Recklinghausen (Neudorf)

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Coordinates: 51 ° 27 '11 "  N , 8 ° 55' 26"  E

Map: Hessen
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Recklinghausen (Neudorf)
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Hesse

Recklinghausen , also Rücklinghausen , is a deserted village in the district of Neudorf , a district of Diemelstadt in the northern Hessian district of Waldeck-Frankenberg .

Geographical location

The place was about 1.5 km west of Neudorf, about 700 m east of today's Hessian border with North Rhine-Westphalia , between the streams Harensbicke in the north and Heckerbicke in the south, at about 314  m above sea level on the western slope of the Auerhahnenberg (337 , 4 m). When the place became desolate cannot be determined exactly, but it can be assumed in the 14th century. The field name "An Rücklinghausen" still reminds of the disappeared village.

history

The place was in 1230 the first written mention in the documents of the monastery Corvey associated provost Marsberg , as this had in "Reclenchusin" sell after the extensive destruction of the city Mars mountain and the provost by fire some of their possessions, including land to to finance the reconstruction. Also in 1295 "Riclinchusen" is mentioned in the documents of the provost, which owned clearing lands at (iuxta) "Riclinchusen" . In 1298 was with the consent of Prince Heinrich III. and the Convent of Corvey, a dispute between the ministerials of the monastery Albert von Mühlhausen and his sister sons Hermann von Hesperinghausen and Hugo von Allenhausen over possessions in Hesperinghausen , Helmighausen , Recklinghausen, Swibrechtshausen and on the Sike settled. In 1304 Count Otto I von Waldeck enfeoffed Johann and Hermann von Billinchusen and Albert von Mühlhausen and their sons and daughters with all the goods to Hesperingshausen, Helmshausen, "Rikelinchusen", Swibrechtshausen and Sike, which Abbot Heinrich and Prior Florentess von Corvey had awarded them in 1298 had.

On the occasion of the marriage of his son Otto to Mechthild (Mathilde), daughter of Duke Otto III. von Braunschweig-Lüneburg , in 1339 Count Heinrich IV. von Waldeck prescribed his daughter-in-law to breed the castle and town of Rhoden with pensions a. a. from Recklinghausen ("Ricelenchusen") and Schmillinghausen ("Smydelenchůsen"). In 1350 the Lords of Brobeck are mentioned in the Corveyer Lehnsregister as owners of Corveyian fiefs in the area of ​​"Ryckelinchosen". Around 1490 the place name reappears as "Reckelynchußen" and "Reckelynghusen" in a book of Salbuch by Count Otto IV. Von Waldeck zu Landau, and in 1537 the field mark of the village , which was probably abandoned in the 14th century, finally belongs to Neudorf.

Footnotes

  1. The spelling of the place name changed several times over the years; see Recklinghausen, district of Waldeck-Frankenberg, in the historical local dictionary of Hesse .
  2. ^ Schmillinghausen, Waldeck-Frankenberg district, in the historical local dictionary of Hesse
  3. HStAM Fund 127 No. 1

literature

  • Heinrich Bodenhausen (arrangement): Neudorf. History of a village in the Red Land [the Nygge Dorp in front of the Urhanenberge], 1537–2004 , Waldeckischer Geschichtsverein, Bad Arolsen, 2004, pp. 14–16
  • Gottfried Ganßauge, Walter Kramm, Wolfgang Medding: The architectural and art monuments in the administrative district of Kassel. New episode Volume 2: Circle of Twist. Bärenreiter, Kassel, 1938, p. 269
  • Ulrich Bockshammer: Older Territorial History of the County of Waldeck, Elwert, Marburg, 1958, p. 52, 187
  • Heinrich Höhle: The submerged localities or the desertions in Waldeck , Bings, Korbach, 1931, p. 99, no. 61

Web links