List of streets in Essen-Frohnhausen
The list of streets in Essen-Frohnhausen describes the street system in Essen 's Frohnhausen district with the corresponding historical references.
Introduction and overview
In Essen-Frohnhausen, the second most populous district, with 32,551 inhabitants (March 31, 2020), more than five percent of the population of the city of Essen live. They are distributed over an area of 3.62 square kilometers. The postal code districts 45144, 45145 and 45147 belong to Frohnhausen .
The present-day Essen districts Altendorf , Frohnhausen and Holsterhausen formed the mayor's office of Altendorf before their incorporation into the city of Essen in 1901 , the street numbering of which was divided into eight sections. When house numbering was introduced on renamed streets towards the end of the 19th century, problems arose with the same house numbers within the individual sections. For this reason, a street naming commission was founded in 1900 in order to clear up street naming and house numbering before the incorporation and to take into account streets in Essen, which was completed by May 15, 1901. However, at the request of the city of Essen, this decision was not carried out. After the incorporation, a new naming commission was formed under the leadership of Mayor Erich Zweigert , which recommended the division of the now new urban area into street name groups. Exceptions, however, were historical names within the districts.
In Frohnhausen there are the street name groups of German and formerly German cities, of supra-regionally important people (especially historians) and regionally important people, such as the so-called Krupp officials.
The boundaries of Frohnhausen are formed as follows:
in the north, the Dortmund – Duisburg railway line ; in the west Lise-Meitner-Strasse, Margaretenstrasse, Münchner Strasse, Liebigstrasse, Kämpenstrasse and Bramkampstrasse; in the south the Borbecker Mühlenbach , which in its further course also roughly forms the eastern border to Herbrüggenstrasse.
There are 147 designated traffic areas in Frohnhausen, including five squares .
The following streets are only partially in the district:
Am Mühlenbach, Am Richtenberg, Berliner Straße, Böhmer Straße, Bunsenstraße, Diergardtstraße, Frohnhauser Straße, Hausackerstraße, Herbrüggenstraße, Koppestraße, Martin-Luther-Straße, Münchner Straße, Nöggerathstraße, Oberdorfstraße, Onckenstraße.
Run through the Frohnhausen district:
- the federal highway 40 in east-west direction (originally Kruppstrasse , later federal highway 1 and A430),
- the state road L20 on the Oncken-, the Rüdesheimer-, the Leipziger- and the Hausackerstraße and
- the state road L64 on Frohnhauser-, Mülheimer- and Wickenburgstraße.
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 of the street section within the city center, provided that the street continues into neighboring districts.
The addition (without side streets) indicates the length of the "main street" in the case of branched streets. - 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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Aachener Strasse | 440 | Aachen , city in North Rhine-Westphalia | May 16, 1902 | Aachener Straße, which was previously partly called Victoriastraße , leads west from Breslauer Straße, crosses Berliner and Düsseldorfer Straße and ends in a dead end before Leipziger Straße. | |
Adelkampstrasse | 900 | Adelkamp, name of a Kottens | before 1874 | The street is named after the former Kotten Adelkamp, more precisely Ardelkamp. In the land register of 1668, the sitter Gerhard im Erlenkamp and the 2.25 acre Kotten, which belonged to the Wickenburg farm, are mentioned. The landlord Ardelkamp lived in the Kotten in 1795. In 1848, the 15.5-acre Kotten at the time was voluntarily put down for public sale by Johann Hermann Jacket called Siepmann. Adelkampstrasse leads westwards from Bramkampstrasse, crosses Wickenburgstrasse and Schweriner Strasse and then ends as a dead end. |
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Altendorfplatz | 75 × 50 | Place of the former town hall of the mayor's office Altendorf | May 16, 1902 | The Altendorfplatz, which was previously called Rathausplatz , was the location of the former town hall of the Altendorf Mayor, to which Altendorf , Frohnhausen and Holsterhausen belonged. In 1901, after being incorporated into the city of Essen, these three places became today's districts. Altendorfplatz is located southwest of the Frohnhauser Strasse / Margaretenstrasse intersection. |
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At the Mühlenbach | 530 (in the district) |
Location at the Borbeck mill stream | May 15, 1902 | The street Am Mühlenbach branches off to the east of Wickenburgstraße and continues north of the Mühlenbach to Holsterhausen . | |
On Richtenberg | 130 (in the district) |
Richtenberg, field name | 4th Sep 1963 | In the mother role of 1866 the Rechenberg is mentioned, from which the orally transmitted Richtenberg probably became. Originally the street Am Richtenberg was the western end of the Frohnhauser Straße. The street Am Richtenberg leads from the tram turning circle on the Frohnhauser Straße to the west to Mülheim an der Ruhr , where it is called Frohnhauser Weg. |
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At the Riehlpark | 100 | Wilhelm Heinrich Riehl , journalist, novelist and cultural historian | May 16, 1902 | The street Am Riehlpark branches off north of the Frohnhauser Straße and borders the Riehlpark on its western side. | |
At the Westbahnhof | 230 | Location at Essen West train station | May 30, 1913 | The street Am Westbahnhof forms the square south of the Essen West train station in front of its reception building and is thus between Dahnstrasse and Martin-Luther-Strasse. | |
At the Apostle Church | 90 | Location at the Apostle Church | July 24, 1929 | The street An der Apostelkirche, which was previously called Bonner Strasse , is a western cul-de-sac of Breslauer Strasse and is thus north of the Apostelkirche. | |
At the Wickenburg | 380 | Location near the former Wickenburg court | Dec 14, 1966 | See also: Wickenburgstraße The street An der Wickenburg runs south parallel to the Bundesautobahn 40 between Wickenburgstraße and Hausackerstraße. |
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Archenholzstrasse | 130 | Johann Wilhelm von Archenholz , Prussian officer, writer, editor of several magazines | May 16, 1902 | Archenholzstrasse, which was originally called Stolzestrasse , connects Busehofstrasse with Mommsenstrasse. | |
Bear dell | 170 | Bärendelle, field name | May 30, 1913 | In the land register of 1668 Wilhelm Niermann is mentioned as the owner of half an acre of land in the Berndell Langß Pauskamp. In the role of motherhood from 1826 it says that Hermann Buse cultivates a field, the Bärendelle. Since many blackberries grew here, it is assumed that Bärendelle has the meaning of the berry valley in which the berry stream flowed. From here the courtyards of Frohnhausen spread out. The land on the Bärendelle was considered inferior and was still used as a garbage dump around 1900. Between 1915 and 1917 the Bärendelle housing estate was built according to plans by Robert Schmohl . The Bärendelle elementary school, later the secondary school, was built here by the architect Albert Erbe around 1910 . It has been a listed building since 1994. The Bärendelle footpath is not open to car traffic and connects Kerckhoffstrasse with Riehlstrasse. |
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Benno-Strauss-Strasse | 270 | Benno Strauss , metallurgist and physicist | March 19, 1969 | Before the autobahn was built in the 1960s, Benno-Strauss-Strasse was part of Kruppstrasse . Today it runs north parallel to the Bundesautobahn 40 between Mühlheimer Strasse and Leipziger Strasse. | |
Bentheimer Strasse | 140 | Bad Bentheim , health resort in Lower Saxony | March 10, 1906 | Bentheimer Straße connects Breslauer Straße with Clausthaler Straße. | |
Berlin street | 1390 (in the district) |
Berlin , German capital | May 16, 1902 | Berliner Straße, which was previously partly called Falkensteinstraße , leads south from Altendorf on the Dortmund – Duisburg railway line , crosses Frohnhauser Straße and Mühlheimer Straße and ends in front of the federal motorway 40 . | |
Berzeliusstrasse | 140 | Jöns Jakob Berzelius , Swedish medic and chemist | Dec 13, 1901 | Between 1901 and 1961, today's section of Frohnhauser Strasse from Altendorfer Platz via Martin-Luther-Strasse to the underpass of the Dortmund – Duisburg railway was called Berzeliusstrasse. The Frohnhauser Strasse was led from Altendorfer Platz over today's Berzeliusstrasse and further over today's Lise-Meitner-Strasse to the railway underpass. On February 22nd, 1961, the name was reversed and the former connection of Frohnhauser Strasse became the two present-day streets Berzeliusstrasse and Lise-Meitner-Strasse, which are no longer directly connected. Since then, Berzeliusstrasse has been located between Margaretenstrasse and Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Böhmerstrasse | 1280 in the district |
Johann Friedrich Böhmer , historian | May 16, 1902 | The Böhmerstraße leads from the Herbrüggenstraße in a southerly direction and has a dead end to the terrace cemetery in Schönebeck . From here it continues under the Dortmund – Duisburg railway line up to Raumerstraße. | |
Bramkampstrasse | 500 | Bramkamp, name of a Kott | before 1874 | The Kotten Bramkamp was an aspliss of the Wientgenhof in Frohnhausen and was located on the corner of Adelkampstrasse and Bramkampstrasse. The Wientgenhof was a treatment item and belonged to the Oberhof Ehrenzell . The Cocy family treated sold half of the farm in 1751 with the permission of the princess. The other half with Kotten Bramkamp, Duvenkamp and Schmidt stayed with the Cocy family. The Kötter were tenants of the Cocys and obtained property rights to the Kotten they managed in the 19th century. In 1807, Heinrich Bramkamp is named as the owner of the six- acre Kottens. Johann Heinrich Bramkamp is mentioned as the last manager of the Kottens. His widow married Lambert Messing from the farmer for the fourth time. Bramkampstraße, which was written on Brahmkampstraße until October 21, 1938, leads from Am Mühlenbach street in a northerly direction to Kämpenstraße and forms the border to Holsterhausen along its entire length . |
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Brandenburger Strasse | 270 | Brandenburg an der Havel , city in the state of Brandenburg | May 16, 1902 | Brandenburger Strasse once led north from Lübecker Strasse, crossing Postreitweg to Frohnhauser Strasse. This northern course in the area of today's allotment gardens (KGV Essen West) was abolished around 1916. Due to the impoverishment after the First World War, this was initially laid out as grave land in order to alleviate the hunger of the population. Brandenburger Strasse, which was previously called Breilmannstrasse , now leads from Lübecker Strasse north over Königsberger Strasse and ends as a dead end. |
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Braunschweiger Strasse | 130 | Braunschweig , city in Lower Saxony | May 16, 1902 | The Braunschweiger Straße, which was originally called Güntherstraße , connects the Dresdner Straße with the Postreitweg. | |
Breilsort | 200 | Breilsort, field name | May 16, 1902 | In the mother role of 1846, the terms Am Breyl, Im Breilsort and Breilsort are mentioned. Initially, the street Breilsort was today's Dahlmannstraße . In the mid-1910s it was extended to include today's Breilsort street and in 1963 Dahlmannstraße was renamed as a separate street. The street Breilsort connects the Dahlmannstraße in the west of Frohnhausen at an angle with the Frohnhauser Straße. |
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Breilsrand | 190 | Breil, family name | Oct 16, 1916 | In the Landmatrikel 1668 Henrich is from Briell modo Hermann and a half acre large figurines called. The blacksmith im Breil and the wheel maker Hermann im Breil are mentioned in 1795. The lands belonged to Hof Overath. The street Breilsrand in the west of Frohnhausen is a northern dead end of the Frohnhauser Straße. |
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Breslauer Strasse | 690 | Wroclaw , fourth largest city in Poland | 26 Sep 1902 | Until the end of the Second World War, Breslau was the capital of the then Prussian province of Lower Silesia . The Breslauer Straße leads from the Frohnhauser Straße in a southerly direction to the bridge over the Bundesautobahn 40 , where it continues as Keplerstraße in Holsterhausen . |
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Burckhardtstrasse | 300 | Jacob Burckhardt , Swiss cultural historian | May 16, 1902 | Burckhardtstrasse, which was originally called Seydtlitzstrasse , branches off south of Kerckhoffstrasse and leads to Riehlpark. | |
Bunsenstrasse | 75 in the district |
Robert Wilhelm Bunsen , chemist | May 16, 1902 | The Bunsenstraße, which was originally called Philippstraße , runs eastwards from Liebigstraße to Margaretenstraße and from there to Holsterhausen . | |
Busehofstrasse | 690 | Buse, court name | Nov 20, 1937 | Hof Buse was a Unterhof of Hof Ehrenzell . 1332 mansus Conradi dicti bosom is mentioned in the chain book. In the land register of 1668 Heinrich Buse is mentioned as the rider of the eight- acre farm. Hof Buse 1795 and Kötter Buse are referred to as treatment goods. In 1796 Everhard Buse and his son Hermann were the last victims. In 1830 the farmer Hermann Buse replaced all the fiscal burdens on the farm and became the unrestricted owner. In 1867 the owner Wilhelm Buse is mentioned. In 1886 the farm became the property of the Altendorf mayor . Busehofstraße, previously called Dunckerstraße , branches off east of Berliner Straße and runs south to Frohnhauser Straße. |
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Clausthaler Strasse | 220 | Clausthal , formerly a free mountain town | March 10, 1906 | The formerly free mountain town of Clausthal is now the largest district of the Lower Saxony mountain and university town of Clausthal-Zellerfeld . Clausthaler Strasse connects Göttinger Strasse with Liebigstrasse. |
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Curtiusstrasse | 500 | Ernst Curtius , classical archaeologist and ancient historian | Dec 17, 1902 | Curtiusstraße, which was originally called Gneisenaustraße , branches off to the east of Berliner Straße today, passes the Essen-West ice rink and ends after a right bend in front of Dahnstraße as a dead end. Between 1902 and 1976, today's Niebuhrstrasse was the western extension of Curtiusstrasse. | |
Dahlmannstrasse | 250 | Friedrich Christoph Dahlmann , historian and statesman, member of the Frankfurt National Assembly | 4th Sep 1963 | Around 1910, the section of Grevelstrasse running west of Gervinuspark was already called Dahlmannstrasse, which extended to Kerckhoffstrasse. Before 1927 the name was canceled there. Today's Dahlmannstraße, which previously belonged to the Breilsort street , connects the Böhmerstraße with the Frohnhauser Straße. |
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Dahnstrasse | 460 | Felix Dahn , professor of law, writer and historian | May 16, 1902 | Dahnstraße, which was originally called Wedelstraße , leads south from Essen West train station to Frohnhauser Straße. | |
Danziger Strasse | 450 | Danzig , formerly a Prussian Hanseatic city, now Polish | May 16, 1902 | Danziger Strasse, which was previously called Ludwigstrasse , leads from the Markuskirche in an easterly direction to Posener Strasse. | |
Diergardtstrasse | 100 in the district |
Friedrich von Diergardt , Rhenish industrialist and silk manufacturer | May 16, 1902 | Diergardtstraße, which was partly originally called Parkstraße , runs from Holsterhausen from Lise-Meitner-Straße northwards to Kerckhoffstraße. | |
Dittmarstrasse | 65 | Heinrich Dittmar , pedagogue, historian | Dec 21, 1906 | Dittmarstrasse connects Pützstrasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Dollendorfstrasse | 680 | Johannes Dollendorf, pastor | Dec 12, 1957 | Johannes Dollendorf was born on July 28, 1875 in Weywertz and worked for almost 40 years at the St. Elisabeth Church in Frohnhausen. As a clergyman, he was open to social issues. Dollendorf died on November 3, 1953 in Frohnhausen. Originally buried in the Margaret Cemetery, he was reburied in the small priest cemetery by the church in 1994. Dollendorfstrasse was initially called Nitzschstrasse . After 1928 it was renamed the western Kerckhoffstrasse and in 1951 the Kleine Kerckhoffstrasse . Until then, it ran from Möserstrasse to Raumerstrasse. At the time it was renamed Dollendorfstrasse in 1957, it was extended in a westerly direction to Dahlmannstrasse. At the end of the 1960s, the building was extended to the east as far as the Eigen Scholle street, where it then merged into Kerckhoffstraße for the first time. In the 1970s, the section between the street Own Scholle and Onckenstraße was attached to Kerckhoffstraße. Today Dollendorfstrasse connects Onckenstrasse with Dahlmannstrasse. |
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Dresdner Strasse | 370 | Dresden , capital of Saxony | May 16, 1902 | Dresdner Strasse connects Wiesbadener Strasse with Mühlheimer Strasse. | |
Droysenstrasse | 230 | Johann Gustav Droysen , historian and history theorist | May 16, 1902 | Droysenstraße, previously called Scharnhorststraße , connects Busehofstraße with Curtiusstraße at an angle. | |
Drumannstrasse | 100 | Wilhelm Drumann , historian | 26 Sep 1909 | Drumannstrasse connects the 8th Giesebrechtstrasse with Seibertzstrasse. | |
Düsseldorfer Strasse | 250 | Düsseldorf , capital of North Rhine-Westphalia | May 16, 1902 | Düsseldorfer Strasse, previously called Nikolausstrasse , connects Kölner Strasse with Leipziger Strasse at an angle. | |
Duisburger Strasse | 140 | Duisburg , a major city in North Rhine-Westphalia | March 10, 1905 | Duisburger Strasse connects Kölner Strasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Own clod | 150 | Own plaice, building cooperative | 13 Sep 1922 | The building cooperative Eigen Scholle , founded in 1922, built some residential buildings on this street. Its purpose was to curb the housing shortage among the members of the Christian trade unions and to create homes before it was merged into the non-profit housing cooperative Essen-West eG in the 1930s . The street Own Scholle, which was previously called Niesertstraße and partly Dahlmannstraße , connects Niebuhrstraße with Kerckhoffstraße. |
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Elbingen knee | 130 (without side streets) |
Elbing in East Prussia, today Elbląg | Feb 25, 1937 | The Elbinger Knie street runs knee- shaped from Postreitweg to Königsberger Straße. | |
Frankfurter Strasse | 230 | Frankfurt am Main , large city in Hesse | May 16, 1902 | Frankfurter Strasse, which was previously part of Oberdorfstrasse , connects Kölner Strasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Freytagstrasse | 180 | Gustav Freytag , writer, cultural historian | May 16, 1902 | Freytagstrasse, which was originally called Bernuthstrasse , connects Kerckhoffstrasse with Riehlstrasse. | |
Frohnhauser Platz | 110 × 50 | Location, place in Frohnhausen | March 10, 1906 | Frohnhauser Platz, which was called Schrönplatz and then Friedel-Schrön-Platz during the National Socialist era , is located south of Frohnhauser Straße between Hildesheimer and Clausthaler Straße. It serves the weekly market. | |
Frohnhauser Strasse | 2230 (in the district) |
Location, road through Frohnhausen | around 1860 | Parts of Frohnhauser Strasse were originally called Essen-Mülheimer-Chaussee and, from around 1885, Herrenbankstrasse . The entire course of the street, together with the part in the Westviertel , became uniformly Frohnhauser Straße on December 13, 1901 after the mayor's office of Altendorf was incorporated into the city of Essen. | |
Cooperative Square | 60 × 40 | Essen consumer cooperative | Jan. 17, 1951 | The Essen consumer cooperative was at this location at the time it was named. It emerged from the consumer association Eintracht eGmbH , which was founded in 1902 by 47 members in Essen-West . By merging with other cooperatives, there were already 160 grocery stores, two department stores and two butcher shops in 37 communities in 1925. They were supplied from three centers in Essen, Duisburg and Gelsenkirchen. In 1978 the cooperative was converted into a stock corporation with a share capital of 2.6 million DM . The cooperative square is at the intersection of Nöggerathstrasse and Berliner Strasse. |
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Gervinusplatz | 50 × 30 | Georg Gottfried Gervinus , historian, politician | Sep 15 2009 | Gervinusplatz is located in the southeast of the intersection of Berliner Strasse and Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Gervinusstrasse | 450 | Georg Gottfried Gervinus , historian, politician | May 16, 1902 | Gervinusstrasse, which was originally called Plattenstrasse , connects Niebuhrstrasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Giesebrechtstrasse | 430 | Wilhelm von Giesebrecht , historian | May 16, 1902 | Giesebrechtstraße, which was originally called Buschstraße and Waitzstraße in parts , connects Niebuhrstraße with Nöggerathstraße on the one hand and Berliner Straße with Nöggerathstraße on the other, whereby it ends as a dead end on this second section for motor vehicles in front of Nöggerasthstraße. | |
Göttinger Strasse | 95 | Göttingen , university town in Lower Saxony | March 10, 1906 | Göttinger Strasse connects Clausthaler Strasse with Breslauer Strasse. | |
Grevelstrasse | 500 | Wilhelm Grevel , pharmacist, politician and local researcher | Nov 26, 1909 | Grevelstraße branches off to the west from Gervinusstraße and leads south and west around Gervinuspark . | |
Major road | 75 | Wilhelm Groß, so-called Krupp officer | Oct 9, 1914 | Wilhelm Groß was born on February 23, 1839 in Unruhstadt and began working as a draftsman at Friedrich Krupp AG on July 1, 1864 . Between July 23, 1888 and July 1, 1895 he was a member of the board of directors at Krupp. Groß died on February 25, 1908 in Wiesbaden . The large street named after him was abolished on January 23, 1957 and the street name was re-used in its current location on March 19, 1969. Today's Großstraße, which was previously part of Kruppstraße , connects Leipziger Straße with Berliner Straße to the north, parallel to Bundesautobahn 40 . |
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Hamburger Street | 820 | Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg | May 16, 1902 | Hamburger Strasse, which was originally called Mühlenstrasse , leads from Frohnhauser Strasse in a southerly direction, crossing Postreitweg to Paul-Goerens-Strasse. | |
Hannah-Arendt-Strasse | 140 | Hannah Arendt , Jewish German-American political theorist and publicist | March 8, 2003 | Hannah-Arendt-Straße, which was originally called Yorckstraße and later Treitschkestraße , connects Kerckhoffstraße with Curtiusstraße. | |
Hattenheimer Strasse | 150 | Hattenheim , city in Hesse | Feb 10, 1931 | Hattenheimer Straße, which was previously called Johannisberger Straße , connects Rüdesheimer Straße with Potsdamer Straße. | |
Haunerlandweg | 200 | Haunerland, name of a kott | Oct 21, 1938 | In the country registry of 1668 Johan Honerlandt is named as the rider of the eight acre Kottens. The Kötter Huhnerland and the landowner, the Münsterkirche , are mentioned in 1795. In the mother role of 1826 it is written that Hohnerland is the body winner of the Münsterkirche. In the mother role of 1867, the farmer Johann Haunerland is named as the hereditary tenant of the cathedral church. The Haunerlandweg connects the street Messings Garten with the Wiesenbergstraße. |
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Hausackerstrasse | 140 (in the district) |
Description of location, locality | May 16, 1902 | In the mother role of 1867 Heinrich Dracke from Frohnhausen is mentioned, the owner of several pieces of land, which are called Hausacker. Hausackerstraße is the southern continuation of Leipziger Straße, which continues from the crossing of Kämpenstraße in Holsterhausen and is part of state road L20 in its entire course. |
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Heerenstrasse | 170 | Arnold Heeren , historian | May 16, 1902 | The Heerenstraße, which was originally called Roonstraße , continues from Hildesheimer Straße over the street Zu den Karmelitern, after which it ends as a dead end. | |
Herbrüggenstrasse | 60 (in the district) |
Schulte-Herbrüggen, court name | July 9, 1915 | At the so-called third sheaf estate of the Essen monastery , the Schulte-Herbrüggen farm, the sitter had a hereditary right of use, which was first mentioned in a profit letter in 1526. In 1670 the natural delivery of the third sheaf was converted into a fixed cash levy. In the land registry of 1668, the yard is 74 acres and is tithe free. Jacob Schulte zu Herbrüggen was the rider. In 1795 the whole farmer and miller Schulte Herbrüggen is listed, the lordship has the princely abbey to eat. The last victim was Johann Heinrich Schulte Herbrüggen in 1773 as well as his wife Maria Francisca born Rasche as a second hand. As a widow, after long negotiations with Prussia, she was granted the hereditary right of use by the Prussian Ministry of Finance. With her only son Johann Heinrich, she replaced all fiscal burdens in 1882, so that the 188 acre farm became her unrestricted property. In 1900 the farm was transferred to the Mülheimer Bergwerks-Verein . Herbrüggenstraße, which was previously called Schultestraße in Frohnhausen , leads from Nöggerathstraße to Altendorfer area to the west, where it runs a few meters through Frohnhausen and on to Schönebeck . |
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Hildesheimer Strasse | 280 | Hildesheim , city in Lower Saxony | March 10, 1906 | Hildesheimer Straße connects Mülheimer Straße with Liebigstraße. | |
Hurterstrasse | 140 | Friedrich Emanuel von Hurter , Swiss-Austrian historian and theologian | Nov 26, 1909 | The Hurterstrasse connects the Seibertzstrasse with the Giesebrechtstrasse. | |
Ingelheimer Strasse | 90 | Ingelheim , town in Rhineland-Palatinate | March 10, 1906 | Ingelheimer Strasse connects Hattenheimer Strasse with Kölner Strasse. | |
Jacob-Grimm-Strasse | 80 | Jacob Grimm , linguist and literary scholar and lawyer | Feb 25, 1977 | Jacob-Grimm-Strasse, which was previously called Arndtstrasse , connects Grevelstrasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Kämpenstrasse | 270 | Kämpen, field name | May 16, 1902 | In the mother role of 1867 Heinrich Lange zu Holsterhausen is mentioned, who owns a piece of land called Kämpen. The Kämpenstraße, which forms the border to Holsterhausen along its entire length , begins at the Pfingstfeldwende, crosses Hausackerstraße and ends in a north-easterly direction as a dead end in front of the federal motorway 40 . |
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Kasseler Strasse | 410 (without access roads) |
Kassel , city in Hesse | May 16, 1902 | Kasseler Strasse, which was originally called Rückertstrasse , connects Hamburger Strasse with Wiesbadener Strasse. | |
Kerckhoffstrasse | 2120 | Wilhelm Kerckhoff , the sole mayor of the Altendorf mayor | 29 Aug 1894 | Kerckhoffstrasse got its name on the occasion of Wilhelm Kerckhoff's 50 years of service in the public sector. The mayor's office of Altendorf, to which Frohnhausen and Holsterhausen also belonged, was incorporated into the city of Essen in 1901. Kerckhoffstrasse originally ran as a western extension of Schederhofstrasse (in Holsterhausen), crossing Berliner Strasse, north past Gervinuspark and then, more northerly than today, on Leisers Feld and Schliemannstrasse to Overrathstrasse . Before 1927, it was extended on today's Schliemannstrasse to Raumerstrasse . 1929 was the road Leiser field their name, so that the Kerckhoffstraße from the east at Möserstraße ended, but something was south continued at the Möserstraße again in a westerly direction, where they now considered Doll village street at the St. Elizabeth's Church past leads to Raumerstraße. This section was at times called Kleine Kerckhoffstraße and in 1957 it was structurally stretched to Dahlmannstraße and renamed Dollendorfstraße. The eastern Kerckhoffstrasse ended after the Second World War in the north of the Gervinuspark. After the Dollendorfstrasse was structurally extended in an easterly direction to the Strasse Own Scholle at the end of the 1960s, it first met Kerckhoffstrasse. In the 1970s, the section between the street Own Scholle and Onckenstraße was attached to Kerckhoffstraße. Today Kerckhoffstrasse connects Onckenstrasse with Frohnhauser Strasse, where it merges into Schederhofstrasse in Holsterhausen. |
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Kieler Strasse | 260 | Kiel , city in Schleswig-Holstein | Apr 21, 1911 | Kieler Straße connects Postreitweg with Frohnhauser Straße. | |
Kleinborgs slope | 130 | Kleinborg, court name | Oct 21, 1938 | Hof Kleinborg was a treatment item that belonged to Hof Ehrenzell . The Kleinborg family was seated on the farm. In the land registry of 1668 Elbert Kleinborgh is named as the owner of the 39 acre farm. In 1745 the estate was acquired by Franz Wilhelm Croesen with the permission of the court. In December of that year his nephew Anton Hoyer and his niece Maria Biesenbrock were treated with the court. In 1795 the half- farmer Kleinborg is mentioned. The landlords were the councilor Lanius and the widow Tutmann. Through several heirs, the farm came to the parish recipient Carl Schorn and his wife Christine Kaemper nee Tutmann. Since they refused to redeem the fiscal burdens on the farm, a process came about that ended in a settlement with the Prussian domain administration in 1833. The Kleinborgs slope leads from Wiesenbergstraße down to Am Mühlenbach street. |
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Knappmannhöhe | 410 | Knappmann, family name | Jan. 5, 1936 | The Knappman family owned the land on which the road is laid out. The Knappmannhöhe leads from Königsberger Straße in a southern arch to Hamburger Straße. |
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Koelner Strasse | 720 | Cologne , big city in North Rhine-Westphalia | May 16, 1902 | Kölner Strasse connects Rüdesheimer Strasse with Mülheimer Strasse. | |
Koenigsberger Strasse | 720 | Königsberg (today Kaliningrad ), once the royal capital and residence of Prussia | May 16, 1902 | Königsberger Strasse, which was originally called Heuweg , leads from Lübecker Strasse in a northerly arch to Hamburger Strasse and then ends as a dead end. | |
Koenigsteiner Strasse | 170 | Königstein im Taunus , health resort in Hesse | March 10, 1906 | Königsteiner Strasse connects Breslauer Strasse with Berliner Strasse. | |
Kohlrauschstrasse | Friedrich Kohlrausch , historian and educator | Dec 21, 1906 | Kohlrauschstrasse connects Pützstrasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | ||
Koppestrasse | 280 (in the district) |
Carl Koppe , geodesist | before 1907 | The Koppestrasse was originally (before 1907) laid out in the same place and led to Heinitzstrasse in Altendorf . After the construction of the freight station (after 1910) in this area, only a short stretch of Koppestrasse served as its access from Oberdorfstrasse. After 1955 the name was temporarily lifted. The Koppestrasse received its name again on December 17, 2013 in the course of the construction of a new building area on the now former railway site. In Altendorf, Koppestrasse branches off from Oberdorfstrasse to the east and leads as a cul-de-sac into the new building area on Frohnhauser Flur. |
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Krefelder Strasse | 230 | Krefeld , a major city in North Rhine-Westphalia | June 16, 1905 | Krefelder Strasse connects Duisburger Strasse with Berliner Strasse. | |
Kuglerstrasse | 430 | Franz Kugler , historian, art historian and writer | May 16, 1902 | Kuglerstrasse, which was originally called Fabianstrasse , connects Burckhardtstrasse with Gervinusstrasse. | |
Langenkämperweg | 210 | Langenkamp, name of a Kottens | Feb 25, 1937 | The previously narrow footpath began at Kotten Langenkamp and connected Adelkampstrasse with Wiesenbergstrasse. That is why it was popularly known as the Langenkämperweg. The likely origin of the name goes back to the fact that the Kottens belonged to Hof Lange in Holsterhausen . In 1795 the day laborer Langenkämper is mentioned. In the mother role of 1826, the owner Johann Wilhelm Bramkamp called Langenkamp is named as Wilhelm Lange's personal winner. The Kotten came to Heinrich Schlenkhoff and his wife Maria née Degener in 1895 via Wilhelm Langenkamp called Bramkamp, who was the leaseholder of the farmer Lange. The Langenkämperweg connects the street Messings Garten with the Wiesenbergstraße. |
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Langenkamp | 85 | Langenkamp, name of a Kottens | Jan. 12, 1972 | The likely origin of the name goes back to the fact that the Kottens belonged to Hof Lange in Holsterhausen . In 1795 the day laborer Langenkämper is mentioned. In the mother role of 1826, the owner Johann Wilhelm Bramkamp called Langenkamp is named as Wilhelm Lange's personal winner. The Kotten came to Heinrich Schlenkhoff and his wife Maria née Degener in 1895 via Wilhelm Langenkamp called Bramkamp, who was the leaseholder of the farmer Lange. The street Langenkamp, which was previously called Haferkamp , is a dead end of the Bramkampstraße. |
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Langfuhrer Strasse | 160 | Langfuhr , district of Danzig | July 31, 1952 | Langfuhr was once a villa suburb that was incorporated into Danzig in 1904. Langfuhrer Straße is a northern cul-de-sac of Danziger Straße. |
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Leipziger Street | 520 | Leipzig , big city in Saxony | May 16, 1902 | The Leipziger Strasse was originally called in parts Fischer Strasse and Gabelstrasse . Leipziger Strasse once led from Aachener Strasse to Mülheimer Strasse and on via today's Raffelberger Strasse to Breslauer Strasse. On February 10, 1931, the part of today's Leipziger Strasse between Mülheimer Strasse and Bundesautobahn 40 (then Kruppstrasse ) was named Raffelberger Strasse and was renamed back on May 19, 1976. In this context, the section from Leipziger Strasse to Breslauer Strasse was given its current name Raffelberger Strasse. Leipziger Strasse is now part of the L20 state road as the link between Rüdesheimer Strasse and Hausackerstrasse. |
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Leiser's field | 120 | Name of a former field | July 6, 1929 | The Leisers Feld once belonged to the Pottgießer Hof. In the official justification for naming the street from 1929, it is said that it should have been the name of a farmer who married into the farm. The street Leisers Feld, which was previously part of Kerckhoffstrasse . It leads from Möserstraße to Onckenstraße, before which it ends as a dead end |
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Lepsiusweg | 420 | Karl Richard Lepsius , Egyptologist, linguist and librarian | Oct 18, 1921 | The Lepsiusweg forms a northerly curve from the Böhmerstraße and back onto it. | |
Liebigstrasse | 680 | Justus von Liebig , chemist and university professor | May 16, 1902 | The Liebigstraße, which was originally called Bismarckstraße , leads from Altendorfplatz to Breslauer Straße, where from Münchner Straße it forms the border to Holsterhausen . | |
Lise-Meitner-Strasse | 280 | Lise Meitner , Austrian nuclear physicist | 28 Sep 1984 | Lise-Meitner-Strasse, which was previously part of Berzeliusstrasse , leads from Martin-Luther-Strasse in a north-easterly direction over Diergardtstrasse and then ends as a dead end. In its course it forms the border to Holsterhausen . | |
Loerbroksstrasse | 150 | Friedrich Wilhelm Loerbrok, lawyer, city councilor, authorized signatory of Friedrich Krupp AG | Oct 21, 1938 | Friedrich Wilhelm Loerbrok was born on September 6, 1820 in Soest . The judicial council was also the authorized signatory of Friedrich Krupp AG. He was also a city councilor in Essen from 1867 to 1876. In that year he moved to Soest for family reasons, where he died as a notary and lawyer on December 10, 1909. Loerbroksstraße branches off north of Niebuhrstraße and leads to Schwaigerstraße. |
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Lorsbachstrasse | 110 | Heinrich Wilhelm Lorsbach, so-called Krupp official | Oct 21, 1938 | Heinrich Wilhelm Lorsbach was born on June 17, 1820 in Siegen . He was Oberbergrat and from 1864 to 1874 director of the Krupp mining administration. He died on August 13, 1886 in Bonn . Lorsbachstraße is located in the Pottgießerhof housing estate and connects Uhlenhautstraße with Wilhelm-Meinrich-Weg. |
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Luebecker Strasse | 640 | Lübeck , Hanseatic city in Schleswig-Holstein | May 16, 1902 | Lübecker Strasse, originally called Schaffystrasse , connects Hamburger Strasse with Mülheimer Strasse, with the westernmost part being Binger Strasse until after 1965 . | |
Lueneburger Strasse | 260 | Lüneburg , Hanseatic city in Lower Saxony | May 16, 1902 | Lüneburger Strasse, previously called Donnerstrasse , connects Kölner Strasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Magdeburg knee | Magdeburg , capital of Saxony-Anhalt | Oct 21, 1921 | The street named after the city of Magdeburg once ran knee-shaped from the street Pfingstfeldwende to Adelkampstraße. After the Second World War , the connection to Adelkamstrasse fell away, so that the Magdeburger Knie street forms a western cul-de-sac from the Pfingstfeldwende street. | ||
Mainzer Strasse | 110 | Mainz , capital of Rhineland-Palatinate | May 16, 1902 | Mainzer Strasse connects Frankfurter Strasse with Breslauer Strasse. | |
Margaretenstrasse | 570 | Margarethe Krupp , wife of the entrepreneur Friedrich Alfred Krupp , trustee group manager, founder of the foundation, first honorary citizen of the city of Essen | May 16, 1902 | Margaretenstrasse, which was originally called Grünstrasse in parts, once connected the two workers' settlements of Alfredshof and Kronenberg . Today it leads from Münchner Straße northwards over Frohnhauser Straße and ends in a dead end before Martin-Luther-Straße. Until around 1913 it led straight northwards over the railway line , where the Essen West station was at that time , and on to the Kronenberg colony. This connection was interrupted and canceled when the station was relocated to the west. Today the Margaretenstrasse forms the border to Holsterhausen in its entire course . | |
Martin-Luther-Strasse | 250 (in the district) |
Martin Luther , reformer | Nov 14, 1933 | Martin-Luther-Strasse, which in Frohnhausen previously had the names Dovestrasse and Margaretenstrasse in parts , leads south from the Luther Church to Lise-Meitner-Strasse, and from here on to Holsterhausen . | |
Meissen Street | 160 | Meißen , district town in the Free State of Saxony | 19-03-06 (???) | Meißener Straße leads south from Königsteiner Straße, crosses Raffelberger Straße and then ends as a dead end. | |
Meppener Strasse | 100 | Meppen , town in Emsland, Lower Saxony | March 10, 1906 | Meppener Straße connects Liebigstraße with Bentheimer Straße. | |
Brass garden | 340 | House garden of the Kotten Bramkamp | Feb 25, 1937 | The brass garden is the house garden of Kotten Bramkamp. The widow Bramkamp, born Stratmannskämper, married Lambert Messing for the fourth time. In 1903 the city of Essen acquired the so-called brass properties. The street Messings Garten leads south of the Adelkampstraße in an eastern arc back to it. |
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Möserstrasse | 440 | Justus Möser , lawyer, statesman, man of letters, historian | May 16, 1902 | Möserstraße connects Niebuhrstraße with Grevelstraße. Until 1935, it led south to Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Mommsenstrasse | 410 | Theodor Mommsen , historian | May 16, 1902 | Mommsenstrasse connects Frohnhauser Strasse with Curtiusstrasse. | |
Mülheimer Strasse | 1100 | Leads to Mülheim an der Ruhr | June 16, 1905 | Mülheimer Straße leads from Altendorfplatz in a south-westerly direction to federal motorway 40 (formerly Kruppstraße ) and thus roughly in the direction of Mülheim an der Ruhr. | |
Münchner Strasse | 90 (in the district) |
Munich , capital of the Free State of Bavaria | May 16, 1902 | Münchner Strasse, which was previously called Langenstrasse in Frohnhausen , leads from Liebigstrasse to Margaretenstrasse, from where it continues to Holsterhausen . | |
Niebuhrstrasse | 740 | Barthold Georg Niebuhr , ancient historian | Oct. 29, 1976 | Originally the section of today's Nöggerathstraße between the Dortmund – Duisburg railway line and Giesebrechtstraße was called Niebuhrstraße. With the renaming to Nöggerathstrasse, the name Niebuhrstrasse had been abolished. Today's Niebuhrstraße, which has been called Niebuhrstraße again since 1976, was originally called Gneisenaustraße and was the western extension of Curtiusstraße from 1902, leads from the cooperative square in a western direction to the Helmut-Rahn sports complex . | |
Niersteiner Strasse | 90 | Nierstein , town in Rhineland-Palatinate | Feb 10, 1931 | Niersteiner Strasse connects Hattenheimer Strasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Niesertweg | 70 | Joseph Niesert , Catholic clergyman, manuscript and seal collector, historian and numismatist | Dec 11, 1974 | The Niesertweg is a southern cul-de-sac of the Böhmerstraße. | |
Nöggerathstrasse | 430 (in the district) |
Johann Jacob Nöggerath , mineralogist and geologist | Apr 21, 1911 | The professor of geology and mineralogy and Geheime Bergrat Nöggerath was one of the most important Prussian miners. In the Rhineland and Westphalia he played a decisive role in the development of mining and metallurgy. Coming from Altendorf , Nöggerathstraße leads from the Dortmund – Duisburg railway line in a south-easterly direction to Berliner Straße. Until 1911 the part up to Giesebrechtstraße was called Niebuhrstraße, and the middle part up to Seibertzstraße was part of Gervinusstraße until after 1935. The structural extension to Berliner Straße also took place after 1935. |
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Oberdorfstrasse | 50 (in the district) |
Course in the upper village | around 1891 | The Oberdorfstrasse, along with the Unterdorfstrasse (in Altendorf ), is one of the oldest paths of the Altendorf peasantry, the core of which lay between these paths. It once led on today's Frankfurter Strasse (until 1902) via Busehofstrasse (until after 1910) on a direct route under the railway line (not today's detour over the railway bridge) to Altendorf. The section between Frankfurterstrasse and Droysenstrasse became Dunckerstrasse after 1910 and Busehofstrasse in 1937. In Frohnhausen there is only a short stretch of Oberdorfstrasse, which merges south of the bridge over the railway line into Berliner Strasse. |
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Onckenstrasse | 740 (in the district) |
Wilhelm Oncken , historian | December 7, 1906 | Coming from Altendorf , Onckenstrasse leads from the Dortmund – Duisburg railway line in a southerly direction, where it merges into Rüdesheimer Strasse from Postreitweg. Onckenstrasse is part of the L20 state road. | |
Osnabrücker Strasse | 260 | Osnabrück , city in Lower Saxony | March 10, 1906 | Osnabrücker Straße connects Liebigstraße with Mülheimer Straße. | |
Overrathstrasse | 300 | Overrath, court name | before 1927 | The former Overrath settlement consisted of four courtyards, including the Overrathhof as one of the oldest courtyards of Hof Ehrenzell . In the chain book of 1332 mansus Johannis de Overrode and mansus Conradi de Overrode are mentioned. In the land registry of 1668, Hermann Overradt and the 46- acre farm are mentioned. The entire farmer Overrath is named in 1795 and the farm is referred to as treatment property and the sitter as owner. Philipp Overrath was last treated in 1748, Anna Maria née Terboven it was in 1759. Their only son Heinrich Overrath was the only heir and died in 1824 before his wife and twelve children. Since his first son died, his second son Johann Heinrich Overrath and his wife Margaretha Niederwinkhaus received the court from the Prussian domain administration in 1828. The farmer Heinrich Overrath took over the fiscal burdens of the now 70 acre farm in 1841, with which he became the unrestricted owner. In 1902, Wilhelm Philipp Overrath was the last farmer to sell the Overrathhof, which was located on the site of what is now the parking lot of the Helmut Rahn sports complex , to the Mülheimer Bergwerks-Verein . It was destroyed in World War II in 1944. The cross at the Overrathhof testifies to the piety of the Frohnhauser rural population. The year 1790 of the cross, which a foreign guest worker created and donated, is engraved in Roman numerals on the base. After the Höfekreuz moved from the Overrathhof to the Pottgießerhof, it was temporarily moved to an air raid shelter during World War II. It was later set up again on the site of the former club house Eigen Scholle , in order to move it to its present location in front of the Nelli-Neumann-Schule on Raumerstraße after it was rebuilt in 1960. From the former Overrath settlement, the renovated and listed farmhouse of the Grotenhof, built in 1771, still exists. Overrathstraße, located in the Pottgießerhof settlement , was initially laid out between Niebuhrstraße (then Curtiusstraße ) and Schliemannstraße (then part of Kerckhoffstraße ). The southern angle to Raumerstraße followed around 1936, so that Overrathstraße today connects Niebuhrstraße with Raumerstraße at an angle. |
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Paul-Goerens-Strasse | Paul Goerens , metallurgist, authorized signatory of Friedrich Krupp AG | March 19, 1969 | Paul Goerens began his career at Krupp in 1917, and was later an authorized signatory and member of the board. In 1945 he committed suicide in an internment camp. The Paul-Goerens-Straße, which was previously part of the Kruppstraße , connects the Hamburger Straße with the Mülheimer Straße, whereby it runs north parallel to the Bundesautobahn 40 . |
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Fur road | 140 | Wilhelm Pelz, so-called Krupp official | Oct 21, 1938 | Wilhelm Pelz was born on April 19, 1831 in Dinslaken . He was the manager of Friedrich Krupp AG from 1849 to 1888 , where he was one of Alfred Krupp's confidants and was highly valued. Pelz died on October 20, 1896 in Bad Honnef . Pelzstraße connects Loerbrokstraße with Niebuhrstraße in a former Krupp settlement. |
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Pentecost turn | Pentecost field, field name | Oct 21, 1938 | At Frohnhauser Platz was the nine- acre Pentecostal field, from which the Holsterhauser Hof Kleinborg had the duty to pay a chicken and a tenth of the natural fruit annually as a fee. There were several quarries in this area, including what is now Westpark. The Langenfeld belonged to the farmer Pollerberg called Lange, who sold it to the city of Essen in 1904 as building land. The street Pfingstfeldwende connects the Adelkampstraße with the street Magdeburger Knie and ends further north as a dead end. |
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Pieperstrasse | 150 | Albert Piueper, so-called Krupp officer | Oct 21, 1938 | Albert Pieper was born in Düsseldorf on March 21, 1838 . From 1855 until his death on March 8, 1870 in Essen, he was an authorized signatory at Friedrich Krupp AG. Pieperstrasse connects Schwaigerstrasse with Pelzstrasse in a former Krupp settlement. |
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Pollerbergstrasse | 150 | Pollerberg, farm name | March 10, 1906 | The Pollerbergshof was originally located in Schönebeck on the site of today's terrace cemetery . In Frohnhausen, however, it refers to Hof Lange, which was located on the corner of Kölner Strasse and Pollerbergstrasse. In 1814 it was transferred to a son of Anna Sophia Lange, who had married into the Pollerbergshof in Schönebeck. Zum Hof Lange, a Unterhof of Hof Ehrenzell , is mentioned in the land register of 1668 as Johan Lange and the 38- acre farm. The whole of Bauer Lange is mentioned in 1795. The last victims were Anna Christiane Lange in 1782 and her husband Johann Franz Kirchmann in 1806. He died in 1812 without children. His widow transferred the Lange Hof in 1814 to the aforementioned son of her sister Anna Sophia Lange: Johann Franz Pollerberg. The transfer of the court to him happened to save him from service in the French military. According to the right of treatment, however, the first-born son Philipp was entitled to inheritance. The heirs of Pollerberg's property dispute followed in 1821. Johann Franz Pollerberg then transferred the Lange farm to his brother Philipp, with the other siblings being compensated. The yard was 83 acres in size at the time. With his wife Gertrud, nee Groote, he founded the Frohnhauser line of the Pollerbergs called Lange. Johann Franz Pollerberg took over the Schönebecker Stammhof Pollerberg, a treatment item that belonged to the Oberhof Borbeck. In 1907 the Frohnhauser Hof called Pollerbegr. Lange was demolished in order to settle the area. Pollerbergstrasse connects Kölner Strasse with Mülheimer Strasse west of Frohnhauser Platz. |
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Poznan Street | 200 | Poznan , now the fifth largest city in Poland | May 16, 1902 | From 1793 to 1919 Posen was the Prussian, German provincial capital. Posener Strasse in the west connects Danziger Strasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. |
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Postreitweg | 870 | Way of the mounted mail | around 1891 | The Postreitweg is part of an old route used by Prussian stagecoaches from Essen via Mülheim an der Ruhr to Duisburg . The Postreitweg leads from Leipziger Straße to Hamburger Straße and ends east of this as a dead end. |
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Potsdamer Strasse | 160 | Potsdam , city in Brandenburg | May 16, 1902 | Potsdamer Strasse, which was originally called Hedwigstrasse , connects Kölner Strasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Pottgießerstrasse | 260 | Pottgießerhof, farm name | Oct 16, 1916 | The Pottgießerhof, originally also known as the Jungehof, was one of four farms in the former Overrath settlement and belonged to the Oberhof Ehrenzell as treatment goods . It once belonged to the Essen citizen Conrad Wiederbach, who sold it to the Pottgießer family for 625 thalers in 1562 , waiving his right of treatment. In the country register of 1668, Dietherich Pottgießer and the 33- acre courtyard are mentioned as the seated man . The entire farmer Pottgießer is mentioned in 1795 as a sitter and owner. Maria Catharina Wortmann sive Hofstadt, the wife of Wilhelm Pottgießer, was last treated in 1774. It was his cousin Everhard Dieckmann modo Pottgießer in 1739. In 1826 Eberhard Pottgießer was seated. The fiscal burdens were replaced in 1834 by the farmer Wilhelm Pottgießer, who became the unrestricted owner. Hermann Becker from Bedingrade married into the farm in 1871. The farm was managed until 1937 and then sold to Friedrich Krupp AG by Hermann Becker . Krupp had it demolished and the Pottgießerhof settlement built. Pottgießerstraße, originally called Pertzstraße , in the Pottgießerhof settlement , leads south from Niebuhrstraße and at an angle to Onckenstraße. |
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Puetzstrasse | Wilhelm Pütz , educator, historian | December 7, 1906 | Wilhelm Pütz was a professor at the grammar school at Marzellen in Cologne, author of historical and geographical textbooks and reading books, as well as a patron. Pützstraße leads from Wattenbachstraße in an easterly direction to Onckenstraße, before which it ends as a dead end. |
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Raffelberger Strasse | 370 | Raffelberg, farm | Feb 10, 1931 | Raffelberg was a farm located in Mülheim an der Ruhr - Speldorf and is today's Raffelberg salt bath . In 1931 the part of today's Leipziger Strasse between Mülheimer Strasse and Bundesautobahn 40 (then Kruppstrasse ) was called Raffelberger Strasse. But today's Raffelberger Straße between Breslauer Straße and today's Leipziger Straße was part of Leipziger Straße. On May 19, 1976 the names of both streets were swapped. |
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Rankestrasse | 230 | Leopold von Ranke , historian, university professor | May 16, 1902 | Rankestrasse, which was originally called Blücherstrasse , connects Mommsenstrasse with Dahnstrasse. | |
Raumerstrasse | 530 | Friedrich von Raumer , administrative lawyer, historian and politician | May 16, 1902 | Raumerstraße leads from Frohnhauser Straße in a northerly direction to Niebuhrstraße. | |
Riehlstrasse | 260 | Wilhelm Heinrich Riehl , journalist, novelist and cultural historian | May 16, 1902 | Riehlstrasse, which was originally called Schultepäskenstrasse , leads back to Berzeliusstrasse in a north-westerly curve. | |
Rüdesheimer Platz | 35 × 25 | Rüdesheim am Rhein , Weinstadt in Hesse | March 10, 1906 | Rüdesheimer Platz is located in the southwest of the intersection of Rüdesheimer Straße / Postreitweg. | |
Rudesheimer Strasse | 450 | Rüdesheim am Rhein , Weinstadt in Hesse | March 10, 1906 | From Frohnhauser Strasse, Rüdesheimer Strasse is the southern continuation of Onckenstrasse, which merges into Leipziger Strasse in the south. This means that Rüdesheimer Strasse is part of the L20 state road. | |
Schliemannstrasse | 200 | Heinrich Schliemann , businessman, archaeologist, pioneer of field archeology | June 13, 1973 | Schliemannstrasse, which was previously part of Kerckhoffstrasse and later part of Strasse Leisers Feld , leads in the Pottgießerhof settlement from Raumerstrasse in an easterly direction to Onckenstrasse, before which it ends as a dead end. | |
Schwaigerstrasse | 130 | Edward Schwaiger, so-called Krupp official | May 16, 1902 | Edward Schwaiger was born on July 27, 1842 in Essen. In 1870 he was the operator of the railway repair workshop and from 1892 head of the railway administration of the Krupp company. Schwaiger died in Essen on October 22, 1896. Schwaigerstrasse connects Loerbrokstrasse with Pieperstrasse in a former Krupp settlement. |
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Schweriner Strasse | 410 | Schwerin , capital of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania | Aug 5, 1936 | Schweriner Straße was originally called Mühlenstraße , from 1902 it was part of the street on Am Mühlenbach and from 1930 it was called Potthälterspad . It has been called Schweriner Strasse since 1936 and leads from Wickenburgstrasse in a north-westerly direction, crosses Adelkampstrasse and forms the access to the Ruhrbahn depot . Until the expansion of the federal motorway 40 , Schweriner Strasse had a connection to the previously so-called Kruppstrasse . This was lifted in 1966 and the Schweriner Straße was extended to the west by bending. | |
Seibertzstrasse | 360 | Johann Suibert Seibertz , lawyer and historian | Nov 20, 1909 | Seibertzstraße connects Nöggerathstraße in an easterly direction with Busehofstraße. | |
Siepmanns Kamp | 150 | Kamp belonging to Kotten Siepmann | Aug 5, 1936 | Heinrich Siepmann is named as shift supervisor in 1795, as is the fact that the manor was Frohnhauser Holz. Wilhelm Siepmann and his wife Gertrud Böhmers were treated with the Kotten Distelkamp in 1790, who was a split off of the Weuenhof. He called himself Sipemann called Distelkämper. In the mother role of 1826 four different kötter named Siepmann are mentioned, two of them as leaseholders of the Mark. Siepmanns Kamp street is a connection between Knappmannhöhe and Hamburger Straße. |
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Spittlerstrasse | 200 | Ludwig Timotheus Spittler , historian for church history, political history and national history | Nov 26, 1909 | Spittlerstrasse leads from Frohnhauser Strasse in a northerly direction, crosses Dollendorfstrasse and ends after it as a dead end. | |
Stenzelstrasse | 120 | Gustav Adolf Harald Stenzel , historical researcher | May 6, 1902 | The Stenzelstraße, which was originally called Herbertstraße , connects the street Leisers Feld with the Niebuhrstraße. | |
Stephensonstrasse | 110 | George Stephenson , English engineer and chief founder of the railway industry | March 10, 1906 | Stephensonstrasse connects Heerenstrasse with Liebigstrasse. | |
Stettiner Strasse | 100 | Szczecin , Pomeranian port city at the mouth of the Ored river | Feb 22, 1961 | The suggestion for naming came from the Szczecin Association in Essen. Stettiner Straße is an eastern dead end of Schweriner Straße. |
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Stüvestraße | 270 | Johann Carl Bertram Stüve , lawyer, historian and politician | July 5, 1907 | Stüvestraße connects Möserstraße with Gervinusstraße. | |
Sybelstrasse | 430 | Heinrich von Sybel , historian, archivist and politician | May 16, 1902 | Sybelstrasse, which was originally called Blumenthalstrasse , connects Berliner Strasse in an easterly direction with Mülheimer Strasse. Until 1978 it led further east to Margaretenstrasse, when this section was named To the Carmelites . | |
Thiesbürgerweg | 290 | Thiesbürger, Kotten | Oct. 1, 1920 | The Thiesbürger Kotten was built in 1780 by Hermann Thiesborg called Witten Jan. In the mother roll of 1826 he is given a size of three acres . The Thiesbürgerweg branches off to the west of Posener Straße and leads north to Frohnhauser Straße. |
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Trier Street | 110 | Trier , city in Rhineland-Palatinate | May 16, 1902 | Trierer Straße, which was previously called Waisenstraße , connects Aachener Straße with Kölner Straße. | |
Uhlenhautstrasse | 200 | Brothers Carl and Max Uhlenhaut, so-called Krupp officers | Oct 21, 1938 | Carl Uhlenhaut, born on July 23, 1837 in Braunschweig , was head of department at the Krupp company. He died in Wiesbaden on February 13, 1892 . Max Uhlenhaut, born on July 26, 1843 in Braunschweig, was an engineer and deputy director of the Krupp company. He died on August 25, 1905 in Essen. Located in the Pottgießerhof settlement, Uhlenhautstrasse connects Wilhelm-Meinrich-Weg with Lorsbachstrasse in a northerly angle. |
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Vogenbeck | 80 | Vogenbeck, name of a hallway and a Kottens | Oct 21, 1938 | In the land register of 1668, Wilhelm in der Vogenbeck and the half- acre Kotten are mentioned. In 1795 the dogfish Dionys Knapman in Vohenbecke and the owner Frohnhauser Holz are mentioned. Several Vogenbecks are named in the mother role of 1866, including Johann Wilhelm Vogenbeck as hereditary tenant of Bögel in Frohnhausen and Wilhelm Vogenbeck as hereditary tenant of the Catholic pastorate in Essen. In the Vogenbeck corridor, which was roughly between Onckenstrasse and Gervinuspark , there was a denser collection of Kotten. The street Vogenbeck connects the Grevelstraße with the Frohnhauser Straße. |
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Vosskühlerstrasse | 210 | Vosskuhle, field name | 16 Sep 1910 | The Vosskuhle was a field name after which the street was named. The Vosskühlerstraße is a western dead end of the Schweriner Straße. |
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Wattenbachstrasse | 150 | Wilhelm Wattenbach , historian and paleographer | 26 Sep 1909 | Wattenbachstrasse connects Dollendorfstrasse with Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Welterstrasse | 190 | Theodor Bernhard Welter, educator and historian | December 7, 1906 | Theodor Bernhard Welter, born June 4, 1796 in Münster , was a German educator and historian. He died there on July 28, 1872. Welterstrasse leads back to Pützstrasse in a northerly curve. |
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Wickenburgstrasse | 520 | Wickenburg, court name | May 16, 1902 | The Hof Wickenburg (also Wickenberg) was a princely food that belonged to Hof Ehrenzell . In 1643 Peter Wessels was treated by the abbess Maria Clara von Spaur with the Wickenburg abbey. In 1668, according to the land registry, Johann Wickenborgh was the owner of the 42- acre farm. The half Bauer Wickenburg is called 1795, as the court Ruland is designated as the owner. In 1778 Albert Theodor Ruland and his wife Bernardina Antonia Backen were last treated. The Ruland family sold the Wickenburg farm between 1811 and 1817 to various interested parties, of which the Bögel family received the largest share. The Lunemannskotten, the Knappmannskotten, the Strünkskotten, the Thies-Kotten and the Hüskes-Kotten also belonged to the Wickenburg farm. The judicial commissioner Tutmann from Essen acquired the soles and the remaining parts of the farm and in 1839 replaced all the fiscal burdens on the farm, so that he consequently became the unrestricted owner of his acquired shares. The Wickenburg family, who were sitting there, did not acquire any part of the farm. The Wickenburgstraße leads from the federal autobahn 40 to the south over the Borbecker Mühlenbach over to Fulerum , where it continues as Fulerumer Straße. |
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Wiesbadener Strasse | 360 | Wiesbaden , capital of Hesse | May 16, 1902 | Wiesbadener Strasse, which was originally called Spanische Beck , connects Postreitweg with Mülheimer Strasse. | |
Wiesenbergstrasse | 440 | Wiesenberg, field name | May 16, 1902 | In the land registry of 1668 it is mentioned that Hermann Dyckmans owns four acres of field land on the Wiesenberg, between Hasken and Putman. Wiesenbergstraße branches off to the west of Bramkampstraße and ends in a dead end after Haunerlandweg. |
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Wilhelm-Meinrich-Weg | 120 | Wilhelm Meinrich, so-called Krupp officer | Oct 21, 1938 | Wilhelm Meinrich, born on February 14, 1837 in Essen, was a senior engineer at Krupp. He died there on February 24, 1906. The Wilhelm-Meinrich-Weg branches off in the Pottgießerhof settlement north of Niebuhrstrasse and leads to Lorsbachstrasse. |
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Wilkenstrasse | 140 | Friedrich Wilken , historian (orientalist), university professor and librarian | Nov 26, 1909 | Wilkenstrasse connects Kuglerstrasse with Kerckhoffstrasse. | |
Woltmannweg | 100 | Karl Ludwig von Woltmann , historian, author, diplomat | Oct 18, 1921 | The Woltmannweg connects the Lepsiusweg with the Böhmerstraße. | |
To the Carmelites | 210 | Dutch Carmelite Fathers at St. Mary's Birth | Aug 18, 1978 | The naming was made in memory of the Dutch Carmelite Fathers, who took over pastoral care in the parish of the nearby church of St. Mary's Birth since 1953. Shortly after the Second World War , it was welcomed as a gesture of mutual understanding that the Dutch province of the Carmelite Order was ready to take on this task. The street Zu den Karmelitern, which was originally part of Blumenthalstraße and since 1902 part of Sybelstraße , connects Margaretenstraße with Mülheimer Straße. |
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 |
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Arndtstrasse | 27 Sep 1907 | Feb 25, 1977 | → Jacob-Grimm-Strasse | ||
Bernuthstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Freytagstrasse | |||
Binger Street | before 1907 | after 1965 | → partly Lübecker Straße → partly repealed and overbuilt |
Bingen am Rhein , town in Rhineland-Palatinate | Binger Strasse, written as Bingener Strasse before 1910, led north from Mühlheimer Strasse on today's Lübecker Strasse, then branched off to the northwest and led to the intersection of Dresdner Strasse and Leipziger Strasse. In 1910 it continued south to Kruppstrasse (today Benno-Strauss-Strasse ). This section had already been canceled and built over by 1927. After 1945, Binger Strasse formed a dead end north of Mülheimer Strasse and, after 1965, was connected to Lübecker Strasse in an arch and renamed it. |
Bismarckstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Liebigstrasse | Otto von Bismarck , Reich Chancellor | ||
Blücherstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Rankestrasse | |||
Blumenthalstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Sybelstrasse | |||
Bonner Strasse | Nov 26, 1909 | July 24, 1929 | → At the Apostle Church | Bonn , city in North Rhine-Westphalia | |
Breilmannstrasse | before 1900 | May 16, 1902 | → Brandenburger Strasse | ||
Bush road | May 16, 1902 | → Giesebrechtstrasse | |||
Thunder road | before 1874 | May 16, 1902 | → Lüneburger Strasse | ||
Dovestrasse | May 16, 1902 | Nov 14, 1933 | → Martin-Luther-Strasse | Dovestraße was the name of the section of Martin-Luther-Straße between Lutherkirche and today's Frohnhauser Straße (already in Holsterhausen ). | |
Dunckerstrasse | 27 Sep 1907 | Nov 20, 1937 | → Busehofstrasse | The Oberdorfstrasse in Frohnhausen became the Dunckerstrasse; in 1907 between Berliner Strasse and Droysenstrasse, and after 1910 further between Droysen- and Frohnhauser Strasse. | |
Emser Strasse | before 1907 | before 1927 | repealed and overbuilt | Emser Straße connected the former Bingener Straße with the former Sodener Straße . | |
Essen-Mülheimer-Chaussee | Dec 13, 1901 | → Frohnhauser Strasse | Road between Essen and Mülheim an der Ruhr | ||
Fabianstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Kuglerstrasse | |||
Falkensteinstrasse | before 1898 | May 16, 1902 | → Berliner Strasse | ||
Fischerstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Leipziger Strasse | |||
Friedel-Schrön-Platz | July 14, 1933 | June 18, 1945 | → Frohnhauser Platz | Fritz (Friedel) Schrön, martyr | Renamed during the Nazi era in order to promote the symbolic form of the seizure of power . Before that there was also the short form Schrönplatz . Friedel Schrön was a resistance fighter against the Weimar Republic and a so-called martyr of the National Socialist movement. |
Fork road | May 16, 1902 | → Leipziger Strasse | |||
Geisenheimerstrasse | before 1907 | after 1916 | repealed and overbuilt | Geisenheimerstraße led as a northern extension of Wiesbadener Straße through the area of today's allotment gardens (KGV Essen West) to Frohnhauser Straße. Due to the impoverishment after the First World War, this was initially laid out as grave land in order to alleviate the hunger of the population. | |
Gneisenaustrasse | Dec 17, 1902 | → Niebuhrstrasse | The original Gneisenaustrasse was renamed Curtiusstrasse in 1902 . The part between Nöggerathstrasse and its western end was renamed Niebuhrstrasse in 1976. | ||
Gregoroviusstrasse | before 1907 | after 1965 | repealed and overbuilt | Coming from Altendorf , Gregoroviusstraße ran through the Grunertstraße tunnel and then to the west over the area of today's Helmut-Rahn sports facility on today's footpath to Böhmerstraße. | |
Grünstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Margaretenstrasse | |||
Güntherstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Braunschweiger Strasse | |||
Haferkamp | March 6, 1920 | Jan. 12, 1972 | → Langenkamp | ||
Hedwigstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Potsdamer Strasse | |||
Herbertstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Stenzelstrasse | |||
Herrenbankstrasse | before 1885 | Dec 13, 1901 | → Frohnhauser Strasse | Herrenbank colliery (Altendorf) or name of a seam | |
Hay path | May 16, 1902 | → Koenigsberger Strasse | |||
Hochh. Street | before 1910 | around 1916 | repealed and overbuilt | The Hochh. The street (full spelling unclear) ran from Rüdesheimer Straße to the west on the former Geisenheimerstraße in the area of today's allotment garden (KGV Essen West) until 1916 . Due to the impoverishment after the First World War, this was initially laid out as grave land in order to alleviate the hunger of the population. | |
Johannisberger Strasse | March 10, 1906 | Feb 10, 1931 | → Hattenheimer Strasse | Johannisberger Strasse was extended to the west until 1916 and led to the former Geisenheimerstrasse in the area of today's allotment gardens (KGV Essen West). Due to the impoverishment after the First World War, this was initially laid out as grave land in order to alleviate the hunger of the population. | |
Kleine Kerckhoffstrasse | May 10, 1951 | Feb 10, 1931 | → Dollendorfstrasse | Wilhelm Kerckhoff , the sole mayor of the Altendorf mayor | The Kleine Kerckhoffstrasse was originally called Nitzschstrasse . |
Kruppstrasse | May 16, 1902 | March 19, 1969 | → Bundesautobahn 40 → Benno-Strauss-Straße → Großstraße → Paul-Goerens-Straße |
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Long street | before 1883 | May 16, 1902 | → Münchner Strasse | Langenfeld, field name | The Langenfeld belonged to the farmer Pollerberg called Lange, who sold it to the city of Essen in 1904 as building land. |
Magdeburger Strasse | before 1907 | after 1910 | → Wickenburgstrasse | Magdeburg , capital of Saxony-Anhalt | The part of today's Wickenburgstrasse between Kruppstrasse (today Bundesautobahn 40 ) and Adelkampstrasse was called Magdeburger Strasse. |
Mühlenstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Hamburger Strasse → Schweriner Strasse |
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Niesertstrasse | before 1910 | Feb 21, 1922 | → Own plaice | ||
Nikolausstrasse | before 1898 | May 16, 1902 | → Düsseldorfer Strasse | ||
Nitzschstrasse | before 1910 | before 1928 | → Dollendorfstrasse | The Nitzschstraße was 1927-1928 Kerckhoffstraße and 1951. Small Kerckhoffstraße called before becoming a Doll Dorfstraße 1957th | |
Parkstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Diergardtstrasse | |||
Pertzstrasse | Oct 16, 1916 | → Pottgießerstrasse | |||
Philippstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Bunsenstrasse | |||
Plattenstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Gervinusstrasse | |||
Pot holder pad | May 31, 1930 | Aug 5, 1936 | → Schweriner Strasse | The street Potthälterspad was originally part of the Mühlenstraße and from 1930 part of the street Am Mühlenbach . | |
Town Hall Square | before 1898 | May 16, 1902 | → Altendorfplatz | Location of the former Altendorf town hall | The town hall of the former mayor's office of Altendorf was located on this square . |
Rückertstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Kasseler Strasse | |||
Schaffystrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Lübecker Strasse | |||
Scharnhorststrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Droysenstrasse | Gerhard von Scharnhorst , Prussian lieutenant general | After the incorporation of Frohnhausen into the city of Essen, the street had to be renamed because it had the same name, as there was already a Scharnhorststraße in Essen's northern district , which still bears this name there today. | |
Schultepäskenstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Riehlstrasse | |||
Schultestrasse | Oct 8, 1896 | July 9, 1915 | → Herbrüggenstrasse | Schulte-Herbrüggen, court name | The street was named after the Schulte-Herbrüggen farm, first Schultestraße, then Herbrüggenstraße. See also under Herbrüggenstrasse. |
Schrönplatz | May 8, 1933 | July 14, 1933 | → Frohnhauser Platz | Fritz (Friedel) Schrön, martyr | Renamed during the Nazi era in order to promote the symbolic form of the seizure of power . Shortly afterwards, the name Friedel-Schrön-Platz was used. Friedel Schrön was a resistance fighter against the Weimar Republic and a so-called martyr of the National Socialist movement. |
Seydtlitzstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Burckhardtstrasse | |||
Sodener Strasse | before 1907 | before 1927 | repealed and overbuilt | Sodener Strasse connected Leipziger Strasse with the former Kruppstrasse (today Benno-Strauss-Strasse ). | |
Spanish Beck | May 16, 1902 | → Wiesbadener Strasse | |||
Pride Street | May 16, 1902 | → Archenholzstrasse | |||
Treitschkestrasse | May 30, 1913 | March 8, 2003 | → Hannah-Arendt-Strasse | Treitschkestrasse was originally called Yorckstrasse until 1913 and was renamed Hannah-Arendt-Strasse on March 8, 2003. | |
Victoriastrasse | before 1898 | May 16, 1902 | → Aachener Strasse | ||
Waisenstrasse | before 1898 | May 16, 1902 | → Trier Street | ||
Waitzstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Giesebrechtstrasse | |||
Wedelstrasse | May 16, 1902 | → Dahnstrasse | |||
Yorckstrasse | May 30, 1913 | → Hannah-Arendt-Strasse | Yorckstrasse was renamed Treitschkestrasse on May 30, 1913 and Hannah-Arendt-Strasse on March 8, 2003. |
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ Unless otherwise stated, the source used is: Erwin Dickhoff: Essener Strasse . Ed .: City of Essen - Historical Association for City and Monastery of Essen. Klartext-Verlag, Essen 2015, ISBN 978-3-8375-1231-1 .
- ^ City of Essen: Population figures. Retrieved May 21, 2020 .
- ↑ School Bears dent excerpt from the list of monuments of the city of Essen, school buildings bear Delle (PDF); accessed on December 17, 2016
- ↑ a b c d KGV Essen West, History ( Memento of the original from November 15, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. ; accessed on December 18, 2016
- ↑ a b c d e f Overview plan of the city of Essen, December 1910, prepared by the land surveying office of the city of Essen
- ↑ The Grotenhof in Essen's list of monuments (PDF); accessed on December 16, 2016