Ostringhausen

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Ostringhausen Burger Strasse 19/21

Ostringhausen is a district of Wermelskirchen and is located west of the city center on the road to Burg an der Wupper in North Rhine-Westphalia .

The name indicates that it comes from the settlement period of the Bergisches Land. The old Bergisch half-timbered house, known today as Burgerstrasse 19/21, is remarkable. For centuries it was the residence of the judges and probably also the courtroom of the Bornefeld office .

In 1663 Bertramus Robens, judge of the Bornenfelt qui altari s district. Rosary dedit pullchere sybilla cum de mysterys, in the brotherhood book of the Rosary Brotherhood in Lindlar.

On December 20, 1666, a hereditary homage was paid in the house of the judge Bertram Robens. The minutes were kept by Jacob Brosius, who also lives in Ostringhausen.

On July 23, 1680 a hearing takes place in the proceedings of the court clerk Jacobus Brosius against the court leaseholder in Ostringhausen of the Girtrut Kuner Wittib Mercatoris in Cologne because of the right of way to Eisenhammer am Heiderbach. Witness Johann Drieß said that there was no hammer down there earlier and that the iron carts had sometimes come back single, as if they had then driven over the Heiderbach. Witness Drutgen Marcus from Pohlhausen says that there is no iron route through the Heiderbach .

In 1696 the clerk's heirs pay Gut 32 Albus in tax.

On July 17, 1726, bailiff Mattheis Werner von Nagel complained to the court chamber about the interrogations of his residents in Bornefeld by the judge from Burg Gumpertz and his brother-in-law, the clerk Privy Councilor Brosii, about the hunting breaches. The Brosii also intervened in his rights as a bailiff through the minutes that were held.

On December 30th, 1755: Mathias Brosy owes debts to the Schmidt zur Eich heirs which are considered lost.

In the original cadastre from 1828 to 1830, Peter Faßbender and Peter Arnold Koll together own 113 acres. This is the size of the undivided property.

Various other messages about the owners and the families Faßbender, Koll, Lenz and most recently Schröder have survived to this day. Today the house is used purely for residential purposes.

See also

Sources and literature

  • Breidenbach, NJ, sources & materials, private collection, Wermelskirchen 2001, vol. 100, p. 81
  • Landesarchiv NRW, Dept. Rhineland, HStAD Fa Schumacher, VII, 16, p. 4 and VII, 20, p. 34; HStAD JB III 931
  • Breidenbach, NJ, Families, Property and Taxes in Wermelskirchen, Dabringhausen and Dhünn, 1666 to 1991, Wermelskirchen 2003, p. 152ff, Verlag Gisela Breidenbach, ISBN 3-980-2801-8-7

Coordinates: 51 ° 8 ′  N , 7 ° 12 ′  E