List of streets in Essen-Bergerhausen
The list of streets in Essen-Bergerhausen describes the street system in the Bergerhausen district of Essen with the corresponding historical references.
Introduction and overview
In Essen-Bergerhausen today, 11,646 inhabitants (March 31, 2020) live on an area of 3.34 square kilometers. The district belongs to the postcode districts 45134 and 45136.
In the west of Bergerhausen there is the street name group of the rivers. Other street names are reminiscent of the rural origins of today's district with Kotten and Höfe as well as its mining past.
The district boundary of Bergerhausen is formed clockwise from the north as follows:
Starting with Sabinastraße, Töpferstraße, Elsa-Brändström-Straße, Moltkestraße, Lanterstraße, Hovescheidtstraße, street An St. Albertus Magnus and follow street Lönsberg to the east follow Spillenburgstrasse, Westfalenstrasse and then the Ruhr . In the south, the border crosses the St. Annental and Im Walpurgistal roads, followed by a feeder to the 52 federal motorway in the west.
There are 86 designated traffic areas in Bergerhausen, including two squares .
The following streets are only partially located in the district:
Bergerhauser Strasse, Dinnendahlstrasse, Fünfkirchenblick Street, Hovescheidtstrasse, Im Walpurgistal Street, Moltkestrasse, Rellinghauser Strasse, Ruhrallee, Spillenburgstrasse, St. Annental Street and Westfalenstrasse .
Run through the Huttrop district
- the federal highway 52 ,
- the federal road 227 on the Ruhrallee,
- the Landesstraße L 20 from Rüttenscheid on the Töpferstraße to Huttrop and
- the state road L 441 on the Westfalenstrasse to Steele .
List of streets
The following table gives an overview of the streets and paths in the district with corresponding information.
- Name : current name of the street or square.
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Length / dimensions in meters:
The length information contained in the overview are rounded overview values that were determined in Google Earth using the local scale. They are used for comparison purposes and, if official values are known, are exchanged and marked separately.
For squares, the dimensions are given in the form a × b.
The addition (in the district) indicates that the length is that of the street section within Huttrop, as the street continues into neighboring districts.
The addition (all street sections together) indicates that the street is so winding that there is no “main street”. Instead, the length of all road sections is added together. - Derivation : origin or reference of the name
- Date of designation : first official designation
- Notes : additional information
- Image : Photo of the street or an adjacent object
Surname | Length / dimensions (in meters) |
Derivation | Date of designation | Remarks | image |
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Adelgundenweg | 810 | Adelgunde mine field | Nov 20, 1937 | From the consolidation of the mining fields Adelgunde, Bänksgen, Finefrau, Henriettenglück and Freye Hoffnung, the later Ludwig mine emerged in 1831 . The Adelgunde mine was located in the Rellinghauser Gemeinheit on the so-called Kogel and consisted of upper and lower tunnels. In 1798 it had six trades with a total of 128 kuxes . The shares were transferred to external trades early on, including Dördelmann / Ückendorf, Frh. V. Elverfeldt / Steinbach and Lührmann / Herbede. Adelgundenweg is located in a workers' settlement of the former Ludwig mine. It was previously called Ludwigstrasse and leads from Am Krausen Bäumchen in a south-eastern arc to Ruhrallee, before which it ends as a dead end. |
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Ahrfeldstrasse | 770 | Ahrfeld, field name | 16 Sep 1910 | The old field name Ahrfeld indicates that Bergerhausen was once the granary of the Essen monastery . 1483 is mentioned in a document that Margareta Marzelyes before the court in Rellinghausen twelve morning v in Aevelde to the maid Goiste. d. Vitinkhave sold. The Ahrfeld, also Aher Feld, is the field belonging to the Aue or Aa on the Rellinghauser Mühlenbach in Bergerhausen. Ahrfeldstrasse continued southwest of Weserstrasse until 1927, crossed Rellinghauser Strasse and later became today's Kaninenberghöhe road . Between Rellinghauserstrasse and Weserstrasse it was interrupted by the Ludwig mine . Today's Ahrfeldstraße branches off from Weserstraße in a north-easterly direction, crosses Ruhrallee and ends in Siepental as a dead end. |
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Allerstrasse | 85 | Aller , tributary of the Weser | 16 Sep 1910 | Since the Weserstraße in Bergerhausen during the period of National Socialism for a shot police officer in Joseph Hommer Lane was renamed the Allerstraße between the 20 November 1937 received and 15 May 1945 Name Weserstraße. After that it was called Allerstraße again and the original Weserstraße got its name back. Allerstrasse, which was previously called Idastrasse , connects Leinestrasse with Rellinghauser Strasse. |
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On the pious Joseph | 540 | Joseph Grüter, innkeeper, Kötter | Sep 24 1923 | Joseph Grüter was born on August 8, 1819 in Heidhausen . In the middle of the 19th century he set up a bar in the former Kappertskotten. This was often visited by the so-called Trample Club, a hiking community made up of Essen personalities; including Alfred Krupp , Freiherr von Hövel , Carl Julius Schulz , Adolf Knaudt and Hermann Heilermann (grammar school director, secret government councilor). The members of the trampling club jokingly called Joseph Grüter because of his loud character and deep piety and alluding to his first name, the pious Joseph . He died in Steele on September 22, 1884 . The spelling of the street was initially Am pious Joseph and was changed to the capitalization Am Pious Joseph on July 15, 1957. The street Am Frommen Joseph, which in parts previously belonged to Rellinghauser Straße, leads from the street Im Walpurgistal to the north, crosses the Rellinghauser Straße until it meets it again from the east. |
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At the frilled tree | 1350 | On the little tree, field name | Feb. 4, 1903 | The field name Am Krausen Bäumchen goes back to the old border tree between Essen and Rellinghausen . The name comes from the term Cruceboom, i.e. a tree with the cross as a boundary symbol. From this the name Krausenbaum emerged via Krusenboorn. This frilled tree was an old linden tree that was destroyed by lightning and was replaced by a new linden tree in 1863. The spelling of the street was initially Am Krausen Bäumchen and was changed to the capitalization Am Krausen Bäumchen on July 15, 1957. The street Am Krausen Bäumchen, which was originally called Josefstraße , leads from the street Am Frommen Joseph northeastwards, which crosses the Weserstraße and the Ruhrallee, to the Lanterstraße. |
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On the work of art | 180 | Colliery artwork | June 28, 1961 | The street at the artwork connects the artwork street with the Schulkirchweg in a western arch. | |
At the Schlangenberg | 150 | Schlangenberg, field and farm name | Jan. 23, 1957 | Schlangenberg was originally the name of a farm. In 1322 it is mentioned in a document that Herman up me Kelre and his wife Hilla sold a piece of farmland at the Hofe to dem Shlangenberge to Rutger von Bergerhausen. The street Am Schlangenberg, which existed structurally before 1927, was only named in 1957 and connects Elzstraße with Nekesweg. |
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On the Siepenhang | 100 | Location on the slope of the Hoverscheider Siepens | Dec 18, 1973 | The Hoverscheider Siepen was originally a wooded and water-rich meadow valley, which spread south of Steeler Straße from Brünglinghauser Feld to the Ruhr. The street Am Siepenhang is a southeastern dead end of the street Am Krausen Bäumchen. |
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To St. Albertus Magnus | 660 | St. Albertus Magnus Church | Apr 9, 1956 | At the southern end of the street, the Church of St. Albertus Magnus was completed in 1958. Consecrated on February 29th, 1959, since July 20th, 1967, it has been called the Pax-Christi Church. The street An St. Albertus Magnus leads back to the Dinnendahlstraße in a western arc. |
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Bauvereinstrasse | 350 | Building association | Feb. 4, 1904 | In the mayor's offices around Essen, at the turn of the century, a number of savings and building associations were set up to counter the growing housing shortage by building inexpensive, good-quality apartments. In 1900, the savings and construction association called Arbeiterwohnungsgenossenschaft eGmbH was founded in neighboring Rellinghausen with the support of the Rhenish Association for the Promotion of Workers' Housing. In addition to the community of Rellinghausen, Gutehoffnungshütte also joined the cooperative as the owner of the Ludwig colliery and the Langenbrahm union as the owner of the Schnabel im Osten colliery . After the cooperative acquired a two-hectare property in 1901 and initially built six residential buildings on it, the street located here was given the name Bauvereinstraße. The Bauvereinstraße connects the street Am Frommen Joseph with the Terbeckstraße. |
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Bergerhauser Strasse | 890 (in the district) |
former Bergerhausen farmers | Nov 14, 1935 | Bergerhauser Strasse was called Morsestrasse in Bergerhausen from 1904 , it was part of Herwarthstrasse in Huttrop from September 15, 1910 , and Hellweg between October 9, 1914 and November 14, 1935 . Today's Bergerhauser Strasse, coming from Huttrop, leads from Elsa-Brändström-Strasse in a south-easterly direction to the street Am Krausen Bäumchen. |
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Billebrinkhöhe | 680 | Billbrink, family name | 17 Sep 1924 | In 1664 the pastorate St. Laurentius in Steele leased two half acres , called Gehr, to the married couple Johan Bilbering and Christina Schürnkamp. In 1795 the self-employed blacksmith Billbrink is mentioned. In 1804 the name Billbrink appears again. In 1824, the so-called Billbrink belonged to Hof Mühlenbeck (also Möllenbeck) in Bergerhausen during the division of the Hovescheidter common unity. He had to pay an annual canon of three talers for it. By lot, the Billbrink fell to the Stattrop farm, which in return had to build and maintain a wooden bridge over the stream. The Billebrinkhöhe street leads south from Lönsberg street to Dinnendahlstraße. |
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Bonsiepen | 370 | Bonsiepe, farm name | May 18, 1989 | In the cadastral map of 1822 from the Bergerhausen section A, the Bonsiepe farm in the Ahrfeld corridor is recorded. In the corresponding hall book there is a Bonsiepe as the owner and beneficiary of this house. The Bonsiepen street forms an eastern arc from and back to the Ruhrallee. |
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Bröhmkenweg | 170 | Brömken, field name | Nov 20, 1937 | The Bröhmkenweg, which was originally called St.-Anna-Straße and from 1910 Saalestraße , leads from the Papenberghang street eastwards to Terbeckstraße and then ends as a dead end. | |
Diemelstrasse | 430 | Diemel , left tributary of the Weser | Oct. 1, 1920 | Diemelstrasse connects Saalestrasse with Ahrfeldstrasse. | |
Dinnendahlstrasse | 800 (in the district) |
Franz Dinnendahl , engineer | Oct. 1, 1920 | Dinnendahlstrasse, which was previously called Löbbertstrasse , leads south from Huttrop on the An St. Albertus Magnus road, where it ends as a dead end after the Billebrinkhöhe road converges. | |
Ederstrasse | 120 | Eder , left tributary of the Fulda | Jan. 26, 1912 | Ederstraße is a dead end to Fuldastraße. | |
Elbestrasse | 660 | Elbe , Central European river | 16 Sep 1910 | The same road that previously Theodorstraße was called and in the era of National Socialism in George Street was renamed combines Ruhrallee on Weserstraße with Rellinghauser road. | |
Elsa-Brändström-Platz | 110 × 100 | Elsa Brändström , Swedish philanthropist | May 8, 1933 | Elsa-Brändström-Platz, which once lay between Engelsbecke and Vedderstrasse , is now bordered by Elsa-Brändström-Strasse and the 52 federal motorway . | |
Elsa-Brändström-Strasse | 280 | Elsa Brändström , Swedish philanthropist | May 22, 1946 | Elsa-Brändström-Strasse, which previously belonged in part to Engelsbecke Strasse , connects Ruhrallee with Moltkestrasse and forms the border with Huttrop along its entire length . There is no direct access to the Ruhrallee. | |
Elzstrasse | 270 | Elz , right tributary of the Rhine | Feb. 24, 1977 | Elzstrasse, which in 1903 led as Alte Ruhrstrasse and from 1910 as Neckarstrasse to Elbestrasse, was shortened in 1977, after the construction of the federal motorway 52 , and now connects Werrastrasse with Nekesweg. | |
Five church view | 800 (in the district) |
Location overlooking five churches | Aug 5, 1936 | At the time it was named, five church towers could be seen from the height above the Spillenburg in an easterly direction. The street Fünfkirchenblick, which was not officially called Ruhrhöhenweg before, branches off from Laurentiusweg in Huttrop to the south and leads from the east onto Dinnendahlstraße. |
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Fulda Street | 120 | Fulda , headwaters of the Weser | Apr 11, 1911 | Fuldastraße branches off to the west of Werrastraße and ends as a dead end after turning off Ederstraße. | |
Gönterstrasse | 550 | Gönter, name of a meanness | Feb. 4, 1903 | 1347 Rutgher Pilike is mentioned in a document, who sells two acres of land near the Slangenberghe uppe of the Gunterdessipen to the chapter in Rellinghausen . The Göntersiepen, also called Behrensörtchen, was divided equally among six entitled farmers in 1832 by means of a recess. These six were Clostermann in Huttrop , Grote and Raupert in Rüttenscheid , Joester, Schürmann in Bergerhausen and Vöcklinghaus. In addition, fifty kötter and landowners who were entitled to a pet were compensated. Section 1 of the recess states that the Gontersiepen was a slope largely planted with high oak forest, which tapered to a point along a valley through which a brook flowed to the north and widened to the south. Due to the rocky bush ground, it is probably only suitable for wood cultivation and, according to a measurement by the geometer Mathey near Schellenberg from 1816, including the old charred mines and dumps located on this division, contains 32 acres of 36 square rods of 30 feet Prussian dimensions. The Gönterstraße leads as an extension of the street Im Walpurgistal to Orden and then curves in an eastward direction onto Max-Keith-Straße.
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Guts-Muths-Weg | 450 | Johann Christoph Friedrich GutsMuths , educator | Oct 21, 1938 | The Guts-Muths-Weg leads west of the Maßmannweg in a bend to the northeast and ends before the Adelgundenweg as a dead end. | |
Hallering | 440 | United Hall, Pit Field | Oct 21, 1938 | The United Halle mine field, which was once located here, last belonged to the Gutehoffnungshütte and went to the Langenbrahm colliery in 1954 . The street Hallering branches off to the west of the Dinnendahlstraße and leads back in a western semicircle back to it and on to the street Billebrinkhöhe. |
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Havelring | 370 | Havel , right tributary of the Elbe | Sep 7 1960 | The road Havelring is a ring road that branches off from Bergerhauser Strasse to the northeast and leads back to it. | |
Henricistraße | 130 (in the district) |
Karl Henrici , university professor, architect, urban planner | 16 Sep 1910 | Henricistraße, which was previously called Roßbachstraße , leads from Töpferstraße to the southeast and ends in front of Ruhrallee as a dead end. It continues across from Töpferstrasse in Huttrop . | |
Hohefuhrstrasse | 380 | Name of an old route | Feb. 4, 1903 | The old road connected the Kersebaum farm with the Überruhrschen Weg, today's Ruhrallee. Today the Hohefuhrstraße leads from the Kersebaumstraße to the southwest to the Bonsiepen street, which then meets the Ruhrallee. |
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Hovescheidtstrasse | 240 (in the district) |
Hof Hovescheidt, sub-builders | Nov 29, 1897 | With Hovescheidt a farm and a sub-builder were called. The Aldenhof, Hof Nellen, Hof Löbbert and Hof Hovescheidt, first mentioned at the beginning of the 14th century, belonged to this subordinate group. It belonged to a treatment item in the Oberhof Viehof. When the Jesuit order, which was originally dealt with by the Hovescheidt court, was dissolved, the Essen princess received the dominium utile (usable property) at the court. In 1775 she transferred it to St. John's Church to improve income and with the obligation to keep a parish chaplain. In 1776 Pastor Joseph Andermar and in 1803 Pastor Andreas Gotfang were treated with the court. When the farm's fiscal burdens were relieved in 1837, the farm was 125 acres . In 1668 Henrich Hovescheidt is mentioned as the sitter, in 1795 the whole farmer Hovescheidt is mentioned and in 1826 the married couple Wilhelm Hovescheidt and Elisabeth called Kaiser. In 1841 the tenant family who was sitting there received the farm in lease from the Catholic Church in exchange for an inheritance fee (2500 Reichsthaler) and an annual canon (22 Rthlr.). Hovescheidtstraße leads from Lanterstraße in a north-westerly direction to Huttrop , where it forms the border to Huttrop for the first 240 meters. |
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Hüskenbörde | 320 | Hüskenbörde, field name | Nov 20, 1937 | Based on the Kotten Hüsken, the field name Hüskenbörde was formed, where Börde stands for a fertile and agriculturally used area. In the land register of 1668, the Kotten belonging to the Huttrop farm is mentioned. Before that it belonged to the Huttrop and Kaiser courts. In 1773, Johan Diderich Huisken and his wife were expelled from the country for a crime. In 1775 a profit letter was issued for Wilhelm Potthoff from Frohnhausen and his wife Catharine Gertrud Montag. The day laborer and Kötter Hüsken and the Gräfliche Damenkapitel in Essen are named as owners in 1795 and Kotten Huiskens in Ahfelde is designated a body profit property. In 1832 the fiscal burdens of the 15 acre Kottens were replaced. In the mother role of 1866 Friedrich Hüsken in Bergerhausen is named as the owner. The church in Steele acquired the Kotten in 1877, followed by the landlord Michael Olfen in Steele in 1880 and the machine keeper Heimeshof in Holsterhausen in 1899 . The street Hüskenbörde connects the Bergerhauser Straße with the Ruhrallee. |
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In the Ahrfeld | 200 | Ahrfeld, field name | Sep 24 1923 | The old field name Ahrfeld indicates that Bergerhausen was once the granary of the Essen monastery . In 1483 it is mentioned in a document that Margareta Marzelyes sold twelve acres in the Aevelde to the maid Goiste vd Vitinkhave before the court in Rellinghausen . The Ahrfeld, also Aher Feld, is the field belonging to the Aue or Aa on the Rellinghauser Mühlenbach in Bergerhausen. The street Im Ahrfeld connects the Max-Keith-Straße with the Schürmannstraße.
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In the Walpurgistal | 1330 (in the district) |
Walburga or Walpurgis , feminine given name | March 16, 1979 | The street Im Walpurgistal was previously part of the Walpurgisstraße , which was interrupted by the construction of the federal highway 52 . The Rüttenscheider part is still called Walpurgisstrasse today. There is only one connection on foot to get there. The street Im Walpurgistal begins at the motorway and forms the border to the neighboring city district Stadtwald in its western course and continues to the west in Rellinghausen . | |
Kaninenberghöhe | 680 | Oral description of the location | Dec. 1, 1927 | Until 1927 the street Kaninenberghöhe was the western part of the Ahrfeldstraße . The Kaninenberghöhe connects the Rellinghauser Strasse with the Max-Keith-Strasse. |
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Kassiepenstrasse | 285 | Kassiepen, court name | 8 Sep 1959 | In 1435, Dietrich von Limburg, Herr zu Broich, certified a pension due to the Rellinghausen monastery from the Karsypengut. Originally the farm belonged to Dietrich von der Leiten. He sold the Kayesseipen farm in 1456 to Johann von Vittinghoff called Schell . In the lease book of 1589/90 of the Werden monastery it is stated that the Kaersypengudt of the Schelen upm Berge guidt through its leaseholder Johan Kairsipen is subject to tax. In 1795 the Cassiepe leasehold is mentioned and the whole farmer is referred to as Aufsitzer . Baron von Schell was the landowner. Kassiepenstrasse leads from Obere Fuhr to the southeast, crosses Adelgundenstrasse and then ends as a dead end. |
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Kersebaumstrasse | 570 | Kersebaum, court name | 16 Sep 1910 | A first mention can be found in the chain book of 1332 with mansus tho deme Kerzebome. In 1795, half of the farmer Anton Kersebaum and the product to be treated are called Kersebaum. Half of it was independent and the other half belonged to the princely abbey in Essen as landowner. It was a Unterhof of the Viehof. Johann Anton Kersebaum, who was last treated in 1760, acquired half of the farm in 1764 for 1700 Reichstaler. The 73 acre farm included eleven acres of land in the Ahrfeld, which came from the Reichsabbey of Werden and which also required treatment. In 1803 the farm passed to Philipp Kersebaum. In 1834, his son Friedrich replaced the fiscal burdens on the farm, so that he became the unrestricted owner. The Kersebaumstraße, which was originally called Siepenweg , is an extension of Lanterstraße and leads south-east onto Künstlerstraße. |
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Klinkestrasse | 283 | Handle, name of a mean | Feb. 4, 1903 | On June 2, 1824 there was a recession of partition of the Hovescheidt vulgarity. After that, the Klenksiepen, which bordered the hospitals' lands (called the Klinke), belonged to the school ad Sanctum Johannem in Essen. The Klinkestraße is a south-western dead end of the Bergerhauser Straße. |
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Artwork Street | 1070 | former art worker's hut | Feb. 4, 1903 |
Franz Dinnendahl built an iron foundry on the Ruhr in 1803 . After his machine factory in Essen was destroyed by fire in 1821, he moved it to Huttrop and merged it with the iron foundry. His son Röttger Wilhelm Dinnendahl took over the business in 1826, and was later followed by his son-in-law, Mr. Küster. From 1900, the art worker's hut was officially named RW Dinnendahl AG and later belonged to Westfalia Dinnendahl Gröppel . The name of the art worker's hut is based on the neighboring art colliery , in which Dinnendahl played a decisive role. The kunsterstrasse leads south from the Lanterstrasse to the Westfalenstrasse. |
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Lanterstrasse | 980 | Lanter, field name | Nov 29, 1897 | The mutilated term Lanter comes from Landwehr . In the land register of 1668 Georgh Huttropff is named as the owner of four acres of land, eighth Landwehr, between the one on Kaysers Landt. Lanterstraße leads from Moltkestraße to Hovescheidtstraße, where it forms the border to Huttrop along its entire length . |
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Leinestrasse | 180 | Leine , left tributary of the Aller | The Leinestraße, which was previously called Herthastraße , connects the Siegstraße with the Weserstraße. | ||
Lennestrasse | 50 | Lenne , left tributary of the Ruhr | Dec. 1, 1927 | Lennestrasse is a northern cul-de-sac from Saarplatz. | |
Lionweg | 110 | Justus Lion , educator and sports pioneer | Oct 21, 1938 | The Lionweg connects the Guts-Muths-Weg with the Ruhrallee. | |
Löbberthang | 530 | Löbbert, court name | Feb 12, 1931 | A first mention can be found in the chain book from 1332: mansus Lubberti to Hovenschede. The courtyard was the Unterhof of Hof Eickenscheidt. In the land registry of 1668, Peter Lobbert is mentioned as the rider of the nine- acre farm. In 1773 Johann Phillip Brockhoff and Franziska Josepha Rose were treated with the court on behalf of the Roseschen Foundation. In 1795 the court councilor Rose was named as the landlord and the horse whore Löbbert. In the mother role of 1867, the farm owner Hermann Kammann is named. Löbbert as the tenant of the Roseschen Foundation in Steele . The street Löbberthang leads from the street An St. Albertus Magnus in a southeastern arch to the street Billebrinkhöhe. |
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Loensberg | 450 | Hermann Löns , journalist and writer | Nov 12, 1934 | The street Lönsberg leads from the Dinnendahlstraße in a south-eastern arc to the street Billebrinkhöhe. | |
Maßmannweg | 260 | Hans Ferdinand Maßmann , medieval philologist | Oct 21, 1938 | The Maßmannweg leads from the Lionweg to the Guts-Muts-Weg and ends further south as a dead end. | |
Max-Keith-Strasse | 630 | Franz Max Hans Keith, entrepreneur | Dec. 21, 1978 | Max Keith was born on August 23, 1903 in Düsseldorf and died there on November 5, 1974. From 1937 to 1968 he was the first managing director of Coca-Cola GmbH, founded in 1930 in Essen on what was then Kaninenbergstrasse. He launched a naming competition among his employees for an alternative drink to Coca-Cola, as its raw materials were expensive in the times of crisis in the 1930s and 1940s. Because they found the drink, which initially consisted of whey and apple pulp, fantastic and imaginative , the name Fanta , which quickly spread, came onto the market. It is also thanks to Max Keith that it was rebuilt after World War II . In 2003, the Coca-Cola headquarters moved from Essen to Berlin. The Max-Keith-Straße, which was previously called Kaninenbergstraße , leads from the Sabinastraße to the street Kaninenberghöhe. |
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Moltkestrasse | 150 (in the district) |
Helmuth Karl Bernhard von Moltke , Field Marshal General | Feb. 4, 1900 | Moltkestrasse, which runs predominantly in Huttrop , forms the border to Bergerhausen between Lanterstrasse and Elsa-Brändström-Strasse. | |
Muldeweg | 270 | Mulde , left tributary of the Elbe | Oct 18, 1921 | The Muldeweg connects Ahrfeldstrasse with Elbestrasse. | |
Neissestrasse | 250 | Neisse , left tributary of the Oder | 3rd Sep 1956 | Neißestraße connects you Warthestraße with Bergerhauser Straße. | |
Nekesweg | 220 | Nekes, family name | Jan. 23, 1957 | The old Bergerhauser Nekes family ran a pottery near the street in 1851. The Nekesweg connects the Elzstraße with the Werrastraße. |
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Netheweg | 220 | Nethe , left tributary of the Weser | Oct 18, 1921 | The Netheweg connects the Muldeweg with Weserstrasse. | |
Netzestrasse | 150 | Netze , tributary of the Warta | Sep 7 1960 | Netzestraße is a cul-de-sac from Weichselstraße. | |
Niersstrasse | 100 | Niers , right tributary of the Meuse in Germany | Feb. 24, 1977 | Niersstrasse, which was previously called Wupperstrasse , connects Saarplatz with Am Krausen Bäumchen. | |
Nottelhof | 470 (all road sections together) |
Nöttelhof, farm name | Oct 18, 1954 | It is a Rellinghauser Stiftshof that went down early . The street Nöttelhof leads from the Kaninenberghöhe to the north and in an arc back to it, where it has further access roads. |
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Upper wagon | 550 | old name of a way | Nov. 27, 1933 | Henrich Morse is mentioned in the land register of 1668, who leased two acres of land on the Oberfuhr next to Brümelinghauß Landt from Messrs Canonicis in Essen . The street Obere Fuhr leads in a southern curve from the Weserstraße to the street Am Krausen Bäumchen. |
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East Street | 300 | Location east of Mühlenbergstrasse | around 1908 | In 1908 the street east of Mühlenbergstrasse (today Papenberghang ) was called Oststrasse, the street west of it as Weststrasse . The whole area belonged to the colony of the Langenbrahm colliery . In the course of the incorporation of Rellinghausen to Essen in 1910, Oststrasse was extended by Weststrasse. Therefore, Oststraße now connects Terbeckstraße with Rellinghauser Straße. |
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Papenberghang | 470 | Papenberg, field name | Nov 20, 1937 | The farmer Kassiepe is mentioned in 1443 when he leased three acres of land on Papenberg. The Kanonichen, also known as Papen in the vernacular, owned larger property on the Krausen Bäumchen that was leased to the farmers. That was the name of the whole mountain top Papenberg. The street Papenberghang, which was originally called Mühlenbergstraße , leads south from the street Obere Fuhr to the Rellinghauser Straße. |
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Peenestrasse | 160 | Peene , coastal river in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania | 3rd July 1956 | Peenestrasse connects Ahrfeldstrasse with Warthestrasse in an eastern arc. | |
Potthoffs Börde | 320 | Potthoff, name of a Kott | Nov 20, 1937 | The name followed based on the Kotten Potthoff, which was originally called Huisken, with Börde standing for a fertile and agriculturally used area. In the land register of 1668, the Kotten belonging to the Huttrop farm is mentioned. Before that it belonged to the Huttrop and Kaiser courts. In 1773, Johan Diderich Huisken and his wife were expelled from the country for a crime. In 1775 a profit letter was issued for Wilhelm Potthoff from Frohnhausen and his wife Catharine Gertrud Montag. The day laborer and Kötter Hüsken and the Gräfliche Damenkapitel in Essen are named as owners in 1795 and Kotten Huiskens in Ahfelde is designated a body profit property. In 1832 the fiscal burdens of the 15 acre Kottens were replaced. In the mother role of 1866 Friedrich Hüsken in Bergerhausen is named as the owner. The church in Steele acquired the Kotten in 1877, followed by the landlord Michael Olfen in Steele in 1880 and the machine keeper Heimeshof in Holsterhausen in 1899 . The street Potthoffs Börde, which was previously called Potthoffstrasse , connects Bergerhauser Strasse with Ruhrallee. |
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Pregelstrasse | 340 | Pregel , river in the northern part of East Prussia | 3rd July 1956 | Pregelstrasse leads at an angle from Bergerhauser Strasse to Ahrfedlstrasse. | |
Rellinghauser Strasse | 1430 (in the district) |
Rellinghausen , former mayor's office | June 5, 1908 | The street is reminiscent of the former mayor's office in Rellinghausen. From 1815 to 1875 Rellinghausen belonged to the mayor's office of Steele . In 1876 the Rellinghausen mayor's office was formed from Rellinghausen, Bergerhausen and Heide. In 1884 Rüttenscheid came to the Rellinghausen mayor's office as a former part of Stoppenberg , but left it again in 1900. In 1910, Rellinghausen was incorporated into a district of Essen. The Rellinghauser Straße leads from Rellinghausen on St. Annental in a north-westerly direction to Huttrop and on to the Südviertel . |
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Ruhrallee | 2220 (in the district) |
Avenue to the Ruhr | Feb. 4, 1904 | The Ruhrallee, which was previously called Alleestraße , leads from the Ruhr in a north-westerly direction up to Elsa-Brändström-Straße and on through Huttrop into the southern district . | |
Saalestrasse | 480 (all road sections together) |
Saale , tributary of the Elbe | Feb. 24, 1960 | Between 1910 and 1937 there was already a Saalestrasse in Bergerhausen, which is now called Bröhmkenweg . In 1960, today's Saalestrasse was laid out, which connects Diemelstrasse with Elbestrasse. | |
Saarplatz | 55 × 30 | Saar , tributary of the Moselle | Dec. 1, 1927 | Saarplatz is located southwest of Ruhrallee. The Saarstrasse, the Lennestrasse and the Niersstrasse meet him. | |
Saarstrasse | 80 | Saar , tributary of the Moselle | Dec. 1, 1927 | Saarstraße runs from Ahrfeldstraße in a south-easterly direction to Saarplatz. | |
Sabinastrasse | 390 | Sabina , female name | Oct 8, 1964 | The naming after a first name was based on a Rüttenscheid decision of 1895. Sabinastraße, which was previously called Wilhelminenstraße and was later part of Töpferstraße , now leads in a southwestern extension of Töpferstraße to the southwest, where it forms the border to Rüttenscheid and ends as a dead end . |
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Scraper | 90 | Coal mining | May 26, 1939 | The road once led to a mining gallery in which coal was mined. The area for this was called scraper. The street Schurfacker connects the street Hüskenbörde with the street Potthoffs Börde. |
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Schürmannstrasse | 630 | Schürmann, court name | 16 Sep 1910 | The farm is first mentioned in the lease book of the Werden monastery from 1598/90. In 1795 the entire Schürmann farmer and the farm are named as a lease from the landlord Baron von Schell. Johannes Terbeck called Schürmann was seated on the farm around 1800. The married couple Wilhelm Wittenberg called Schürmann and Franziska nee Terbeck put their son Wilhelm Wittenberg called Schürmann junior in 1868. as heir to the court. His son Paul sold the farm in 1923 to the city of Essen, which established a commercial development area there. It was located southwest of today's junction Kaninenberghöhe / Rellinghauser Straße. Schürmannstraße, which was previously called Ringofenstraße , connects Kaninberghöhe with Rellinghauser Straße. |
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Schulkirchweg | 200 | Popular parlance: Dinnendahlschulkirche | Feb. 18, 1959 | In 1949, a pastoral care district was set up in the mother parish of St. Lambertus in Rellinghausen . In this district, the first service took place on October 9th of that year in the then Catholic Dinnendahl School on Künstlerstrasse, which existed before 1907. This is how this school was popularly called Dinnendahlschulkirche. For the believers the way from the west was the church way, for their children the way to school. The Schulkirchweg branches off to the west of the Künstlerstrasse and ends as a dead end for motor vehicles. A footpath leads to the Ruhrallee. |
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Siegstrasse | 90 | Sieg , right tributary of the Rhine | Feb. 24, 1977 | Siegstrasse, which was called Papestrasse since 1904 and Mainstrasse from 1910 , connects Elbestrasse with Rellinghauser Strasse. | |
Siepenstrasse | 330 | Siepen , wooded valley rich in water | Nov 29, 1897 | The Hovescheidter Siepen was a wooded and water-rich meadow valley that stretched from Brünglinghauser Feld south of Steeler Strasse to the Ruhr. Originally it was unrestrictedly jointly owned by the farms belonging to the Huttrop farmers . After the recession of division of the Hovescheidt vulgarity of 1824, Siepen consisted of high wood forest land, cleared forest land as well as meadow and pasture land. At that time it was around 215 Prussian acres . Siepenstraße branches off from Lanterstraße in a south-easterly direction and ends in Siepental. |
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Spillenburgstrasse | 340 (in the district) |
Spillenburgmühle | 19 Sep 1910 | The Spillenburgmühle was built in 1418 by the Essen prince abbess Margarete von der Mark-Arensberg († 1429). A mill had stood here before. In 1423 the abbess transferred her property to the minster church factory. In 1685 the abbess Anna Salome von Salm-Reifferscheidt sold the mill of the Essen monastery for 6000 thalers to Arnold Johan Vietinghoff called Schele zu Schellenberg and Ripshorst. In 1807 the rifle manufacturers Pieul and Pelletier leased the drill mill for rifle barrels on the Spillenburg. But shortly afterwards the gun industry went under. There were two other mills here that were operated by the miller Humann. In 1911, the Spillenburg, the Ruhrwehr and all those in law were sold to the city of Essen by Baron von Schell. It secured the water supply for the waterworks built in 1863. The mill systems had to give way to a turbine system for generating electricity. Spillenburgstrasse was named Koppstrasse in 1897 and was called Spillenburger Weg between 1904 and 1908 . It forms the border to Steele from Westfalenstraße and continues in Huttrop . |
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Spreestrasse | 100 | Spree , left tributary of the Havel | 3rd July 1956 | The Spreestrasse connects the Ahrfeldstrasse with the Pregelstrasse. | |
St. Annental | 1000 (in the district) |
St. Anne's Chapel | Sep 18 1926 | The street St. Annental, which was previously called Kapellenstraße and in 1910 was part of the street Im Walpurgistal , then Walpurgisstraße , which continues to the west today , has led from Walpurgisstraße to the east since 1926 until it meets Frankenstraße in Rellinghausen . | |
Stone hollow | 110 | Oral description of the location | Oct 18, 1954 | The Steinkuhle street, which was previously called the Angry Ant , is a western cul-de-sac of the Ruhrallee. | |
Stupertweg | 160 | Süpert, name of a coal seam | Dec 5, 1951 | In 1799 the Stülpert coal seam belonged to the union on the work of art at Billebrink. The artwork colliery went into custody with reference to a legal dispute pending at the Reich Chamber of Commerce in Wetzlar against a third party intended sale of the Stülpert and Vierfußbank seams. The Stüpertweg connects the Löbberthang street with the Billebrinkhöhe street. |
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Terbeckstrasse | 190 | Terbeck, farm owner | around 1908 | The sitter of the Schürmannhof was Johannes Terbeck around 1800, cf. Schürmannstrasse . Terbeckstraße connects Bauvereinstraße with Bröhmkenweg. |
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Pottery Street | 650 | former pottery | Nov 29, 1897 | The Töpferstraße is named after a former pottery on the corner of Henricistraße and Töpferstraße. Today it is part of the state road L20 and leads from the Ruhrallee to Rellinghauser Straße, where it forms the border to Huttrop in the entire course . | |
Lower carriage | 400 | Based on the Obere Fuhr | Nov. 27, 1933 | The naming is based on the street Obere Fuhr. The street Untere Fuhr connects the Adelgundenweg with the Weserstraße. |
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Warthestrasse | 340 | Warta , right tributary of the Oder in Poland | 3rd July 1956 | Warthestrasse connects Pregelstrasse with Am Krausen Bäumchen. | |
Weichselstrasse | 220 | Vistula , the largest Polish river | 16 Sep 1910 | The Weichselstrasse, which was previously called Grüner Weg , connects the Obere Fuhr street with the Weserstrasse. | |
Werrastrasse | 380 | Werra , a main source river of the Weser | 16 Sep 1910 | Werrastraße, which was previously called Huttroper Straße , connects Töpferstraße with Rellinghauser Straße. | |
Weserstrasse | 990 | Weser , German river | 16 Sep 1910 | Weserstraße, which was previously called Alfredusstraße and was renamed Joseph-Hommer-Weg at the time of National Socialism , connects Ruhrallee with Rellinghauser Straße. | |
Westfalenstrasse | 1160 (in the district) |
Prussian Province of Westphalia | Feb 15, 1936 | Westfalenstraße leads from Steele in the Rhineland to Westphalia. It was built between 1848 and 1851 by Steele-Bredeneyer Wegebau-Aktiengesellschaft as an art road from Steele on via Frankenstraße in Rellinghausen to Bredeney . The provincial administration took over the street in 1865. The Westfalenstraße begins at the Ruhralle and continues in an easterly direction north of the Ruhr to Steele. |
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Wuppertaler Strasse | 280 (in the district) |
Course towards Wuppertal | Nov 20, 1937 | The Wuppertaler Straße, which was previously part of the Frankenstraße coming from Rellinghausen , continues in Rellinghausen and Heisingen as an extension of the Ruhrallee from the junction of Westfalenstraße to the junction of the Zornige Ameise street . It is part of the federal highway 227 . | |
Angry ant | 270 | Angry ant, restaurant | Dec 17, 1963 | The conspicuous landlady of the former restaurant is said to have been called angry ant because of her character. The origin of this restaurant was in a glassworks, which was built in 1778 by the smelter Kaspar Mann on the property of the farmer Schulte Staade an der Ruhr. Kaspar Mann started running a brewery in addition to the glassworks. After the end of glass production, the former glassworks was converted into a brewery and restaurant. A restaurant chain has been running a restaurant here since 1984, which is again nicknamed Angry Ant. Between December 5, 1951 and October 18, 1954, today's Steinkuhle street was called Angry Ant. In 1963 today's dead-end street east of the Ruhrallee was given this name. |
List of former street names
The list of former street names does not claim to be complete.
Surname | from | to | renamed to (current) | Derivation | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alfredusstrasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | 16 Sep 1910 | → Weserstrasse | ||
Avenue street | May 8, 1903 | Feb. 4, 1904 | → Ruhrallee | avenue | |
Old Ruhrstrasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | 16 Sep 1910 | → Elzstrasse | Ruhr , river | The Alte Ruhrstrasse was called Neckarstrasse in 1910 and ran to Elbestrasse. It was shortened in 1977, after the construction of the federal highway 52 , and now connects Werrastrasse with Nekesweg as Elzstrasse. |
Engelsbecke | Feb. 27, 1927 | May 22, 1946 | → Elsa-Brändström-Straße → Elsa-Brändström-Platz |
Engelsbecke, field name and brook | The street named after the corridor of Engelsbecke now only runs through Huttrop . Initially, only today's Elsa-Brändström-Straße, and thus partly the square, bore the name Engelsbecke. In 1937 the road was extended from there to Huttrop. In 1946 the part south of Moltkestrasse became Elsa-Brändström-Strasse, before the construction of the federal motorway 52 finally severed the connection in the late 1970s . |
Frankenstrasse | May 8, 1933 | Nov 27, 1937 | → Wuppertaler Strasse | Franconia (people) | The Rüttenscheid peasantry was separated from the Bredeney , Haarzopf and Fulerum tribes by the Essen tenth border, the marca Francorum et Saxonum, the tribal border of the Franks and Saxons . The road led west to the former Franconian region and established such a connection for the first time. The Frankenstraße coming from Rellinghausen continued in Bergerhausen to the junction with Westfalenstraße. |
Georgsstrasse | May 8, 1933 | June 18, 1945 | → Elbestrasse | Renamed during the Nazi era in order to promote the symbolic form of the seizure of power . | |
Green way | Feb. 4, 1904 | 16 Sep 1910 | → Weichselstrasse | ||
Hellweg | Oct 9, 1914 | Nov 14, 1935 | → Bergerhauser Strasse | Westfälischer Hellweg , medieval trade route | Hellweg was previously part of Herwarthstrasse and was previously called Morsestrasse . |
Herwarthstrasse | Sep 15 1910 | Oct 9, 1914 | → Bergerhauser Strasse | Eberhard Herwarth von Bittenfeld , Field Marshal General | Between September 15, 1910 and October 9, 1914, today's Bergerhauser Strasse was named as the southeastern extension of today's Herwarthstrasse in Huttrop . It was then called Hellweg before becoming Bergerhauser Strasse in 1935. |
Hüskenstrasse | around 1927 | before 1979 | repealed and overbuilt | Hüsken, name of a Kott | See also Hüskenbörde . The Hüskenstraße connected the Vedderstraße, which later delimited the so-called Elsa-Brändström-Platz in the southeast, with the Klinkestraße. After 1945, the western part of Vedderstrasse came to Hüskenstrasse, before both of them gave way to the construction of the federal motorway 52 at the end of the 1970s . |
Huttroper Strasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | 16 Sep 1910 | → Werrastrasse | Road to Huttrop | |
Idastrasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | Nov 20, 1937 | → Allerstrasse | ||
Josefstrasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | → At the frilled tree | |||
Joseph-Hommer-Weg | Jan 15, 1936 | June 13, 1945 | → Weserstrasse | Joseph Hommer, shot police officer | Renamed during the Nazi era in order to promote the symbolic form of the seizure of power . |
Kaninenbergstrasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | Dec. 21, 1978 | → Max-Keith-Strasse | Oral description of the location | The Kaninenbergstrasse led directly to the Rellinghauser Strasse from the west until the Federal Highway 52 was built . It was then renamed Max-Keith-Straße and connected to Sabinastraße via a bridge over the motorway. |
Kapellenstrasse | Feb. 4, 1904 | 16 Sep 1910 | → St. Annental | St. Anne's Chapel | In 1910, Kapellenstraße became part of the street Im Walpurgistal , which continues to the west today , then Walpurgisstraße , before it was given its current name St. Annental in 1926. |
Koppstrasse | Nov 29, 1897 | Feb. 4, 1904 | → Spillenbuger Straße | From 1904 Koppstraße was called Spillenburger Weg . It has been called Spillenburger Straße since 1908. | |
Löbbertstrasse | Nov 29, 1897 | Oct. 1, 1920 | → Dinnendahlstrasse | Löbbert, court name | In the chain book of 1332 mansus Lubberti to Hoveschede is mentioned. In the land register 1668, Peter Lobbert, who was seated at the new morning large court, is named. The farm with Kotten was a Unterhof of Eickenscheidt. In 1773 Johann Phillip Brockhoff and Franziska Josepha Rose were treated with the court on behalf of the Rosesche Foundation. The horse whore Löbbert and the landlord Hofrat Rose are mentioned in 1795. In 1867 Hermann Kammann, known as Löbbert, was the tenant. |
Ludwigstrasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | Nov 20, 1937 | → Adelgundenweg | ||
Mainstrasse | 16 Sep 1910 | Feb. 27, 1977 | → Siegstrasse | Main , right tributary of the Rhine | Before that, Mainstrasse was called Papestrasse since 1904 . |
Morsestrasse | Feb. 4, 1904 | Sep 15 1910 | → Bergerhauser Strasse | ||
Mühlenbergstrasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | Nov 20, 1937 | → Papenberghang | ||
Neckarstrasse | 16 Sep 1910 | Feb. 24, 1977 | → Elzstrasse | Neckar , right tributary of the Rhine | Neckarstrasse, which was previously called Alte Ruhrstrasse , ran to Elbestrasse. It was shortened in 1977, after the construction of the federal highway 52 , and now connects Werrastrasse with Nekesweg as Elzstrasse. |
Papestrasse | Feb. 4, 1904 | 16 Sep 1910 | → Siegstrasse | Heinrich Eduard von Pape , lawyer | After Papestraße was called Mainstraße in 1910 , it was given its current name Siegstraße in 1977. |
Potthoffstrasse | 16 Sep 1910 | Nov 20, 1937 | → Potthoffs Börde | Potthof, name of a Kottens | |
Ringofenstrasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | 16 Sep 1910 | → Schürmannstrasse | Led to a ring furnace | Ringofenstraße was the name of the northern part of today's Schürmannstraße, which branched off from Rellinghauser Straße and ended as a dead end in front of a ring furnace of the Neu-Essen II colliery (to the Ludwig colliery ). After 1910 the street was extended to today's street Kaninenberghöhe. |
Rossbachstrasse | May 8, 1903 | 16 Sep 1910 | → Henricistraße | ||
Saalestrasse | 16 Sep 1910 | Nov 20, 1937 | → Bröhmkenstrasse | Saale , tributary of the Elbe | The St. Anne's Road was renamed in 1910 in Saalestraße before it became the Bröhmkenstraße 1937th In 1960 a new Saalestrasse was laid out on Elbestrasse in Bergerhausen . |
Siepenweg | 16 Sep 1910 | → Kersebaumstrasse | |||
Spillenburger Weg | Feb. 4, 1904 | June 5, 1908 | → Spillenbuger Straße | Spillenburgmühle | The Spillenbuger Weg was previously called Koppstrasse . |
St. Anna Street | 16 Sep 1910 | → Bröhmkenstrasse | St.-Anna-Straße was renamed Saalestraße in 1910 before becoming Bröhmkenstraße in 1937. | ||
Theodorstrasse | Feb. 4, 1903 | 16 Sep 1910 | → Elbestrasse | ||
Vedderstrasse | Feb. 27, 1927 | after 1945 | → Elsa-Brändström-Platz , partly | Vedderstrasse delimited what was later known as Elsa-Brändström-Platz in the southeast. After 1945, its western part came to the former Hüskenstrasse , before this gave way to the construction of the federal motorway 52 at the end of the 1970s . | |
Walpurgisstrasse | Jan. 26, 1906 | March 16, 1979 | → In the Walpurgistal → St. Annental |
Walburga or Walpurgis , feminine given name | The name was named after a first name by a Rüttenscheider resolution of 1895. The Walpurgisstrasse was separated by the construction of the federal highway 52 . In Rüttenscheid it still bears this name, to the west it was renamed Im Walpurgistal. |
West Street | around 1908 | 1910 | → Oststrasse | Location west of Mühlenbergstrasse | In 1908 the street west of Mühlenbergstrasse (today Papenberghang ) was called Weststrasse, and the street east of it was called Oststrasse . The whole area belonged to the residential colony of the Langenbrahm colliery . In the course of the incorporation of Rellinghausen to Essen in 1910, Oststrasse was extended by Weststrasse. |
Wilhelminenstrasse | Feb. 4, 1904 | 16 Sep 1910 | → Sabinastrasse | Wilhelmine , female name | The name was named after a first name after a Rüttenscheider decision of 1895. |
Wupperstrasse | Dec. 1, 1927 | Feb. 24, 1977 | → Niersstrasse | Wupper , right tributary of the Rhine |
Individual evidence
- ↑ Unless otherwise stated, the source used is: Erwin Dickhoff: Essener Strasse . Ed .: City of Essen - Historical association for the city and monastery of Essen. Klartext-Verlag, Essen 2015, ISBN 978-3-8375-1231-1 .
- ^ City of Essen: Population figures. Retrieved May 21, 2020 .
- ↑ a b Overview plan of the city of Essen, November 1942
- ↑ General plan of the city of Essen, Köndgen, December 1910