Revenahe-Kammerbusch

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Revenahe-Kammerbusch
Sauensiek municipality
Coordinates: 53 ° 24 ′ 53 ″  N , 9 ° 33 ′ 0 ″  E
Height : 42 m
Postal code : 21644
Area code : 04164
Revenahe-Kammerbusch (Lower Saxony)
Revenahe-Kammerbusch

Location of Revenahe-Kammerbusch in Lower Saxony

Revenahe and Kammerbusch together form the district of Revenahe-Kammerbusch in the Sauensiek municipality in Lower Saxony and are located in the south of the Stade district , in the Apensen municipality . There is no longer a clear separation between the two places, they merge into one another.

Geographical location

Aerial view of Revenahe-Kammerbusch with Revenahe in the foreground and Kammerbusch in the background

The two villages Revenahe and Kammerbusch are located on the Stader Geest to the west of Buxtehude . Formerly located as "islands in the bog", only remnants of the raised bogs that used to surround the villages have survived . The ram rises southwest of Revenahe . The Steinbeck , a right-hand tributary of the floodplain, flows on the western edge of the village .

Nature reserves

East of Revenahe-Kammerbusch, partly in the Beckdorf district, two raised bog areas are designated as the nature reserve (NSG) " Moor bei Revenahe ". These contain valuable stocks of rare bog plants, e.g. B. from sundew . To the northwest of the village is the 654 hectare NSG Braken, Harselah, Kahles and Wildes Moor .

history

Origin of the place names

There are various explanations for the origin of the name Revenahe . The spelling "Revenha" found in old documents with the suffix "ha" indicates a height, here probably an elevation from the surrounding moor. Another spelling, "Revena" or "Revenah", uses the suffix "a" or "ah" to indicate water or a river. This could mean the Steinbek brook, which rises near Revenahe. According to a third interpretation, Revenahe got its name from the old name for the neighboring forest of Harselah. This was previously called "Deppenrehmen" or "Rehmen" for short. The term "Remnoh", which is still used in Low German today, would then designate a place that is close to the Rehmen.

The name "Kammerbusch" probably comes from the pictorial description of a settlement surrounded by striking bushes and trees on a Geest island in the moor.

Prehistoric settlement

Evidence of a Neolithic settlement can be found in the region z. B. at the giant beds of Grundoldendorf and the Daudieck necropolis near Issendorf . Around Revenahe and Kammerbusch there are burial mounds from the Bronze Age , most of which, however, have now been leveled. Preserved burial mounds are located north of highway 127 approximately at the level of the cemetery. Archaeological excavations were carried out there as early as 1910.

Later story

The two places are first mentioned in historical reports about the expulsion of the robber baron Heinrich von Borch from his castle in the Dannsee . Revenahe and Kammerbusch are referred to as the outworks of this castle. Both villages are mentioned for the first time in the Vörder Register , which was created around 1500 by order of the Archbishop of Bremen. In the further course the two villages were subordinate to the court on the Delm .

Revenahe municipality

The Revenahe community was dissolved on July 1, 1972. From now on, their area belongs to the Sauensiek municipality.

Economy and Infrastructure

Cemetery with a war memorial

economy

Mostly agricultural and handicraft businesses. There is also an agricultural machinery dealer in Revenahe. A large proportion of the workforce are commuters.

traffic

Revenahe is connected to Wiegersen and Harsefeld by Kreisstraße 53 . State road 127 leads through Kammerbusch from Apensen to Ahrensmoor . At the exit towards Ahrensmoor there is a crossing of both streets. Since the last expansion of the tariff area, Revenahe and Kammerbusch are in the area of ​​the Hamburger Verkehrsverbund .

Public facilities

In Revenahe there is a kindergarten with 2 groups.

Regular events

Since 2011, a two-day Oktoberfest has been held annually at the end of September / beginning of October, each with 1300 guests, which is known far beyond the municipality's borders.

literature

  • Klaus Bredehöft: Islands in the moor. From the story of Revenahe-Kammerbusch. Kammerbusch 1984.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The nature reserve "Moor bei Revenahe" at the Lower Saxony State Agency for Water Management, Coastal Protection and Nature Conservation
  2. Archaeological nature trail between Issendorf and Gut Daudieck ( Memento of the original from February 27, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.horneburg.de
  3. ^ 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, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 246 .