Stockhausen (Friedland)

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Stockhausen
Friedland parish
Stockhausen coat of arms
Coordinates: 51 ° 27 ′ 33 "  N , 9 ° 55 ′ 56"  E
Height : 165 m
Residents : 230  (Jul 31, 2012)
Incorporation : 1st January 1973
Postal code : 37133
Area code : 05509

Stockhausen is a district of the Friedland municipality in the Göttingen district in Lower Saxony .

description

The place lies between the west flowing Leine and the east running state road 568 (formerly federal road 27). About 230 inhabitants live on an area of ​​2.54 km².

Thieplatz with the heraldic elements stone chair and table

The site is determined by the mill, the Thie place, the Church of St. Boniface to the cemetery, stately Dreiseithöfen on generous plots and loosely arranged farmsteads .

Village community facility with village community center

In the middle of the village, directly on the L 564 , is the village community facility with the village community center . The premises of the volunteer fire brigade are housed on the ground floor, while the upper floor serves as a club and training facility for the local rifle club.

Schützenhaus on the "Steinkuhle"

To the east of Landesstrasse 568 (formerly Bundesstrasse 27) and outside the town center is the "Steinkuhle", which, with the Schützenhaus and the Osterfeuerplatz, houses two more central meeting points for village life.

Riding school with cenotaph (right)

On the "Reitbahn" green area in the south of the village there is a memorial in honor of the inhabitants who died in the First and Second World Wars.

history

The place was first mentioned in a document in the year 1100. At that time the place still operated under the name Stockhuson , also in a further mention in 1130 by Abbot Reinhard von Reinhausen . It was not until 1141 that he moved to Stockhusen , where he was also mentioned until the middle of the 15th century. The aristocratic Stockhausen family originally had their family seat here. They were in their early Burg men and committed their service in Friedland, the castle Niedeck which plesse castle , and from the mid-14th century as castrensis in Bramborg . They owned extensive goods in the vicinity of their ancestral home, which can still be proven in their hands until the middle of the 19th century.

With the law on the reorganization of the communities in the Göttingen area of ​​November 20, 1972, Stockhausen was incorporated into the newly founded community of Friedland on January 1, 1973.

politics

Local councilor and local mayor

In the local elections on September 11, 2016, a five-member local council was elected. This is headed by the local mayor Sebastian Bause; his deputy is Marco Krause (both Stockhausen voters ). The current electoral term ends on October 31, 2021.

  • Stockhausen voter community: 5 seats

(Status: local election on September 11, 2016 )

Culture and sight

Architectural monuments in Stockhausen

The following building ensembles in Stockhausen are under monument protection (as of 1997):

  • Göttinger Straße 3: The courtyard is a stately three-sided courtyard . The residential building with a gable-side facing and resting on a high plinth with a grid-like framework dates from the end of the 19th century.
  • Göttinger Straße 19: In 1748 the residential building of the courtyard was built, as the inscription in the door lintel shows. The floor-to-floor building with a cantilevered upper floor is structured by K-struts arranged in pairs on the corner and collar studs. The rear part of the house was later expanded.
  • Göttinger Straße 20: A two-story half-timbered house, probably from the early 18th century. It was subsequently expanded to include an extension with a towed roof.
  • Göttinger Straße 26: The one and a half storey half-timbered building was built around 1900 as a school building. This axially symmetrical half-timbered building has a built-in jamb and faces the Göttinger Straße on the eaves.
  • Göttinger Straße 28: St. Bonifatius Church
  • Leine bridge
Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. Boniface with cemetery

Evangelical St. Boniface Church

Around the middle of the 18th century, the parish church of St. Bonifatius was built south of the former school as a simple three-axis plastered building. The rectangular building is crowned by a squat-looking, slated gable with a Welscher hauge. Corner cuboids as well as portal and window walls contribute to the structure of the outer walls. The St. Bonifatiuskirche stands in the middle of the cemetery, which is surrounded by a stone wall.

Personalities from Stockhausen

Paul Gaebler
Paul Gäbler on April 9, 1972.

literature

  • Paul Gäbler : The documents in the tower head of Stockhausen. In: Göttinger Tageblatt No. 235 from 9./10. October 1954.
  • Paul Gäbler : The tower peers into the country in a new beauty. In: Göttinger Tageblatt No. 288 of 11./12. December 1954.
  • Rolf Wilhelm Brednich : Tie and Anger. Historic village squares in Lower Saxony, Thuringia, Hesse and Franconia. Friedland 2009.
  • Sven Spiong: Archaeological building observation in the center of Stockhausen, Friedland community, Göttingen district. In: Göttinger Jahrbuch Vol. 40 (1992) pp. 45–51 (3 illustrations and ct.). With the support of the city and the district of Göttingen ed. from the history association Göttingen und Umgebung eV; Genealogical-Heraldic Society; Local history study group Göttingen; Göttingen Association of Friends of Natural Sciences. - Göttingen: Goltze. - ISSN 0072-4882.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karl von Mengershausen u. Ludolph Heinrich Wissmann: Facilitating the understanding of documented news about the Principality of Göttingen . In: Burchhard Christian von Spilcker (Ed.): Patriotic archive for Hanoverian-Braunschweigische history . No. 1 , 1833, p. 122 f .
  2. Website of the Friedland community ( Memento of the original from April 4, 2019 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed on August 12, 2012 (PDF). @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / friedland.de
  3. Law on the restructuring of the municipalities in the Göttingen area of November 20, 1972, accessed on August 12, 2012 (PDF; 37 kB).
  4. Monument topography Federal Republic of Germany: "Architectural monuments in Lower Saxony" Volume 5.3: "Landkreis Göttingen Altkreis Duderstadt", edited by Peter Ferdinand Lufen. Publishing house CW Niemeyer, Hameln 1997.
  5. Paul Gäbler : The tower peers into the country in a new beauty. In: Göttinger Tageblatt No. 288 of 11./12. December 1954. - Paul Gäbler : The documents in the tower head of Stockhausen. In: Göttinger Tageblatt No. 235 from 9./10. October 1954.