Steinsbüscher Hof

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Steinsbüscher Hof, top left the main building (2012)
Main building of the Steinsbüscher Hof (2019)

The Steinsbüscher Hof is a homestead in Bad Honnef , a town in the Rhein-Sieg district in North Rhine-Westphalia .

The farm is located northeast of Selhof on a hillside at the edge of the forest at 140  m above sea level. NHN near the lower entrance of the Mucher Wiesental , which leads from Bad Honnef into the mountains of the Rheinwesterwälder volcanic ridge that adjoin the Siebengebirge to the south . The Servatiusweg leads past the courtyard and ends at Aegidienberg at the Servatius chapel.

The Steinsbüscher Hof goes back to a house that was built there in 1591 by a bailiff from the Löwenburg office . As early as 1594 it belonged to a Junker Metternich, who or his descendants had converted the house into a courtyard by 1678 at the latest. He owned a three-and-a-quarter acre vineyard . The name of the farm and the surrounding parcel at that time was Ahm Steinbusch . In 1682 and 1706/1707 the farm was leased, in 1746 it was one of the wineries visited in the parish of Honnef as part of a so-called “ cellar visitation” . In 1751 it was pledged to the Jesuits , who then owned the court in 1766. Under the tenant Rungen (until 1837) the farm had an area of ​​49 acres.

In the course of secularization in the areas on the right bank of the Rhine from 1803, the Steinsbüscher Hof fell from the Jesuits to the Prussian state in 1815 and was sold in 1835 for 1,310 Reichstaler . In 1885 the Steinsbüscherhof residential area had six residents in a building that was a quarry stone building . Until the beginning of the 20th century it was still used as a farm with pig breeding and dairy farming , in the 1920s fruit growing for commercial purposes ended. Around 1920 riding stables were added on Mucherwiesenweg below the original farm. At that time, the Sonderbusch, north of it at the same height, also belonged to the farm . Towards the end of the Second World War, the courtyard suffered severe damage in March 1945 and was later rebuilt as a villa in the form of Lower Rhine architecture. The courtyard was restored in the 1990s and has been used as a beauty clinic since 2006 .

literature

  • Adolf Nekum : Viticulture in Honnef - memories of a 1,100-year history (= home and history association "Herrschaft Löwenburg" eV : studies on the local history of the city of Bad Honnef am Rhein , issue 10). Bad Honnef 1993, p. 75.
  • Adolf Nekum: 400 years of the Steinsbüscherhof . In: Honnefer Volkszeitung , 13, 16, 17, 20 June 1992.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wilhelm Bier, Werner Osterbrink (ed.); Wilhelm W. Hamacher : The Löwenburg: Pictures and data on the history of the castle and its lords . edition Wolkenburg, Rheinbreitbach 2004, ISBN 3-934676-16-2 , p. 126.
  2. ^ Community encyclopedia for the Kingdom of Prussia , Volume XII Provinz Rheinland, Verlag des Königlich Statistischen Bureaus (Ed.), 1888, page 115
  3. J [ohann] J [oseph] Brungs : The city of Honnef and its history . Verlag des St. Sebastianus-Schützenverein, Honnef 1925, p. 35 . (Reprint 1978 by Löwenburg-Verlag, Bad Honnef)
  4. Helmut Arntz (with the assistance of Adolf Nekum ): Urkataster und Gewannen: using the example of the community of Honnef 1824/1826 (= Heimat- und Geschichtsverein "Herrschaft Löwenburg" eV : studies on the local history of the city of Bad Honnef am Rhein , issue 13, Bad Honnef 2000; Society for the History of Wine eV : Writings on Wine History , ISSN  0302-0967 , No. 133, Wiesbaden 2000). P. 104.
  5. idyll in Bad Honnef Mucherwiesental: From the fruit industry for the beauty clinic , General-Anzeiger 13 April, 2010

Coordinates: 50 ° 38 ′ 35 "  N , 7 ° 14 ′ 53"  E