Hamburg-Othmarschen
Othmarschen district of Hamburg |
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Coordinates | 53 ° 33 '10 " N , 9 ° 53' 40" E |
surface | 6.0 km² |
Residents | 15,737 (Dec. 31, 2019) |
Population density | 2623 inhabitants / km² |
Post Code | 2 .... |
prefix | 040 |
district | Altona district |
Transport links | |
Highway | |
Train | |
Source: Statistical Office for Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein |
Othmarschen is a district in western Hamburg . It belongs to the Altona district and is one of the Elbe suburbs .
geography
Rivers and streams
Historically, there was the Flottbek (probably originally Vlothbeke) (headwaters north of the road Quellental in Westerpark ) that Teufelsbek (the name of the ship investor Teufelsbrück responsible on the Elbe, the headwaters of the Baur road at Othmarschen Park ) and the Röbbek in the streets Röbbek and Seestraße ( headwaters at Groß-Flottbeker Markt). The Röbbek is only preserved by the street name. The original streambed dried up, was backfilled and is only detectable in a few places due to slight subsidence. Flottbek and Teufelsbek are also largely dried out (also due to changes in the groundwater during the construction of the Elbe tunnel), some of them also piped. A section of the Teufelsbek trench has been preserved in Walderseestrasse between Reventlowstrasse and the A7 junction. The course of the Teufelsbek and the Flottbek in Jenischpark can also be seen; both streams drain into the Elbe.
Neighboring districts
Othmarschen borders the Elbe in the south , Groß Flottbek in the north, Ottensen in the east and Nienstedten in the west . It covers the eastern part of the Klein Flottbek district .
history
Othmarschen was first mentioned in a document in 1317 as Villa Othmerschen . The name is a compound, the basic word of which is mnd. Plural merschen for hd. "Marshes", "swamp lands" is. The final word could be interpreted as “barren”, “uninhabited”. Although there is no evidence for the origin of a personal name, in particular the existence of a hermit named Otmar cannot be proven, and it has long been considered disproved that the place name used to be Otmarsheim or Otmarshusen , corresponding (false) Interpretations.
In the Middle Ages it was a farming village with a few farms and belonged to the Hamburg St. Petri community. It was not until 1547/1548 that the new Ottensen parish was built with the construction of a church in Ottens. In 1759 the thatched Röperhof was built by the Röper family on today's Agathe-Lasch-Weg . Together with the Schmidtschen Hof located next to it, it is the last remaining part of the historic Othmarsch village center. Around the same time, the first country houses of wealthy merchants were built on today's Elbchaussee . Othmarschen was a small suburb until the 19th century. Together with Övelgönne it had only 362 inhabitants in 1855. In 1867 Othmarschen came to the Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein . In 1882 the first stop was built on the Altona-Blankenese suburban railway line, namely the Groß-Flottbek-Othmarschen stop on demand . In 1883, the manufacturer Ferdinand Ancker and other partners founded the Terrain Consortium , which implemented the Neu-Othmarschen villa complex , a garden city for the wealthy in the community of Groß Flottbek. In 1890 Othmarschen fell to Altona together with Bahrenfeld and Övelgönne. Othmarschen has been connected to the S-Bahn network since 1897 ; the stop on demand was now a regular S-Bahn stop, for a long time as the Großflottbek-Othmarschen stop , now as Othmarschen . In 1893 a horse-drawn tram was set up in the village. In 1899 a tram led to Altona, the following year the construction of the Christ Church on Roosensweg was finished. Due to the Greater Hamburg Law , Othmarschen came to Hamburg together with Altona in 1937/1938. In 1939, Othmarschen received the eastern part of Klein Flottbek, the southernmost part of Groß Flottbek and the south-western part of Bahrenfeld. With effect from May 11, 1951, the District Administration Act in the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg (1949) divided the then Flottbek-Othmarschen district and the Othmarschen district emerged. The 1960s and 1970s changed the old Othmarschen considerably: the historic village center had to give way to the construction of the federal motorway 7 and the Elbe tunnel that began in Othmarschen .
statistics
- Minor quota: 20.5% [Hamburg average: 16.3% (2017)].
- Elderly rate: 20.9% [Hamburg average: 18.2% (2017)].
- Proportion of foreigners: 12.1% [Hamburg average: 17.1% (2017)].
- Unemployment rate: 2.5% [Hamburg average: 5.2% (2017)].
Othmarschen is one of the richest districts in Hamburg. The average income per taxpayer here is 108,258 euros annually (2013) and is thus around three times as high as the overall average in Hamburg.
politics
For the general election, Othmarschen belongs to the Altona constituency . The 2015 state elections in Othmarschen resulted in the following:
Citizenship election | SPD | Green | CDU | FDP | left | AfD | Rest |
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2020 | 34.4% | 24.2% | 16.6% | 11.7% | 5.5% | 3.1% | 4.5% |
2015 | 38.1% | 14.6% | 16.3% | 19.1% | 4.8% | 4.4% | 2.7% |
2011 | 37.8% | 11.5% | 26.9% | 16.3% | 3.4% | - | 4.2% |
Culture and sights
Museums
The art exhibitions of the Jenischhaus and Ernst-Barlach-Haus can be seen in Jenischpark .
Buildings
A number of villas of various styles can be seen along the Elbchaussee . Other villas are further away from the Elbe, such as Haus K. in O. and Jenischhaus . The over 250-year-old Christianeum high school has been housed in a functionalist concrete building by Arne Jacobsen in Othmarschen since 1974 .
Parks
The Elbe beach at Övelgönne and the Hans-Leip- Ufer are popular with walkers. Larger green spaces are the Jenischpark on the border with Klein Flottbek and the Hindenburgpark on the Elbhang.
Natural monuments
The two largest boulders in the Hamburg area are located in Othmarschen:
- The old Swede (weight 217 t) in Övelgönne
- The stone from Othmarschen (weight 60 t) in the park above the Elbe tunnel
Economy and Infrastructure
traffic
The northern edge of Othmarschen is formed by the Altona – Blankenese S-Bahn (lines S1 / S11 ). The Othmarschen station was called Groß-Flottbeck-Othmarschen from 1902 , before it was renamed Othmarschen again on April 1, 1938 . The historic platform roof is a listed building . After a restoration of the historic roof, which was carried out by 2006, the stop was made barrier-free in 2009/10 , an elevator was added and the platform and access systems were renovated.
To the east of Othmarschen is the northern entrance to the Hamburg Elbe Tunnel on federal motorway 7 . In March 2016, as part of the eight-lane expansion of the autobahn, all parliamentary groups agreed on an extension of the planned Hamburg cover from the planned 730 m to 2300 m to Othmarschen.
The main traffic and upper-class residential street Elbchaussee and the Elbe bank hiking trail run along the Elbe, also from Altona to Blankenese .
education
Othmarschen decreed in 2015 eleven kindergartens and seven schools, including three high schools ( Christianeum , school farthing , high school Othmarschen ). The humanistic Christianeum is one of the oldest schools in the city. In the 2015/16 school year, a total of 4,359 students attended the Othmarsch schools.
Personalities
Born in Othmarschen
- Charlotte Paulsen (1797–1862), social reformer and women's rights activist.
- Ludwig Burmester (1840–1927), mathematician and inventor.
- Hans Petersen (1885–1946), physician.
- Hark Bohm (* 1939), actor and filmmaker.
Associated with Othmarschen
- Martin Johann Jenisch (1793–1857), businessman and Senator from Hamburg, had the Jenisch House built.
- Robert Miles Sloman (1812–1900), shipowner, lived and died in Othmarschen.
- Hermann Anthony Cornelius Weber (1822–1886), Hamburg Senator and Mayor, lived on Elbchaussee and died there.
- Max Kuchel (1859–1933), landscape and portrait painter, lived and died in Klein Flottbek
- Franz von Hipper (1863–1932), naval officer, lived and died in Othmarschen.
- Margarete Böhme (1867–1939), writer, lived and died in Othmarschen.
- Philipp Fürchtegott Reemtsma (1893–1959), entrepreneur and patron of the arts, had the Villa Reemtsma built.
- Siegfried Lenz (1926–2014), writer, last lived in a city villa in Othmarschen
- Hubert Fichte (1935–1986), writer, last lived in a single-family house in Othmarschen
- Heinz Otto Wehmann (* 1955), cook, co-owner of Landhaus Scherrer .
See also
- List of streets and squares in Hamburg-Othmarschen
- List of cultural monuments in Hamburg-Othmarschen
- List of stumbling blocks in Hamburg-Othmarschen
Individual evidence
- ↑ To this and to the following Wolfgang Laur : The names of places and waters of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. A historical lexicon including relevant field names , Neumünster 2012, p. 193 f.
- ↑ Quota of minors in the Hamburg districts in 2017
- ↑ Proportion of 65-year-olds and older in the Hamburg districts in 2017
- ↑ Proportion of foreigners in the Hamburg districts in 2017
- ↑ Unemployment rate in the Hamburg districts in 2017
- ↑ Statistical Office for Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein (ed.): Hamburg District Profile 2016 (= NORD.regional . Volume 19 ). 2018, ISSN 1863-9518 ( Online PDF 6.6 MB [accessed February 12, 2018]).
- ↑ election result on www.wahlen-hamburg.de, accessed on February 23, 2015.
- ↑ Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft (ed.): Official Gazette of the Reichsbahndirektion Mainz of April 14, 1938, No. 19. Announcement No. 262, p. 110.
- ↑ Citizenship wants the long motorway cover. NDR , February 10, 2016, accessed on March 16, 2016 .
- ↑ Authority for Schools and Vocational Education and Training , Data Management Unit, Data collection and provision: Pupils by school, type of school in the 2015/16 school year . (Source: 2015 school year survey, online )
- ^ FW Döbereiner (ed.): Altonaer address book for 1895 . HW Köbner & Co, Altona, Othmarschen, S. 307 ( online ).