Stikelkamp

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Stikelkamp
Hesel municipality
Coordinates: 53 ° 20 ′ 9 ″  N , 7 ° 34 ′ 36 ″  E
Height : 9 m above sea level NN
Postal code : 26835
Area code : 04946
Good Stikelkamp
Good Stikelkamp

Stikelkamp is a district in the municipality of Hesel in the district of Leer in East Frisia . The Stikelkamp forest covers a large part of the area of ​​the settlement. Village life is very closely linked to the neighboring community of Neukamperfehn and the Hesel district of Beningafehn .

history

The manor house

Stikelkamp is a former Johannitergut and nunnery that was subordinate to the Kommende Hasselt . During the Reformation period , the monastery was confiscated by the rulers and the monastery died.

About the appropriation of the monastery property without compensation by the sovereigns there was the saying: "Heiselhusen in the west and Stikelkamp in the east, de are taken before snuff and host."

The Counts of East Friesland leased the estate to the Count's Chancellor Wilhelm Ubben in 1522. The son Joachim Ubbena and his sister transferred the estate to their cousin Joest von Diepholt in 1561. The descendant Phillip von Diepholt exchanged it in 1663 for Boyung Beninga , chief of Grimersum and Dornum .

In 1665 it came into the possession of the general rent master Leonard Fewen zu Emden. From this the estate went to his son-in-law, Alexander Hume of Manderstone from Scotland, 5th Earl of Dunbar (1651-1720), who called himself Count Hume of Manderstone in Germany . He had under the Anglo-Scottish King Wilhelm III. of Orange served as Dutch equestrian captain and later became a privy councilor in Aurich. His son was Leonard Hume, his son Heeres Andries Hume (de jure 7th Earl of Dunbar, born 1738). His sister Helena Hume of Manderstone (1722–1784) inherited the property; she married Bebäus Scato Kettwig; their daughter Isabella (1742–1797) married Eger Carl Christian Lantzius-Beninga (1744–1798), a son of Erhard Thomas Lantzius and Beatrix Dorothea Beninga from the Dornum family . The Lantzius-Beninga family lived and managed the estate until the 20th century. In 1966 the land was divided between the Lantzius-Beninga and the Hullmann family. The historic manor building then fell into disrepair, as it was only used as a residential building. The district of Leer finally acquired the property in 1971.

Web links

Commons : Gut Stikelkamp  - collection of images, videos and audio files

credentials

  1. Dettmar Coldewey: Frisia Orientalis - data on the history of the country between Ems and Jade
  2. See the English article Earl of Dunbar
  3. ^ Web family tree of Eger Carl Christian Lantzius-Beninga
  4. Houtrouw: Ostfriesland - A historical and local hike towards the end of the princely period
  5. ^ Paul Weßels: Gut Stikelkamp. From the Johanniter convent to the “parlor” of the Leer district. East Frisian Landscape, Aurich 2002, ISBN 3-932206-28-2 .