Pauliner March

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Pauliner Marsch green zone is located in Bremen in the Ostliche Vorstadt district, Peterswerder district between Osterdeich and Weser . A green zone on the left side of the Weser between Werdersee and Hasteder Bulten in Obervieland , district habenhausen complements the spacious green area on the Weser.

history

Pauliner March from the left bank of the Weser; Floodlight masts from Weserstadion Platz 11
Jürgenshof historical photo from 1965
Bird sanctuary in Arsten-habenhausen

The Pauliner Marsch takes its name from the medieval Paulskloster in Ostertor , which was once responsible for the management of the Weser meadows. The park was used as pasture for cattle until the 19th century. In 1803 the Pauliner Marsch passed from the Bremen Evangelical Church to the Free Hanseatic City as part of the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss .

Before the First World War , sports clubs laid their first sports fields here. In 1909 a sports field with a wooden grandstand and from 1926 a concrete grandstand as an ABTS arena , the forerunner of today's Weser Stadium , in which Werder Bremen has played since 1930 . The stadium pool was built in 1925 , then the Pauliner Marsch district sports facility and later the sports garden .

A largely continuous cycle and hiking trail was laid out on the Weser as a Weser promenade, which leads past the allotment garden areas Im Suhrfelde to the rose garden on Jakobsberg with its sports facilities from the Hastedter TSV and the Bremen Weser weir .

Juergenshof

The Jürgenshof, Pauliner Marsch 1, was a shepherd's court and belonged to the Paulskloster, since 1560 to the cathedral structure of the Bremen cathedral and since 1803 to the city of Bremen. This left the farm to the Remberti Hospital . In 1810 a summer inn was built in a new building, which came with the farm through marriage to Johann Jürgens in 1870. In 1969 the property was taken over by the Sparkasse Bremen as a foundation. In 1971/72 the Jürgenshof had to be thoroughly renovated. Since then it has been operated as a restaurant by a tenant. Since 1986, a project has been taking place with young people on the adjacent horse pasture, which advocates the welfare of animals.

Connections across the Weser

The Karl Carstens Bridge from 1970, popularly known as the Strawberry Bridge, and the pedestrian bridge over the Weser weir in Hastedt connect the green areas on both sides of the Weser. The term strawberry bridge refers to the earlier Habenhausen spread strawberry fields .

literature

  • Peter Schulz, Peter Fischer (cards): Parks in Bremen . Bremer Marketing (ed.), Bremen 2008.
  • Ludwig Köwing: Jürgenshof, from the shepherd's house of the Pauliner March to the historic restaurant . Published by: Sparkasse Bremen, Bremen 1972.

Web links

Commons : Eastern Suburbs  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 53 ° 3 ′ 43 ″  N , 8 ° 51 ′ 0 ″  E