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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the city of Springe
Jump
Map of Germany, position of the city of Springe highlighted

Coordinates: 52 ° 13 '  N , 9 ° 33'  E

Basic data
State : Lower Saxony
County : Hanover region
Height : 107 m above sea level NHN
Area : 159.81 km 2
Residents: 29,897 (Jan 15, 2020)Template: Infobox administrative unit in Germany / maintenance / not yet converted to meta template
Postal code : 31832
Primaries : 05041, 05044, 05045
License plate : H
Community key : 03 2 41 017
City structure: 12 districts or city ​​districts

City administration address :
At the Burghof 1
31832 Jump
Website : www.springe.de
Mayor : Christian Springfeld ( FDP )
Location of the city of Springe in the Hanover region
Region Hannover Niedersachsen Wedemark Burgwedel Neustadt am Rübenberge Burgdorf Uetze Lehrte Isernhagen Langenhagen Garbsen Wunstorf Seelze Barsinghausen Sehnde Hannover Gehrden Laatzen Wennigsen Ronnenberg Hemmingen Pattensen Springe Landkreis Hameln-Pyrmont Landkreis Schaumburg Landkreis Nienburg/Weser Landkreis Heidekreis Landkreis Celle Landkreis Peine Landkreis Gifhorn Landkreis Hildesheimmap
About this picture
Transport links from Springe
Jump as a Merian engraving around 1650

Springe is a city with around 30,000 inhabitants in the Hanover region .

geography

Location, waters

The city is located on the Deisterpforte , a flat valley pass between the southern foothills of the Deister and the Kleiner Deister . The Haller river , which gave the town of Springe its medieval name, Hallerspring , rises in the Deisterpforte .

The two sources of the Haller are on Raher Berg in the parcel Am Spielbrink at an altitude of 123.2  m above sea level. NN developed in a water extraction system of the water supply company Purena ; Purena is a subsidiary of E.ON Avacon . The Hallerbrunnen pump spring water from the partly karstified corallenoolite of the Malm , which is supplemented by inflows from the 15 m thick Quaternary unconsolidated rocks. The pumped water is slightly alkaline and has increased carbonate hardness . The springs are used to supply the town of Springe with drinking water; their discharge is around 0.5 million m³ per year.

City structure

As of January 15, 2020

Neighboring communities

Springe borders clockwise, starting in the north, on Barsinghausen , Wennigsen (Deister) , Ronnenberg , Hemmingen and Pattensen ( Hanover region ), Nordstemmen and Elze ( Hildesheim district ), as well as Salzhemmendorf , Coppenbrügge and Bad Münder ( Hameln-Pyrmont district ) .

history

Springe was first mentioned in a document as Hallerspringe in 1013. In a border description of the Diocese of Hildesheim , which has survived as an undated copy, but must be assigned to the end of the 10th century in terms of form and content, Springe is mentioned under the name Helereisprig. After losing their Hallermund Castle on the Kleiner Deister to the Welfen in 1282, the Counts of Hallermund built a solid, castle-like house at the current location of Springe. From this new manor they administered their county. This presumably resulted in Springe as a new facility. The establishment of the count's seat and the fortification of the place led to the acquisition of city ​​rights in the 13th century . During the Middle Ages, Springe was the ancestral seat of the Counts Hallermund and their successors, a side line of the Counts of Kevernburg . From their territory later the Office Springe arose and after various renaming and extensions in 1884 the District Springe.

At the end of the 10th century, the first place names of the districts that are now part of Springe appear in documents, and up to the year 1300 all villages and towns that exist today are mentioned in documents.

The development and growth of the place are closely related to its convenient location at the Deisterpforte . Here is the border between the plains and the mountains into which the Deisterpforte leads. In addition, the place is in the middle of the road between the economic centers of Hanover and Hameln. This favorable location only unfolded its effect with the "Chaussee expansion" of today's B 217 in the 18th century and with the completion of the Hanover-Altenbeken railway line in 1872.

A steady development towards a medium-sized town began after the end of the First and especially the Second World War (1933 = 3912 inhabitants). Until the district reform , which came into force on March 1, 1974, Springe was the district town of the Springe district . After that Springe belonged to the district of Hanover , which was absorbed on November 1, 2001 in today's Hanover region. Today around 13,000 people live in the city center.

Until December 31, 2004 Springe belonged to the Hanover administrative district , which, like the other administrative districts of Lower Saxony, was dissolved.

Incorporations

Today's town of Springe was created on March 1, 1974 from the merger of the communities of Alferde, Altenhagen I, Alvesrode, Bennigsen, Boitzum, Gestorf, Holtensen, Lüdersen, Mittelrode and Völksen as well as the towns of Springe and Eldagsen. Due to the regional reform, the city of Eldagsen lost its city rights, which were granted in the 13th century, and is now the fourth largest district of the city of Springe. After protests by the people of Eldagsen, the district regained its municipal naming rights and is now officially titled “Stadt Eldagsen, district of the city of Springe”.

religion

The majority of the population in Springe is Protestant (73%) and is organized in the two Evangelical Lutheran parishes, St. Andreas with the historic church in the city center and St. Petrus with the modern church in the north-west of the city. The parishes belong to the Laatzen-Springe parish with headquarters in Pattensen, and they also include the forest kindergarten. The regional church community Springe has its common room on Burgstrasse, its beginnings go back to 1907.

The Catholic Christians (13%) gather in the Christ-König-Kirche on Archbishop-Joseph-Godehard-Platz. It was built in 1980 as a towerless central building, as a successor to a church of the same name that was built in 1951. Your parish belongs to the dean's office in Hanover.

The Evangelical Free Church community uses after decades of temporary since 1998 even built the Cross Church on the Jägerallee.

There has been a New Apostolic congregation since 1931 , which gathers in the church on Im Sieke, consecrated in 1967. In 2005 there was a merger with the communities of Springe-Altenhagen and Bad Münder, whereupon the church was rebuilt and expanded. The community belongs to the church district Hannover-Südwest.

The Community of Christ has been represented in Springe since 1947 and has had a church building on Im Reite Street since 1971. Since September 2005, there is a Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses in Rathenaustraße in the industrial area.

The Lutherheim, located at the northern end of Jägerallee, is a Christian conference venue.

Other Protestant and Catholic churches are located in localities that are incorporated into Springe.

politics

Local election 2016
Turnout: 57.1% (2011: 58.6%)
 %
40
30th
20th
10
0
35.0%
30.6%
10.0%
8.6%
7.1%
2.9%
2.4%
1.8%
FWS
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Gains and losses
compared to 2011
 % p
 10
   8th
   6th
   4th
   2
   0
  -2
  -4
  -6
  -8th
-5.9  % p
-6.2  % p
-5.3  % p
+ 8.6  % p
+ 4.7  % p.p.
+1.5  % p
-0.7  % p
+1.8  % p
FWS
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City Council

The city council or, according to Lower Saxony local law, an independent municipality of Springe, is composed of 35 councilors. The distribution of seats after the local elections on September 11, 2016 (and for comparison after the 2011 local elections and 2006 local elections ):

CDU SPD GREEN FDP LEFT FWS AfD Single proposal total
2016 13 11 4th 2 1 1 2 1 35 seats
2011 13 13 7th 1 1 1 - - 36 seats
2006 15th 16 3 2 - - - - 36 seats

mayor

Mayor is Christian Springfeld (FDP). In the runoff election on January 31, 2016, Springfeld prevailed with 55.0%. He started his service on February 12, 2016. He was sworn in at the council meeting on February 18, 2016.

previous incumbent
  • until 2002: Gerd Schwieger (SPD)
  • 2002–2015: Jörg-Roger Hische (independent)
  • 2015–2016: vacant; Gerd-Dieter Walter as head of administration
  • since 2016: Christian Springfeld (FDP)

youth

There are activities of several youth organizations of the parties, among others the Junge Union or the Jusos in Springe. In addition, numerous youth associations such as Evangelical Youth , Youth Fire Brigade , THW Youth , Association of Christian Pathfinders , German Youth Red Cross , Sports Youth and Decisions for Christ are active.

Town twinning

There are partnerships with

There is a friendship between cities

coat of arms

According to recent interpretations, the Springer city coat of arms represents the three sources of the Haller , which rises not far from Springes at the foot of the Kleiner Deister, in the Deisterpforte. In the three corners of the coat of arms you can see a five-petalled rose, the shield and seal of the county Hallermund, which existed from the 12th century.

Culture and sights

The Springe hunting lodge is on the edge of the Saupark . It was built in the years 1836 to 1842 according to plans by the court architect Georg Ludwig Friedrich Laves, initially as a single-storey building and was later extended. Further forest and hunting buildings followed by 1912, including two cavalier houses to the right and left of the castle . The hunting lodge was the starting point for stately hunts by the Hanoverian royal family . In 1965 the buildings came into the possession of the Lower Saxony state forest administration . Around 1990 the ground floor was extensively renovated, with the classical style being restored in two splendid halls. Today the castle can be visited. Parts of the building can be rented for events. As a branch of the Springer registry office, weddings are also possible. The castle houses a hunting museum on the ground floor. A training facility for the Lower Saxony State Hunters' Association is located on the upper floors.

Architectural monuments

Parks

Märzenbecher in the Elmschebruch between the Saupark and Eldagsen .

The Saupark is a forest area of ​​around 14 km², most of which is located on the Kleiner Deister and Nesselberg ridges . The area was used by the Hanoverian kings as a hunting ground from the middle of the 17th century and for this purpose it was surrounded by a 16 km long limestone wall in 1840 . The park is an enclosed game reserve that is home to many species of wildlife. The Saupark forest is an old mixed deciduous forest of beech and oak . In addition, the spruce trees predominate among the conifers . There is also a chestnut avenue. This is called Kaiserallee because the former emperor drove from the train station to his hunting lodge in his carriage. In addition to rock faces, caves, barrows , springs and wild meadows, there are also numerous rare animal and plant species.

In the north-eastern part of the Saupark there is the 90  ha large bison enclosure Springe , in which visitors can observe bison and around 100 native wild animal species.

Castles

In the area of ​​today's urban area there are still remnants of three prehistoric ramparts . The oldest is the Barenburg in the Osterwald above the Wülfinghausen monastery near Eldagsen. The remains of the Kukesburg , a former ring wall, are located near the Altenhagen I district on a foothill of the Nesselberg ridge . The defense system was built at different times, with the oldest construction phase in the 3rd century BC. Chr. Is suspected. The third is the Bennigser Burg on the east side of the Deister. These castles were never permanently inhabited, but served as a refuge for the population in times of danger .

On the east side of the Kleiner Deister within the Saupark lies Hallermund Castle , which was razed in 1435 on a hilltop , and some stone remains are still there.

natural reserve

Gypsy grove

South-west corner of the "Zigeunerwäldchen" nature reserve

The Zigeunerwäldchen (official spelling: Ziegeunerwäldchen , e.g. in the regulation on the nature reserve) is a nature reserve in the Lower Saxony town of Springe in the Hanover region . The nature reserve with the sign NSG HA 115 is 15  hectares in size. It is largely from the conservation area surrounded "Haller lowland". The area has been a nature reserve since December 18, 1986. The lower responsible nature conservation authority is the Hanover region. The nature reserve lies between the Springer districts of Stadt Eldagsen and Gestorf at the foot of the Abrahams . It protects a section of the Haller valley , a tributary of the Leine . The mostly near-natural forest remnants are unused today, but still influenced by earlier use. Willows and a high proportion of tree fungi characterize the forest, in which there is a lot of lying and standing dead wood . On swampy clearings extensive grow reeds stocks and tall sedge . In the west and south, grassland areas are included in the nature reserve. The nature reserve largely borders on arable land. The Lower Saxony Landgesellschaft acquired the Zigeunerwäldchen nature reserve for an area pool. The association Biotop-Management-Initiative e. V. transferred.

NABU Foundation Springe Natural Landscape Deister and Haller

The Nabu -Ortsverein Springe has had its own foundation since 2012 , which was established with endowment capital of 25,000 euros and 16 properties. The aim of the foundation is to make nature conservation in Springe sustainable. The heart of the projects is the gypsy forest. The Nabu bought the property in 1983; In 1986 it became a nature reserve. The income from the capital is used to maintain the existing properties and to acquire new areas. The volunteers try to manage as many care measures as possible on their own. One goal of the foundation is the renaturation of the Haller and the formation of a tributary of the Haller, which throttles the current speed and thereby creates a habitat for further animal and plant species. One of the goals of the Nabu members is to acquire the land adjacent to the gypsy forest in order to create connections to Hallerburger Holz , Jeinser Holz, Stude and Horn on the B 3 with hedges and green spaces .

Google Impact Challenge 2016

As part of the "Google Impact Challenge 2016", the NABU Foundation Springe 2016, like ninety-nine other winners, received a prize of € 10,000 for the following project: The NABU Foundation Springe would like to create an interactive map of the Deister and Haller natural landscape. The aim is to present the many nature conservation projects such as the nesting boxes or the NSG Gypsy Forest to a broad public without disturbing nature by too many visitors. Visitors can move freely through the landscape and call up interactive content such as photos and texts at certain points. All breeding species are also presented.

Economy and Infrastructure

Night watchman as a signpost in the old town

Companies

The Paulmann Licht company is based in Springe, in the Völksen district. The German Red Cross operates the blood donation service in Springe for large parts of northern Germany. The Binos company in Springe develops machines for the production of fiberboard. The zu Klampen Verlag has had its headquarters in Springe since 2003. The Octapharma company operates a production facility in Springe for the manufacture of medicines for blood clotting.

media

Two daily newspapers appear in Springe. The Neue Deister-Zeitung of the JC Erhardt GmbH publishing house has been based in the village since 1875 . It also supplies the Deister-Anzeiger of the Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung and the Neue Presse . The Deister-Anzeiger belongs to the Madsack publishing company .

Public facilities

  • Headquarters of the DRK rescue service in the Hanover region
  • Indoor swimming pool jump
  • Outdoor swimming pools in Altenhagen I, Bennigsen and Eldagsen
  • Tennis courts, mini golf, boules courts, beach volleyball, skate park
  • Wisent enclosure jump

Education and Social

Museum in the castle courtyard
  • City Library Springe
  • Museum in the castle courtyard
  • Football Museum Springe (Sports Collection Saloga e.V.)
  • vocational schools jump
  • Otto Hahn High School
  • Integrated comprehensive school (IGS) Jump
  • Peter Härtling School (special needs school, focus on learning)
  • Janusz Korczak School (special school, focus on intellectual development)
  • Primary schools in the districts of Springe (2), Altenhagen I, Völksen, Bennigsen, Gestorf, Eldagsen
  • 16 day-care centers for children from 0-14 years (crèche, day-care center, day-care center, family groups) with forest kindergarten
  • Education Center for Retail Lower Saxony (BZE)
  • Study center Springe of the SRH FernHochschule Riedlingen
  • Education and conference center Heimvolkshochschule Springe ( Heimvolkshochschule recognized by the State of Lower Saxony )
  • Energy and environmental center on the Deister
  • Enclosure school in the bison enclosure
  • Jägerlehrhof Jagdschloss Springe
  • Haas course (tax school)
  • Music school jump
  • North German refrigeration school
  • Adult Education Center Calenberger Land

traffic

Springe is on federal road 217 .

The train stations Springe , Völksen / Eldagsen and Bennigsen are in the urban area . They are on the Hanover – Altenbeken railway line and are served by the S-Bahn line 5 Paderborn - Hameln - Hanover Hbf - Hanover Airport . In terms of tariffs, these stations are located in Zone C of the Greater Hanover traffic .

The RegioBus Hannover operates in the Jump city bus line 301 and a plurality of lines that cross the urban area also.

Personalities

sons and daughters of the town

Incandescent lamp monument for Heinrich Göbel above Springe
Alleged birthplace of Heinrich Göbel

People who worked on site

  • Friedrich Türcke (1915–1998), forester and hunting scientist, headed the Saupark Forestry Office from 1957 to 1978 and was the city's nature conservation officer
  • Slava Gorpischin (* 1970), Russian national handball player and Olympic champion, played for HF Springe
  • Sven Lakenmacher (* 1971), national handball player, was player trainer at HF ​​Springe

literature

  • Brinckmann: The camp near Nordstemmen during the concentration of the 10th Federal Army Corps in 1858. Pictures and humor from camp life. Hanover: Schlüter'sche Hofbuchdruckerei, 1858
  • Wilhelm Hartmann: History of the city of Springe am Deister. Jump on Deister 1954
  • Günter Haupt: Jump in old views. With illustrations by Springe, Saupark and Eldagsen. European Library, Zaltbommel (Netherlands) 1978
  • Hans-Christian Rohde: We are Germans with a Jewish religion. History of the Jews in Eldagsen and Springe, Bennigsen, Gestorf, Völksen. (= Hallermunter Schriften , Vol. 2), Springe: Museum auf dem Burghof e. V., 1999.
  • Eike Rehren: Humiliated and exploited. Prisoners of war and forced laborers in the town and district of Springe 1939–1945. Hallermunter writings 3. Museum in the Burghof e. V., Springe 2009. ISBN 978-3-00-028749-7
  • Helmut Busse: 40 years of the museum in Springe. 1969-2009. History and stories in a timeline. Once a granary - now a cultural center , Springe: Museum in the Burghof, 1999
  • Hans-Cord Sarnighausen: Kurhannoversche local lawyers from 1692 to 1866 in Springe. In: Springer Yearbook 2014 for the city and the old district of Springe. Ed .: Friends of the town history of Springe e. V., Springe 2014, pp. 69–89.
  • Karl Schaper (ed.), Wilhelm Netzel (edit.): Small history of the city of Springe. Jump 2012

Web links

Commons : Jump  - collection of images, videos and audio files
Wikivoyage: Jump  - Travel Guide

Individual evidence

  1. Result applicant jump (preliminary result). Retrieved January 31, 2016 .
  2. Purena network area  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. .@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.purena.de  
  3. City of Springe: Districts of the city of Springe. Retrieved August 18, 2020 .
  4. Blazek, Matthias: From the Landdrostey to the district government - The history of the district government Hanover in the mirror of the administrative reforms , Stuttgart 2004, ISBN 3-89821-357-9 .
  5. ^ 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 GmbH, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 203 .
  6. ^ Lower Saxony State Office for Statistics Online. Retrieved January 3, 2007 .
  7. ^ EFG jump
  8. http://wahl.hannit.de/wahlen.php?site=left/sitzverkauf&wahl=965#index.php?site=right/result&wahl=965&angebote=0&gebiet=17&idx=0&typ=3&stimme=0&hoch=0&untertyp=0&lstpartei=DIE % 20LINKE. & Sitz = 1 & mode = list
  9. ^ WRS Softwareentwicklung GmbH: Municipal election 2016. Accessed April 22, 2017 .
  10. ^ Hannoversche Allgemeine , September 12, 2011
  11. Jagdschloss Springe , landesforsten.de, February 12, 2007.
  12. http://cms2.niedersachsen.de/portal/live.php?navigation_id=8062&article_id=39507&_psmand=26 nature reserve "Ziegeunerwäldchen" at NLWKN
  13. http://cms2.niedersachsen.de/naturschutz/schutzgebiete/einzelnen_naturschutzgebiete/44602.html?_psmand=26 Regulation on the NSG
  14. Nabu Foundation operates nature conservation on site.
  15. ^ NABU Springe Foundation
  16. ^ City of Springe: Schools in the urban area of ​​Springe. Retrieved January 18, 2020 .