Ahlem manor

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The Ahlem manor near Hanover was located near today's Weidemannweg street in the Ahlem district .

History and description

The Ahlemer Vollmeierhof I was raised to a manor in 1846 .

Around 1873 the Ahlem manor was acquired by the entrepreneur Carl Weidemann (born April 19, 1843 in Pattensen ; † August 18, 1890 in Ahlem). Weidemann had two brickworks built there. In 1975 the street Die Rehre , which was laid out in 1959 and led from Ernst-Cammann-Straße to Wunstorfer Landstraße , was renamed Weidemannweg.

In the 1880s the "Rittergut Schloß Ahlem" was owned by the noble regimental commander Moritz von Kaisenberg , who retired to the manor from 1886 after the end of his military career and wrote novels and stories from there for more than a decade.

Around 1900 the expedition of the Deutsche Milchwirtschaftliche Zeitung had a seat in “Ahlem Castle”.

The second rectory of the Ahlem Martin Luther Church, built between 1963 and 1965, was later built on the site of the manor house of the manor .

Individual evidence

  1. a b Helmut Zimmermann : Weidemannweg , in ders .: The street names of the state capital Hanover . Hahnsche Buchhandlung Verlag, Hanover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , p. 260; also as a preview in the Hanover history sheets
  2. a b Klaus Mlynek Ahlem in Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 15
  3. ^ Franz Brümmer : Kaisenberg, Moritz von , in ders .: Lexicon of German poets and prose writers from the beginning of the 19th century to the present . Vol. 3, 6th edition, Leipzig, 1913, pp. 394f .; Digitized via the German text archive
  4. Milchwirtschaftliches Zentralblatt , Volume 29 (1900), p. 393; Preview over google books

Coordinates: 52 ° 23 ′ 4.9 "  N , 9 ° 39 ′ 54.4"  E