Punghouse

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Pungshaus Hilden Grünstraße 22

The Pungshaus is a two-story half-timbered house with an attic in 40723 Hilden Grünstraße 22 (formerly Pungshausstraße 9, hall 11, parcel 470/139, 5408). It stands in the Pungshaus district of Hilden of the same name.

Since the renovation in 1980, the "Restaurant Pungshaus" has been set up in it. It offers "German cuisine".

The half-timbered house has been entered in the list of architectural monuments in Hilden under number 32 since September 30, 1987 .

location

The hamlet of Pungshaus was on the commercial and old military road " Alte Kölnische Landstraße Trasse 5" (today Baustraße-Grünstraße). It led from Zons , Haus Bürgel , Hellerhof , Buchholz ( Garath ) near Haus Horst (Hilden) , Karnaper Hof in Hilden, Wiedenhof, Forstbacher Hof, Pungshaus, Henkenheide, Kalstert via Elberfelder Straße to Haan .,

Pungshaus before the renovation in 1980

history

The main building should originally have been a "point house ", ie a multi-storey rest stop for merchants traveling through. They transported wood from the Rhine port in Urdenbach . The name can also mean that the wood was hallmarked with metal pins . The metal pins punch , poke, stamp and mark. Meanwhile, the horses were being looked after in the neighboring stables at the Forstbacherhof.

The hamlet is only named after 1500. Alternative names of the hamlet were: (1580 Punshaus, 1611 Paunhauß or Paunshaus, 1715 Pungshus (Ploennis map), 1724 Pungsthauß, 1745 Paunßhauß, 1747 Poonshaus, 1777 Pungshauß, 1893 Pungshaus or Pungßhauß, Pungshauß, Pungßhaus archives) Other names are mentioned in the archives : Pfungshauß, Pfungsthaus Ponßhauß, Pongshauß, Pongshof or Ponschet.

The medieval court and the hamlet of Paunshaus belonged to the tax lists of the " Honschaft Sand des Hildener parish ". The parish of Hilden was founded in 1313.

In 1704 Caspar Manerth bought 2/3 of the farm, which belonged to the poor relief of the Reformed parish. According to a foundation stone found during renovation work, the current half-timbered house was built in 1730. The residents and taxpayers in the 18th century are listed in "Agricultural historical sources of Hilden and the surrounding area III".

A distinction was previously made between three properties: the Bushkeeper; Schäfers- and Manertz-Pungsthauß.

The smaller Buschhüters-Pungsthauß (Buschhutters, Poonshaus) belonged to the manor von der Horst . This is where their bush and forest rangers lived. This required that he looked after the Horster fief forests. Around 1725, the forest warden and bushkeeper Jürgen used three and a half acres of arable land and half an acre of bush for his maintenance. In 1747 it belonged to the lands of Kessel auf Hackhausen. The Waldwärter family lived in the house in 1940.

Schäfers-Pungshaus: (Schäffers, Scheffers, Schiepers, Ponschet). Arnold Pungsthauß was a shepherd in 1725, hence Schäfers-Pungsthauß. Towards the end of the 18th century, a “Schäffer” (shepherd) lived there in 1783 with the same name Arnold Pungshauß. The Schäfer-Pungshaus comprised 4 acres of farmland and one acre of gangs, and later a quarter of an acre of bushland.

The larger Manertz Pungsthauß (Manerts, Marnerdts, Georg-) comprised 10 acres of farmland. In 1725 it was inhabited by Joh (ann) Caspar Manerth. In 1739 Jacob Manertz lived in the Ponßhauß. Then it splintered. In 1777 one half belonged to Jacob (Jocob) Manertz's widow aufm Ponschet, the other half was owned by Georg Pungsthauß. In the tax lists from 1743–1749, “Efardt auffm Ponshaus”, or “Everhardus aufm Punßhauß” or “Evert auf dem Ponßhauß” appears as a subtenant with the Manertz.

According to the tax lists of 1777/78, Peter Weck, Andreas Meyer and Catharina Gertrud Kürtens and 1783/1784 Dierich Gierlichs, Andreas Meyer and Wilhelm Decker lived in the part of Georg Pungshauß. The occupation is given as a split. Seiler is likely to come closest to the job title.

At the beginning of the 19th century it belonged to the farmer and landlord Jakob Ehlenbeck. So he ran an inn. The timber merchant and building contractor Theodor Maibücher, member of the Hilden municipal council, appears in the tax lists of 1813 and 1833.

On a map from 1830 in Hildener Jahrbuch 56/59, the hamlet comprised 11 houses. The Zimmermann family ran a haulage company there at the turn of the century. The Zimmermann family owned the property in 1940 and ran a coal business. In the early 1970s, Mr Penner from Haan bought the Pungshaus from her. During the renovation, the previous half-timbered fillings were removed from bast mats bound with clay. They are popularly known as " sauerkraut platters ". The half-timbered panels were renewed. Mr. Penner, who also owns the restaurant "Landpartie im Fachwerk" Marktstr 9-11, ran a restaurant there from 1980 to 1989. Then in 1989 he leased it to the couple Brigitte and Franz Hagel. Mr. Wolf, who started as a cook there on April 1st, 2000, leased and took over it from October 2000. The restaurant offers 45 seats inside. In summer, guests can see an old fountain on 35 additional seats in the courtyard. It is closed with a lid, but from a depth of 6 m there is water in it.

Pungshausstrasse

In Hilden, Pungshausstraße leads from Walder Straße to the south-west, past the half-timbered Pungshaus and into the Pungskamp corridor.

The Pungshausstraße originally led over the Baustraße into the district of Forstbach. With the construction of the Düsseldorf-Solingen railway line from January 3, 1894, it crossed the railway line at an unrestricted level crossing. Then came the gatekeeper's house with barriers. From 1969, the barrier operation was replaced by automatic contact points with half barriers, St. Andrew's cross and flashing lights, and the stationer's house disappeared. The crossing has been closed since 1980 and replaced by a pedestrian underpass. The traffic flows over Baustraße and Grünstraße.

Pungshausstrasse leads directly to the “Am Holterhöfchen” facility. In the "Am Holterhöfchen" facility are the remains of the Holterhöfchen ring wall and the school center with the Helmholtz grammar school Hilden , the Marie Colinet secondary school (formerly Wilhelm Fabry secondary school), the Hilden vocational college , and the municipal kindergartens "Kita Städt . Daycare "and" Itterpänz "as well as the gymnastics club HAT-Fit.

Individual evidence

  1. Homepage of the Pungshaus restaurant
  2. Heinrich Strangmeier: Alternative names of the hamlet Pungshaus (also called Paunshaus, Pungßhauß, Pongshauß or Pongshof), Hildener Jahrbuch 1945, page 31, 74, Verlag Peters 1950
  3. ^ Erich Krumme: The Cologne streets in the Niederberg area. In: Romerike Berge. Journal for home care in the Bergisches Land. 11th year 1961/62 issue 2, pp. 68-80.
  4. Gerhard Köbler: "punken", pushing, beating Old High German Dictionary, (6th edition) 2014
  5. ^ Heinrich Dittmaier : settlement names and settlement history of the Bergisches Land, book HB 448, S55ff
  6. ^ A b c d Heinrich Strangmeier: Agricultural historical sources of Hilden and the surrounding area III, tax lists and residents of the sand mining industry in the 18th century, parts 1 and 2, Verlag Stadtarchiv Hilden 1979.
  7. Time track search Sandhonschaft Pungshaus, Pungskamp corridor
  8. ^ Rafael von Uslar : To the Holterhöfchen near Hilden. In: Hildener Jahrbuch 1956/59. Volume 7. Stadtarchiv, Hilden Verlag Fr. Peters 1960, p. 20.
  9. Pungshaus, Rhenish people sheet no. 104 81. Born From our home town Hilden, May 4, 1940
  10. Buschhüters Pungshaus, Rheinisches Volksblatt No. 365, 81st year From our hometown Hilden, December 28, 1940.
  11. Schäfers Pungshaus, Rheinisches Volksblatt from our hometown Hilden, December 28, 1940
  12. Wolfgang Wennig: Hilden yesterday and today, the city archives Hilden 1977
  13. An old restaurant at Pungshaus, Rhenish People's Journal February 14, 1941
  14. Interview with Ms. Brigitte Hagel and Mr. Wolf in the Pungshaus on July 25, 2019
  15. Automatic barrier on Pungshaus later, Hilden newspaper, July 9, 1969

Web links

Commons : Pungshaus  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 51 ° 9 ′ 57.6 ″  N , 6 ° 57 ′ 1 ″  E