Reislingen

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Reislingen
City of Wolfsburg
Reislingen coat of arms
Coordinates: 52 ° 25 ′ 10 ″  N , 10 ° 50 ′ 37 ″  E
Height : 79 m
Residents : 6046  (December 31, 2015)
Incorporation : July 1, 1972
Postal code : 38446
Area code : 05363
map
Location in Wolfsburg
Land plan of Reislingen, 1758

Reislingen is a district in the east of Wolfsburg .

geography

The district consists of different types of settlement, partly also separated by larger undeveloped areas. It is about Alt-Reislingen , the nucleus of Reislingen with a former village school, half-timbered houses and former farms. Alt-Reislingen is supplemented by newer areas such as Köterkamp (1980s) and Campo Mediterraneo (2000s). Further away from Alt-Reislingen, directly adjacent to the Hellwinkel district , are Reislingen-West (1950 / 1970s) and the Windberg area (1980s). In the 1990s, the large residential area Reislingen Süd-West was built , which has multiplied the population of the district. There is a shopping center, two kindergartens, a primary school and a community center for the city of Wolfsburg. A small part of the Allerpark area , where the district descends to the Aller glacial valley , and the foothills of the eastern industrial area belong to Reislingen .

history

The place was mentioned in a document as early as 1239 as Reslinge . The place name is formed from the very old word ending ( suffix ) -lingi. The original village shape was that of a Wendish round . According to a settlement register around 1850, there were 21 farms at that time.

Margarethenhof

The as Vorwerk for manor Nordsteimke belonging Margarethenhof was in the 1930s by Elisabeth von der Schulenburg , the former owner of the manor, Hubertus Rogalla von Bieberstein sold. The initials G.vdSN-St. from 1868 as well as MvdSNSt. and EvdS from 1905 on outbuildings of the courtyard are still reminiscent of the former owners of the Margarethenhof, Gebhard von der Schulenburg Nord-Steimke (1823–1897) and his son Matthias von der Schulenburg Nord-Steimke (1861–1929) and his wife Elisabeth von the Schulenburg (1873–1953). Today the farm is from the city of Wolfsburg as a forest depot used.

Partial view of the former Wolfsburg pasta factory Driesen & Co before its demolition (2017)

1947 was on the western edge district of the former town Reislingen, on the border with the city of Wolfsburg, the Wolfsburg-based pasta factory & Co Driesen built. Later, one was on their land BP - gas station operated, most recently a car rental . After the old buildings were demolished in 2018, residential buildings will be built on the property in 2020. This building area was initially called the old noodle factory , but is now called Sandkrug Gardens . On the opposite side of the street, but already part of the Hellwinkel district , the residential and office building of the then factory owner Arnold Driesen, built in 1951, still stands today.

On July 1, 1972, Reislingen, which comes from the Helmstedt district , was incorporated into the city of Wolfsburg in accordance with the Wolfsburg Act .

In 2016, with the groundbreaking ceremony, the construction of the Wiesengarten construction area , which adjoins the Altdorf to the west, began.

politics

Local council

Politically, Reislingen and the Neuhaus district form the village of Neuhaus-Reislingen . The joint local council consists of 10 council members. There are also 11 advisory members in the local council.

Distribution of seats:

(Status: local election September 11, 2016)

Local mayor

The local mayor is Hans-Jürgen Friedrichs (SPD). His deputy is Bennet Wilhein (CDU).

coat of arms

Reislingen belonged to the Duchy of Brunswick for centuries and therefore has one of the two Brunswick lions. In 1239 the knight Friedrich von Esebeck gave Duke Otto the child the larger village of Reislingen, with the exception of one house, as a fief. One of the three roses from Esebeck's coat of arms commemorates this event and the first historically tangible fief-bearer in Reislingen . The ears of wheat symbolize the agricultural character of the place and at the same time indicate that the local grain trade was temporarily of regional importance.

The local council had two drafts to pass a resolution, both of which referred to the historical connecting points described; in addition to the one shown here, another one with "In red three golden ears of corn growing out of a golden rose", which indicated the former country of origin through the colors of the Brunswick coat of arms. The local council decided on May 25, 1978 for the first mentioned draft. Heraldic Description: Divided; above in red stepping, looking, blue armored and tongued golden (yellow) lion; below in gold (yellow) a red rose in the middle of two crossed red ears.

Culture and sights

St. Mark's Church (2012)
  • St. Mark's Church , 1192 desert. 1569–1958 branch of Vorsfelde .
  • St. Mark's Church (new building 1962–65) - Protestant-Lutheran - Architect: Friedrich Berndt , Braunschweig. Its organ was built in 1965 by Hans-Heinrich Blöß from Oker , the cross on the tower was added in 2016.
  • Wooden bench theater , in the former Gasthaus Zum Dorfkrug .

education

  • Käferschule (primary school)
  • Evangelical day care center St. Markus "Pusteblume"
  • Edith Stein Catholic day care center
  • Volkshochschule Wolfsburg (branch)
  • Civic Center

Web links

Commons : Reislingen  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Siegfried Mahlmann et al.: Nordsteimke, A village in the course of times. Wolfsburg City Archives, Texts on the History of Wolfsburg, Volume 14, Wolfsburg 1984, pp. 60–65.
  2. Eberhard Rohde: Wolfsburg's noodle factory against hunger. In: Wolfsburger Nachrichten. Edition of September 30, 2017.
  3. Demolition work in full swing. In: Wolfsburger Nachrichten. Edition of June 22, 2018.
  4. Barbara Benstem: Sandkruggärten - start of construction 2020. In: Wolfsburger Nachrichten. Edition of November 22, 2019.
  5. Barbara Benstem: Sandkrug Gardens before groundbreaking. In: Wolfsburger Nachrichten. Edition of July 31, 2020.
  6. ^ Nicole Froberg, Ulrich Knufinke, Susanne Kreykenboom: Wolfsburg. The architecture guide. 1st edition 2011. ISBN 978-3-03768-055-1 , p. 61.
  7. ^ Rüdiger Koch: In the middle of Germany: memories of 100 years of the Gifhorn district 1885-1985. Published by the district of Gifhorn. Gifhorn 1985, p. 51.
  8. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer GmbH, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 221 .
  9. ↑ Construction area: Wiesengarten. wolfsburg.de, accessed on January 10, 2019.
  10. ^ Main statutes of the city of Wolfsburg. (PDF; 644 kB) Section 9, Localities and Local Councils, Paragraph 3, No. 7. In: Website City of Wolfburg. July 3, 2019, p. 5 , accessed August 5, 2020 .
  11. a b Neuhaus / Reislingen local council. In: Website City of Wolfburg. Retrieved August 5, 2020 .
  12. ^ Antje and Michael Labahn: Our Church. Church guide St. Markus Reislingen-Neuhaus. Wolfsburg 2015.
  13. ^ Wolfsburg News. Edition of October 8, 2016, p. 10.