Loerbrocks

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Loerbrocks, originally also Loer-Broickhusen , was a place in the then rural community of Lohne , in the office of the same name.

history

The place on the Ahse arose from three courtyards. The so-called little courtyard was feeble from the Füchten house . Johann von Lüdinghausen, called Wolf zur Füchten, enfeoffed Johann Zweiffeler in 1560 on the high road to Soest and in 1563 with the court from Andreas Klepping, who belonged to the Soest patriciate. Johann Wulff von Lüdinghausen, an assessor of the court in Speier, declared that he had enfeoffed the mayor of Soest, Andreas Klepping, with the court. In 1608 Johann von Lüdinghausen enfeoffed Johann Klepping, who in 1616 was enfeoffed again by Friedrich von Lüdinghausen called Wolf, a cathedral scholaster in Hildesheim and heir to Füchten.

The lords of the so-called great court at Brockhausen were the lords of Fürstenberg zu Waterlappe. Friedrich von Fürstenberg zur Waterlappe enfeoffed Andreas Klepping with a quarter of the court in 1563; he was enfeoffed again in 1568 by Kaspar von Fürstenberg. Lienability was later bought from the von Fürstenberg family by the vassals . According to the cadastre of 1685, Schulte von Loerbrocks paid the lease to the Soest patricians of Kubach, Varsheim and von Mengen, as well as to the minor races of Florence Brandis zu Werl.

There is no information about the third farm, nor has its name been passed down.

literature

  • A. Ludorf: The architectural and art monuments of Westphalia, published by the Provinzial-Verbande der Provinz Westfalen, 1905.