Marienhagen (Duingen)

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Marienhagen
Patch Duingen
Marienhagen coat of arms
Coordinates: 52 ° 2 ′ 23 ″  N , 9 ° 41 ′ 19 ″  E
Height : 212 m above sea level NHN
Area : 6.23 km²
Residents : 773  (Nov. 1, 2016)
Population density : 124 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : November 1, 2016
Postal code : 31089
Area code : 05185
Marienhagen (Lower Saxony)
Marienhagen

Location of Marienhagen in Lower Saxony

Marienhagen in the district of Hildesheim
Marienhagen in the district of Hildesheim

Marie Hagen is a district of the borough Duingen in Hildesheim in Lower Saxony .

Marienhagen, view to the northeast

geography

location

Marienhagen is located in the Leinebergland east of the Weserbergland Schaumburg-Hameln Nature Park between Elze in the north and Eschershausen in the south. The Thüster Berg extends to the northwest and the Duinger Berg to the southeast .

history

Friedrich Rogge (1850–1900) founded a lime works in 1873. The material was brought to Banteln by the narrow-gauge railway and to the Ilseder Hütte with the Hildesheim-Peiner Kreis-Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft . At times, people were also transported by train. The material was mined in the Marienhagen quarry. Some prisoners of war worked there during World War II. There, too, had Trillke plant for the production of starters for tanks a project in U-shifting . The railway and plant were shut down in 1961.

During the Second World War , Marienhagen was hit by four high explosive and three incendiary bombs on July 26, 1941 . Five houses were badly damaged.

Incorporations

On November 1, 2016, the member communities of the Duingen integrated community , including Marienhagen, merged to form the new Duingen district.

Population development

year 1895 1910 1925 1933 1939 1950 1973 1975 2000 2015 2016
Residents 690 761 722 688 766 1365 1073 1091 888 727 773
source ¹

¹ according to the version history of the place

politics

City council and mayor

Marienhagen is represented at the municipal level by the Duingen municipal council.

coat of arms

The municipality was awarded the municipal coat of arms on July 24, 1939 by the President of the Province of Hanover . The district administrator from Alfeld handed it over on November 29 of the same year.

Marienhagen coat of arms
Blazon : " Shield divided above in red the diagonally crossed silver mountain hammers ( mallets and iron ) with golden stems, below in gold a green , two-leaf beech rice with an open, green, four-leaf fruit cup containing two golden booknuts ."
Foundation of the coat of arms: The forest and mountain village of Marienhagen, once laboriously nourishing itself from the meager yield of its mostly less fertile fields and from forest work, flourished and prospered through large quarries, whose founder Fritz Rogge - a son of Marienhagen - was, hence the two mountain hammers . The beech rice indicates the nearby, beautiful beech forests, which are loved by all local residents.

Culture and sights

Buildings

  • Evangelical Marienkirche

Leisure and recreation

There are hiking opportunities around Marienhagen, for example on the Duinger Berg and Thüster Berg. A hiking route runs from Marienhagen over the ridge of the Thüster Berg to the Lönsturm and on to Salzhemmendorf .

societies

  • Musikverein Marienhagen e. V. (concert band, since 1967)
  • TSV Marienhagen e. V. (football, table tennis, badminton, judo, gymnastics)

Economy and Infrastructure

Establishments

There are a few smaller craft businesses in Marienhagen.

traffic

Entrance to Oberdorf

Marienhagen is connected to the road network via the federal highway 240 , which runs directly through the town.

Public facilities

Social facilities

  • There is a kindergarten in the former village school

Web links

Commons : Marienhagen  - collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. a b municipalities in Germany by area, inhabitants and postcode. (XLS; 4.4 MB) → See under: No. 1776 . In: Destatis website. Federal Statistical Office, December 31, 2015, accessed on June 29, 2019 .
  2. a b Population of the Leinebergland community. (PDF; 14 kB) Flecken Duingen - Marienhagen district. In: Internet site of the Leinebergland community. November 1, 2016, accessed June 29, 2019 .
  3. Carsten Schulz: Lime works have shaped the entire region for many years . In: Leine and Deister newspaper . Local. Newspaper publisher F. Wolff & Sohn, Gronau December 31, 1997 ( digitized [PDF; 2.5 MB ; accessed on June 29, 2019]).
  4. Ruhrthal locomotives - factory no. 3621 / 1959. In: Internet site Along the rails. Retrieved June 29, 2019 .
  5. Carsten Watsack: The railways of the Ilseder hut . Self-published, Ilsede 2006, ISBN 3-935944-02-0 , p. 44 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  6. ^ Wilhelm Barner : Kalkwerk Marienhagen . In: Our home - the land between Hildesheim Forest and Ith . August Lax Verlagbuchhandlung, Hildesheim / Leipzig 1931 ( digitized version (limited preview) [PDF; 2.3  MB ; accessed on June 29, 2019] panel 60).
  7. Rolf Keller, Silke Petry (ed.): Soviet prisoners of war on the job 1941–1945. Documents on living and working conditions in Northern Germany (=  series of publications by the Lower Saxony Memorial Foundation . Volume 2 ). Wallstein Verlag , Göttingen 2013, ISBN 978-3-8353-1227-2 , p. 329 .
  8. Thomas Krassmann: Underground relocations of the German armaments industry in southern Lower Saxony. (PDF; 365 kB) Table 1/4. In: www.mineral-exploration.de. August 2016, accessed June 29, 2019 .
  9. Lower Saxony State Chancellery (Ed.): Law on the unification of the communities of Banteln, Betheln, Brüggen, Despetal, Rheden and the city of Gronau (Leine) as well as on the new formation of the Duingen area and the Leinebergland community, Hildesheim district . Lower Saxony Law and Ordinance Gazette (Nds. GVBl.). No.  22/2015 . Hanover December 15, 2015, p. 399-400 ( Digitalisat ( Memento of 13 May 2019 Internet Archive ) [PDF; 278 kB ; accessed on June 29, 2019] pp. 17–18).
  10. ^ Ulrich Schubert: Community directory Germany 1900 - Landkreis Gronau. Information from December 1, 1910. In: www.gemeindeververzeichnis.de. February 3, 2019, accessed June 29, 2019 .
  11. a b c Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Alfeld district (→ see under: No. 49 ). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  12. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Official municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany . Final results according to the September 13, 1950 census. Volume  33 . W. Kohlhammer Verlag, Stuttgart / Cologne August 1952, p. 33 , col. 1 ( digital version [PDF; 26.4 MB ; accessed on June 29, 2019] Alfeld district, p. 42).
  13. Lower Saxony State Administration Office (ed.): Municipal directory for Lower Saxony . Municipalities and municipality-free areas. Self-published, Hanover January 1, 1973, p. 28 ( digital copy [PDF; 21.3 MB ; accessed on September 20, 2019] District Alfeld (Leine)).
  14. ^ Municipalities in Germany by area and population. (XLSX; 895 kB) → See under: No. 1380 . In: Destatis website. Federal Statistical Office, December 31, 1975, accessed on June 29, 2019 .
  15. ^ Municipalities in Germany by area, inhabitants and postcode. (XLS; 3.1 MB) → See under: No. 1646 . In: Destatis website. Federal Statistical Office, December 31, 2000, accessed on June 29, 2019 .
  16. ^ A b Wilhelm Barner: Coat of arms and seal of the Alfeld district . Rebinding. Lax GmbH & Co. KG, Hildesheim 1998 ( digitized version of the text part of the first edition from 1940 [PDF; 10.0 MB ; accessed on June 11, 2019]).