Rose garden (Lampertheim)

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rose Garden
City of Lampertheim
Coordinates: 49 ° 38 ′ 6 ″  N , 8 ° 23 ′ 41 ″  E
Height : 90 m above sea level NHN
Area : 7.45 km²
Residents : 642  (May 9, 2011)
Population density : 86 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : 1st October 1971
Postal code : 68623
Area code : 06241

Rosengarten is a former hereditary village and today forms the westernmost part of the southern Hessian city ​​of Lampertheim .

history

Before the settlement was founded

In the 13th century the song from the rose garden in Worms was created , in which the saga of the Nibelungenlied is linked with the Thidrek saga . Kriemhild's legendary "rose garden" near Worms was moved by the poet to the area that is today the district. The oldest surviving documentary mention of the place comes from 1422, when Elector Ludwig III. acquired this together with Kirschgartshausen from the Kirschgarten Monastery in Worms . Etymologically , another interpretation of the name is also conceivable. In 1524 the rose garden is listed as an imperial fiefdom, "so a bishop of Worms arrives to fief from the Keysser". A “Roßgarten”, a horse pasture, can be associated with this fiefdom.

The oak forest, which is rich in game and which is already mentioned in the Nibelungenlied, was used primarily for electoral hunts in the 18th century. This forest was completely cut down after 1789.

The statistical-topographical-historical description of the Grand Duchy of Hesse reports on Rosengarten in 1829:

»Rosengarten (L. Bez. Heppenheim) Rheinau; belongs to Lampertheim, consists of fields and some forest and is stately. The floodplain lies behind the main dam. Because of the fishing water and because of the customs house there, there was previously a protracted argument with Churpfalz. "

For the year 1845 there are two entries in the latest and most thorough alphabetical lexicon of all localities in the German federal states :

  1. »Rosengarten b. Lampertheim - Wirthshaus on the Rhine crossing to Worms, belonging to the parish of Lampertheim. 1 house, 9 inhabitants. Grand Duchy of Hesse, Starkenburg Province, Heppenheim District, Landger. Lorsch, Court of Darmstadt "
  2. »Wormser Fahrthaus b. Lampertheim - Wirthshaus "zum Rosengarten" on the right bank of the Rhine, to the evangel. Parish of Lampertheim. 1 house, 8 inhabitants, Grand Duchy of Hesse, Starkenburg Province, Heppenheim district. Landger. Lorsch, Darmstadt Court. "

In the alphabetical directory of residential places in the Grand Duchy of Hesse. For Rosengarten, a tavern from Lampertheim with 22 inhabitants in 2 houses is given in 1867.

The infantry regiment "Prinz Carl" , which was stationed in Worms, used part of the rose garden as a parade ground and a shooting range in the period before the First World War.

Settlement establishment and territorial reforms

Since the 1920s there were plans to drain and reclaim the Hessian Ried . Based on these plans and on the Reichserbhofgesetz (Reichserbhofgesetz) of 1933, so-called hereditary farm villages were built under the National Socialist rule , including Rosengarten in the then Bensheim district . On April 25, 1937 the foundation stone was laid for the Rosengarten settlement , as the new village was officially called. It was created in parts of the Lampertheim, Bürstadt , Hofheim and Maulbeeraue districts . The settlement was inaugurated on October 3, 1937 and at the same time incorporated into the city of Worms along with its immediate surroundings.

During the Hessian district reform on November 1, 1938, the nine communities Bobstadt , Bürstadt , Groß-Hausen , Hofheim , Klein-Hausen , Lampertheim and Lorsch were reclassified from the dissolved district of Bensheim to the district of Worms; at the same time Worms became an independent city .

In the final phase of World War II , American troops crossed the Rhine south of Worms in the first hours of March 26, 1945 and took possession of the village of Rosengarten that night. In the early hours of the morning they marched into Bürstadt and advanced on Reichsstrasse 47 in the direction of Lorsch. On March 27, the American units were in Lorsch, Bensheim and Heppenheim and a day later Aschaffenburg am Main and the western and northern parts of the Odenwald were occupied.

With the redistribution of the federal states by the victorious powers of World War II after 1945, Rheinhessen came west of the Rhine first to the French occupation zone and then to the newly formed federal state of Rhineland-Palatinate . The areas on the right bank of the Rhine in the city of Worms and the district of Worms, which were now in the American occupation zone, were reclassified to the Bergstrasse district in the state of Hesse. Rosengarten came under the administration of Bürstadt.

The new formation of the municipality of Rosengarten (Bergstrasse district) was determined by a decree of January 12, 1951 with retroactive effect to October 16, 1945. This community was on 1 October 1971 at the course of municipal reform in Hesse on a voluntary basis, the city Lampertheim incorporated . Today, Rosengarten forms a local district with a local advisory board and a local councilor .

In 1961 the size of the district was given as 745  hectares , of which 3 hectares were forest.

Population development

  • 1961: 193 Protestant (= 60.12%) and 107 Catholic (= 33.33%) residents
Rose garden: Population from 1939 to 2011
year     Residents
1939
  
280
1946
  
398
1950
  
263
1956
  
285
1961
  
321
1967
  
469
1970
  
398
1980
  
?
1990
  
?
2000
  
?
2011
  
642
Data source: Historical municipality register for Hesse: The population of the municipalities from 1834 to 1967. Wiesbaden: Hessisches Statistisches Landesamt, 1968.
Further sources:; 2011 census

politics

For Rosengarten there is a local district (areas of the former municipality of Rosengarten) with a local advisory board and mayor according to the Hessian municipal code . In the 2016-2021 electoral period, however, no local advisory board was established.

traffic

The Ernst Ludwig Bridge on a postcard from 1902; View from the east

The Ernst Ludwig Bridge (now called the Nibelungen Bridge) was the road bridge over the Rhine to Worms , built from 1897 and inaugurated on March 26, 1900, named after the Grand Duke of Hessen-Darmstadt as sovereign. It had three arches made of iron truss with elevated roadway, which were built by the MAN plant in Gustavsburg .

In December 1900 the railway bridge Rheinbrücke Worms was opened over the Rhine to Worms. A continuous train connection was thus achieved. The previous end point of the Riedbahn in the Rosengarten station and the Rhine crossing by means of a trajectory became superfluous.

The Hessian long-distance cycle route R6 leads through Rosengarten.

economy

Rosengarten is the location of a 380 kV substation from Amprion , which went into operation on October 4, 1957 as one of the first of this power class in Germany as part of the commissioning of the first German 380 kV line, the Rommerskirchen-Bürstadt-Hoheneck line has been.

literature

  • HF Karb: The Rosengarten station . In: City of Lampertheim (ed.) (1977); Rose Garden. Contributions to the history of the community Rosengarten.
  • Fritz Heck: Chronicle of Sandhofen, Scharhof, Sandtorf and Kirschgartshausen together with the district plan and the incorporation conditions . Mannheim 1976
  • Paulus Weissenberger: History of the Kirschgarten Monastery in Worms Wormsgau Beih. 6 (Worms 1937)

Web links

Commons : Rosengarten  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Rosengarten, Bergstrasse district. Historical local dictionary for Hessen. (As of March 23, 2018). In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
  2. a b Selected data on population and households on May 9, 2011 in the Hessian municipalities and parts of the municipality. (PDF; 1.8 MB) In: 2011 Census . Hessian State Statistical Office;
  3. ^ Georg Wilhelm Justin Wagner : Statistical-topographical-historical description of the Grand Duchy of Hesse: Province of Starkenburg . tape 1 . Carl Wilhelm Leske, Darmstadt October 1829, OCLC 312528080 , p. 206 ( online at google books ).
  4. ^ Johann Friedrich Kratzsch : The newest and most thorough alphabetical lexicon of all localities in the German federal states . Part 2nd volume 2 . Zimmermann, Naumburg 1845, OCLC 162810705 , p. 445; 822 ( online at google books ).
  5. ^ Ph. AF Walther : Alphabetical index of the residential places in the Grand Duchy of Hesse . G. Jonghaus, Darmstadt 1869, OCLC 162355422 , p. 76 ( online at google books ).
  6. ^ City of Worms / Gerold Bönnen (ed.): History of the city of Worms . Konrad Theiss Verlag, Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-8062-1679-7 , p. 592 .
  7. Headlines from Bensheim on the 175th anniversary of the "Bergsträßer Anzeiger". (PDF; 9.0 MB) The creation of the Bergstrasse district. 2007, p. 109 , archived from the original on October 5, 2016 ; accessed in June 2019 .
  8. ↑ Series of articles in the Bergstrasse Gazette from 2005 about the end of the war on Bergstrasse. Mountain road. Bergsträßer Anzeiger, accessed on December 20, 2014 .
  9. ^ Rosengarten district. In: website. City of Lampertheim, accessed December 2018 .
  10. Karl-Heinz Meier barley, Karl Reinhard Hinkel: Hesse. Municipalities and counties after the regional reform. A documentation . Ed .: Hessian Minister of the Interior. Bernecker, Melsungen 1977, DNB  770396321 , OCLC 180532844 , p. 348 .
  11. a b main statute. (PDF; 14 kB) § 3. In: Website. City of Lampertheim, accessed September 2019 .