List of street names in Frankfurt am Main / H

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Ha

Haardtwaldplatz and Haardtwaldstraße , Niederrad

The Haardtwald is a quartzite ridge in the Hunsrück . Highest point is the Haardtkopf (658 m).

Habelstrasse , Heddernheim

Friedrich Gustav Habel (1792–1867), archivist from Wiesbaden-Schierstein , undertook major scientific investigations of the Saalburg and the ruins of Nida between 1853 and 1862 . Habel is financially supported by the Bad Homburg casino . He also bought various castles at symbolic prices, e.g. B. Reichenberg and Mildenburg in Miltenberg to protect them from final decay.

Habsburgerallee , Ostend

Part of the avenue ring , named after the Habsburg dynasty ruling Vienna, who provided the most German emperors of all houses and was of great importance for the imperial city of Frankfurt.

Hachenburger Strasse , Sossenheim

Hachenburg , town in the Westerwaldkreis in Rhineland-Palatinate.

Hadamarer Strasse , Sossenheim

Hadamar , a small town in the Limburg-Weilburg district . Hadamar is known for the “Clinic for Forensic Psychiatry” located on the outskirts, in whose outbuildings there is also the Hadamar Memorial. There is of the murder of people with disabilities and mental illness during the time of National Socialism in the Nazi killing center Hadamar recalls.

Hadrianstrasse , Heddernheim (Roman city)

Hadrian (76-138), full name Publius Aelius Hadrianus, Roman Emperor from 118. Hadrian's Wall between England and Scotland was built on his instructions. A dark chapter is his attempt to exterminate the Jews and forbid their belief. The street is in the area of ​​the former Roman city of Nida .

Haeberlinstrasse , Eschersheim

the Justizrat Ernst Justus Haeberlin (1847–1925) had a villa on this street. His passion was collecting Roman coins.

Haenischstrasse , Seckbach (1933–1945 Lötzener Strasse )

Konrad Haenisch (1876–1925), editor and SPD politician, Prussian minister of culture from 1919 to 1921, then president of Wiesbaden until 1925. A primary and secondary school in Frankfurt is named after him.

Haeussermannstrasse , Griesheim

Karl Haeussermann (1853–1918), chemist, built a chemical factory in Griesheim in 1882. 1891–1906 professor at the TH Stuttgart, from 1912 on the supervisory board of the chemical factory Griesheim-Elektron .

Hafnerstrasse , Griesheim

Peter Hafner, last honorary mayor of Griesheim from 1867 to 1888 .

Hagebuttenweg , Frankfurter Berg

As rose hips is defined as the non-toxic collecting Nuts different kinds of roses.

Hagenstrasse , Ostend

Gotthilf Heinrich Ludwig Hagen (1797–1884), senior civil engineer and master of German hydraulic engineering

Hahnbergweg , Zeilsheim

The Hahnberg, 447 m high mountain located on the southern city limits of Niedernhausen in the Rheingau-Taunus district .

Hahnenkammstrasse , Bergen-Enkheim

The Hahnenkamm (Spessart) , 437 m high elevation in the Vorspessart, Bavarian Lower Main region . Particularly popular with mountain bikers and hikers.

Hahnstrasse , Niederrad (1938–1945 Kesselbergstrasse )

Banker L. Anton Hahn (1825–1907) owned an estate in Niederrad. The bank that he owned was renamed the Deutsche Effecten- und Wechselbank in 1872 . The " Merkurbrunnen " in front of the Frankfurt fair was donated by his sons in 1916 in his memory.

Haigerer Strasse , Sossenheim

Haiger , town in the Lahn-Dill district

Hainer Hof , old town

The Cistercian monastery of Haina built the Bernhard chapel close to the cathedral on the spot where St. Bernhard of Clairvaux lived in 1146 when he called for the second crusade . During the Reformation , the property of the monastery passed into the possession of Landgrave Philip of Hesse .

Hainer Weg , Sachsenhausen

This old country road led to Hayn Castle (also Hain ) in Dreieichenhain in today's city of Dreieich . There was the seat of the bailiwick for the administration of today's city forest.

Haingrabenstrasse , Praunheim

Praunheim was protected by a moat, the course of which can still be seen in the old village center. It was secured with thorn bushes and trees and was supposed to prevent raids and theft.

Haingasse , Bergen -Enkheim

the Haingasse formed part of the Landwehr, which was placed around Bergen by the Counts of Hanau. This consisted of a ditch and a peg, a quasi-impenetrable, intertwined thorn bush on the eastern edge of the village. Around 1500 the peg was replaced by a defensive wall.

Hallgartenstrasse , Nordend (1935–1945 Hartmann-Ibach-Strasse )

Charles Hallgarten (1838–1908), partner in the New York bank Hallgarten & Co., Jewish German-American and great Frankfurt philanthropist who settled in Frankfurt in 1877. He was involved in social projects and sponsored various foundations for welfare and welfare institutions as well as for the expansion of popular education and social housing.

Halmstrasse , Gutleutviertel

1920 so named after the agricultural products.

Hamburger Allee , Bockenheim

A large street near the exhibition center bears the name of the northern German trading city of Hamburg . Original name: Moltke Allee from approx. 1890 until shortly after the Second World War.

Hammanstrasse , Nordend

Hamman von Holzhausen (1467–1536), senior mayor and strong supporter of the Reformation in Frankfurt.

Hammarskjöldring , Niederursel (Northwest City)

The Swede Dag Hammarskjöld (1905–1961) was Secretary General of the United Nations and was posthumously (1961) Nobel Peace Prize Laureate . He was killed in a plane crash on the way to peace negotiations in the Congo crisis .

Hammelsgasse , city center

Cattle were driven through this lane to the cattle market that used to take place on the Zeil.

Hammersbacher Weg , Bergen-Enkheim

Hammersbach , municipality in the Main-Kinzig district

Hanauer Landstrasse , Ostend and Fechenheim

The most important arterial road to the east leads to Hanau, around 20 km away .

Handelstrasse , Northrend

Georg Friedrich Händel (1685–1759), German-English composer of the Baroque era , who became well known primarily through his numerous operas. His main works include around 40 operas and 25 oratorios, including Messiah .

Hannah-Arendt-Strasse , Kalbach

Hannah Arendt (1906–1975), eminent Jewish journalist and scholar of German origin, who had lived in emigration since 1933 and who in 1951 accepted US citizenship.

Hansaallee , Westend

The Free Imperial City of Frankfurt was not a member of the Hanseatic League , but of the Rhenish League of Cities , but one street still reminds of the successful union of city-states from Germany and the Scandinavian and Baltic regions in the late Middle Ages. In the southern part, the Hansaallee opens up a district whose streets are named after the Hanseatic cities of Lübeck, Rostock and Stralsund.

Hans-Bethe-Strasse , Kalbach-Riedberg

Hans Bethe (1906–2005), a Strasbourg- born physicist whose mother was Jewish. Attended the Goethe-Gymnasium and the University of Frankfurt, where he later worked as a lecturer. As a so-called non-Aryan, he lost his teaching permit in 1933 and emigrated to the USA, where he helped develop the first atomic bomb. In 1967 he received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on the conversion of energy into stars

Hans-Böckler-Strasse , Unterliederbach

Hans Böckler (1875–1951), German politician and trade union official. The Hans Böckler Foundation of the DGB, named after him, endeavors to promote co-determination and improve working conditions.

Hans-Burggraf-Anlage , Dornbusch (renamed in 2008 from Hans-Burggraf-Platz)

Hans Burggraf (1927–2001), psychotherapist and CDU politician, city councilor and member of the state parliament from Frankfurt.

Hans-Eick-Weg , Bockenheim

Hans Eick (1906–1979), trade unionist and SPD city councilor.

Hansenweg , Oberrad

After the Order of St. John in Frankfurt. You have to come to that first.

Hans-Flesch-Platz , city center

Hans Flesch (1896–1945), physician, actor and radio pioneer. Writes the first German-language radio play for radio. 1929 director of the Berliner Rundfunk, imprisoned in the concentration camp in 1933 , conscripted as a military doctor in 1942 and disappeared near Berlin during the last weeks of the war.

Hans-Herkommer-Ring , Kalbach-Riedberg

Hans Herkommer (1887–1956), German architect, with a focus on church construction, including the Frauenfriedenskirche in Frankfurt-Bockenheim, built 1927–1929.

Hans-Kobald-Weg , Nied

Hans Kobald (1906–1967), SPD local politician, co-founder and chairman of the Nied association ring and the Hessian State Sports Association.

Hans-Loskant-Weg , Höchst

Johannes (Hans) Loskant (1915–1999), senior works doctor at the Hoechst paintworks and CDU city councilor, author of the works medical service and health protection in the chemical industry , a reference work in this sector.

Hans-Pfitzner-Strasse , Schwanheim

Hans Erich Pfitzner (1869–1949), German composer and conductor. He studied at the Hoch Conservatory . His most famous work is the opera Palestrina .

Hans-Poelzig-Strasse , Kalbach-Riedberg

Hans Poelzig (1869–1936), architect, painter and university professor. Known for the Poelzig building of the Goethe University in Frankfurt, formerly the administration building of IG Farben , which he designed for them in 1928 and which was completed in 1931. After 1945 it served as the European headquarters of the American armed forces and the headquarters of the United States' 5th Corps.

Hans-Sachs-Strasse , Bockenheim

Hans Sachs (1494–1576), Nuremberg poet, master singer and playwright. Richard Wagner created a musical monument for him in his opera Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg .

Hansteinstrasse , Nordend

The imperial colonel Konrad von Hanstein († 1553) proved his skills during the three-week siege of Frankfurt in 1552 by the Protestant princes . The city could be held and looting prevented.

Hans-Thoma-Strasse , Sachsenhausen

Hans Thoma (1839–1924), German painter and graphic artist. From 1877 to 1899 he lived in Frankfurt and belonged to the wider circle of the Kronberg painters' colony . In Städel hang many of his works.

Hardenbergstrasse , Gutleutviertel

Prince Karl August von Hardenberg (1750–1822), Prussian statesman and reformer.

Harkortstrasse , Riederwald

Friedrich Harkort (1793–1880), industrialist and politician, also known as the “father of the Ruhr area”. Demag later emerged from the company he founded, in which he introduced an exemplary company health insurance fund.

Harry-Fuld-Strasse , Gallus

Harry Fuld (1879–1932), German industrialist. In 1899, Fuld and Carl Lehner (1871–1969) founded the Deutsche Privat Telephon Gesellschaft H. Fuld & Co in Frankfurt , from which, after the order boycott and Aryanization in 1937, Telefonbau & Normalzeit GmbH (T&N) , now Tenovis , emerged.

Harthweg , Schwanheim

Harth is the earlier name for forest, the path leads into the Schwanheim forest.

Hartmann-Ibach-Strasse , Nordend

Hartmann Ibach (around 1487–1533) was a theologian ( Franciscan ) and Protestant preacher during the Reformation . In 1522 he gave the first Protestant sermons in the Katharinenkirche in Frankfurt. The city council refused the extradition requested by the bishop of Mainz, and Frankfurt turned to the new Protestant faith. Until 1945 the Hartmann-Ibach-Straße had the course of today's Hallgartenstraße. With effect from August 9, 1945, Wiesenstrasse northwest of Burgstrasse was renamed Hartmann-Ibach-Strasse, with the house numbering being retained so that Hartmann-Ibach-Strasse begins with 51 and 54 respectively. At the same time, the old Hartmann-Ibach-Strasse was renamed Hallgartenstrasse.

Hartmannsweilerstrasse , Griesheim

The Hartmannswillerkopf , French Vieil Armand (956 m) near Mulhouse in the Vosges Mountains was one of the hardest contested points on the front of the First World War . In the course of two years, around 30,000 German and French soldiers died on this Vosges pass, without either side being able to achieve greater success.
  • Until the incorporation of Griesheim into Frankfurt on April 1, 1928 Neustraße and Frankfurter Straße , then after the last mayor of Griesheim Benno-Schubert- or Bennostraße , renamed Hartmannsweilerstraße under National Socialism.

Hartmannweg , Seckbach

Johann Anton Hartmann, from 1862 to 1867 the last major and commander of the Frankfurt fire fighting battalion, from which the professional fire brigade developed.

Hasengasse , old town

The house "To the three rabbits" once stood in the street. Johann Christian Senckenberg lived here in house no. 3 (the counting differs from the current counting of house numbers).

Hasselhorstweg , Sachsenhausen

Prof. Johann Heinrich Hasselhorst (1825–1904), a painter born in Frankfurt, was initially a student at the Städelsche Kunstinstitut and a teacher there from 1860 to 1895.

Hattsteiner Strasse , Rödelheim

The Lords of Hattstein were a respected noble family in the Middle Ages that died out around 1767. Small remnants of their castle in today's Schmitten (Hochtaunus) municipality do not give an idea of ​​their former importance. Relations with Frankfurt were changeful and not always the best.

Hauermauerweg , Bergen-Enkheim

Old connection route southwest of Bergen, only for pedestrians; runs from Neuer Weg behind the cemetery to Florianweg. 1566 documented in the files of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Almosenkastens as (Weingarten) vff der hawermauern. The nature conservation association HGON has acquired orchards in the vicinity.

Haushofweg , Zeilsheim

The dirt road leads to the farm "Hausen vor der Sonne", colloquially known as the "Häuserhof". Its existence began in Roman times. For a long time it belonged to the Lords of Eppstein .

Hey

Lever Street , Northrend

Johann Peter Hebel (1760–1826), German poet, Protestant theologian and educator, dialect Alemannic.

Heckerstrasse , Schwanheim

Friedrich Hecker (1811–1881), lawyer, most famous leader of the March Revolution of 1848. The Hecker uprising and the Baden Revolution , although bloodily suppressed by Prussian troops, became a myth for the liberation from feudal rule . Hecker himself had to emigrate to the United States. The Saffran family, well-known in Schwanheim, still bears the nickname "Hecker" among the locals. Only very few street names in Schwanheim, including Heckerstrasse, "survived" the incorporation into Frankfurt in 1928.

Hedderichstrasse , Sachsenhausen

Carl Hedderich, patron of the city of Frankfurt.

Heddernheimer Landstrasse , Heddernheim

The Heddernheimer Landstrasse begins at the Nidda and goes to the Heddernheimer Landstrasse / Niederursel district boundary

Hedwig-Dransfeld-Strasse , Bockenheim

Hedwig Dransfeld (pseudonym: Angelika Harten), (1871–1925), German politician. The Catholic teacher was for many years the first chairwoman of the Catholic German Women's Association (KDFB) and headed the editorial team of the women's magazine 'Die christliche Frau'. She was a staunch campaigner for women's suffrage (introduced in 1919).

Heerstrasse , Praunheim / Rödelheim

Connecting road laid out by Roman troops between 80 and 100 AD between the legionary camp in Mainz ( Mogontiacum ) and the (initially used for military purposes) camp Nida near what is now Frankfurt's northwest center. The road led to the Roman camps in the Wetterau and was later referred to as Elisabethenstrasse .

Hegarstrasse , Schwanheim

Friedrich Hegar (1841–1927), Swiss choir composer and conductor

Hegelstrasse , Nordend

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831), German philosopher and both central and final figure of German idealism . During his time in Frankfurt from 1797 to 1800 as a private tutor, the first drafts were made.

Heidelbachstrasse , Bornheim (1935–1945 Egerer Strasse )

The relatives of Henriette Heidelbach, b. Gans, set up the Heidelbach Foundation on their 80th birthday , with which a day nursery was set up in Frankenallee.

Heidelberger Strasse , Gallus

Heidelberg , university and district town in Baden-Württemberg, symbol of German romanticism and happy student life, formerly the residence of the Count Palatine near the Rhine , i.e. the Electoral Palatinate . Heidelberg is still a popular tourist attraction. The original name was Bülowstrasse from approx. 1890 to 1947 .

Heideplatz and Heidestrasse , Bornheim

The area between the old town and the formerly fun village of Bornheim, which was still undeveloped in the 19th century, was the Bornheim Heath , which was popular for excursions and celebrations .

Heidetränkstrasse , Niederursel

The Heidetränktal in the Taunus, where a Celtic ring wall can still be seen. Celts were considered pagans, so the cattle trough there was called the heather trough.

Heigenbrücker Weg , Sachsenhausen

Heigenbrücken , municipality in the district of Aschaffenburg / Lower Franconia.

Heilbronner Strasse , Gutleutviertel

Heilbronn , district town in the Franconian part of Baden-Württemberg .

Heiligenstockweg , Berkersheim, Seckbach

On the earlier route from Berkersheim to Friedberger Warte there was a holy cane with a bench where the market women could put their loads down, pray and rest.

Heiligkreuzgasse , city center

After a cross that is said to have stood on the rattle field. (see Klapperfeldstrasse ).

Heilmannstrasse , Praunheim

The lords of Praunheim had the first name Heilmann a few times, including the nobleman Heilmann von Praunheim, who died in 1472 and whose tomb can still be seen in Frankfurt Cathedral today.

Heilsberger Strasse , Bergen -Enkheim

The Heilsberg , since 1948 part of Bad Vilbel in the Wetterau district . It was only built after the Second World War on a former military training area and became a home for displaced persons and resettlers from the former eastern regions. The name was chosen based on what is now a Polish city of Heilsberg in East Prussia .

Heimatring , Sachsenhausen

Named after the "Heimat" settlement company, which built the Heimatsiedlung between 1927 and 1934 according to the plans of city planner Ernst May .

Heimchenweg , Unterliederbach

The diminutive of Heim, more precisely the workers' home settlement of the Hoechst paintworks , gave this street its name.

Heinestrasse , Nordend (1935–1945 Rudolf-Jung-Strasse )

Christian Johann Heinrich Heine (1797–1856), one of the most important German poets and journalists of the 19th century. Despite strong anti-Semitic objections, Frankfurt was the first German city to dedicate a monument to Heine in 1913. His Loreley poem , set to music for the song, I don't know what it should mean, has become famous .
  • Rudolf Jung (1859–1922), archive director

Heinrich-Baldes-Strasse , Sossenheim

Heinrich Baldes (1857–1924), local history researcher

Heinrich-Becker-Strasse , Nieder-Eschbach

Heinrich Becker (1890–1958) was mayor of Nieder-Eschbach from 1924 to 1933 and 1945 to 1947

Heinrich-Berbalk-Strasse , Bonames

Heinrich Karl Berbalk (1911–1961), mayor from the Sudetenland from 1952 to 1961 in Nieder-Eschbach, which was still independent at the time. Against considerable resistance, he had the water and sewer system laid and today's "Michael Grzimek School" built.

Heinrich-Bingemer-Weg , Bergen-Enkheim, runs parallel to the slope topography from the Neuer Weg street in the west, along the slope and above the school on the slope to Fritz-Schubert-Ring in the east.

Heinrich Bingemer (1888–1995). Born in Enkheim, director of the Historical Museum in Frankfurt and founder of the scientific local research in Bergen-Enkheim.

Heinrich-Bleicher-Strasse , Dornbusch

Heinrich Bleicher (1861–1928), city treasurer with great merits in restructuring the finances after the First World War and the inflationary period in 1923.

Heinrich-Hardt-Strasse , Griesheim

Heinrich Hardt (1869–1954), Rector of the Griesheim "Boys School" (from 1904) and Rector of the "Forest School" (from 1918), today's Eichendorff School, the name was changed after the incorporation.

Heinrich-Hertz-Strasse , Bockenheim

Heinrich Hertz (1857–1894), German physicist and professor of physics. He discovered the existence of electromagnetic waves. The unit of frequency , one oscillation per second = 1 Hertz (abbreviation 1 Hz), is named after him.

Heinrich-Hoffmann-Strasse , Niederrad

Heinrich Hoffmann (1809-1894) was a Frankfurt neurologist and author of the children's book Struwwelpeter . In Heinrich-Hoffmann-Straße there are, among other things, the centers for neurology and neurosurgery as well as for psychiatry of the university clinic and the Max Planck Institute for Brain Research .

Heinrich-Hopf-Strasse , Sossenheim

Heinrich Hopf (1869–1929) was head of the city council from 1919 to 1924.

Heinrich-Kegelmann-Weg , Bergen- Enkheim

Heinrich Kegelmann (1920–1980) made an outstanding contribution to the club life in Bergen-Enkheim, especially as the club president of the Carnival Association 1897 eV Enkheim (KVE) for decades .

Heinrich Kraft Park , Fechenheim

Heinrich Kraft (1903–1971), city councilor from 1960 to 1971

Heinrich-Lanz-Allee , Kalbach

Heinrich Lanz (1838–1905), inventor and manufacturer of agricultural machinery, locomobiles and tractors, which were exported all over the world under the brand name LANZ. John Deere since 1956 .

Heinrich-Limpert-Weg , Sachsenhausen

Heinrich Limpert (1858–1938), Frankfurt painter

Heinrich-Lübke-Strasse , Praunheim

After Heinrich Luebke (1894-1972), the second President of the Federal Republic of Germany , fewer roads are clearly identified as to its predecessor , but Frankfurt gave him a small residential street in the settlement Ebelfeld in Praunheim.

Heinrich-Plett-Strasse , Berkersheim

Heinrich Plett (1908–1963), trade unionist, SPD politician, chairman of Neue Heimat , a non-profit housing association that hit the headlines from 1982 because of the misconduct of its successor and foster son and had to be extensively renovated.

Heinrich-Rößler-Strasse , Nordend

Heinrich Roessler (1845–1924), chemist and factory owner, co-heir of the Frankfurt refinery founded by his father, which later became part of Degussa AG.

Heinrich-Seliger-Strasse , Niederrad

Heinrich Seliger (1888–1956), city councilor and head of school.

Heinrich-Stahl-Strasse , Nied

Heinrich Stahl (1908–1945), citizen of Nied. Executed on January 25, 1945 in the Oranienburg concentration camp for alleged degradation of military strength .

Heinrichstrasse , Gallus

Emperor Heinrich IV. (1050–1106) - from the Salian dynasty - became famous for his proverbial walk to Canossa when he had to ask for his person to be removed from the church exile in an investiture dispute with Pope Gregory VII in Canossa .

Heinrich-Tessenow-Strasse , Praunheim

The street is located in the Westhausen estate of Frankfurt city planning officer Ernst May . Like May, Heinrich Tessenow (1876–1950) was an architect during the Weimar Republic .

Heinrich-Wilhelm-Römer-Anlage , Eckenheim

Heinrich Wilhelm Römer (1836–1909), from 1869 to 1909 the last mayor of Eckenheim before it was incorporated into Frankfurt in 1910.

Heinrich-Zinß-Weg , Bergen- Enkheim

Heinrich Zinß (1875–1931), Mayor of the municipality of Bergen-Enkheim from 1923 to 1931.

Heinz-Herbert-Karry-Strasse , Seckbach, formerly Rotenburger Strasse

The Hessian Minister of Economics, Heinz-Herbert Karry (1920–1981), FDP politician from Frankfurt, was murdered in 1981 in his Seckbacher house on Hofhausstrasse by members of the radical left revolutionary cells .

Heinz-Raspe-Platz , Ostend

Heinz Raspe (1907–1977), engineer and port director in Frankfurt

Heinz-Saalig-Weg , Riederwald

Heinz Saalig (1922–2007), Frankfurt painter and sculptor, co-founder of the artist group "Griesheim School"

Heinzstrasse , Ginnheim

named after a long-established Ginnheim family who still live on this street today

Heisterstrasse , Sachsenhausen

Lorenz Heister (1683–1758), doctor and scientist, born in Frankfurt. Son of Heinrich Heister, floorboard merchant and landlord (inn "Zur Stadt Darmstadt" in Fischergasse, not far from the cathedral). From 1710 professor of anatomy and botany at the University of Altdorf near Nuremberg, founder of scientific surgery and wound medicine.

Heldenbergener Strasse , Bonames

Heldenbergen, since 1970 district of Nidderau in the Main-Kinzig district

Helene-Adler-Weg , Kalbach-Riedberg

Helene Adler (1849–1923), Frankfurt poet

Helene-Lange-Strasse , Kalbach

Helene Lange (1848–1930), educator, pioneer of the women's movement at the end of the 19th century and a promoter of girls' education. According to her u. a. Schools in Höchst and Wiesbaden named.

Helgoländer Strasse , Westend

Helgoland , North Sea island in the German Bight , acquired by Germany in 1890 in exchange for the island of Zanzibar from England. The main income comes from day tourism.

Hellerhofstrasse , Gallus

The former Hellerhof, named after the owner Jakob Heller , who bought it in 1453. Converted to building land around 1902.

Helmholtzstrasse , Ostend

Hermann von Helmholtz (1821-1894 in Charlottenburg) was a German physiologist, physicist and scientific polymath.

Helmut-Coing-Weg , Westend-Nord

Helmut Coing (1912–2000), legal scholar, habilitated in Frankfurt in 1938, from 1941 professor of Roman and civil law there, at times rector and chairman of the West German rectors' conference. 1964 founding director of the Max Planck Institute for European Legal History.

Helmut Sittler Promenade , Fechenheim

Helmut Sittler (1928–2010), according to an acknowledgment, a personality particularly deserving of the common good

Helmut-Walcha-Strasse , Gallus

Helmut Walcha (1907–1991), organist and harpsichordist, who worked in Frankfurt from 1929. Although already blind at the age of 16, he developed into an important Bach interpreter. Since 1933 teacher at the Hoch Conservatory, in 1938 he received a professorship for organ at the Frankfurt University of Music.

Hemmerichsweg , Gallus

A Hemmerich had acquired a farm there around 1748, after which this street and the Hemmerichsgraben flowing parallel to it is named.

Hennegasse , Niederursel

In 1436, Henne Veit zu Ursel sold part of his property in Niederursel to the city of Frankfurt due to a financial emergency

Henning-von-Tresckow-Strasse , Kalbach-Riedberg

Henning von Tresckow (1901–1944), German general and resistance fighter, who committed suicide after the unsuccessful assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on July 20, 1944 , in which he played a major role

Henriette-Fürth-Strasse , Schwanheim

Henriette Fürth (1861–1938), born in Giessen, social politician of Jewish origin and women's rights activist for the German Empire. Long-term city councilor in Frankfurt, chased from office in 1933, she died alone in Bad Ems. Their eight children emigrated.

Henry-Budge-Strasse , Dornbusch (1935–1945 Langemarck Strasse )

Private banker Henry Budge (1840–1928) founded the "Henry and Emma Budge Foundation", which still exists today, in 1920 for older people of Jewish and Christian faith in need of support.
  • Langemark , a place in Belgium where a fierce battle with heavy losses on the German side took place in 1914.

Henschelstrasse , Ostend

The street near the Ostbahnhof is reminiscent of the Henschel industrial dynasty , which owed its rise above all to the construction of locomotives.

Henselstrasse , Niederrad

Karl Hensel (1825–1901), municipal forester, was the first to dedicate the city forest to a recreational area for the Frankfurt population.

Herbartstrasse , Nordend

Johann Friedrich Herbart (1776–1841), philosopher, psychologist and pedagogue, who is considered a classic of pedagogy beyond the German-speaking world.

Herbert-Boehm-Strasse , Niederrad

Herbert Boehm (1894–1954), city building director and head of the local city planning office.

Herbert-von-Meister-Strasse , Sindlingen

Herbert Eugen Albert von Meister (1866–1919), chemist, industrialist and local politician. Thanks to his initiative, the Sindling “villa colony” was built in 1910 for employees of the Hoechst paintworks.

Herbesthaler Strasse , Höchst

Herbesthal , part of Lontzen in eastern, German-speaking Belgium around Eupen , belonged to the German Empire until 1919.

Herborner Strasse , Heddernheim

Herborn , town in the Lahn-Dill district

Herchenhainer Weg , Preungesheim

Herchenhain, since 1972 part of Grebenhain in the Vogelsbergkreis .

Herderstrasse , Nordend

Johann Gottfried Herder (1744–1803), German poet, philosopher, translator and theologian of the Weimar Classics .

Hermann-Brill-Strasse , Sindlingen

Hermann Brill (1895–1959), SPD politician, member of the Thuringian state parliament from 1920 to 1932, imprisoned in the Third Reich , one of the fathers of the Basic Law in 1948 and then a member of the Bundestag, died in Wiesbaden.

Hermann-Eggert-Strasse , Gutleutviertel / Gallus / Griesheim

Hermann Eggert (1844–1920), architect, a. a. of the Frankfurt main train station built between 1883 and 1888 . The previously unnamed private road leads from Camberger Strasse into the Griesheimer Bahnwerk. In 2009, at the request of Deutsche Bahn, it was given its own name with a rail link. This should provide better orientation for truck delivery traffic. Because the railway site cannot be reached at all from the former postal address Erzberger Straße (see municipal submission M 62).

Hermann-Küster-Strasse , Sindlingen

Hermann Küster (1870–1920), Protestant pastor in Höchst, who was also responsible for the Protestants in Sindlingen and Zeilsheim. Co-founder of the Höchst construction association, was heavily involved in popular education.

Hermann-Mäckler-Ring , Kalbach-Riedberg

Hermann Mäckler (1910–1985), German architect. From 1948 headed the reconstruction of the Frankfurt Imperial Cathedral . Other church and secular buildings are z. B. the All Saints Church in Frankfurt, but also the St. Catherine's Hospital and the German Library in Frankfurt.

Hermann Gate , Harheim

one of three historical entrances to the village of Harheim; adorned with an atonement cross

Hermannstrasse , Nordend

Hermann Goldschmidt is said to have been the namesake. He was particularly active in the parcelling of the Adlerflychthof (see Adlerflychtstrasse ).

Hermann-Waibel-Allee , Unterliederbach

Kommerzienrat Hermann Waibel (1881–1945) came from BASF in Ludwigshafen and was responsible for international business as a member of the IG Farben board.

Hermann-Wendel-Strasse , Bockenheim

Hermann Wendel (1884–1936), Balkan researcher, Frankfurt city councilor and SPD member of the Reichstag from 1911 to 1918.

Hermesweg , Northrend

Over a long period of time, the area known as “Schwarzhermannsborn” around 1300 became “Hermannsborn” and ultimately “Im Hermes”.

Herriotstrasse , Schwanheim

Édouard Herriot (1872–1957), French politician, Prime Minister for a short time in 1932, writer and radical socialist .

Herrenapfelstrasse , Preungesheim

Street in the so-called apple district on Frankfurter Bogen, named after a group of apple varieties (Kleiner, Roter, Aargauer Herrenapfel, etc.).

Herrnstrasse , Oberrad

The Teutonic Order , also known as the Order of the Teutonic Lords, had considerable property in Oberrad.

Hersfelder Strasse , Bockenheim

Bad Hersfeld , district town in the Hersfeld-Rotenburg district

Herweghstrasse , Eschersheim

Georg Herwegh (1817–1875), socialist-revolutionary German poet of the Vormärz and translator.

Herxheimerstraße , Gallus (1935–1945 Nothnagelstraße )

Salomon Herxheimer (1842–1899) was a dermatologist in Frankfurt, founded a polyclinic, which his brother Karl Herxheimer, from 1884 director of the skin clinic of the municipal hospital, continued to run.
  • Johann Andreas Benjamin Nothnagel (1729–1804), painter and wallpaper manufacturer

Herzbergstrasse , Niederursel

The Herzberg (Taunus) , 591 m high mountain near the Saalburg in the Hochtaunuskreis , a popular destination for hikers and mountain bikers in the region.

Hesselbergweg , Zeilsheim

named after the 461 m high Hesselberg, not far from Friedrichsdorf

Hessenplatz , Bockenheim

In contrast to its western ( Duchy of Nassau ) and its eastern surroundings ( Free City of Frankfurt ), Bockenheim already belonged to Hesse before 1866 , more precisely to the Electorate of Hesse .

Hessestrasse , Heddernheim

From Olpe originating Brothers Hesse directed in 1853 in the long-on Urselbach lying cold mill a copper hammer one, which later became the United German Metalworks (VDM) emerged.

Heugasse , Unterliederbach

Alley in the former village center of Unterliederbach

Heusingerstraße , Nied

Edmund Heusinger von Waldegg (1817–1886), a German engineer and railway pioneer from Bad Schwalbach, who played a key role in the construction of the Taunus Railway and Homburg Railway, but also earned merit throughout the Reich.

Heussenstammstrasse , Dornbusch

Dr. Karl Heussenstamm (1835–1913), Mayor of Frankfurt, bequeathed a large part of his fortune to a welfare foundation.

Heussleinstrasse , Sindlingen

Georg Martin Heusslein (1754–1833), Catholic pastor in Sindlingen from 1791 to 1829. Before that, pastor in Mombach from 1783 to 1798.

Heylstrasse , Eschersheim

Name of a long-established Eschersheim family that also provided several Eschersheim mayors.

Hi

Hildburghäuser Weg , Zeilsheim (unnamed 1900–1917, Heidelberger Strasse 1917–1928 )

Hildburghausen , district town in the Thuringian district of Hildburghausen

Hildegard-Schaeder-Strasse , Oberrad

Hildegard Schaeder (1902–1984), survivor of the Ravensbrück concentration camp , to which she was admitted in 1943 for favoring Jews, and reported as a writer about this time. She died in Frankfurt.

Hildegard-von-Bingen-Weg , Niederursel

Hildegard von Bingen (1098–1179), abbess and mystic. She dealt with disciplines as diverse as religion, medicine, biology and music.

Hilligengasse , Höchst

After the Hilligenturm (derived from Heiligenturm), a tower in the former city fortifications.

Behind the lamb , old town

This lane led north parallel to the market from the Nürnberger Hof to the chicken market . The eponymous house, Goldenes Lämmchen , was directly adjacent to the Nürnberger Hof, the seat of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange since the end of the 17th century. The Goldene Lämmchen-Hof served as the headquarters of the Blum trading company from 1417 and provided quarters and storage space for external merchants during the trade fairs. Reopened in 2018 as a street in the New Frankfurt Old Town .

Behind the Sausee , Seckbach

Viewed from the Seckbach development, the road lies behind the Sausee , hence the name.

Behind the Bad Wall (old), downtown

In the Middle Ages, this path was still known as Froschgasse , probably named after the Frosch family . Already attested as Slymmengasze from 1368, due to residents with the name Slymme . In the 15th and 16th centuries they wrote Schlymgasze , Schlimmengass and occasionally Schlummengass . From the 17th century onwards, due to a long courtyard or garden wall, it was increasingly also written Behind the Bad Wall , as was the case in Goethe's autobiography. In the 19th century it was given its current name Stiftstraße .

Back alley , Seckbach

To the north of Hintergasse and east of Am Lohrberg street, there used to be a brown coal mine of the Taunus union, as a map from 1867 shows. - In front of the house at Hintergasse 16 are the millstones of the former Seckbacher Mühle, fed by the Mühlbach, a confluence of several sources of the Lohrberg . The curved back alley opens and ends on Hofhausstrasse; it is seen from the town center behind the town hall .

Hirzenhainer Strasse , Eckenheim

Hirzenhain , municipality in the Wetterau district , branch office of the Frankfurt-Heddernheim labor education camp in the Third Reich , where numerous executions were carried out shortly before the end of the war.

Ho

Hochschildstrasse , Preungesheim (1934–1945 Taufsteinstrasse )

Samuel Hochschild (1852–1911), a feed trader of Jewish descent, bought a large area in Preungesheim and arranged the development on his own.

Hochstädter Strasse , Seckbach

Hochstadt , district of Maintal and known for its well-preserved old town and its cider press (Der Alte Hochstädter) .

Highest market , highest

The square between Melchiorstraße, Justinuskirchstraße and Antoniterstraße was laid out in 1923 as the new Höchst Marktplatz.

Highest castle square , Höchst

The square in front of the Höchst Castle in the well-preserved old town is one of the most beautiful city squares in Frankfurt.

Hochstraße , downtown

The elevated road runs along the former city wall and probably owes its name to the fact that it was the highest street within the city walls.

Hoechster-Farben-Strasse , Sindlingen

Paints were the first products and therefore also part of the name of the former Farbwerke Hoechst AG for a long time .

Hoffeldstrasse , Oberrad

Road that led to the "Hofeld", the fields and meadows of the water yard.

Hofgartenweg , Seckbach

The name can be traced back to the gardens of the Seckbach farms.

Hofhausstrasse , Seckbach

named after the former "Hofhaus", which once belonged to the Seckbacher Hofgut der Schelme von Bergen .

Hofheimer Strasse , Zeilsheim

Hofheim am Taunus , district town of the Main-Taunus district , immediately adjacent to Zeilsheim

Hofstrasse , downtown

Former courtyard for the manor houses there on Untermainkai.

Hohe Kanzel , Zeilsheim

The Hohe Kanzel , 592 m high mountain near Niedernhausen in the Rheingau-Taunus district

Hohemarkstrasse , Niederursel

the Hohemark, district of the city of Oberursel , terminus of the Taunusbahn , now U3 underground. Forest cooperative of 19 villages that already existed in Franconian times. In the Napoleonic era, the cooperative was dissolved and the property divided.

Hohe Straße , Bergen -Enkheim, connection road for various emigrant farms and for agricultural use on the Berger ridge to Marköbel .

As Via Regia , important imperial, pilgrimage and trade route between the Rhine and Wroclaw in Silesia since the Middle Ages, which bears the name "Hohe Straße" in the Frankfurt-Leipzig section, presumably because it avoided the wetlands and marshland as much as possible and so on could be used in all seasons. The Via Regia was a prehistoric connection from Spain to Russia. In what is now Frankfurt's urban area, it ran from Höchst (old Elisabethenstrasse ) over the Nidda near Nied ( Rödelheimer Strasse , now Oeserstrasse ), past Rebstock through the Biegwald ( Biegweg ), then north past Bockenheim , over the Ginnheimer Höhe ( Diebsgrundweg ), the Dornbusch ( Marbachweg ) and the Lohrberg and mountains .

Höhenblick , Ginnheim

A settlement built on the “Ginnheimer Höhe” by the city architect Ernst May with a very beautiful view of the Taunus heights. He built a villa for himself in a prominent place with an unobstructed view at Ludwig-Tieck-Straße 11.

Hohenstaufenstrasse , Gallus

The House of Hohenstaufen (the Staufers) provided several German emperors in the High Middle Ages, among them the well-known Friedrich I , known as Barbarossa , or his grandson Friedrich II. The Staufer emperors contributed a lot to the urban development of Frankfurt.

Hohensteiner Strasse , Bockenheim

Hohenstein (Untertaunus) , municipality in the Rheingau-Taunus district . A naming after Hohenstein in East Prussia (today Olsztynek ) is also conceivable , since almost all neighboring streets bear the names of East Prussian cities (e.g. Tilsiter, Königsberger, Rossittener, Elbinger, Lötzener Str.).

Höhenstrasse , Bornheim

until it was incorporated into Frankfurt it was still called Taunusstrasse , but it already existed in the Bahnhofsviertel. One then remembered the name "die Höh", which was used earlier for the Taunus , cf. "Bad Homburg vor der Höhe" and the problem was solved. See explanation under "Homburger Straße".

Hoherodskopfstrasse , Preungesheim

The Hoherodskopf (764 m) is the second highest mountain in Vogelsberg in Upper Hesse . The Hoherodskopfstraße was called Hoherodskopfweg until 1962 and was changed and renamed as part of a new settlement with row houses for families.

Holbeinstrasse and Holbeinsteg , Sachsenhausen

The Holbeins, a painter dynasty: Hans Holbein the Elder (around 1465–1524). He mainly painted religious works in the late Gothic style. Later came the Renaissance elements added. In his later creative years, his pictures were very similar to those of his son Hans Holbein the Younger (1497–1543), who had been an apprentice to him. After the Protestant iconoclasm in Basel in 1529, he hardly received any commissions and therefore left the city for England in 1532, where he worked as the court painter to King Henry VIII .

Hölderlinstrasse , Ostend

Johann Christian Friedrich Hölderlin (1770–1843), poet, is one of the most important German poets. His work combines the classical and romantic. In 1796 he was employed as a private tutor for the Frankfurt banker Gontard and fell madly in love with his wife Susette.

Höllbergstrasse , Eschersheim

A ravine already used in Roman times, "the Helle". It was part of the Roman road coming from Nida and leading via Preungesheim and Bergen to the small fort Langendiebach .

Hollerkopfstrasse , Niederursel

The Hollerkopf, 616 m high mountain in the Hochtaunus, south of Wehrheim- Obernhain

Höllgasse , old town

One of the many curiosities of old Frankfurt was naming the alley in front of the cathedral tower "Höllgasse". The eastern side of the street was torn down in 1900 in order to "expose" the cathedral, which was fashionable in many cities at the time and was seriously considered valuable in terms of monument preservation. On the corner of the market stood the reconstructed Goldene Waage house , one of the most beautiful half-timbered houses in the city.

Elder path , Frankfurter Berg

The elder (Sambucus) form a genus of plants in the musk herb family (Adoxaceae).

Holzgraben , old town

Part of the first city fortification, the " Staufen wall ". After the construction of the substantially expanded city wall, the trench, which was now useless for defense and therefore filled in, served as a storage place for wood and as a shooting range for crossbowmen. From 1580 the house was built on this street.

Holzhausenstrasse , Nordend / Westend

The patrician family of the Holzhausen is named after their former place of residence Burgholzhausen , now part of Friedrichsdorf . It achieved an important position in the city and was the mayor alone 60 times. Extinguished in Frankfurt in 1923. The Holzhausenschlösschen was the family seat from 1740.

Wooden hedge , low wheel

The wooded area "Holzhecke", formerly the main entrance to the Frankfurt city forest, was bought by Frankfurt around 1483. In 1863 the racecourse was set up on the site against strong resistance , for which 60 acres of forest were cut.

Holzmannstrasse , Ostend

Philipp Holzmann (1836–1904), a building contractor from Sprendlingen, founded Philipp Holzmann AG in 1849 , which soon made a name for itself internationally and built the Baghdad railway in 1902, for example . After it had temporarily become the largest construction company in Germany, it had to file spectacular bankruptcy in 2002 and has been liquidated since then.

Homburger Landstrasse , Nordend-West, Preungesheim, Eckenheim, Frankfurter Berg, Bonames, Nieder-Eschbach

Since Niedereschbach was incorporated in 1972 and the through streets there were renamed Homburger Landstrasse , it has been the longest street in the city and actually leads to the city limits of Bad Homburg vor der Höhe ( Ober-Eschbach ).

Homburger Strasse , Bockenheim

Bad Homburg vor der Höhe , district town of the Hochtaunus district . "The Hoh" was to the 18th century, the common name for the mountain range that then based on a mention of the Roman writer Tacitus in Taunus has been renamed.

Homolkaweg , Unterliederbach

Dr. Ing. Benno Homolka (1860–1925), chemist at the Hoechst paintworks

Honsellbrücke and Honsellstrasse , Ostend

Max Honsell (1843–1910) an important hydraulic engineer and civil engineer, completed the correction of the Upper Rhine in Tulla. 1908 Minister of Finance of Baden.

Hornauer Strasse , Gallus

Hornau , district of Kelkheim (Taunus) in the Main-Taunus district

Hörselbergstrasse , Unterliederbach

The Great Hörselberg (484 m) is a mountain in Thuringia .

Horst-Lippmann-Platz , city center

Horst Lippmann (1927–1997), jazz musician, radio writer and director, founded the German Jazz Festival in Frankfurt in 1953. From 1950 he ran a renowned ( Lippmann and Rau ) concert agency in Frankfurt with Fritz Rau , where the Eisenacher- born died in 1997.

Horst-Schulmann-Strasse , Ostend

Horst Schulmann (1933–1994), banker, currency expert, State Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Finance from 1982 to 1989, died in Frankfurt

Hospitalstrasse , Höchst

Named after the original servants' hospital from 1858, the new building on Gotenstrasse was completed in 1876

Hostatostrasse , Höchst

This important Höchst shopping street honors the legendary founder of Höchst, Hostato .

Howaldtstrasse , Ostend

Bernhard Howaldt (1850–1908), German entrepreneur from the early days in the fields of mechanical engineering, shipbuilding and plant construction and made a significant contribution to the industrialization of the city of Kiel. The Howaldtswerke managed by him were later merged into HDW and since 2005 a company of ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems.

H.-P.-Müller-Platz , Heddernheim

Heinz P. Müller (d. 1998), Frankfurter dialect poet, usually published as HP Müller, published the Frankfurter Kalenner for Uzer un Schenner for the first time in 1968 ; The model was Friedrich Stoltze's old Frankfurt city and country calendar .

Hu

Hubertusgasse , Bergen -Enkheim

After the area around the former Hubertus Chapel, which was given as a fief to the rascals of Bergen. The Hubertus chapel burned down completely in 1600 and was no longer rebuilt.

Hufnagelstrasse , Gallus

Wilhelm Friedrich Hufnagel (1754–1830), Evangelical Lutheran Consistorial Councilor, initiator for founding the model school in 1803.

Hügelstraße , Eckenheim, Dornbusch, Ginnheim, a short section on one side also in Eschersheim

no information about the origin available yet

Huguenot avenue , Sachsenhausen and Neu-Isenburg

Huguenots , Calvinists expelled from France in the 17th century , founded the city of Neu-Isenburg on the southern city limits of Frankfurt in 1699 . The road leads through the Isenburg city center to the Isenburg aisle in the Sachsenhausen area.

Hugo-Eckener-Ring , airport

Hugo Eckener (1868–1954), successor to Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin . Under his direction u. a. the LZ 129 "Hindenburg". Since he did not support the politics of the National Socialists, he had to hand over the management of the zeppelin works to the airship captain Ernst A. Lehmann in 1936 .

Hugo-Güldner-Strasse , Kalbach

Hugo Güldner (1866–1926), German engineer, inventor and engine builder, whose name today is primarily associated with pioneering achievements in diesel engine construction and the Güldner agricultural tractor brand name.

Hugo-Junkers-Strasse , Fechenheim

Hugo Junkers (1859–1935), German engineer and entrepreneur with enormous creativity in many sectors (gas appliances, aircraft, engines). The traditional Junkers brand is still on the market for household appliances, although he had to sell his Junkers & Co. to Robert Bosch GmbH as early as 1932 . World famous the aircraft based on his patents, from which the " Tante Ju " became the most famous.

Hugo-Kallenbach-Strasse , Sindlingen

Hugo Kallenbach (1872–1928), editor with a focus on social policy, co-founder of the “Bauverein für Höchst und Umgebung”.

Hugo-Sinzheimer-Strasse , Bonames

Hugo Sinzheimer (1875–1945), professor at the Academy of Labor in Frankfurt with a focus on labor law , SPD politician, member of the Weimar National Assembly . Dismissed in 1933 because of his Jewish descent, he survived in the Dutch underground.

Hugo-Wolf-Strasse , Schwanheim

Hugo Wolf (1860–1903), Austrian composer. Best known for his song settings of Mörike , Eichendorff and Goethe poems .

Chicken market (also sausage market) , old town

Reconstructed square north of the market . The Neugasse and the Gasse Hinter dem Lämmchen opened into the chicken market . 1974 to 2010 the square with the technical town hall was built over.

Hühnerweg , Sachsenhausen

People joke or stupidity led to the word corruption barrows to "chicken graves", which are plentiful in the area and prove the early settlement of the area.
The Hülya-Platz in Bockenheim

Hülya-Platz , Bockenheim

Hülya-Platz is located in front of a retirement home between Friesengasse and Kleine Seestrasse in Bockenheim . Not very big, but still unique in the Federal Republic of Germany: It is the first place that commemorates a victim of neo-Nazis , namely the 9-year-old Hülya who died on May 25, 1993 in an arson attack in Solingen together with four other victims Genc .
A replica of the Hammering Man , even if only the size of a man, was erected on the square by a citizens' initiative on the occasion of a demonstration against right-wing radicalism and left there after discussions in the local advisory board . It shows the hammering man hitting a swastika with a hammer . With a crank you could do the movements yourself. At the beginning of 2008 the magistrate had the sculpture removed because of the alleged danger from rusted parts. The initiative created a new one that can be found there again since autumn 2008.

Humboldtstrasse , Nordend

Wilhelm Freiherr von Humboldt (1767-1835), statesman and scholar was 1816 / 1817 in Frankfurt as a representative of Prussia at the foundation of the Bundestag involved. His brother Alexander von Humboldt was also often in Frankfurt.

Humbrachtstrasse , Nordend

The Frankfurt patrician family Humbracht had moved from Speyer in the 14th century. The family provided several mayors and lay judges. Elevated to the baron status in 1883, the name has expired in Frankfurt since 1896.

Humperdinckstrasse , Sachsenhausen

Engelbert Humperdinck (1854–1921), Frankfurt composer, wrote a. a. the opera Hansel and Gretel .

Humserstrasse , Nordend

Gustav Humser (1836–1918), Privy Councilor of Justice, long-time chairman of the Frankfurt city council.

Hünstelder Strasse , Fechenheim

Hünfeld , town in the district of Fulda

Hungener Strasse , Northrend

Hungen , town in the district of Giessen

Hunsrückstrasse , Unterliederbach

The Hunsrück is part of the Rhenish Slate Mountains , the continuation of the Taunus on the left bank of the Rhine .

Huswertstrasse , Preungesheim

Huswert, oldest named citizen from «Bruningesheim», from which the name Preungesheim is derived. He gave some property to the Lorsch monastery .

Huthmacherstrasse , Sindlingen

Franz-Josef Huthmacher, last Mayor of Sindling from 1888 until it was incorporated into Höchst in 1917. He continued a family tradition, because Peter Huthmacher (from 1815 to 1825) and Philipp Huthmacher (from 1825 to 1836) were mayors in Sindlingen.

Hy

Hydronstrasse , Fechenheim

Hydron is a trademark for a class of dyes that was manufactured by Cassella Farbwerke Mainkur.

Hynspergstrasse , Nordend

the patrician family Hynsperg had immigrated from Kaiserslautern in the 15th century and were taken in by Alten Limpurg in 1458 . With the councilor and alder Hector von Hynsperg, the family in Frankfurt went out in 1727.

Individual evidence

  1. "vff der hawermauern". Hessian field names. In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
  2. Karl Hieke: The country doctor and pharmaceutical manufacturer Johann Andreas Eisenbarth (1663-1727). Publishing house Dr. Eike Pies, Sprockhövel 2002, p. 64, ISBN 3-928441-42-6
  3. http://www.st-jakobus-harheim.de/php/Kreuz/Kreuz.htm Diocese of Mainz, St. Jakobus / Harheim, "Re-inauguration of the restored cross at the Hermannspforte on September 8th, 2005", accessed on November 10th 2016
  4. ^ Johann Georg Batton. Local description of the city of Frankfurt am Main. Sixth booklet containing the description of the rest of the Neustadt. Associations for history and antiquity in Frankfurt a. M., Frankfurt am Main, 1871. Online version