Shepherd's House

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The Schäferhaus ( Danish Skæferhus ; Low German Schäperhus ) in Flensburg is the name of an area that was assigned to the Friesischer Berg district , but lies on the edge of the Weiche district , between Lecker Chaussee and Bundesstraße 199 . It gave its name to the Flensburg-Schäferhaus airport there , the Schäferhaus foundation land and the district of the same name in the Weiche district.

background

In 1722 St. Marien set up the so-called shepherd's house in the area on Ochsenweg . At that time the area was still in the middle of a heathland . The shepherd's house should enable poor people to practice sheep farming so that they could get work and income. King Friedrich IV made stones available to the Duburg , which was demolished at that time. In 1723 the stone, thatched shepherd's house was completed. The facility included a separate bakery and a well. Due to an objection from St. Nikolai , no restaurant could be set up at that time .

On a map from 1768, a large area to the west of the shepherd's house was described with the words "Field to the shepherd's house, the orphanage for use". In 1788, the Schäferhaus had grown considerably. A horse stable, a second stable in which there were cows and horses, a hay barn and a manor house supplemented the facility. The Schäferhaus inn is said to have been known since 1734. The jug law is said to have been granted only in 1772. The name of the first host is said to have been Iver Lorenzen. The innkeepers following Iver Lorenzen are well known. The current building of the inn was built in 1889. It originally had the address Friesische Straße 240, today the address Lecker Chaussee 130. The original sheep farming disappeared at some point.

Even today, the Shepherd of Schäferweg , east of Shepherd House, which until 1957 was named and the Schäferweg in Harrislee in the northern part of the Foundation's Country Schaferhaus . The Flensburg-Schäferhaus airfield adjacent to the Schäferhaus was built at the beginning of the 20th century from a previously existing large parade ground . Since the construction of the federal highway 199, after the Second World War , Schäferhaus has been in a kind of structural island location. The urban connection was interrupted. Schäferhaus is difficult to reach on foot. After the end of the Cold War , the Briesen barracks was converted into a garden city . The foundation country was established at the same time. The entire area of ​​the airfield, the entire undeveloped and built-up area below it to the railway line at the former Weiche station is now part of the so-called Schäferhaus district.

Adjacent towns and areas

The villages adjacent to Schäferhaus are Langberg and Gottrupel . In the north on the edge of the foundation state in the natural area of ​​Flensburg there is the Nonnenberg . In the south is the already mentioned airfield.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Lüd vun de Flensburg Kant . Johannes Christiansen, Harrislee, canceled… 1st edition. Skandia publishing house. NA Sørensen KG, Flensburg 1979, ISBN 3-88060-017-1 , p. 124 (Low German).
  2. ^ Falk-Verlag : Flensburg city map with Glücksburg, Harrislee, Padborg, 1991, 17th edition
  3. ^ Cities-Verlag: Map of Flensburg, 14th edition; The city map was probably created around 2013.
  4. Graphisches Institutes Eckmann (mediaprint): Map of Flensburg with Harrislee and Glücksburg (center) from, status 2011
  5. ^ City districts, published by the City of Flensburg ( Memento from February 24, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  6. ^ Writings of the Society for Flensburg City History (ed.): Flensburg in history and present . Flensburg 1972, page 398
  7. Flensburg street names . Society for Flensburg City History, Flensburg 2005, ISBN 3-925856-50-1 , article: Schäferweg
  8. Flensburg street names . Society for Flensburg City History, Flensburg 2005, ISBN 3-925856-50-1 , article: Schäferweg
  9. Gerret Liebing Schlaber: Fra opland til bydele . Studieafdelingen ved Dansk Centralbibliotek for Sydslesvig, Flensborg / Flensburg 2009, ISBN 978-87-89178-73-8 , p. 73 .
  10. Flensburg street names . Society for Flensburg City History, Flensburg 2005, ISBN 3-925856-50-1 , article: Schäferweg
  11. Gerrit Liebing Schlaber: Fra opland til bydele . Studieafdelingen ved Dansk Centralbibliotek for Sydslesvig, Flensborg / Flensburg 2009, ISBN 978-87-89178-73-8 , p. 73 .
  12. Gerrit Liebing Schlaber: Fra opland til bydele . Studieafdelingen ved Dansk Centralbibliotek for Sydslesvig, Flensborg / Flensburg 2009, ISBN 978-87-89178-73-8 , p. 75 .
  13. Gerrit Liebing Schlaber: Fra opland til bydele . Studieafdelingen ved Dansk Centralbibliotek for Sydslesvig, Flensborg / Flensburg 2009, ISBN 978-87-89178-73-8 , p. 73 and 75 .
  14. See Lutz Wilde : Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany, cultural monuments in Schleswig-Holstein. Volume 2, Flensburg, p. 136

Web links

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

Coordinates: 54 ° 47 '  N , 9 ° 23'  E