List of streets in the Bonn district of Geislar
The following list contains the streets and squares in the Bonn district of Geislar in the Beuel district .
Street | First name / mention |
Origin of name | Previous name notes |
Bonn street cadastre |
---|---|---|---|---|
Abtstrasse | 1978 | The street was named after the courtyard that belonged to Siegburg Abbey in 1066 and was located on this street. After the secularization , the farm fell to the Barmbach family, who had previously managed the farm on a half- lease basis . | The street runs between Geislarstrasse and Oberdorfstrasse and was called Bonngasse from 1858 to 1978; this was mentioned in a document as early as 1270. | entry |
At the old Pütz | 1978 | Named after the field name Am alten Pütz . The old community fountain was located on this street at the confluence of Geislarstrasse. The street Am new Pütz also existed and was located in 1752 at the southern end of Geislarstraße. | The road runs between Siegauenstrasse / Geislarstrasse and Auf der Rötschen . It was called Ispelsgäßchen from 1752 to 1907 and Pützstraße from 1907 to 1978. | entry |
At the Marienhof | 1974 | Named after the housing estate with the name Marienhof located there. | The housing estate is located in Siegaue , on the border with the Sankt Augustinian district of Meindorf . | entry |
Auestrasse | 1968 | This road leads into the lowland (Au) of the Vilicher Bach . | Dead-end street from Liestraße. | entry |
On the Clemensbitze | 1987 | The street is named after a field name , in dialect op de Bitz , which means a fenced property. | The street runs between Florusstraße and Aurelianastraße. | entry |
On the Rötschen | 1995 | Named after a field name. | The road runs between Landstrasse 16 and Liestrasse. | entry |
Aurelianastraße | 1987 | The street is named after the willow stone found in 1969, which commemorates the expansion of the pastures of the Bonn Legion under the Roman Emperor Marc Aurel (121-180). The so-called Prata Aureliana is the only known Roman field name in the Bonn area from the 2nd / 3rd centuries. Century. | The street runs between Fabristraße and Hammstraße. | entry |
Baguette Street | 1955 | The street was named after Johannes Baguette (1869–1947). He was the first clergyman at the chapel in Geislar, which was then dependent on Vilich (1906–1910). | The street runs between Geislarstrasse and Abtstrasse. From 1930 to 1955 it was called Josefstrasse. | entry |
Bergergasse | 1907 | The street is named after the Geislarer Bergerhof, which belonged to the monastery in Merten / Sieg as early as 1506 . After the secularization, the Brodesser family acquired the farm that they had previously managed on a half-lease basis. | The street runs between Sandorfstrasse and Geislarstrasse. It was called Bergergäßchen from 1858 to 1907. | entry |
Cellitinnenstrasse | 2013 | The name of the street refers to the former monasteries that the Cellites maintained in Vilich (1908–2008) and Geislar (1939–1963). | The road runs between Im Rübengarten and Auf der Rötschen . | entry |
Fabristrasse | 1930 | It is named after the factory above, on Abtstrasse. The farm was later called the Abthof. The parcel that belongs to it is probably named after the Vilich organist Adolph Fabry, the president of the poor and church council. | The street runs between Julius-Palm-Straße and Aurelianastraße. The street was called Maarweg or Maargasse until 1930. | entry |
Florus Street | 1987 | Named after Lucius Annaeus Florus , a Roman writer who first mentioned the name of Bonn (Bonna) in his epitoma around 120 AD . | The road begins and ends as a ring road on Aurelianastraße. | entry |
Franz-Buchbender-Strasse | 2013 | The street is named after Franz Buchbender (1900–1987). From 1930 to 1936 he was youth chaplain in Küdinghoven and from 1936 to 1948 rectorate pastor in Geislar. | The street runs between the streets Im Rübengarten and Auf der Rötschen . | entry |
Geislarstrasse | 1972 | Named after the Geislar district in Bonn. The southern end used to be called Auf der Sand . | The street runs between Am Alten Pütz / Oberdorfstraße and Adelheidisstraße / Käsbergstraße. The street itself was called Hauptdorfstraße from 1858 to 1907 and then, until 1972, Hauptstraße. | entry |
Hammstrasse | 1978 | The street is named after a field name. There are two explanations for the expression Hamm, on the one hand it means something like enclosed property (pasture, field), on the other hand one also understands the arch of a watercourse, here the Vilicher Bach, underneath. | The street is a dead end from Geislarstraße. It was called Hammweg from 1858 to 1930 and Franzstraße from 1930 to 1978. | entry |
In the Dohm | 2002 | The street is named after a field name. | It is a dead end from Auf der Rötschen . | entry |
In the Kremerich | 1995 | The street is named after a field name. | The street runs between Fabristraße and Am Alten Pütz . | entry |
In the beet garden | 2013 | The street is named after a field name. | The street runs between Auf der Rötschen and Cellitinnenstraße. | entry |
In sand | 1987 | unknown | The street runs between Fabristraße and Florusstraße. | entry |
Julius-Palm-Strasse | 1999 | Named after Julius Palm (1888–1952). From 1925 to 1931 he was the first parish rector at St. Joseph. He then became pastor in Stieldorf from 1931 to 1952 from 1931 to 1952. | The street runs between the street Im Kremerich and the street Auf der Rötschen . The street was called Fabristraße from 1930 to 1999. | entry |
Liestrasse | 1978 | The street is named after a field name. Lie denotes a fiefdom , here were properties that were issued as a fiefdom. | The street runs between Geislarstraße and Gensemer Gasser . It was called Lehbergsweg from 1858 to 1930 and Grüner Weg from 1930 to 1978 . | entry |
Meindorfer Strasse | 1907 | Named after the Sankt Augustinian district of Meindorf. | It is a dead end street from Oberdorfstraße. The street was called Flieschgasse between 1858 and 1907. | entry |
Oberdorfstrasse | 1907 | Named after the Geislar Oberdorf. | The street runs between Bergergasse / Geislarstraße and the federal highway 59 . It was called Im Oberdorf from 1752 to 1824 and Dorfstraße from 1858. | entry |
Peter-Heider-Strasse | 1987 | Named after Peter Heider (1847–1924). He was a landowner in Geislar and in 1917 donated his farm to the Order of the Cellites in Vilich. They established a monastery there in 1922. | The street leads off from Fabristrasse. | entry |
Sandorfstrasse | 1963 | The street is named after a field name. The name Sandorf could be a modified form of Sanderhof. Alexander Sander is mentioned in a document in 1355 and 1360 as a feudal lord of the Siegburg Abbey, possibly he or one of his descendants later settled in Geislar. | The street runs between Oberdorfstrasse and Bergergasse. | entry |
Schnufertsberg | 2005 | The street is named after a field name. | The street is a connection between the Abtstrasse and the Oberdorfstrasse. | entry |
Siegauenstrasse | 1978 | Named for a path to victory. | The road runs between Auf der Rötschen and Am alten Pütz / Bergergasse. It was called Daufgasse between 1752 and 1858, Taubengasse between 1858 and 1907 and then Siegstraße until 1978. | entry |
Individual evidence
- Old and new street names in the area of the former town of Beuel , edited by Johannes Bücher; in: Studies on the home history of the Bonn-Beuel district (issue 22), Bonn 1980
- Bonn street names origin and meaning edited by Ansgar Sebastian Klein ; in: Publications of the Bonn City Archives (Volume 70); Bonn 2011; 2nd edition Bonn 2012; City of Bonn - City Archives and City History Library; ISBN 978-3-922832-48-5
- Street cadastre of the city of Bonn
- Detailed city map of Bonn