Richardshohn

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This chapel of the Düsseldorf trade and art exhibition in 1880 had been built on Richardshohn since 1882 and was demolished in 1902 due to its dilapidation.
View from Richardshohn over the Paulinenhof to Eitorf

Richardshohn is a homestead in the municipality of Eitorf . Until the municipality reforms in 1969 it belonged to the mayor's office of Herchen or municipality of Herchen , today Windeck . Below the courtyard is the Paulinenhof, which was first built around 1930.

First mentions

The farm is first mentioned in a document in 1361. Paza von Halle transfers the farm to Ryghartzhane to the convent of Herchen . In 1373 Gertrud von Eitorf gave the monastery a bush on the Richradshayn .

The estate has to pay taxes to the knight Wilhelm von Hayne mentioned in 1353 and 1363 .

Also the free noble Good Probach can the tithes of lands above the halter claim creek.

tenant

  • 1722: Johann Hillen and Elisabeth
  • 1734: Elisabeth, widow of Johann Hillen
  • 1751: Peter Hillen and Helena
  • 1761: Peter Hillen and Helena
  • 1798: Matthias Bohlscheid and Maria Eva Hillen
  • 1828: Peter Güldenring
  • 1829: Josef Strunk

The lease period was usually twelve years.

secularization

In 1803 all worldly goods were withdrawn from the ecclesiastical masters.

Richardshohn's Hofswald was put up for sale in Siegburg in 1822 . The size was over 37 acres , it consisted of old oak, beech and mixed root wood.

Domain councilor Schäfer offered the farm himself in 1828 in the Gasthaus zum Drachenfels in Königswinter , for purchase or lease. The indicated areas were:

  • Courtyard area without building 1 acre and a rod and a half
  • Garden 144 rods
  • Arable land 51 acres and 134 rods
  • Meadows 5 acres and 61 rods

A total of 59 acres and 42 rods in Cologne, 73 acres and 116 rods in Prussia. At that time the farm was leased for 30 Reichstaler, a third of which was in gold. In the same year the farm was offered again to Mr. Veit in Königswinter , as there were different bids.

Welcome to Richardshohn in 2010

Other owners

  • 1839: Schumacher siblings
  • 1846: Schumacher siblings
  • 1849: Aloys Wladimir Leonhard
  • 1859: Gottfried Weyrauch
  • 1863: Albert Plönsgen in Düsseldorf
  • 1864: Peter Kratz
  • 1864: Peter Wilhelm Kohlen in Cologne-Kalk
  • 1869: Johann Schemmer, pensioner in Cologne
  • 1874: Married art dealer Paul Rudolf Meller in Cologne
  • 1911: Philipp Sommer
  • 1922: Herrmann Josef Hirtsiefer

division

In 1922 the lands were divided. The farm passed to a new owner at 50 acres.

swell

  • Gabriel Busch: Merten (victory) . Reckingner & Co., Siegburg 1978.

Coordinates: 50 ° 46 '  N , 7 ° 30'  E