Stommelerbusch

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Stommelerbusch
City of Pulheim
Coordinates: 51 ° 2 ′ 44 ″  N , 6 ° 46 ′ 17 ″  E
Residents : 895  (March 31, 2019)
Postal code : 50259
Area code : 02238
map
Location of Stommelerbusch in Pulheim
Strawberry culture

Stommelerbusch , colloquially also rarely Stommlerbusch , is a street village northeast of Stommeln , a district of the middle town of Pulheim . It is the youngest district with 902 inhabitants (as of June 30, 2018), of which 450 are male and 452 are female.

location

Stommelerbusch borders the Chorbusch in the east. This belongs to the city of Cologne . A blocked road leads through this to the Dormagen district of Hackenbroich , which is a good two kilometers northeast of Stommelerbusch. To the southwest of Stommelerbusch is the village of Stommeln and to the west is the Butzheimer Busch , which is in the Rhine district of Neuss . In the north of Stommelerbusch, a good two kilometers away, is the Anstel-Delhoven district road and Knechtsteden monastery .

history

Until the 19th century

During excavations in 1853, near today's Gertrudenhof, numerous Roman finds were unearthed by a plow, including shards of pottery, bricks, a coin and a fragment of a column, but above all a tombstone that belonged to Gaius Acutius Speratus and his wife Petronia Lustria remembers. The finds suggest that there was a Villa Rustica , a Roman estate in Stommelerbusch around 1700 years ago , as there were many in the area of ​​the Roman city of Cologne at the time .

Before the country was occupied by the Romans , there was a primeval forest there , which the Romans have now cleared.

With the invasion of the Franks in the 4th century , the Roman urban culture and thus a coherent estate economy deteriorated. The forest was able to expand again on the land left to itself.

The houses of the two forest counts or bush counts Haus Hasselrath and Haus Mutzerath are handed down in the Codex Welser 1723.

19th and 20th centuries

St. Bruno Church

In the middle of the 19th century there was still a forest area, the Stommeler Busch , which was jointly owned . In this area the clearing yards were built or expanded. Around 1810, the Stommelers oriented themselves more and more to this forest area and thus the gradual settlement of Stommelerbusch through intensive forest clearing began . Due to the municipal code of 1845, the hamlets Ingendorf and Stommelerbusch were incorporated into Stommeln. As early as 1867, Stommelerbusch had its own St. Bruno church and school. After 1900, a large part of the residents changed their jobs from agriculture to industry. Until 1960 there was a private bus line operated by the Cologne company Glanzstoff to Stommelerbusch. In 1973 an ammunition field with a NATO firing range was set up northeast of Stommelerbusch . Belgian troops initially guarded these facilities. Stommelerbusch has belonged to the city of Pulheim since January 1st, 1975.

Culture and leisure

  • "St. Bruno" daycare center
  • Youth facility of the Catholic Young Community (KjG) Stommelerbusch.

Events

  • Until 2009, the international golf tournament Mercedes Championship , formerly known as the Linde German Masters, took place every year in Stommelerbusch at the Gut Lärchenhof golf club.
  • The annual popular harvest festival with parade is known in the wider area beyond the district.

Individual evidence

  1. a b https://www.pulheim.de/rat-und-verwaltung/stadtverwaltung/pulheim-in-zahlen/einwohner numbers/?id=19498# cntnt_282879
  2. ^ 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. 301 .

literature

  • Pulheimer contributions to history and local history: the community of Pulheim The places and their monuments ; Pulheim 1979
  • Johann Köllen, Hans Kinsky, Robert Steimel: Seals and coats of arms, castles and palaces in the Cologne district , Cologne 1966 (Haus Hasselrath p. 92f; Haus Mutzerath p. 93–95)
  • Paul Clemen: Die Kunstdenkmäler der Rheinprovinz BD.4, Der Landkreis Köln , Düsseldorf 1897, Reprint Düsseldorf 1983, ISBN 3-590-32118-0 (Haus Mutzerath p. 183f)