Siebeneick

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Wuppertal coat of arms
Siebeneick (26)
district of Wuppertal
Location Siebeneick in Wuppertal
Coordinates 51 ° 17 '32 "  N , 7 ° 6' 59"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 17 '32 "  N , 7 ° 6' 59"  E.
surface 5.05 km²
Residents 2231 (Dec. 31, 2016)
Population density 442 inhabitants / km²
Proportion of foreigners 3.1% (December 31, 2016)
Incorporation 1975
Post Code 42111
Primaries 02 02, 0 20 53
Borough Uellendahl-Katernberg
Transport links
Train S 9
bus 617 647 649 SB69
Source: Wuppertal statistics - spatial data

Siebeneick is a 5.1 km² residential area in the north of the Uellendahl-Katernberg district of Wuppertal and belongs to the Elberfeld district .

geography

Siebeneick borders Dönberg in the east, the Uellendahl-West and Uellendahl-Ost quarters in the southeast, and the Nevigeser Straße and Eckbusch quarters in the south . The Velbert district of Neviges borders Siebeneick in the west and north . The south of the area is on the ridge of the Wuppertaler Nordhöhen , which form the watershed between the Wupper and Ruhr , the brooks that arise here flow through the sloping terrain towards the Hardenberger Bach .

Siebeneick is a rather rural area. A residential area from the second half of the 20th century in Metzmachersrath on the border with Katernberg houses most of the around 2,300 residents of the quarter. Other residential areas that have become part of today's residential areas are Metzmachersrath, Triebel , Triebelsheide , Vogelsbruch , Branger , Röttgen and Grenz Jagdhaus .

To Siebeneick belong the immediately neighboring Hofe Unterrohleder and Frickenhaus , which houses one of the oldest half-timbered houses in Wuppertal from the 17th century. Other farms and places to live are Alter Triebel , Am Lindgen , Auf der Schmitten , Asbruch , Bredde , Brink , Fingscheidt , Frickenhaus , Heidacker , Herrnasbruch , Jungmannshof , Königshof , Krähenberg , Krieg , Obenrohleder , Schevenhof , Schevensiepen , Schmitzhaus , Steingeshof , Wolfsholz , Worthsholz and desert farm .

The farms that were sold include Elsternbusch , Galgenbusch , Winkel , Römersleimberg , Schanze , Winkel and Wordernocken .

In the north at Kleinehöhe there is an extensive golf course run by the Bergisch Land Golf Club . The Wuppertal-Vohwinkel-Essen-Überruhr railway line, originally built by the Prinz Wilhelm Railway Company , runs along the western edge of the district . The Velbert-Rosenhügel stop on the S-Bahn line established in 2003 belongs to the Siebeneicks catchment area, the park-and-ride car park east of the stop is already in the Wuppertal city area.

At the Galgenbusch corridor , a reference to an old Wuppertal execution site near the royal court, there was an open-air theater in an old, geologically significant quarry - outcrop of Devon - carbon layer boundary - in the second half of the 20th century .

Etymology and history

The quarter was named after seven oaks near Hof Siebeneick on the Hardenberger Bach, located in the Dönberg area, the last of which was felled with a trunk diameter of two meters at the end of the 19th century. The area around Siebeneick was mentioned in 1038 as Sivonekon in a document from the Werden monastery and in 1220 as Siveneken in the small bailiff of Count Friedrich von Isenberg-Altena . Hof Siebeneick itself was first listed in 1355 as a Sevenheken in a list of goods belonging to the Hardenberg domain . In the late Middle Ages it was part of the Hardenberg rule in the area of ​​the Duchy of Berg .

The higher ground to the south and east of the farm is called Obensiebeneick , the north and west of the Untensiebeneick , which largely belongs to Neviges. These district names are derived from the Hardenberger farmers' associations Oberste Siebeneick and Unterste Siebeneick .

In the 19th century, the rural communities Obensiebeneick and Untensiebeneick belonged to the Hardenberg mayor , which was renamed Neviges in 1935 . From 1816 to 1861 it belonged to the Elberfeld district and from 1861 to the old Mettmann district . The south-eastern part of Obensiebeneick and the southern part of Dönberg were assigned to the newly founded city of Wuppertal in 1929.

With the municipal reform of 1975, the rest of the top seven Eicks, southeastern parts of sub-Seven Eick and the rest from Dönberg into the city of Wuppertal (was district Uellendahl-Katerberg ) incorporated. In the south-west of the newly created Wuppertal Siebeneick residential area, one half of the Kleine Höhe district , which had also previously belonged to Neviges and which historically did not belong to the area of ​​the Siebeneick farmers, was attached. The parts of Untensiebeneick passed to Wuppertal, however, came to the Dönberg residential area.

Web links

Commons : Siebeneick  - collection of images, videos and audio files