List of streets in Essen Hair Braid

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The list of streets in Essen-Haarzopf describes the street system in the Essen district of Haarzopf with the corresponding historical references.

Introduction and overview

In Essen-Haarzopf, 6940 inhabitants (March 31, 2020) live on an area of ​​4.27 square kilometers. Haarzopf has the postcode district 45149.

North of Hatzper Strasse, which runs through the district from southwest to northeast, the street name group was created according to old field names. The street names are based on the field names of the first cadastral records from the years 1819 to 1822.

In a residential area in the west of Haarzopf, south of Hatzper Straße, the street was named after animals from the epic Reineke Fuchs by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe .

The district boundary runs clockwise in the north, roughly as follows:
It leads from the roundabout on Humboldtstrasse to the east over Fulerumer Strasse and Schlingmannweg, roughly following the course of the stream to Tommesweg and on to Spielkampshof street, further south to the federal autobahn 52 , which forms the border in a south-westerly direction to Roßkothenweg, but does not belong to Haarzopf. From Roßkothenweg it runs in a northerly direction over the area of the Essen-Mülheim airport , crossing Lilienthalstrasse over Dellberg street and on over Haarscheidberg to the roundabout on Humboldtstrasse.

In Haarzopf there are 55 designated traffic areas, including no space . The following streets are only partially in the district:
Fulerumer Straße, Hatzper Straße, Humboldtstraße, Lilienthalstraße, Norbertstraße, Roßkothenweg, Spielkampshof and Stubertal.

Run through the Haarzopf district

  • the state road L64 on the Raadterstraße and the Fulerumer Straße to Fulerum ,
  • the state road L176 north parallel to federal motorway 52 ,
  • the state road L132 on the Hatzper road from Schuir to Mülheim an der Ruhr and
  • the state road L442 on the Lilienthalstraße from Schuir to Mülheim an der Ruhr.

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.
  • 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.
    The addition (in the district) indicates that the length of the street section within the district is 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.
    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
Alfred-Neuse-Weg 100 Alfred Neuse, pastor 2nd June 1984 Alfred Neuse was born in Dinslaken on June 13, 1875 and was the first pastor of the newly formed Haarzopf evangelical community from 1904 to 1945. The establishment of the Haarzopf Evangelical Church and the construction of the parish cemetery go back to his initiative . Neuse died on June 7, 1969 in pigtail.
The Alfred-Neuse-Weg is a southeastern dead end of the Kirschbaumsweg.
Old Hatzper Strasse 360 Description of location, derivation from pigtail Sep 18 1968 Hatzper is an old form of Hartzappe / hair pigtail. Here is Appe (actually Apa ) "flowing water". Some linguists interpret Hartz as "deer" or "forest". According to this, Hartzappe could be translated as Waldbach or Hirschbach, and it is assumed that Hirschbach was the name of the stream that flows through Haarzopf today and is called Steinbach.
The Alte Hatzper Straße, which was part of the Hatzper Straße and was previously called Haarzopfer Straße and originally Velauer Straße , branches off to the south of today's Hatzper Straße and ends in front of the Bundesautobahn 52 , which was built here in the 1960s and which does not lead to Hair counts as a dead end.
Alte Hatzper Strasse 40
Old Raadter Strasse 680
(all road sections together)
former municipality of Raadt Nov 21, 1968 After the dissolution of the Mülheim an der Ruhr district in 1910, Raadt was temporarily part of the Essen district and in 1920 was incorporated into the city of Mülheim an der Ruhr , where it is now part of the Menden-Holthausen district.
Alte Raadter Strasse, which was previously part of Raadter Strasse , branches off south of Raadter Strasse and leads onto Eststrasse.
At the Brönngen 370 Am Brömgen (Brönngen), field name May 14, 1941 The spellings Am Brömgen and Am Brömchen appear in the field books and in the parenting role of 1866. The spelling of today's street name has not been passed down.
The street Am Brönngen connects the street Folkersbeck with the Tommesweg in a north-westerly arch.
At the spruce bush 170 Spruce bush, field name Jan. 11, 2005 The street Am Fichtenbusch opens up a residential area built from 2005, the site of which was the last remnant of Haarzopfer Mark. The naming was based on the field names of the first cadastral records from the years 1819 to 1822. This also includes the spruce bush.
The street Am Fichtenbusch connects the Hatzper Straße with the Kirschbaumsweg in a northerly corner.
At the Stein house 400 House stone, field name 21 Sep 1955 The field name Haus Stein refers to the medieval knight's seat and seat of the manor Haarzopf, Haus Stein . The distorted spelling Am Hausstein can be found in the land register from 1826.
The street Am Haus Stein connects the Birkmannsweg with the street Hatzbeeker Mark.
At the pot 210 Poth piece, field name Oct 21, 1938 According to the lease book of the Werden monastery from the years 1589/90, Herman upm Hoeckelenkalten was taxable with a piece of land nompt dat Poitstück. In the mother role of 1826, it says that Wilhelm Birkmann owned arable land on the Pothstück.
The street Am Pothstück connects the street Hatzbeeker Mark with the street Auf'm Bögel in a north-westerly arch.
At the Ruhmbach 890 Ruhmbach , tributary of the Ruhr before 1936 In addition to the water body name, the field names Rumsbeck and In der Rumsbeckswies can also be found in the land register from 1826.
The street Am Ruhmbach runs from the Raadter Straße in a western arc to the street Neulengrund.
On the strip 150 Stripes, field name Sep 18 1974 The street on the strip connects the street Berghausbusch with the street Im Schlagholz in a western corner.
On the podium 620
(in the district)
Description of the location, slope in the terrain Oct 13, 1953 In 1918 the name Am Treppchen appears for the first time in the cadastral records. The reason for the naming in 1953 states: From the airport complex , the area towards the Mühlendyk courtyard fell sharply. The height difference was overcome by a staircase that was at the beginning of the street on Lilienthalstraße.
The street Am Treppchen leads from Lilienthalstraße in an easterly direction, then crosses under the Bundesautobahn 52 and continues in Schuir onto Meisenburgstraße.
On the Wünnesberg 670 Wünnesberg, field name 8 Sep 1959 In the mother role of 1866, the form Am Wünnesberg appears, although it is assumed that the correct spelling is Winnesberg. There was also the Kotten Winnesberg, which was owned by the Winner (s) berg family for a short time. Hermann Winnersberg acquired it in 1828 with a size of 25  acres from Wilhelm Schaepermann and the Lehnhoff couple. In 1842 he sold it to the von der Brüggen family.
The street Am Wünnesberg branches off to the east of the Tommesweg and, after a south-east curve, continues north and back onto the Tommesweg.
On the fox maul 210
(without access roads)
Fuchskaul, field name Dec 11, 1959 In the mother role of 1866, Johann Heinrich Bögel is named as the owner of the Fuchskuhle.
The street Auf der Fuchskaul connects the street Am Brönngen with the Kirschbaumsweg.
On the bow 420
(without access roads)
Bögel, Kotten - and Flurname December 11, 1931 In the parent roll of 1867, the field name Auf'm Bögel is mentioned. There was also a Kotten with that name.
The street Auf'm Bögel connects the street Hatzbeeker Mark with the Raadter street.
On the break 200 On the break, field name Jan. 28, 1957 In the land register from 1826 the field name Auf'm Bruch is mentioned. In the mother role of 1867, the spelling Aufm Broich occurs.
The street Auf'm Bruch connects the street Auf'm Dörnchen with the Gockelweg.
Auf'm Dörnchen 260 Auf'm Dörnchen, field name Feb 12, 1931 The field name Aufm Dörngen is mentioned in the land register of 1826. In the mother role of 1867, the spellings Aufm Dörnchen and Am Dörnchen appear.
The street Auf'm Dörnchen connects the Sonnenscheinsweg with the Raadter Straße.
On the garden 340 On the garden, field name Sep 24 1923 In the parent roll of 1867 the spelling Auf'm Gartenstück appears. There is also the distorted shape as a quack piece.
The street Auf'm Gartenstück connects Harscheidweg with Humboldtstraße.
In the basement 390
(without access roads)
Keller, court name Oct. 20, 1971 The farm's revelers were blacksmiths who ran a nearby forge between the mid- Thirty Years' War and the beginning of World War II . The farm itself was called the Fängershof, see Fängershofstrasse .
The street Auf'm Keller leads from Harscheidweg in a southerly direction and then to the north on the street Auf'm Gartenstück.
Berghausbusch 190 Berghaus, family name Dec 11, 1974 Most of the parcels on which the Berghausbusch road is laid out belonged in 1795 to Jan Hendrich Berghaus († 1808), who was also called Schmidt im Busch.
Berghausbusch Street connects Tommesweg with Im Schlagholz Street.
Berghausweg 210 Berghaus, family name Dec 11, 1974 Most of the parcels on which the Berghausweg is laid out belonged in 1795 to Jan Hendrich Berghaus († 1808), who was also called Schmidt im Busch.
The Berghausweg branches off from the Berghausbusch road in an easterly curve and leads back to it.
Birkmannsweg 760
(without access roads)
Birkmann, court name May 14, 1914 The Birkmann farm, which was first mentioned in a document in 1215, originally belonged to the Stein family . In 1765 it was acquired by Henrich Birkmann and his wife Gertrud nee Hölters for 2,750 Reichstaler from the owner of the Stein family. In 1922 the 101  acre farm, which had been inherited through the male line since the Thirty Years' War , became the property of the city of Essen. Johannes Birkmann managed the farm as the last owner until 1951.
Birkmannsweg branches off to the south of Hatzper Strasse and ends in a dead end west.
Birkmannsweg, Haus Stein
Crumble turn 150 Am Brökel, field name July 15, 1957 The spellings Am Brökel and Bröckel appear for the field names. The name Wende indicates that the street ends as a cul-de-sac.
The street Brökelwende is a southern cul-de-sac of the street Im Siepen.
Dellberg 140 Dellberg, field name before 1914 The street Dellberg is a northern cul-de-sac of the Raadter Straße.
Eichholzhof 350
(without side streets)
Eichholzhof, name of the farm Dec 20, 2005 The Eichholzhof, first mentioned in documents in 1215, was located on the site of the road laid out in 2005. When the farm was sold to the city of Essen, its owner was called Rottmann, who had his ancestral farm on the site of today's Marie-Juchacz-Heim on Auf'm Bögel. Later there was a city nursery on the area of ​​the former Eichholzhof until around 2002.
The Eichholzhof street branches off south of the Rottmannshof street and, after branching off several spur streets, returns to it.
Eststrasse 3210
(all road sections together)
Este, field name May 10, 1914 The old spelling is Hespede. In the register of leased and rented property of the Werden monastery from the years 1474 to 1477, it says: In the Dahl court is tenable Johan to Walney van a stuck landtz gnant dat Walneyer Este.
The Eststraße is widely branched in the southern area of ​​Haarzopf. It branches off to the east of the street Neulengrund, crosses the Raadter Straße and continues to the east, where a piece branches off to the south and meets the Alte Raadter Straße. From the eastern course the Eststraße bends roughly to the south, whereby a western branch also meets the Alte Raadter Straße and an eastern branch meets the street Am Treppchen. Here it ran until 1967, when the federal highway 52 was built, in a southerly direction to Schuir .
Fängershofstrasse 290 Fängershof, farm name around 1932 The Fängershof is the old Schmitten farm, which was first mentioned in a document in 1611. In 1721 Jörg am Keller was the head of the farmers in the Schmitten. Members of his family were farriers for centuries. In 1710 a Kotten was built next to the forge, which was later inhabited by a son of the now so-called Kellermann family. In 1854, the Kotten came by marriage to Jakob Fänger, who from then on gave the farm his name. The farm, which over the years had grown to 115  acres , was sold in 1912 by Hermann Fänger to Essener Boden-Aktiengesellschaft. The city of Essen acquired it in 1922, with the Fänger family running it as a tenant. In the 1930s the farm areas were used for residential development. The buildings were abandoned in 1968 after the death of the last rider.
The Fängershofstraße connects the Neulengrund street and the western arch of the Am Ruhmbach street.
Föhrenweg 290 neighboring pines (Scots) 21 Sep 1955 The Föhrenweg is named after the pines in the neighboring Schlinghoffschen Park.
The Föhrenweg connects the Birkmmansweg with the street Hartzbeeker Mark.
Folkersbeck 410 Folkersbeck, field name 17 Sep 1924 The spellings Volkersbeck and Folkersbeck are both mentioned in the land register of 1826. In the inventory of the fiefdoms of Werden Abbey , the form Folkersbeck can be found, for example at Haus Stein , split off of the same; A bush called the Folkersbeck of four acres of land.
The Folkersbeck street branches off from Tommesweg to the north and ends as a dead end after crossing Milkdelle street.
Fulerumer Strasse 900
in the district
Fulerum , neighboring district Sep 12 2006 After the incorporation of the eastern part of the former Fulerum peasantry, which until then belonged to the mayor's office in Heißen , the old Bülowstrasse in Fulerum became Fulerumer Strasse on October 1, 1920.
Fulerumer Straße comes from the neighboring district of Fulerum to the north and was stretched in Haarzopf east parallel to Humboldtstraße to the Erbach junction in 2006, and has since relieved the residents of Humboldtstraße. Fulerumer Straße is now part of the L64 state road, which continues in a southerly direction via Raadter Straße.
Crossing Erbach, Fulerumer Straße coming from the bottom right
Gockelweg 630 Gockel in Gockel, Hinkel and Gackeleia July 15, 1954 The Gockelweg actually belongs to the group of names in a housing estate in the west of Haarzopf, south of Hatzper Straße, in which the streets were created after animals from the epic Reineke Fuchs by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe . The Gockelweg was accidentally added, based on the fairy tale Gockel, Hinkel and Gackeleia by Clemens Brentano .
The Gockelweg connects the Harscheidweg with the Raadter Straße; until November 26, 1976 it ended at the Sonnenscheinsweg and was then extended.
Grimbartweg 330 Grimbart the badger, mythical creature in Goethe's epic Reineke Fuchs Oct 13, 1953 In a residential area in the west of Haarzopf, south of Hatzper Strasse, the streets were designed after animals from the epic Reineke Fuchs by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe .
The Grimbartweg connects the Harscheidweg with the Sonnenscheinsweg.
Harscheidweg 1800 Am Harscheid, field name May 10, 1914 In the land register of 1826, the name Am Haarscheid is used for a hallway, as well as in the mother role of 1866 Am Harscheid.
Harscheidweg forms the border to the neighboring district of Fulerum from Humboldtstraße to Auf'm Keller street . In the further course to the southwest it forms the border between Haarzopf and Mülheim an der Ruhr until it meets the street Neulengrund.
Hartzbeeker Mark 340 Hartzbeeker Mark, field name June 5, 1934 The field name Hartzbeeker Mark is entered in a map of the Werden monastery from 1582.
Hartzbeeker Mark street, which had previously been part of Tommesweg since 1914 , connects Am Haus Stein street with Hatzper Strasse.
Hatzper Strasse 1710
(in the district)
Description of location, derivation from pigtail July 9, 1915 Hatzper is an old form of Hartzappe / hair pigtail. Here is Appe (actually Apa ) "flowing water". Some linguists interpret Hartz as "deer" or "forest". According to this, Hartzappe could be translated as Waldbach or Hirschbach, and it is assumed that Hirschbach was the name of the stream that flows through Haarzopf today and is called Steinbach.
The Hatzper Strasse, which was previously called Haarzopfer Strasse and originally Velauer Strasse , comes from the neighboring district of Schuir and crosses Haarzopf in a north-westerly direction to the city limits to Mülheim an der Ruhr . It is part of the L132 state road throughout.
Crossing Erbach, Hatzper Straße from top right to bottom left
Henningweg 450 Henning, figure from Goethe's epic Reineke Fuchs Oct 13, 1953 In a residential area in the west of Haarzopf, south of Hatzper Strasse, the streets were designed after animals from the epic Reineke Fuchs by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe .
The Henningweg connects the street Im Siepken with the Grimbartweg.
Humboldtstrasse 810
(in the district)
Humboldt colliery Nov 21, 1911 Humboldtstrasse is named after the Humboldt coal mine, which was named after Alexander von Humboldt . It was created in 1869 from the consolidation of the fields Hammelsbeck , Sonderwerk, Hoppenkuhle, Rettelstruckerstollen, Gitzkiel , Robert, Adele and Vereinigte Drei. In 1929 the mining of the Humboldt colliery was stopped and the mine fields were dismantled by the Rosenblumendelle colliery . Coming
from the north from the neighboring district of Fulerum , Humboldtstrasse leads to Fulerumer Strasse near the Erbach intersection.
In the bat 450 In the bat, old location name Sep 18 1974 The street Im Schlagholz branches off south of the Tommesweg, then bends in an easterly direction and ends after the street Berghausbusch as a dead end.
In Siepken 620 Location in the Siepental July 9, 1915 The street Im Siepken connects the street Neulengrund in a northern arch with the Raadter street.
Isegrimweg 250 Isegrim the wolf, mythical creature in Goethe's epic Reineke Fuchs Oct 13, 1953 In a residential area in the west of Haarzopf, south of Hatzper Strasse, the streets were designed after animals from the epic Reineke Fuchs by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe .
The Isegrimweg leads from Grimbartweg to Gockelweg and then ends as a dead end.
Cherry tree path 430 Cherry tree, name of a kott May 11, 1914 Johann Kirchbaum probably came from the Kersebaumshof in Rüttenscheid . On November 22, 1797, he and his wife Elisabeth, née Burgardt, bought six acres of land from the married couple Heinrich and Elisabeth Boverman née von Scheidt for 800 Reichstaler. They built a Kotten on it, which by transfer agreement of August 9, 1839 to the owner and Rademacher Johann Kirschbaum jun. passed over and was enlarged by his acquisitions. His son Johann Kirschbaum (1844–1921) was a farmer, timber merchant and brick factory owner. The last farmer named Johann Kirschbaum died in 1935.
The Kirschbaumsweg leads from Hatzper Straße in a north-easterly direction and ends after the Straße Auf der Fuchskaul as a dead end.
Lilienthalstrasse 1250
(in the district)
Otto Lilienthal , aviation pioneer June 13, 1932 Lilienthalstrasse, which was originally called Werdener Weg , runs eastwards from Mülheim an der Ruhr around Essen / Mülheim Airport and continues south to the neighboring district of Schuir . It is part of the L442 state road.
Milk dent 350 Milkdelle, old field name Jan. 10, 1929 Milkdelle street connects Am Brönngen street with Tommesweg in a northern corner.
Neulengrund 750 Neulen, court name Oct 3, 1932 The original Lehngut Neulen (there are also the spellings Noelen and Nolden) was enfeoffed on January 26, 1467 with Johann von Schüren, Canon of Essen, as the successor to Hermann Höfken. In 1644 Ludolf Georg von Boenen zu Oberhausen applied for the estate to be enfeoffed. On July 10, 1794, the couple Röttger Neulen (also Rutger Nolden) and Catharina nee Neuhaus bought the farm for 2500 Reichstaler from Count von Westerholt . Rutger Nolden was enfeoffed on May 3, 1795 with the 179  acre farm, whose successor was his son Hermann Neulen.
The street Neulengrund leads from the southern end of the Harscheidweg in a south-easterly direction to the street Am Ruhmbach.
Norbertstrasse 290
(in the district)
Norbert , male first name May 25, 1906 The name was named after a first name through the Rüttenscheid resolution of 1895. Norbertstrasse, which was previously called Nikolausstrasse and briefly Nicodemusstrasse , was originally part of an old trade route from Essen via Rüttenscheid to Kettwig .
Coming from Rüttenscheid, Norbertstraße runs parallel to federal motorway 52 as the L176 state road and forms the border between Margarethenhöhe and Bredeney , then it continues to Schuir and Haarzopf.
Raadter Strasse 1600 former municipality of Raadt Nov 21, 1911 After the dissolution of the Mülheim an der Ruhr district in 1910, Raadt was temporarily part of the Essen district and in 1920 was incorporated into the city of Mülheim an der Ruhr , where it is now part of the Menden-Holthausen district.
Raadter Strasse connects from the Erbach intersection, extending Fulerumer Strasse to the south, with Lilienthalstrasse. It is part of the L64 state road.
Ev.  Haarzopf Church, Raadter Strasse
Reineke-Fuchs-Strasse 344 Goethe's epic Reineke Fuchs Oct 13, 1953 In a residential area in the west of Haarzopf, south of Hatzper Strasse, the streets were designed after animals from the epic Reineke Fuchs by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe . The Reineke-Fuchs-Straße itself belongs to this group of names.
The Reineke-Fuchs-Straße leads from the Hatzper Straße to the Gockelweg and then ends as a dead end.
Roßkothenweg 1690
(in the district, all street sections together)
Roßkothen, peasantry and fiefdom Apr 16, 1975 Roßkothen was the name of a peasantry. In a loan inventory from the time of the Werden Abbot Adolf III. Von Spiegelberg (around 1412) mentions that Johannes Luttelnou enfeoffed cum duobus bonis in Roskothen. What is meant are probably the later farms of Klein- and Groß-Roßkothen, which were property of the feudal curia. The last tenant from Klein-Roßkothen was Hermann Kleine Roßkothen in 1796, from Groß-Roßkothen it was Wilhelm Groß Roßkothen in 1798. In the mother role of 1826, Johann Mühlendieck is the owner of the 147  acre Groß-Roßkothen farm and Hermann Roßkothen is the small owner of the 90  acre Klein-Roßkothen farm.
The Roßkothenweg, originally called Roßkothen , branches off southwest of Lilienthalstraße and with a few branches leads partly to Mülheim an der Ruhr or forms the border to the neighboring town.
Mühlendyk farm on Roßkothenweg
Rottmannshof 300 Rottmann, name of a Kottens Dec 16, 1975 The Rottmannshof was acquired by the city of Essen in 1960/61 for the plant of the city nursery, whereby it was the Eichholzhof, into which Wilhelm Rottmann had married in 1886. The Rottmanns-Kotten seems to have its origin in the Thirty Years War . The owners of the Stein house leased it in 1695. In 1811, Henrich Birkmann (called Rottmann) bought the Kotten, which was around six Mülheim acres, from the Haarzopfer neighbors . The Kotten was still inhabited until 1963 and was then demolished to make a retirement home.
The street Rottmannshof connects the street Eichholzhof with the Raadter street.
Rottmannshof, copper beech natural monument
Schlingmannsweg 410 Schlingmann, landowner May 10, 1915 The Schlingmanns were hair-sacrifice landowners. In the parenting role of 1866, the day laborer Hermann Schlingmann is named as the owner of a piece of land at the later Humboldtstraße 239 that was 82 ares and 18 square meters in size.
The Schlingmannsweg branches off southeast of the Humboldtstrasse and leads to the Stubertal street, after which it ends as a dead end.
Sunshine path 700 Sunshine, name of a kott May 10, 1914 The Kotten Sunshine is mentioned in a smoke hen list from 1648. According to the Haarzopfer trademark regulation of 1677, he was jointly owned by old trademark heirs. Hermann Mühlendyck acquired the Kotten from Wilhelm Neulen called Sonnenschein (* 1807). Mühlendyck's son-in-law Wilhelm Birkmann received it later. Eventually the city of Essen acquired the Kotten.
The Sonnenscheinsweg leads from the Auf'm Dörnchen road in a southerly direction to the Siepken road and then ends as a dead end.
Spielkampshof 110
(in the district)
Spielkampshof, court name Feb 20, 1963 The Spielkamp farm was originally called Kreuzenbeck. In 1648 the three Kotten Bernt in the Creutzbeck, his daughter and Karst in the Crützbeck, which were later known as Ober-, Mittel- and Unter-Kreuzenbeck, are mentioned in the Rauchhühnerverzeichnis. Ober-Kreuzenbeck was auctioned off in 1823 and acquired by the married couple Johann Fürkotten and Elisabeth Oberbannscheid. The weaver Fürkotten died early, so that his widow married the clog maker Hermann Spielkamp. Heinrich Unterkreutzenbeck acquired the Kotten Mittel-Kreuzenbeck in 1850. Without a descendant, he appointed his neighbor Spielkamp as heir. He took ownership in 1877, moved to the Kotten Unter-Kreuzenbeck and had the other two Kotten demolished. Since then, the yard has been called Spielkampshof. The Am Wünnesberg housing estate was built on the farm's land.
The Spielkampshof road leads from the Nachtigallental to the neighboring Margarethenhöhe district .
Spielkampsweg 380 Spielkampshof, court name May 10, 1914 For the history of the court, see Spielkampshof .
Spielkampsweg is a northern cul-de-sac from Hatzper Strasse.
Spielkampsweg 30
Stein's field 230 Stein's field, field name 5th July 1950 It was named after the field belonging to the Stein house . In the land register from 1826 Hermann Eichholz is mentioned as the owner of arable land in the Steinsfeld.
The street Steins Feld connects the street Hartzbeeker Mark with the street Am Haus Stein.
Stubertal 240
(in the district)
Stubertal, field name June 5, 1934 The field name Stubertal is mentioned in a map of the Werden monastery from 1582.
On September 20, 1972, the connection in Haarzopf between Schlingmannsweg and Fulerumer Strasse was assigned to the Stubertal road coming from Fulerum . This section was previously part of Bethelstrasse .
Tersteegenweg 210 Gerhard Tersteegen , lay preacher and writer Nov 12, 1934 The Tersteegenweg connects the Auf'm Dörnchen street with the Gockelweg.
Tommesweg 980 Tommes, name of a kott May 10, 1914 The Tommes-Kotten is mentioned in an official directory around 1820 in the spellings Thomas, Tommes and Tummes. In 1806 the married couple Wilhelm Tummes and Margaretha, née Berghaus, bought several properties with a house, garden and farmland from Heinrich Bovermann. After a few years, they had increased their property to 27 acres of local mills. In 1857 the married couple Hermann Pothmann and Gertrud nee Tommes acquired the property from the heirs of Tommes. In 1868 they transferred it to their son Hermann Pothmann. The property passed from his heirs to the couple Ackerwirth Hermann Burghardt and Gertrud nee Pothmann in 1872. The economist Theodor Pörting acquired most of this property in 1877.
The Tommesweg branches off north of the Hatzper Straße and after a left bend leads into the Nachtigallental.
Tommesweg, Christ the King

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
Bethelstrasse before 1927 after 1983 →  Stubertal Originally, Bethelstrasse was a southern cul-de-sac from Humboldtstrasse. It was later connected to the Stubertal street and after 1983 its name was removed.
Hair Sacrifice Street Nov 21, 1911 July 9, 1915 →  Alte Hatzper Strasse
→  Hatzper Strasse
Road through pigtail Haarzopfer Strasse was previously part of Velauer Strasse , which in its further course in Mülheim an der Ruhr still bears this name today.
Nicodemusstrasse Jan. 26, 1906 May 25, 1906 →  Norbertstrasse The street was previously called Nikolausstrasse .
Nikolausstrasse 6 Sep 1897 Jan. 26, 1906 →  Norbertstrasse Nikolaus , male first name The name was named after a first name through the Rüttenscheider resolution of 1895.
Rosskothen Apr 16, 1975 →  Roßkothenweg Roßkothen, peasantry and fiefdom
Velauer Strasse before 1911 →  Alte Hatzper Strasse
→  Hatzper Strasse
Shaft of the Wiesche colliery in Mülheim an der Ruhr The Velauer Straße in its further course in Mülheim an der Ruhr still bears this name today.
Becoming way June 13, 1932 →  Lilienthalstrasse Way towards becoming

See also

Individual evidence

  1. 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 .
  2. ^ City of Essen: Population figures. Retrieved May 21, 2020 .
  3. There is still potential in Norbertstrasse ; In: Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung of February 10, 2018