Sabbenhausen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sabbenhausen
City of Lügde
Sabbenhausen coat of arms
Coordinates: 51 ° 54 ′ 46 ″  N , 9 ° 17 ′ 9 ″  E
Height : 160 m
Area : 8.96 km²
Residents : 871  (Dec. 31, 2017)
Population density : 97 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 1970
Postal code : 32676
Area code : 05283
map
Location of Sabbenhausen in Lügde

Sabbenhausen is one of the ten districts of the city of Lügde in the Lippe district in North Rhine-Westphalia . The district had 871 residents on December 31, 2017. The current mayor is Karl-Heinz Klus.

location

Sabbenhausen lies at an altitude of 169  m above sea level. NN and around five kilometers southeast of the core city of Lügde. The area is 8,962 km².

history

Stone axes found in the Sabbenhaus area indicate that the area was already settled in the Neolithic . According to scientific research, places ending in -hausen were created between 700 and 900 AD . Sabbenhausen was first mentioned in a deed of donation in 1258 , when Count Widekind von Schwalenberg donated the village of Sabbenhausen to the Falkenhagen monastery. In the 14th century , Sabbenhausen and other neighboring towns fell into desolation. In 1529 the place was repopulated with the help of the Kreuzherren in Falkenhagen. As early as 1516 , they had built the so-called kitchen courtyard in Sabbenhausen, which was intended to expand the cultivation of grain and to provide additional supplies to the Falkenhagen monastery. In Sabbenhausen, 20 new houses and a tithe barn were built in 1555 . This was removed in 1953 and rebuilt in the Lippisches Landesmuseum in Detmold . It is considered to be the oldest four-column construction in the Westphalia-Lippe Regional Association .

In the Thirty Years War , many farmers lost their belongings and left Sabbenhausen. Despite the heavy losses caused by the long war, the place did not fall desolate, but was able to reactivate itself after the peace agreement. Around 1800 there was the first Protestant and in 1887 the first Catholic school in Sabbenhausen. In 1937 the Nazis merged both denominational schools. In the new school building erected in 1959 there is now a kindergarten after the primary and secondary schools were closed. For centuries, the Christians in Sabbenhausen have been visiting the Protestant and Catholic church in Falkenhagen, until the Catholics built a church in Sabbenhausen on their own in 1926. The Protestant cemetery, established in 1898, and the Catholic cemetery that was created in 1899 were merged into one cemetery for both denominations in 1970.

On September 1, 1921 Sabbenhausen ceded parts of the area to the new municipality of Falkenhagen .

In the First World War were 43 soldiers in the Second World War there were 56 victims from Sabbenhausen for which erected a memorial, and a memorial plaque was attached to the cemetery chapel.

The previously independent municipality was incorporated into the municipal reform on January 1, 1970.

Infrastructure

The place is predominantly agricultural. In Sabbenhausen there is a Catholic church with a youth home, a municipal kindergarten, a village community room, a grocery store, a butcher's shop, a bakery, three restaurants, six craft businesses and a commercial enterprise.

Attractions

In the village there is a natural monument an old lime tree and three as a monument reported half-timbered houses. The 400-year-old former water mill , which is well worth seeing , is also a monument in the Ratsiek district . In Mosterholz (Lower Saxony), north of Sabbenhausen, there are numerous medieval vaulted bakers in good condition and some Bronze Age barrows .

literature

  • Drake, Heinrich: Chronicle of Sabbenhausen and the former districts of Ratsiek and Henkenbrink . Bad Pyrmont 1996/97.
  • Festing, Heinrich: 750 years of Sabbenhausen . Festschrift with village chronicle. Lügde / Sabbenhausen 2008.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c http://www.sabbenhausen.de/geschichte.html History of Sabbenhausen
  2. ^ Stephanie Reekers: The regional development of the districts and communities of Westphalia 1817 - 1967 . Aschendorff, Münster (Westphalia) 1977, ISBN 3-402-05875-8 .
  3. Main statute of the city of Lügde (PDF; 340 kB) from May 28, 2014
  4. Martin Bünermann: The communities of the first reorganization program in North Rhine-Westphalia . Deutscher Gemeindeverlag, Cologne 1970, p. 106 .
  5. a b Lügder district Sabbenhausen