Sulbeck

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sulbeck
City of Einbeck
Sülbeck coat of arms
Coordinates: 51 ° 46 ′ 18 ″  N , 9 ° 55 ′ 6 ″  E
Height : 111 m above sea level NN
Residents : 484  (Oct 2010)
Incorporation : March 1, 1974
Postal code : 37574
Area code : 05561
Sülbeck (Lower Saxony)
Sulbeck

Location of Sülbeck in Lower Saxony

Sülbeck is one of the oldest villages in the area of ​​the city of Einbeck in the Northeim district . The development of the place is characterized by the exploitation of the brine springs .

geography

Sülbeck is located in the Leinegraben about 6 km south-east of Einbeck and near the Leine , where the Leineniederung Salzderhelden nature reserve extends.

history

Saline trading house from 1694.

A prehistoric settlement near the brine springs has been proven: "Tools that were made by Neanderthals resting there come from the Sülbeck mountain". When the new development area "Am Bohrturm" was developed in the 1980s, further archaeological investigations were carried out, which showed that the settlement was up to around 5000 BC. Goes back. The first documentary mention can be found in writings of the Amelungsborn monastery from the year 1210. There it is about the "salinis" near Siburgehusen . On April 26, 1686, Prince Ernst August von Calenberg-Göttingen-Grubenhagen ordered that a “Saltz- und Leckwerck” should be built in Sülbeck . Around 1700 the Saline Sülbeck with the graduation towers then produced around 300 tons of salt per year, production increased to 800 tons over the next hundred years. At the beginning of the 20th century, the yield rose to over 5,000 tons.

On March 1, 1974, the village became part of the city of Einbeck on the occasion of the Lower Saxony regional reform.

politics

Local council

Local mayor is Rolf Metje (SPD). The current electoral term runs from November 1, 2011 to October 31, 2016.

A joint local council is elected with over it . The by-election on January 20, 2013 due to the merger of Einbeck and Kreiensen brought the following result:

  • SPD 6 seats
  • Voting community Drüber-Sülbeck 3 seats

coat of arms

The coat of arms symbolizes a technical component of the salt works and the nearby leash.

Culture and sights

music

Since 1989 a local initiative from southern Lower Saxony has been organizing a series of concerts known as “Kultur im Esel” . It is one of the longest regularly running concert series in Lower Saxony. In the concerts an attempt is made to give relatively unknown artists of various musical styles a basis for their further development. There are 10-15 concerts per year. In the 2013 season, artists such as Cristin Claas and Stephanie Nilles appeared. The association "Kultur im Esel" operates an event hall in which a number of other events, such as B. a "Low German Afternoon" take place regularly.

Technical monument brine reservoir from 1882.

Buildings

societies

  • Sülbecker Karnevalsverein e. V. (SKV)
  • Gymnastics and gymnastics department
  • FC Sülbeck / Immensen, emerged from the merger of TSV Sülbeck eV and SV Immensen
  • Jugendspielgemeinschaft (JSG) Sülbeck, composed of members of the clubs FC Sülbeck / Immensen, TSV Hollenstedt, TSV Edemissen and SR Stöckheim; a total of 8 junior teams and one junior team are provided
  • Music lovers Sülbeck-Drüber
  • Mixed choir Sülbeck
  • Heimatverein Leinetal e. V.

Economy and Infrastructure

The new derrick will continue to pump brine .

Personalities

  • Theodor Lockemann (1885–1945), German librarian, director of the university library in Jena

literature

  • Gernot Schmidt: The praiseworthy Saltzwerck zu Sülbeck. History and development of a saltworks in Lower Saxony. Publishing house of the German Mining Museum. Bochum 1995, ISBN 3-921533-55-4 . (The book offers a complete overview of the development of the salt works in Sülbeck and contains an extensive picture attachment)
  • Einbecker History Association V. (Ed.): Einbeck's villages - pictures from bygone times . Duderstadt 1995, ISBN 3-923453-64-7 .

Web links

Commons : Sülbeck  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. ^ City of Einbeck: Population statistics October 2010 (PDF; 38 kB) . Retrieved March 22, 2011.
  2. Hansjörg Küster: History of the landscape in Central Europe: from the Ice Age to the present . CH Beck. 1995, p. 26 (online)
  3. a b cf. Einbeck's villages - pictures from bygone times. In: Hansjörg Küster: History of the landscape in Central Europe. 1995, p. 132 f.
  4. ^ 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. 207 .
  5. Website kultur-im-esel.de