Pariser Platz (Hanover)

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View over the tracks of the Hanover tram through Egestorffstrasse towards Lindener Marktplatz

The Pariser Platz in Hanover is a square formed by different streets converging on each other , which was formed by the confluences of Egestorffstraße, Davenstedter Straße, Teichstraße, Dieckbornstraße and Kirchstraße.

History and description

Residential and commercial building on the corner of Teichstrasse and Davenstedter Strasse

The star-shaped complex, laid out in 1889 in what is now the Hanoverian district of Linden-Mitte, was originally only popularly referred to as Pariser Platz after the court of the furrier , farmer , member of the first magistrate of the industrial city of Linden, which was independent from the founding of the German Empire from 1885 and later senator Carl Lampe (1837–1904) had confessed: Since Lampe had also worked temporarily in Paris , the Lindener gave Pariser Platz its current name.

The unofficial designation of the square, continued over several generations in "self-confident persistence" by the Linden residents, the members of the city ​​council finally bowed and gave Pariser Platz, on which a corresponding street sign has been erected since 2004, its official, official name.

The numerous shops at Pariser Platz is one of the the from television known "cult pastry" among other Ralf Schnoor : Opened in the in the 1980s Café K were in the following years next to cakes and chocolate truffles also nightly detective games and Table Quiz -Runden offered.

literature

Web links

Commons : Pariser Platz (Hannover)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c d Franz Hinrich Hesse : Pariser Platz , in ders .: Guide through Hanover city and country. Local landmarks. A companion on hikes through the city of Hanover and the surrounding area. Compiled and described according to location, origin, meaning, etc. , 227 pages with 16 plates, Hanover: Helwingsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1929, p. 38
  2. a b Helmut Zimmermann : From the Linden market square to the kitchen garden , in this: Linden. From the farming village to the Ihmezentrum . Harenberg-Labs, Hanover 1986, ISBN 3-89042-019-2 , pages 27-30; here: p. 30
  3. ^ Helmut Zimmermann: Egestorffstraße , in ders .: The street names of the state capital Hanover . Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , p. 67
  4. ^ Klaus Mlynek : Linden. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 406ff.
  5. Heinz Max Lampe: The village of Linden and its residents (19th and 20th centuries) , in Hans Asbeck, Gert Busch, Walther Engel, Dietmar Franke, Sieglinde Kaczmarek, Christoph Walther (Red.): The Beethovenstrasse: 1898 - 1998 , ed. from IGS Hannover-Linden, Baumgart print agency: Hannover-Linden 1998, pp. 59–62
  6. Ekkehard Oehler-Austin : Tour 3: The largest village in Prussia. Industrialization in Linden , in ders .: Hanover. Walks through history , pp. 57–80; here: p. 64; limited preview in Google Book search
  7. ^ Cornelia Kuhnert (text), Günter Krüger (photos): Der Pariser Platz. The wild 13 accelerates the pulse , in this: 111 places in Hanover that you have to see , [Cologne]: emons, 2013, ISBN 978-3-95451-086-3 , pp. 162f.

Coordinates: 52 ° 22 '2.57 "  N , 9 ° 42' 37.95"  O