Egestorf manor

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The manor Egestorf was a manor near what is now the Barsinghausen district of Egestorf (Deister) in the Hanover region in Lower Saxony .

history

At the beginning of the 14th century , the Bishop of Minden enfeoffed the von Lenthe family with the manor of Egestorf . Henning Grotian took over the courtyard, which was free from labor and other duties, at the beginning of the 16th century. The patronage of the Barsinghausen monastery church was associated with the manor for a long time . The von Schwartz family followed in the second half of the 16th century .

The landowner Leo Johan Schwartze acquired in 1669 the so-called Obergut at the Nienstedter road together with a recently erected there big "Pallatium" by the widow of Egestorfer wood Count Erich Daniel Huldersen. Soon afterwards, with the approval of Duke Johann Friedrich, he transferred the rights and privileges of his old manor to the acquired estate.

The manor had been abandoned since the middle of the 17th century and was soon described as "a derelict, desolate house" or "completely ruined aristocratic estate". When the site was leveled at the end of the 18th century, there were still remains of buildings and of the wall stones "as big as a beer barrel" that formerly surrounded at least the main building. The estate, located on the then course of the Beerbeeke northwest of the old village center, was probably surrounded by a moat . The field name "Altes Gut" still reminds of the manor in Egestorf. The area on the bypass is used as arable land.

Others

While the Egestorf manor was demolished, two goods that were created elsewhere in Egestorf have been preserved. The so-called Untergut on the eastern edge of the old village center and the Obergut in the southwest.

literature

  • Wolfgang Ewig: Rittergut Egestorf , Barsinghausen 1998

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Egestorf. www.barsinghausen.de, accessed on January 20, 2018 .
  2. Chronik 1966. in 800 years Egestorf am Deister (reading sample). www.barsinghausen.de, accessed on January 20, 2018 .
  3. ↑ Field names. in 750 years of Egestorf am Deister (reading sample of the reprint). www.barsinghausen.de, accessed on January 20, 2018 .

Coordinates: 52 ° 17 ′ 29.8 "  N , 9 ° 30 ′ 28.8"  E