Ohe , which is a name for flowing water. On the field map from 1750, a creek is located there, the seemingly out of with Westerrode comes designated forest on the southern end and continues to flow south. In Low German, the Aue or Au is also called Ohe . It is possible that an r was omitted, which is not uncommon (e.g. in Westerode ), and raw is meant. Among other things, raw is a Low German word for calm . So far it has not been proven that raw comes from clearing .
Weygandtstrasse

( Location )

W211 0615 Friedrich Weygandt (1491–1525), personality of the German Peasants' War 1960/1999 The street was originally dedicated to the psychiatrist Wilhelm Weygandt (1870-1939) on September 5, 1960 . Because of its proximity to National Socialism , it was renamed in 1999. Originally group of motifs: "Doctors". Friedrich Weygandt (also Weigandt ) was a territorial official of the Archbishop and Elector of Mainz Albrecht of Brandenburg in Miltenberg . During the Peasant War he was the author of his progressive imperial reform draft of May 18, 1825. Because of his opposition to the archbishop he was probably executed in 1525.
Wieleweg

( Location )

W467 0105 Berthold Wiele (1904–1944), SPD politician, resistance fighter against National Socialism 1983
(June 21)
Berthold Hans Martin Wiele was born in Hamburg in 1904. After attending elementary school, he completed an apprenticeship as a printer and then went hiking for four years. He was employed as a stately coachman for two years before he returned to Hamburg in 1928. His father Louis Wiele and his mother were among the first settlers in the Fritz Schumacher settlement and lived at Tangstedter Landstrasse 243. At the end of 1928 he married Hilda Johanna Maurer, who also came from a family of settlers in the settlement. For a short time, the two of them sublet in the street Wattkorn until they got an apartment on Knickweg in Hamburg-Winterhude . Wiele was a member of the SAJ , a member of the Reich Banner and since 1921 a member of the SPD. When the SPD was banned on June 22, 1933, he continued to work for them in secret. One of his tasks was to produce camouflaged receipt stamps for contributions paid. He drew still lifes containing the numbers 20, 30 or 50 somewhere for the penny amounts paid. Then he printed it. When his secret activities were exposed, he was taken into protective custody for the first time on October 11, 1934 . In the second protective custody warrant of May 16, 1935, he was accused, among other things, of being a functionary of the illegal SPD and of distributing leaflets of treasonable content. The protective custody he spent in Fuhlsbüttel and in Sachsenhausen concentration camp lasted until December 17, 1938 . After that he was released, but as “unworthy of defense” he was initially not called up as a soldier in the Second World War . In 1942, however, he was drafted into Penal Division 999 because of his past . He was used in the Balkans and died in Yugoslavia on November 26, 1944 . More precise circumstances are not known. Berthold's father Louis Wiele was also a member of the SPD resistance and was active in Langenhorn . Berthold Wieles woman lived around 1984 in the Old Center Ansgar in street Reekamp 49-51.
Wildermuthring

( Location )

W262 0615 Eberhard Wildermuth (1890–1952), FDP politician and housing minister from 1949 to 1952 1962
(October 26)
Willerstwiete

( Location )

W285 0290 based on the Willersweg 1955
(November 12)
See Willersweg . Twiete = narrow way . The Spanish-German musician, director and filmmaker (with Wim Wenders , among others , editor for Jenseits der Wolken ) Lucian Segura (* 1958) grew up in Willerstwiete 1. He lives in Barcelona today.
Willersweg

( Location )

W286 0286 after the long-established Langenhorn farming family Willers 1948
(January 26th)
Before that, from August 1, 1914, Heinfelder Strasse . Langenhorn was first mentioned in 1229 in documents from the Hamburg State Archives . At that time, a Marquard de Langenhorne ( Marquard from Langenhorn ) came to Hamburg to become a citizen there. In Liber Heretitatum , Hamburg's oldest city heritage book , Marquardus de Langhenhorne ( Marquard from Langenhorn ) is mentioned again in 1269 and a year later, in 1270, a Willero de Langhenhorne , who is called Willer from Langenhorn without Latinization . From the 1590s, the names of the Hufner , Kätner , Brinkitzer and growers in Langenhorn are recorded until 1802, but the name Willer or Willers is not included, not even in the Hamburg address book (Langenhorns are also recorded there from 1867). In the land maps of 1750 the parcel is marked as Heyn field , and from 1804 as Heinfeld . In 1932 it was called Hainfeld . There should have been forest there before, the grove wood . Around 1856 a street in Langenhorn was called Heinfeld . The mathematician and algebraic scientist Emil Artin and his wife, the mathematician and photographer Natascha Artin (later Natascha Artin Brunswick ) lived at Heinfeld 9 (renamed Willersweg in 1948 ).
Willy Jacobs Way

( Location )

W484 0255 Willy Jacobs (1885–1969), Chief Counselor 1986
(September 8)
Willy Jacob was born in Kiel in 1885 . From 1906 he served with the 1st Guard Regiment at a height of 202 cm . In 1909 he switched to the Hamburg police force and was deployed in the old town . After the beginning of the First World War he was drafted and later wounded. After the war he served in the Hamburg administrative police . In 1919 he joined the SPD . In 1921 he moved into a semi-detached house in the Fritz-Schumacher-Siedlung in the street Im Häben 31 (since 1950 Immenhöven ) in Langenhorn and became active in local politics. After the seizure of power by the National Socialists, the so-called became effective on April 7, 1933 Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service in force, which allowed them Jewish and politically differently oriented officials to dismiss, which meant that Willy Jacobs, who at the time police commissioner was was released. The KPD was banned at the end of February, and so was the SPD on June 22, 1933 . In the fall of 1934, Willy Jacobs' house was searched. He was accused of preparing for high treason . He was arrested and taken to the Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp, where he suffered solitary confinement and torture for 7 weeks or three months . He was then released for lack of evidence. Over 40 communist, social democratic and Jewish families were given notice of their apartments in the Fritz-Schumacher-Siedlung and were to be replaced by NSDAP party members. Willy Jacobs filed a lawsuit for all those who were terminated, but was only able to delay the terminations for a short time. He moved with his family into an apartment in Fuhlsbüttel on Kohlgarten 1 street . Despite his previous history, he was drafted into the Air Force in Blankenese in 1942 during World War II . He then spent the remainder of the war in Norway as a warehouse manager . After the end of the war he was brought to Hamburg by police chief Bruno Georges to set up the criminal investigation department and moved back into his old semi-detached house on Im Häben 31 street (since 1950 Immenhöven ). His last rank in the police force, before he retired around 1950, was criminal inspector.
Wilstedter way

( Location )

W301 0345 Wilstedt, part of Tangstedt in the Stormarn district in Schleswig-Holstein 1954
(December 3)
In front of it Stockflethweg byway 2 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Wiping yards

( Location )

W326 0140 after a field name 1920
(April 27)
In front of it path 199 . In the land map of 1750 there are six adjacent parcels, each designated as Wischhoff . In the land map from 1804 the whole area is referred to as Wiesenhof , in 1900 it is called Wiesenhöfe . Wisch , Low German = meadow . Hoff , Low German = court . Höfen , Low German = courtyards . The Hufner and Kätner provided a shepherd for cows, one for pigs and one for sheep. The cowherd drove the cows out of the village in the morning to graze in good places and drove them back in the evening. Each Hufner and Kätner owned a fenced meadow on which the cows spent the nights. These meadows were called meadow farms. They lay against each other so that the shepherd could easily pick up and bring the cows back. The Wiesenhöfe were located on the Dorfbach, which flowed through the village pond over today's Langenhorner Chaussee past the Wiesenhöfe, to unite further to the southwest with the Moorreye , today's Raakmoorgraben . The Wiesenhöfe were located between the old village, also known as Achterort (Low German for Hinterort ), with the three oldest Hufen and the Langenhorn Chaussee , where the other four Hufen and four Katenstellen were. The Achterort was 300 to 400 meters west of Langenhorner Chaussee and south of Rodenkampweg .
Wittekopsweg

( Location )

W333 0595 After the Wittekop family, who owned half of Langenhorn from 1538 to 1615, or after one of the family members 1938
(October 6)
Before that, route 166 and from November 25, 1903, part of the Rodenkampweg . Partial suspension: March 28, 1967. In 1538, the Hamburg mayor Albert Westede, who owned half of Langenhorn, died. He bequeathed this half to his daughter Cäcilie, who had married Hinrich Wittekop. Hinrich Wittekop became the upper age of the main church St. Jacobi in 1563 and died in 1565. Albert Wittekop, a son of both, became the owner of half of Langenhorn, 1597 Jurat, 1602 upper age of the main church St. Jacobi and Hundertmann, 1607 president of the upper old and 1613 corpse sworn . He died at the end of 1614. The heirs, his widow Engel Wittekop, b. On April 9, 1615, Tamme and her children sold half of Langenhorn to the Hospital St. Jürgen ( St. Jürgen , Low German for St. Georg ), which owned the other half. Several sources indicate that the elder Johann Wittekop was the namesake, but there was no elder Johann Wittekop. Johann Wittekop, Albert's brother (in 1586 he had a meal at the Hofmeisterei St. Georg) “liberated” himself in Magdeburg, where he also died. The part of Rodenkampsweg , renamed Wittekopsweg , is one of the oldest three streets in Langenhorn along with Langenhorner Chaussee and Tangstedter Landstrasse . Opposite the confluence of Tangstedter Landstrasse, it connected Langenhorner Chaussee with Achterort (also Hinterort or old village ), where the oldest three Hufen stood with the associated retirement and day laborers' cottages. The Achterort was 300 to 400 meters west of Langenhorner Chaussee and south of Rodenkampweg . The section is now traffic-calmed. It is no longer possible to enter or leave the Langenhorner Chaussee .
Cottongrass path

( Location )

W385 0290 after the cotton grass of the same name 1940
(February 11)
Wördenmoor Bridge

( Location )

- 0055 according to location and function 1960
(July 15)
In the course of the Wördenmoorweg , the bridge leads over the tracks of the subway and the Bornbach , which runs parallel to it . The forge from 1964 on the northern railing is by Ernst Hanssen and shows two courting grouse .
Wördenmoorbrücke (Hamburg-Langenhorn). Fahrbahn.ajb.jpg
Wördenmoorweg

( Location )

W362 1195 after a field name 1903
(November 25)
Before that, path 357 , path 360 and path 370 . Expansion: May 20, 1920. On the land map from 1804, parcels of parcels are marked that are called Wördenmoor . The parcels to the south are designated as Wörden . These parcels are called Wöhren on the land map from 1750, but there are no parcels to the north, and there is also no bog. Wöhren , Wören , Wöhrden or Wörden are like the Worth or Wort (see Kohrswort ) fenced-in fields or pastures, or higher-lying fields. The Hamburg address book assumed, among other things, in 1941 that the street was named after the Wördenmoor formerly located there .
Wörenstieg

( Location )

W363 0145 after the field name Wören 1948
(January 26th)
Before that Wörden , then from around 1940 Wördenstieg . When Hufe I was sold in 1688, the corresponding fields were named. Five fields were on the word . In the land map of 1750, four adjacent parcels are each designated as Wöhren . In 1767, the grower Hans Timm grew up there. In the land map from 1804, parcels of land are drawn there, which are called Wörden . In 1856 the parcels were also called Wöhrden . Wöhren , Wören , Wöhrden , Wöhrden or Wörden are like the Worth or Wort (see Kohrswort ) fenced-in fields or pastures, or also higher-lying fields.
Wrangelkoppel

( Location )

W396 0985 after a field name 1933
(April 30)
Expansion: April 7, 1935, extension by renaming and expansion of the old Schierenkamp and the extension to Krohnstieg August 14, 1964. The Wrangel Koppel parcel is shown on the land map from 1804 . In the land map from 1750, a nameless parcel is drawn in at this point. Wrang , Low German = sour . Paddock = fenced pasture . The sour can refer to the vegetation or the soil. Maybe there were growing sedge plants , so that the coupling as acid coupling was called. In 1926 a tree nursery was set up on the parcels Wrangel Koppel and Neuen Kamp on the eastern side of Wrangelkoppel street, which still exists today.
Wrietkamp

( Location )

W400 0400 based on a field name 1935
(October 26)
In the land map from 1750 a parcel is marked as Wrieet Reeht . The Wrietreye parcel is located at this point on the 1804 land map . The road Wrietkamp located in the parcel Wrietreye . The Wrietreyengraben , which runs through the Wrietreye parcel , flows into the Tarpenbek a little further west . Wriet , Low German = undergrowth , roots . Reeht = thatch , reed . Reye = gutter , brook . Kamp = field, pasture. Lat .: campus = field.
Wulffsblocks

( Location )

W409 0300 after a field name 1942
(May 8)
Before that, from 1910, section from Reckkamp (renamed Reekamp ). Partial cancellation: December 21, 1965. In the land map from 1750, two parcels of land with the name Wulfs Blöck are drawn far apart . One is in the area of ​​today's Wulffsblöcken road and the other to the east of today's Tangstedter Landstraße , not far from the border with Hummelsbüttel, between the Höpen Camp and Korten Camp plots . In 1900 they were each or one of them called Wulfsblocks , and in 1909 with regard to the year 1750 both were called Wulffsblocks . From the 1590s, the names of the Hufner , Kätner , Brinkitzer and growers in Langenhorn are recorded until 1802, but the name Wulf or Wulff is not included. The wolf (Low German = Wulf ) may have something to do with the naming of the parcels, or there was a landowner with the name before. A source indicates that the Wulff family, who came from Bergstedt to Langenhorn in December 1845, gave the street its name, but the parcel is much older. The farmer CI Wulff is registered in the Hamburg address book until 1904 under the address Weg 351 (renamed Reckkamp , then Reekamp ) and from 1905 to 1911 under the address Wördenmoorweg . It may have been assumed that the parcel was named after his family, but they have nothing to do with it. Blocks are fields that cannot be worked together with other fields.
Wulffsgang

( Location )

W411 0140 after the Langenhorn farming family Wulff 1942
(May 8)
Named after the Wulff family of farmers from Langenhorn or based on the name of the street Wulffsblöcken . See Wulffsblocks .
Wulffsgrund

( Location )

W412 0430 after the Langenhorn farming family Wulff 1952
(March 3)
In front of it Tarfenbööm byway 1 . Named after the Wulff family of farmers from Langenhorn or based on the name of the street Wulffsblöcken . See Wulffsblocks .
Wulff settlement in Hamburg-Langenhorn 7.jpg
Wulffstwiete

( Location )

W413 0185 after the Langenhorn farming family Wulff 1942
(May 8)
Named after the Wulff family of farmers from Langenhorn or based on the name of the street Wulffsblöcken . See Wulffsblocks . Twiete = narrow way .
Wulff settlement in Hamburg-Langenhorn 6.jpg
Wulksfelder Weg

( Location )

W416 0370 Wulksfelde , part of the Tangstedt community in Stormarn district in Schleswig-Holstein 1952
(July 14)
In front of it Tangstedter Landstrasse byway 11 . Motif group: "Places north of Hamburg".
Zeppelinstrasse

( Location )

Z014 2125
(in the district)
Ferdinand von Zeppelin (1838–1917), developer of the airship named after him 1927 Extension by the Langenhorn part June 3, 1999. In 1927 the border to Fuhlsbüttel was a little further south, so that a piece of the road was initially in Langenhorn. On April 1, 1938, the border to Fuhlsbüttel was relocated to the current location at the Raakmoorgraben brook, as part of the Greater Hamburg Act , so that the northern Zeppelinstrasse was now wholly or almost entirely in Fuhlsbüttel. On June 3, 1999, the new Langenhorn section was opened, of which the northern ends, which flow into Krohnstieg and Niendorfer Straße , are in Norderstedt . The southern part, up to the Alsterkrugchaussee , is in Fuhlsbüttel. The subterranean part, which crosses under the Alsterkrugchaussee and merges into Sengelmannstrasse, which begins at the Alsterkrugchaussee , at about the same height as the Am Oortensiek path , is located from the Alsterkrugchaussee with its northwestern half in Ohlsdorf and the southeastern half in Alsterdorf . Since May 16, 2000 it has been part of the federal highway 433 . The 10th degree of longitude ( meridian ) east longitude ( 10 ° east ) crosses the Langenhorn part of the Zeppelinstrasse . On January 10, 1911, Hamburger Luftschiffhallen GmbH (HLG) was founded on what is now the airport . In January 1912, the airship port was put into operation on around 45 hectares. Initially, the airport was mainly used by airships. In 1913, the area was expanded to around 60 hectares, with the northern area, with the airship hangar , reserved for airships and the south-eastern part for airplanes. The first zeppelin to call at the airport was LZ 10 “Schwaben” . The first zeppelin stationed there was LZ 14 , the first military airship of the Imperial Navy , which was designated L 1 . On September 9, 1913 at 1.30 p.m., it started on its unlucky voyage. A memorial stone in Langenhorn remembered the airship and the deceased crew members for a long time. After the First World War , the airship hangar was removed in 1921. From now on, the planes alone determined what was going on at the airport.
Fuhlsbüttel, Hamburg, Germany - panoramio (8) .jpg
To relax

( Location )

Z091 0085 for a place to relax farm animals from plows and carriages. 2010
(October 19)
As a relaxation , however, inns on trade routes were also mentioned, which offered space to accommodate the horses and wagons of travelers.

Literature and Sources

Web links

Commons : Streets in Hamburg-Langenhorn  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
Commons : Bridges in Hamburg-Langenhorn  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Langenhorn street names on the website of the Langenhorn Archives ( Annie-Kienast-Straße , Dobenplatz , Dobenstück , Dortmunder Straße , Dreyerpfad , Duisburger Straße , Fassbinderweg , Ursula-de-Boor-Straße and Zeppelinstraße are missing)
  • Langenhorn street names ( Memento from April 5, 2017 in the Internet Archive ). List of the old Langenhorn Archive website in the Internet Archive ( Annie-Kienast-Straße , Fassbinderweg , Ursula-de-Boor-Straße and Zeppelinstraße are missing)
  • Hamburg road maps with Langenhorn by Falk on landkartenarchiv.de (half of Langenhorn until 1965, whole of Langenhorn from 1974): 1949, 1952, 1953, 1957, 1965, 1974, 1976, 1983
  • Langenhorn field map ( memento from September 27, 2019 in the Internet Archive ) of Jacob Kock from 1804 with field names, Langenhorn archive (the red dots are intended to represent existing original boundary stones , the blueones aremissing.)
  • Partial map from 1928
  • Road map from 1961

See also

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Website Bürgerhaus Langenhorn
  2. Digital Atlas North
  3. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk Erwin Möller: Langenhorner street names on the Langenhorn Archive website
  4. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp Karl August Schlüter: From Langenhorn's past. Langenhorn Citizens' Association from 1877 (publisher), P. Brüchmann, Hamburg 1932.
  5. ^ Theodor Neuberger : The insane asylum Langenhorn-Hamburg. In: German sanatoriums and nursing homes for the mentally ill in words and pictures. 1910, pp. 127-140. (Digitized version)
  6. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Karl August Schlüter: Street and field names. In: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Langenhorner Heimatwoche (Hrsg.): Langenhorner Heimatwoche 1952. Festschrift. Ludwig Appel, Hamburg 1952, pp. 46, 48.
  7. Ahl on plattmakers.de
  8. a b c d e f g h i j k I. Streets and paths and II. Field names . In: 7. Landgemeinde Langenhorn . In: Directory of the rural communities and localities of the territories of the Geestlande, the Marschlande, Bergedorf and Ritzebüttel . Johann Hinrich Meyer, Hamburg 1900, pp. 9-11
  9. Erwin Möller wrote on the street Am Ochsenzoll that the border was changed because Harksheid farmers repeatedly drove their cattle to the Langenhorn area. That's nonsense. There were disputes because they kept driving their cattle over. And then Hamburg is supposed to have given away a piece of Langenhorn, so to speak, as a reward? The change in the border had other, much more complex, political reasons.
  10. ^ Karl August Schlueter: When Langenhorn was still a customs border . In: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Langenhorner Heimatwoche (Ed.): Langenhorner Heimatwoche 1952 . Festschrift. Ludwig Appel, Hamburg 1952, pp. 44, 45.
  11. The Tarpembek and its tributaries. In: Wilhelm Schade: Langenhorn. Past and present. M + K Hansa Verlag, Hamburg 1979, ISBN 3-920610-28-8 , p. 54
  12. See Falk plans 1949 and 1953 under web links
  13. The new time from 1019 to 1979. In: Wilhelm Schade: Langenhorn. Past and present. M + K Hansa Verlag, Hamburg 1979, ISBN 3-920610-28-8 , p. 30
  14. Anita Sellenschloh on the website of the primary school Am Heidberg . See also Anita Sellenschloh. In: Rita Bake: A City's Memory. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men , Volume 2 (women's street names), pp. 39–41 (PDF under literature and sources )
  15. Max-Nonne-Straße and Konjetznystraße will be renamed on May 1, 2016. on Hamburg.de , April 1, 2016
  16. ^ Road map from 1961. See also Falk plans under web links
  17. a b Information on the Eberhof and Bärenhof on oxenzoll.info as well as The old farms of Langenhorn. In: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Langenhorner Heimatwoche (Hrsg.): Langenhorner Heimatwoche 1952. Festschrift. Ludwig Appel, Hamburg 1952, pp. 16-17 as well as The old farms of Langenhorn. In: Wilhelm Schade: Langenhorn. Past and present . M + K Hansa Verlag, Hamburg 1979, ISBN 3-920610-28-8 , pp. 10-13, 15
  18. Our cover picture: Langenhorner Dorfschmiede. In: Langenhorner Heimatblatt für Langenhorn and Ochsenzoll , May 1959, p. 1
  19. ^ Maps and hiking maps of Langenhorn at Wikimedia
  20. Card of 1773 on langenhorn-archiv.de
  21. ^ Wilhelm Schwen: Memories and considerations of an Alt-Langenhorner . In: De Börner , No. 6/7, June / July 1932, Hamburg, p. 45
  22. Erna Klodt, b. Suck: Childhood on Tangstedter Landstrasse . In: De Börner , Langenhorner Heimatblatt , No. 8, August 1986, pp. 6-7.
  23. R. Feddern: Our price writing . In: De Börner , First Volume, No. 1, April 1921, Hamburg, pp. 2–3
  24. ^ Hermann Claudius: Wi Börner! In: De Börner , special edition for the school consecration, Hamburg, 1921
  25. Diek on palttdeutsch.net
  26. Compare Falk plans 1976 and 1983 under web links
  27. Primary school teacher Ms. Römer of the Fritz-Schumacher-Schule , approx. 1974 on site as part of the class on the subject of the old Langenhorn .
  28. ^ Emil Peter Lüders: Water names in the Alster area (p. 15-18). In: Yearbook of the Alsterverein eV 1963 , Hamburg, p. 17
  29. Georg Clasen: The Hamburg state estate Langenhorn and their school. The history of a settlement between the wars , Verlag Gesellschaft der Freunde des Väterländischen Schul- und Erziehungswesen , Hamburg 1947, p. 91
  30. ^ Georg-Clasen-Weg. In: Rita Bake : A City's Memory. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men , Volume 3, as of July 2017, p. 499
  31. Grell on platt-wb.de
  32. garish on plattmakers.de
  33. ^ Oats , Wiktionary
  34. Baptism entry church book Evangelical Church Hagenow: Dead, Baptisms and Confirmations 1782–1872 , available at Ancestry.de
  35. Necrology . In: Wilhelm Büchner : Annual report on the Gymnasium Fridericianum , Schwerin 1871, p. 51
  36. ^ Harnack in the Hamburg address book from 1861
  37. Harnacksweg. In: Rita Bake: A City's Memory. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men , Volume 3, as of July 2017, p. 637 (under literature )
  38. Death and burial entry in the church book of the Evangelical Church Hagenow: Deaths, Baptisms and Confirmations 1782–1872 , available at Ancestry.de
  39. ^ Henny-Schütz-Allee . In: Rita Bake: A City's Memory. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men , Volume 2, as of June 2015, p. 211 (under literature )
  40. Community Gränz relationship between Pinneberg and Hamburg from 15 16 to 22 Oct. 1732. In: Collection of the Hamburg laws and constitutions ... , Piscator, Hamburg 1772, p. 636
  41. Rita Bake: A Memory of the City. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men , Volume 3, as of July 2017, p. 693 (under literature )
  42. ^ Johann Friedrich Voigt : Historical information about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn. Griese, Hamburg 1909, p. 63
  43. ^ A b c Johann Friedrich Voigt : Historical reports on the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, pp. 52-53
  44. ^ Wilhelm Schwen: Memories and considerations of an Alt-Langenhorner. In: De Börner . June / July 1932, p. 45
  45. The top of the a or ä is missing due to a misprint .
  46. ^ In Erwin Möller's so-called "transcript" of Schlüter's book (Karl August Schlüter: From Langenhorn's Past . Reprint by Erwin Möller (Ed.). Michael Weidmann Verlag, 2000, ISBN 3-935100-11-6 .) The original Bei den Immhafen or At the Immhäfen (p. 36 ) falsified to At the Immenhöfen (p. 55).
  47. Captain Schröder Way . In: Rita Bake: A City's Memory. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men , Volume 3, as of July 2017, p. 756 (under literature )
  48. See Falk plan under web links
  49. The old hooves (I – VII) and Katenstellen (VIII – XI) in Langenhorn . In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, pp. 31-42 and P. 8
  50. Langenhorn map from 1740 (incorrectly the drawn northern, straight border of Langenhorn is that of 1773). In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn. Griese, Hamburg 1909
  51. Wohrt . In: Christian Wilhelm Christlieb Schumacher: The just relationship between cattle breeding and agriculture, derived from the improved Mecklenburg Economic Constitution, ... , 1763, pp. 273-274
  52. Rita Bake: A Memory of the City. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men , Volume 3, as of July 2017, p. 790 (under literature )
  53. marriage entry in: Sachsen, Germany, Protestant Church Books, 1760-1890, 1808-1863 Bleck village. Visible online (2 pages interrupted by one. Search term: Johann Gottfried August Kraemer ) at ancestry.de
  54. Kraemer, Friedrich Erich August . In: German biography
  55. Hamburg address book , 1816, 1817, 1818
  56. ^ Staats und Gelehre Zeitung des Hamburgischen impartial Correspondents (No. 149, September 3, 1823), p. 17
  57. ^ The Vögte in Langenhorn and the community chairmen since 1872 . In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, pp. 61–62 (under literature )
  58. display . In: Weekly Duisburg address and intelligence slip , No. IV, January 28, 1749
  59. display . In: Weekly Duisburg address and intelligence slip , No. XXIX, July 22, 1749
  60. display . In: Weekly Duisburg address and intelligence slips , no.XLV, November 5, 1754
  61. The good from above
  62. Photo Haus Kreuzfurth on mobile-geschichte.de
  63. Kreuzfuhrt housing estate on Wegenerarchitekten.de
  64. ^ Road map from 1961. See also Falk plans under web links
  65. ^ The board of directors of the French Mairie Langenhorn 1811–1814 and Die Vögte in Langenhorn . In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, pp. 60–62 (under literature )
  66. See Falk plans under web links
  67. Abbots of Reinfeld
  68. ^ Karl August Schlueter: The Langenhorner Chaussee . In: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Langenhorner Heimatwoche (Ed.): Langenhorner Heimatwoche 1952 . Festschrift. Ludwig Appel, Hamburg 1952, pp. 41-43
  69. The Langenhorner Chaussee . In: Wilhelm Schade: Langenhorn. Past and present . M + K Hansa Verlag, Hamburg 1979, ISBN 3-920610-28-8 , pp. 33-38
  70. After seven years of construction, the bypass road to the airport is ready . In: Hamburger Morgenpost , June 17, 2000
  71. Henning Glindemann, Erwin Möller: 100 years of the Langenhorn district . In: Langenhorner Rundschau. SyncroHost publishing house, August 2013, pp. 4-5.
  72. Linne, Otto Armand . In: Franklin Kopitzsch , Dirk Brietzke : Hamburgische Biografie , Volume 2, Christians, Hamburg 2003, ISBN 3-7672-1366-4 . Accepted edition: Wallstein, Göttingen 2006, ISBN 3-8353-0099-7 , pp. 256-257
  73. ^ Richard Ebert: Jobless settlements in Langenhorn . In: Langenhorner Rundschau , December 2018, p. 12 (p. 12–14)
  74. Hooves III . In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, p. 34
  75. Street and field names . In: Wilhelm Schade: Langenhorn. Past and present . M + K Hansa Verlag, Hamburg 1979, ISBN 3-920610-28-8 , p. 75.
  76. Langenhorn map from 1740 (incorrectly the drawn northern, straight border of Langenhorn is that of 1773). In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn. Griese, Hamburg 1909
  77. The Forge Melahn on melahn.de
  78. II. From 1740 to 1806 . In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, pp. 14-15
  79. Jens Meyer-Odewald: Former students remember the teacher Loki Schmidt . In: Hamburger Abendblatt , March 1, 2019
  80. Armin Clasen: Hummelsbüttel's borders against Fuhlsbüttel and Langenhorn . In: Journal of the Association for Hamburg History . Volume 52, 1966, pp. 57-60
  81. Community Gränz relationship between Pinneberg and Hamburg from 15 16 to 22 Oct. 1732. In: Collection of the Hamburg laws and constitutions ... , Piscator, Hamburg 1772, p. 636
  82. ^ Marriage entry, Wilhelm Parow, Berlin, Germany, registry office Berlin-Mariendorf, marriage register (1912–1913), 1874–1920. Available online at ancestry.de
  83. Review: Anna von Villiez: With all strength repressed . Institute for the History of the German Jews (ed.). Dölling and Galitz Verlag GmbH, Munich-Hamburg, ISBN 978-3-937904-84-9
  84. ^ Date of birth and death of Wilhelm Parow
  85. Hamburg, Germany, death register, 1874–1950 entry from March 18, 1943. Available online at ancestry.de
  86. ^ Wilhelm Uwe Parow, Hamburg, Germany, death register, 1874–1950, entry from May 5, 1944. Available online at ancestry.de
  87. ^ Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical information about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, p. 55
  88. Putt on wikilink
  89. ^ Hamburger Falk plans , 1976 a. 1983 (under web links )
  90. The Grützmühle on museumsdorf-volksdorf.de
  91. Hamburger Falk plans , 1949 Reckkamp , 1952 Reckkamp , 1953 Reekamp (under web links )
  92. reek . In: Hermann Jellinghaus : To the classification of the Low German dialects . Lipsius & Tischer, Kiel 1884, p. 60
  93. ^ Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical information about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, p. 53
  94. ^ Johann Friedrich Voigt: Map of Langenhorn around 1740 (based on the map from 1750). In: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn ]. Griese, Hamburg 1909
  95. rhone on wikilink
  96. Street and field names . In: Wilhelm Schade: Langenhorn. Past and present . M + K Hansa Verlag, Hamburg 1979, ISBN 3-920610-28-8 , p. 74
  97. ^ Maps and hiking maps from 1859, 1866 and 1871 from Langenhorn at Wikimedia
  98. Germany, selected Protestant church books 1500–1971, Schleswig-Holstein, Elmshorn, Tote 1816–1879. Elmshorn death register 1863. Johann Nicolaus Scharns. Available online at ancestry.de
  99. Falk plans under web links
  100. ^ Karl August Schlueter: When Langenhorn was still a customs border . In: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Langenhorner Heimatwoche (Ed.): Langenhorner Heimatwoche 1952 . Festschrift. Ludwig Appel, Hamburg 1952, pp. 44, 45.
  101. Directory of the residents of Langenhorn in 1772. In: Directory of the rural communities and localities of the territories of the Geestlande, the Marschlande, Bergedorf and Ritzebüttel . Johann Hinrich Meyer, Hamburg 1900, p. 55
  102. ^ Wilhelm Schwen: Memories and considerations of an Alt-Langenhorner . In: De Börner , No. 6/7, June / July 1932, Hamburg, pp. 45–46
  103. Die Brinksitzer: (1804) In: Directory of the rural communities and localities of the territories of the Geestlande, the Marschlande, Bergedorf and Ritzebüttel . Johann Hinrich Meyer, Hamburg 1900, p. 57
  104. ^ Hamburg address books
  105. ^ Stork father Schwen (And two other articles)]. In: Heimatblatt für Langenhorn and Ochsenzoll . June 1958, pp. 1–3 (and title page)
  106. Sebastian Leitzbach: Stork father Schwen . (Part 1) In: De Börner . November 1999, No. 11, pp. 3–5 (and title page)
  107. Celebrities from A to Z on friedhof-hamburg.de
  108. Sebastian Leitzbach: Stork father Schwen (Part 2). In: De Börner . December 1999, No. 12, pp. 10-11
  109. ^ Armin Clasen: Wilhelm Schwen . In: The Eppendorfer . January 1973, pp. 7-8
  110. Lucie Stapel: Wilhelm Schwen, the famous stork father from Langenhorn in memory (3 pages). In: The Winterhude Citizen . 7/8, 1973
  111. Schwenweg - efforts of 6b rewarded on gymnasium-heidberg.de
  112. Article Seven oaks for seven oaks , Hamburger Abendblatt dated April 12, 1968.
  113. Documents from the St. Georg Hospital in the Hamburg State Archives, some of which concern Langenhorn  in the German Digital Library
  114. Albert Wittekop in Die Hamburgischen Oberalten, their civic effectiveness and their families (digitized version)
  115. Erna Klodt, b. Suck: Childhood on Tangstedter Landstrasse . In: De Börner , Langenhorner Heimatblatt , No. 8, August 1986, pp. 6-7.
  116. ^ Directory IX . In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, p. 40
  117. Susanne Sommerfeld: Letter to the Editor “I think we just have to accept these facts” . In Langenhorner Rundschau , July 2017, p. 7
  118. 05.01.2017 - Thatched roof house burns down in Langenhorn (photos) on waldeck-fotografie.de
  119. Photos of the cottage before the last fire (Facebook page of a last tenant)
  120. ^ History of the Tangstedt Estate , on ahnenforschung-in-stormann.de
  121. Card of 1773 on langenhorn-archiv.de
  122. ^ Johann Friedrich Voigt: Directory of the former Langenhorn field names . In: Historical information about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, p. 52
  123. Tarf . In: Johann Wilhelm Andreas Pfaff : General outlines of the Germanic languages, the High German, the Low German, the Swedish and the Gothic of Ulfilas, set in a new way. Friedrich Campe, Nuremberg 1817, p. 134
  124. Tarffen . In. Gotthold Ephraim Lessing's complete works , Volume 21, GJ Göschen, 1968 ( snipped view from Google Books )
  125. Collection of the Hamburg laws and constitutions , Volume 11, Hamburg 1772, pp. 633, 638–640
  126. ^ Emil Peter Lüders: Water names in the Alster area (p. 15-18). In: Yearbook of the Alsterverein eV 1963 , Hamburg, p. 17
  127. Kate position X . In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, p. 41
  128. On the occasion of the incorporation . In: Altoanaer Nachrichten , January 3, 1913, p. 2
  129. In the Netherlands Watersnip . So far no better source has been found than the Low German Wikipedia article Norddüütsche Vagels , in it: Order Charadriiformes - "Tückop, Wotersniep (Gallinago gallinago)". The Kiwittsmoor was also named after a bird. Better than the unconfirmed, imaginative assumptions of the Langenhorn archivist: "Tü = Tue = small fixed increase, especially in Moore, kop = lands on which there were no taxes other than land tax."
  130. ^ Map from 1961 and Falk Plan 1974 under web links
  131. Twelen . In: Yearbook of the Association for Low German Language Research , volumes 65–73, Karl Wachholtz Verlag , Neumünster 1941, p. 99
  132. Twissel . In: Yearbook of the Association for Low German Language Research , volumes 65–73, Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1941, p. 99
  133. ^ Karl Schlueter: Der Vogtshof - Our cover picture , De Börner , Heimatblatt , No. 2, February 1960, p. 6 (and title page)
  134. Interview with Tom Jütz , Martin B. Münch: “Creativity? Not to be recognized, right? ". In: Langenhorner Rundschau , February 2019, pp. 6–9 (and title page)
  135. R. Feddern: Our price writing . In: De Börner , First Volume, No. 1, April 1921, Hamburg, pp. 2–3
  136. Wattkorn in the Hamburg address of 1941
  137. Emil Peter Lueders: Wattkorn . In: Hamburgische Geschichts- und Heimatblätter , April 1955, No. 3, p. 306
  138. R. Rosenbohm: Wattkorn . In: Hamburgische Geschichts- und Heimatblätter , October 1955, No. 4, pp. 318–319
  139. Armin Clasen: Wattkorn . In: Hamburgische Geschichts- und Heimatblätter , April 1956, No. 1, pp. 14-17
  140. Emil Peter Lueders: Wattkorn . In: Hamburgische Geschichts- und Heimatblätter , October 1956, No. 2, p. 44
  141. Theodor Düring: Wattkorn . In: De Börner , December 1956, p. 2
  142. ^ Emil Peter Lüders: Water names in the Alster area (p. 15-18). In: Yearbook of the Alsterverein eV 1963 , Hamburg, p. 16
  143. Street and field names . In: Wilhelm Schade: Langenhorn. Past and present . M + K Hansa Verlag, Hamburg 1979, p. 74
  144. ^ A stumbling block for Carl Suhling , Inforchiv Norderstedt , February 28, 2012 ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  145. Mention of Beke and her husband Johann Westede . In: Peter Gabrielsson: Structure and function of the Hamburg pension business in the period from 1471 to 1490 . Christians, 1971, p. 68
  146. Albert Westede (Wetstede) In: Friedrich Georg Buek : Genealogical and Biographical notes on dei since the Reformation late hamburgischen mayor. Association for Hamburg History, JA Meissner, 1840, pp. 16-18 ( books.google.de ).
  147. Rita Bake: A Memory of the City. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men, Volume 3, as of July 2017, p. 1125
  148. ^ Friedrich Weygandt's draft imperial reform (May 18, 1525) in the Collection of German History in Documents and Pictures
  149. ^ G. Wulff: Streets in Langenhorn: Wieleweg . In: De Börner , February 1984, No. 2, pp. 5-6
  150. Rita Bake: A Memory of the City. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men , Volume 3, as of July 2017, p. 1235
  151. Erwin Möller, Bernado Peters-Velasquez: Langenhorner Geschichte (n) . Langenhorner Bürger- und Heimatverein eV (Ed.), Publishing House SyncroHost, Books on Demand, Norderstedt 2013, p. 102
  152. Langhenhorne . In: Journal of the Association for Hamburg History , Volume 1, Verlag Verein für Hamburgische Geschichte, Hamburg 1841, pp. 409, 415
  153. Willerus . In: Franz Heinrich Neddermeyer: On the statistics and topography of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg and its area . Hoffmann and Campe, Hamburg 1847, p. 120
  154. Langenhorn . In: Johann Friedrich Voigt: Historical messages about the Hamburg rural community Langenhorn . Griese, Hamburg 1909, p. 1
  155. a b Langenhorn . In: Johannes von Schröder , Hermann Biernatzki : Topography of the Duchies of Holstein and Lauenburg, the Principality of Lübeck and the area of ​​the free and Hanseatic cities of Hamburg and Lübeck . Volume 2, Fränkel, 1856, p. 71.
  156. Reinhold Müller (left) and Willy Jacobs (right) in front of Hermann Denecke's bakery at Niedernstrasse 29 in Hamburg-Altstadt (source: Hamburg address book from 1910), around 1910.
  157. ^ Occupation information in the Hamburg address book from 1932
  158. Rita Bake: A Memory of the City. Streets, squares, bridges in Hamburg named after women and men , Volume 3, as of July 2017, p. 1250
  159. ^ Entry in the Hamburg address book from 1951. Before that, it was not there after the Second World War, probably for security reasons.
  160. It must have been the end of 1614, because it was not until 1615 that another corpse swore and senior age for St. Jacobi.
  161. Albert Wittekop . In: Friedrich Georg Buek : The Hamburg upper elders, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, p. 48
  162. Erwin Möller from the Langenhorn Archive and Rita Barke under literature (possibly also Horst Beckershaus and Christian Hanke)
  163. free (marry). In: German dictionary by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm
  164. free . In: German dictionary by Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm
  165. Hinrick Wittekop . In: Joachim Moller : Dat Slechtbok: Gender register of the Hamburg family Moller (vom Hirsch) , Hamburg 1876, p. 25
  166. ^ Wördenmoorweg in the Hamburg address book from 1941
  167. Hamburg address book 1940
  168. Falk plans under web links .
  169. Chapter 10. False grass family (Cyperaceae). In: Ludwig Griesselich : German Plant Book , Groos, 1847, pp. 55–56
  170. Workaround: 2.5 new kilometers are ready . In: Hamburger Abendblatt , June 4, 1999
  171. website hamburg-airport.de