Rinkerode
Rinkerode
City of Drensteinfurt
Coordinates: 51 ° 50 ′ 45 " N , 7 ° 40 ′ 58" E
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Height : | 60 m above sea level NN | |
Area : | 35.13 km² | |
Residents : | 3812 (Aug. 1, 2019) City of Drensteinfurt | |
Population density : | 109 inhabitants / km² | |
Incorporation : | 1st January 1975 | |
Postal code : | 48317 | |
Area code : | 02538 | |
Location of Rinkerode in North Rhine-Westphalia |
Rinkerode is a district of the city of Drensteinfurt in the Warendorf district in North Rhine-Westphalia with around 3800 inhabitants.
geography
location
The village is about 12 km south of Münster, neighboring towns are Hiltrup (in the north), Albersloh (in the northeast), Drensteinfurt (in the southeast), Ascheberg and Davensberg (in the west) and Amelsbüren (in the northwest). In the north-south direction, Rinkerode is crossed by the Münster – Hamm railway, serving the Rinkerode station, by local trains every half hour and by the almost parallel federal highway 54 .
To the west of the village lies the large wooded area of the Davert and to the north the Hohe Ward . About 1.5 km east of the town center, the Werse flows north to Albersloh .
structure
Dorf, Altendorf, Hemmer and Eickenbeck
history
Settlement began in the southern Davertwald before 900. It started from the Bispinghof, today's Bisping House , and from the Pröbstinghof, today's parish center. Around 1170 the place was first mentioned "Rinkerrode", in 1250 the local parish was mentioned for the first time. Around 1200 Gerwin von Rinkerode owned Haus Borg and Haus Steinfurt . House Bisping appeared in the sources for the first time in 1364, where Christoph Bernhard von Galen , Prince-Bishop from 1650 to 1678, was born in 1606 .
In 1589 and 1624 Spanish troops stayed in Rinkerode. In 1628 the foundation of the poor house, which was rebuilt in 1824 (demolished in 1966, today LWL- Freilichtmuseum Detmold ), was established around 1670 on the church square. In 1719, under the direction of Gottfried Laurenz Pictorius, the new manor house of Haus Borg was built, from 1721 to 1724 the new parish church of St. Pankratius was built, and in 1810 the Galensche Mill, which today houses the Mill Museum.
In 1816 Rinkerode came to the Münster district as part of the Kingdom of Prussia , which Westphalia fell to . In 1848 the Münster – Hamm railway line was opened, at which Rinkerode was a stop. In 1877 the new boys' school (now a youth home) was built, and in 1896 the hospital in the former Pröbstinghof that existed until 1975. In 1901, the Rinkerode agricultural purchasing and sales cooperative was founded, and in 1908 the dairy, which flourished until 1969 and was demolished in 1978. From 1915 to 1925 the Davertbahn, the Kleinbahn Rinkerode – Ascheberg , was maintained.
In 1946 Protestant services were held for the first time in the Catholic village (in the Agnesstift), and in 1968 the Protestant community center Friedenskirche was inaugurated. From 1961 to 1963 the Alte Dorfstrasse was expanded.
On January 1, 1975, the municipality , which had previously belonged to the Wolbeck district in the Münster district, was incorporated into the city of Drensteinfurt in the Warendorf district , as the new district boundaries meant that an intended merger with the former communities of Hiltrup and Amelsbüren was no longer possible. An incorporation into the city of Münster was rejected by this. In the event that the planned airport was built, Drensteinfurt, Albersloh, Rinkerode and Sendenhorst would have been merged to form a larger city of Drensteinfurt. In 1987 the village square was redesigned, in 1989 the Brinkskuhle parcel; In 1993 the Pankratius Fountain was created by Ernst Schlüter. In 1995 the mill and equipment museum was opened.
traffic
train
Rinkerode station is on the Münster – Hamm railway line and is served every half hour on weekdays (every Saturday, Sunday and public holiday) by Eurobahn trains (RB 69/89 Münster – Bielefeld / Paderborn). In addition, on weekdays, except Saturday, the RE 7 runs at 5:39 a.m. to Krefeld via Hagen, Wuppertal and Cologne. Trains in the opposite direction stop in Rinkerode from 10 p.m.
Between 1915 and 1925 there was a small material railway operated by Philipp Holzmann AG to Ascheberg, which also transported people from 1917 to 1925, the small railway Rinkerode – Ascheberg.
bus
Three buses stop in Rinkerode on weekdays. These are mainly used for school transport , but are not school buses, but buses on line 341 between Herbern and Münster. Before Saturdays and Sundays / public holidays, night buses on the N42 run from Münster to Drensteinfurt. The Meerkamp, Haverland and Niehoff stops are served within the village. There are also a few stops in the respective farmers' associations.
Worth seeing
The village has only partially retained its rural Westphalian character. In addition to the baroque parish church of St. Pankratius in the center, built from 1721 to 1724 by Gottfried Laurenz Pictorius , the moated castles Haus Borg and Haus Bisping in the west are noteworthy.
Personalities
- Wolter Westerhues , (* around 1470; † 1548) bell founder in Westphalia, was born here.
- Christoph Bernhard von Galen , (* October 12, 1606 at Haus Bisping near Rinkerode in Westphalia; † September 19, 1678 in Ahaus) Prince-Bishop of Münster , was born in Rinkerode
- Johannes Brockmann , (* July 17, 1888 in Paderborn, † December 14, 1975 in Rinkerode) long-time chairman of the Center Party , lived and died here
- Josef Rickfelder , (born October 25, 1951 in Rinkerode) member of the CDU state parliament
- Thomas Meurer , (born September 23, 1966 in Weidenau (Siegen), † August 22, 2010 in Rinkerode) was a German theologian and non-fiction author.
societies
Club life is an integral part of the village and is very well integrated. The best-known club Rinkerode is the sports club Rinkerode 1912 eV with the sports football, table tennis and popular sports. The SVR's first men's football team currently plays in the district league. Other well-known clubs in Rinkerode are the TC Rinkerode (tennis) and the ASC Rinkerode (fishing). The music-making clubs are the Kolping Wind Orchestra Rinkerode and the Spielmannszug Rinkerode. The shooting was cultivated in the two traditional clubs Rinkerode Rinkerode von 1840 eV and the Hubertus shooting guild "Lebensfreude". The latter said goodbye to club life in 2014. In addition, the Drensteinfurt volunteer fire brigade has a fire engine in Rinkerode.
Population development
Basis: Information in the town hall of the city of Drensteinfurt for the district of Rinkerode, residents without secondary apartments
- Reference date August 14, 2015 - 3711 inhabitants - of which: 1830 men / 1881 women
- Reference date August 3, 2016 - 3,802 inhabitants - of which: 1890 men / 1912 women
- Reference date August 1, 2017 - 3,790 inhabitants
- Reference date August 1, 2018 - 3,755 inhabitants
- Reference date August 1, 2019 - 3,812 inhabitants
Web links
- Website of the Rinkerode district of the city of Drensteinfurt
- Rinkerode in the Westphalia Culture Atlas
Individual evidence
- ^ 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. 314 .