Sieberhausen

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Coordinates: 51 ° 26 '  N , 9 ° 16'  E

Map: Hessen
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Sieberhausen
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Hesse

Sieberhausen is a former manor with a classicist manor in the district of Zierenberg in the northern Hessian district of Kassel . It is located about 1.5 km northwest of Hohenborn at 295  m in the upper Warmetal on the southern edge of the hedgehog bed . A connecting road leads from Hohenborn in the southeast to Oberlistingen in the northwest.

history

The place was first mentioned in documents in 1273, when the knight Dietrich Olla the monastery Aroldessen gave his share of "ecclesia" (church) and "villa" (village) "Siborgehosen". In 1322 the village "Zyborgehosen" is listed as a family property of those from the Malsburg . The courtyard was built by Georg von der Malsburg. From the 15th century on, the spellings “Sibernchusen” (1428), “Syberhusyrn” (1429), “Siberhausen” (around 1580) and “Sibershausen” (1708/10) can be found. From 1428 the place had its own parish under the patronage of the von der Malsburg and with a branch church in Niederlistingen . In 1747 Sieberhausen became the vicariate of Oberlistingen .

The mansion

When the von der Malsburg zu Sieberhausen family died out in the male line in 1751, the estate and village came into possession of the von Westphalen family through female inheritance , in 1781 through sale to von Reineck , in 1905 to August Maertens and finally in the 1920s of the banker Ernst Enno Russell , whose heirs, as well as the Hohenborn estate, still own it today. The Sieberhausen manor district , which in 1885 comprised 142 hectares of arable land, 11 hectares of meadows and 12 hectares of forest and woodland and in which 22 people lived, was dissolved in 1928 and incorporated into Oberlistingen.

The estate

Road through the estate (2019)

Sieberhausen today consists of two courtyards, each surrounded by buildings and walls, between which the street from Oberlistingen, sloping to the south, runs. The two-storey mansion made of plastered half-timbered houses , built around 1800, faces the street on the east side of the western courtyard. The symmetrical, five-axis building is covered with a half- hip roof and has a simple central portal and rectangular windows on both floors . A central risalit , which is framed by pilaster strips above a plate belt that horizontally divides the entire facade , pierces the eaves and contains a further storey with its own gable end. Around 1830 a slightly protruding side wing was added to the north and south, with three-part windows on the two lower floors, with a profiled gable line and with semicircular windows in the gable field. The courtyard is surrounded by barns and stable buildings in the north, west and south, as is the eastern courtyard. On the west side there is a beautiful gate from the second half of the 17th century. It consists of plastered quarry stone, with round-arched sandstone walls and profiled fighting stones in the passage.

Footnotes

  1. The documents from the 11th century, wrongly attributed to Sieberhausen in older works, refer to today's deserted area of Siburgehusen about 1.2 km east of Strodthagen in the Northeim district . (Kirstin Casemir, Franziska Menzel and Uwe Ohainski: Die Ortnames des Landkreis Northeim. Verlag für Regionalgeschichte, Bielefeld, 2005, ISBN 3-89534-607-1 , pp. 345–346.)
  2. ^ Johann Just Winkelmann's thorough and authentic description of the principalities of Hesse and Hersfeld .... , Part 1, Brauer, Bremen, 1712, p. 309
  3. ^ "Maertens, August" , in: Hessische Biographie
  4. ^ Sieberhausen, district of Kassel , in: Historisches Ortlexikon Hessen

Web links

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

literature

  • Fritz Hufschmidt: An attempt at a history of the upper Warmetal, in particular the town of Zierenberg, the villages Dörnberg, Ehlen, Burghasungen, the former Hasungen monastery, the colonies Friedrichsaue and Friedrichsstein, the manors Bodenhausen, Oedinghausen, Hohenborn and Sieberhausen. Borner, Wolfhagen 1905, pp. 274-275
  • Heinrich Reimer (arrangement): Historisches Ortslexikon für Kurhessen , (publications of the Historical Commission for Hesse, Volume 14; reprint of the 1st edition from 1926) Elwert, Marburg, 1974, ISBN 3-7708-0509-7 , p. 442
  • Anna Schroeder-Petersen: The offices of Wolfhagen and Zierenberg; their territorial development up to the 19th century (publications of the Institute for Historical Regional Studies of Hesse and Nassau, Volume 12), Elwert, Marburg, 1936, pp. 85–96