Stockhausen (Lübbecke)

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Stockhausen
City of Luebbecke
Stockhausen coat of arms
Coordinates: 52 ° 19 ′ 19 ″  N , 8 ° 35 ′ 25 ″  E
Height : 54 m above sea level NN
Area : 5.73 km²
Residents : 739  (Aug 31, 2017)
Population density : 129 inhabitants / km²
Postal code : 32312
Area code : 05741
map
Location of Stockhausen in Lübbecke

Stockhausen is a village with around 700 inhabitants and belongs to the East Westphalian city of Lübbecke ( Minden-Lübbecke district ).

The place can be characterized as a rural village, which is about one kilometer from the development of the Lübbeck core town. The village is mainly surrounded by fields and meadows, with arable land dominating the center and the south, and grassland dominating the northern third. South-east of the edge of the village is a small forest area, the approximately five hectare Stockhauser Busch , which is owned by the von der Recke family . To the north of the village is another approximately two hectare wooded area. A handful of other forests , including the Telgtengarten belonging to the Stockhausen manor, are all smaller than one hectare. The forest area makes up hardly 1.5 percent of the total area. Stockhausen is one of the poorly forested districts of Lübbeck.

Land use, settlements and landscapes in the Stockhausen district

location

The old community of Blasheim, to which Stockhausen belonged, was 21.38 km². Stockhausen is around 5.7 km² in size, which results in a population density of around 133 inhabitants per km². This means that the district has a significantly lower population density than the entire city of Lübbecke (400 inhabitants per km²). In the area of ​​the district, in addition to the actual core village, there are two other districts with the names Hope (Eikel) and Horst. The Hope is about one kilometer southwest of the center of Stockhausen, the street settlement Horst is northwest of the core village. In the north the village has a share in the nature reserve Rauhe Horst - Schäferwiesen .

history

Stockhausen was first mentioned around 1280. The name comes from stick (= stump) and indicates a clearing. The first named farm owners in the Stockhausen peasantry in what was then the parish of Blasheim were Johann von Uflen and his wife Gese. On August 9, 1355, they pledged their farm in Stockusen . Among the peasant owners around 1650 there are still well-known names such as Duwenriek, Östermann and Niemeyer.

The history of the village has always been closely linked to the history of the Stockhausen manor, which once represented the core of the peasantry, but is now southwest of the actual village. In the possession of the von Westrup family since the 15th century, it passed to the von der Recke family in the first quarter of the 17th century.

Until the regional reform, which came into force on January 1, 1973, the Stockhausen farmers belonged to the former municipality of Blasheim. As a result, Stockhausen has in a certain way gained autonomy through the territorial reform, since it is now an “equal” district of the city of Lübbecke alongside Blasheim.

Activities of the village community

Stockhauser Backhaus (right) with coach house and boules alley

The Stockhausen village community with a total of seven clubs or groups (gymnastics club "Grüne Eiche", local history club, project club "Stockhausen for Europe", rural women, social association, local agricultural association, volunteer fire brigade) has been committed to the interests of the village since the late 1980s. For example, in the early 1990s, the historical grave of the former von der Recke family in Telgtengarten and the individual grave of Captain Strubberg in the Horst district were extensively restored.

In addition, a new village center with a meeting place, gymnasium, sports field, all-purpose playing field, children's playground, bakery, coach house, boules alley and a small “Stockhauser Vitrine” shop was built on the inside and outside of the former village school in the center of Stockhausen. Various activities, events and projects initiated by the individual associations or groups regularly take place on this site, such as the baking days, which are held twice a year, the Stockhauser market held every two years in August, the potato festival that takes place every autumn, the Easter bonfire and the Stockhaus afternoon as well as various smaller lecture, cultural, social, game and sporting events spread over the whole year.

At the beginning of the 2000s, the main town thoroughfare on Blasheimer Strasse was redeveloped and the establishment (1992) or continuation (2016) of a continuous foot / cycle path from the town center to the Hope district.

These activities have led to Stockhausen's success in the village competition Our Village Has a Future ("Our village should be more beautiful" until 1997) from the end of the 1980s to the present day, both at district and state level and in 1995 at federal level with a Award as " Golddorf " could celebrate. In the district competition in 2017, Stockhausen was again awarded second place.

As a result of the success in the national competition in 1995, Stockhausen was accepted into the “Village of the Future” funding program as part of the Expo Initiative OstWestfalenLippe 2000 together with seven other villages from East Westphalia-Lippe ( Bellersen , Bökendorf , Frille , Kleinenberg , Kutenhausen , Ottenhausen , Vörden ) honored here as a “cultural model village”.

Sons and daughters (selection)

photos

Web links

Commons : Stockhausen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ to be measured in TIM-online
  2. Blasheim community (ed.): 1000 years Blasheim community, Blasheim, Minden 1969, p. 12 f.
  3. ^ 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, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p. 325 .
  4. Statistics of the national competition "Our village has a future" 1961–2016. Retrieved March 11, 2018 .
  5. District competition "Our village has a future" 2017 - results. Retrieved March 11, 2018 .
  6. ^ Stockhausen - the cultural model village. Retrieved March 11, 2018 .