Nochen (Gummersbach)

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City of Gummersbach
Coordinates: 51 ° 1 ′ 48 ″  N , 7 ° 28 ′ 21 ″  E
Height : 203–221 m above sea level NN
Residents : 73  (Jun. 30, 2016)
Postal code : 51647
Area code : 02261
Nochen (Gummersbach)
Bones

Location of Nochen in Gummersbach

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Nochen is a district of the city of Gummersbach in the Oberbergisches Kreis in the administrative district of Cologne in North Rhine-Westphalia .

geography

Nochen is located 7.8 km from the center near the western city limits of Gummersbach at the south-southwestern foot of the Nordhelle (390 m above sea level) in the valley of the Gelpe, an approximately 5.2 km long tributary of the Leppe . The place has been a traffic junction since ancient times; This is where today's state roads L 98 (from Apfelbaum via Berghausen into Leppetal) and L 306 (from Meinerzhagen to Engelskirchen ) intersect . Neighboring Gummersbacher districts are Berghausen in the northwest, Niedergelpe in the northeast, Apfelbaum in the southeast and Peisel , which is directly adjacent to the southwest.

history

In 1542 a Thomas was named " op der Noycken " in a Turkish tax list . 1789 Nochen is recorded as an independent place on the map of Carl Friedrich von Wiebeking . So far there is no further evidence of the time the settlement was built. It seems, however, that in ancient times Nochen (probably as a single courtyard) was assigned to the neighboring Peisel; therefore see the older story under Peisel .

The hamlet of Nochen belonged to the imperial rule of Gimborn-Neustadt until 1806 . After belonging to the Grand Duchy of Berg (1806-1813) and a provisional transitional administration , the region came to the Kingdom of Prussia in 1815 on the basis of the agreements made at the Congress of Vienna . Under the Prussian administration, the place first belonged to the Gimborn district (1816–1825) and then to the Gummersbach district in the Rhine Province . In 1843 the village had 82 inhabitants who lived in 17 houses.

Until the early 19th century bones belonged to the peasantry Niedergelpe that in 1819 part of village Gimborn was. With its dissolution in 1974, the place came together with the rest of the old farmers to the municipality of Gummersbach.

From the beginning of the 19th century, one of the four dairy cooperatives existed in Nochen in the Gummersbach district, which was taken over by the municipality during World War I and then leased to private customers in the 1920s.

economy

Nochen is the headquarters of Opitz-Consulting with 400 employees in 2010.

Church institutions

In the village is the Catholic Church of St. Hedwig, built 1962–66 according to plans by the architect Hans Lob from Siegburg. Until the end of 2009, the church belonged to the parish in Gimborn. Since January 2010 she has been part of the parish of St. Mariä Visitation Marienheide.

traffic

The Nochen bus stop is connected by bus routes 307 (Gummersbach Bf - Berghausen - Lindlar ) and 316 (Gummersbach Bf - Neuremscheid - Lindlar).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Landesvermessungsamt Nordrhein-Westfalen (ed.): Nordrhein-Westfalen. Official topographic maps ("Top50") . Federal Agency for Cartography and Geodesy, 2003, ISBN 3-89439-721-7 .
  2. ^ Klaus Pampus: First documentary naming of Oberbergischer places (= contributions to Oberbergischen history. Sonderbd. 1). Oberbergische Department 1924 eV of the Bergisches Geschichtsverein, Gummersbach 1998, ISBN 3-88265-206-3 .
  3. ^ Carl Friedrich von Wiebeking : Carte of the Duchy of Berg. 1789.
  4. a b Royal Government of Cologne (Ed.): Overview of the constituent parts and list of all localities and individually named properties of the government district of Cologne, according to districts, mayor's offices and parishes, with details of the number of people and the residential buildings, as well as the confession, Jurisdictions, military and former state relationships. Made on the basis of the officially requested messages. sn, Cologne 1845, p. 27 ( online edition at the Düsseldorf State Library )
  5. a b Jürgen Woelke: Alt-Gummersbach. In contemporary images and views. Volume 2: A foray through the city and its 70 villages. Gronenberg, Gummersbach 1980, ISBN 3-88265-024-9 .
  6. ^ Opitz Consulting homepage. Retrieved March 6, 2017 .
  7. The history of the origins of the St. Hedwig Church in Nochen .