Wülfingen

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Wülfingen
City of Elze
Coat of arms of Wülfingen
Coordinates: 52 ° 9 ′ 7 ″  N , 9 ° 44 ′ 40 ″  E
Height : 78  (73-80)  m above sea level NHN
Area : 6.65 km²
Residents : 777  (Jun. 30, 2018)
Population density : 117 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : March 1, 1974
Postal code : 31008
Area code : 05068
Wülfingen (Lower Saxony)
Wülfingen

Location of Wülfingen in Lower Saxony

Wülfingen and Marienburg Castle around 1990
Wülfingen and Marienburg Castle around 1990

Wülfingen ( emphasis on the first syllable ), formerly: Wluinge , is a district of the city of Elze in the west of the Hildesheim district in the middle of the Hanover-Braunschweig-Göttingen metropolitan region in southern Lower Saxony .

geography

Geographical location

Wülfingen is located west of Hildesheim on the outskirts of the Hanover region in the Calenberger Land on the state road  461 and on the B 3 .

Neighboring places

Around Wülfingen are:

Jump Wisent enclosure jump Pattensen Schulenburg Calenberg Castle
Eldagsen Hallerburg Adensen Marienburg Castle Nordstemmen
Wülfinghausen Monastery Alferde Wind rose small.svg Poppenburg Hildesheim
Wittenburg Sorsum Elze Betheln Beusterburg
Hamelin Flours Gronau Barfelde Bad Salzdetfurth
View from the viewing platform on the keep of Marienburg Castle to the southwest into the Leine valley . From left to right you can see Nordstemmen , Burgstemmen , Poppenburg , Elze , Wülfingen and Sorsum . Wülfingen is behind the right gravel ponds.

geology

A salt dome of the Zechstein at a depth of −200 to −900 m below sea ​​level with the name Leinetal axis extends from the Adenser Berg over Wülfingen, Sorsum, Mehle, Saale-Mühle, Sehlde, Eime , Banteln and from then on under the Leine to Freden . The leaching of the salt dome in this axis of the Leine valley created a depression through which the Leine in the Quaternary after the Elster Cold Age , especially in the early Drenthe stage of the Saale Cold Age, from Freden via Banteln, Eime, Sehlde, Saale-Mühle, Mehle, Sorsum and Wülfingen in the Hallertal flowed. This former course of the river Leine can be identified in several places by the middle terrace gravel of the Leine, which G. Lüttig also found in Wülfingen. In the broad northern valley of the Leine east of Elze, a lake formed during the Holstein warm period . There a breakthrough valley of the Leine was created between the Teufelsberg and the Großer Rammelsberg , in which the Leine is now.

history

Early history

Finds that are kept in the State Museum show axes and spindle whorls from the Stone Age , swords and lance tips from the Iron Age . Archaeological finds in the Wülfinger Feldmark suggest that the area around Wülfingen had been inhabited since the Bronze Age at the latest .

There were finds of house floor plans and ceramics from the Roman Empire (approx. 1 to 375 AD) 200 meters north of Wülfingen in the gravel mining area on the Moorweg and coins from the Roman Empire; furthermore finds of bones and bog oaks in the gravel mining area.

In 1931 there were still two grave mounds from the Neolithic age on the Weißen Brink west of Wülfingen , which have been destroyed; the neck fragment of a stone ax was found there around 1931 .

View from the Finie over Wülfingen into the Leinetal . You can see over Wülfingen in east direction to the Osterberg. The picture shows Wülfingen, the railway bridge over the Leine, Nordstemmen (left) and Mahlerten (right), Heyersum in the back, the Osterberg in the back.

Place name

The “Holzweg” leads from Wülfingen to the Finie
Wet biotope in the Wülfinger Seenplatte

According to place name research, Wülfingen was founded because of the ending -ingen ( family settlement ) in the place name during the time of the conquest between 300 and 500 AD.

Old spellings of Wülfingen are Wulvingen (1175) and Wolffing (1645). Jürgen Huck derives the place name Wülfingen with reference to Förstemann from "settlement of a Wulf". In the Low German language , Wolf is called in the singular: Wulf, in the plural 1: Wülf, in the plural 2: Wülv.

Localization

The towns of Hardingsen and Wülfingen were built on slight hills above the Haller and Leine near the "Alte Heerstraße". The access to the "Alte Heerstraße" was made from Wülfingen via the "Holzweg" to the ravine at the "Helle" through which the "Alte Heerstraße" ran, and from Hardingsen via the "Hardingser Straße". The localities were surrounded by forest areas (field names "Eichenkammer", "Finie-Holz", "Wiedholz") and wetlands (field names "Bruch", "Meerfeld", "Meerwiese", "Moorweg", "Oheweg", "Wellkamp") .

The Bock family from Wülfingen

Next to the church tower of Wülfingen stood the Barchfried , the ancestral seat of the Bock von Wülfingen family . The aristocratic family was in feudal and service relationship with the bishops of Hildesheim. Bishop Athelog first mentions in 1175 a "Hermann miles de Wlvingi" = Hermann, Knight of Wülfingen, and in 1241 Bishop Conrad mentions a Hermann Bock von Wülfingen. The village of Wülfingen is first mentioned in a document in 1290 as a founding of the knight Albert Bock. Until the end of the 16th century, the Wülfingen Barchfried remained the ancestral home of the Bock von Wülfingen family. Then the headquarters were relocated to Elze and Bockerode. The Bock von Wülfingen family still has the patronage of the Evangelical Lutheran. Wülfingen parish.

Poppenburg waterworks

Machine house of the Poppenburg waterworks, built 1909–1911

The Poppenburg waterworks is located in the Poppenburg district on the northern side of Wülfinger Straße (L 461) on the boundary between Wülfingen and Poppenburg. The waterworks is surrounded by a water protection area, in which the town of Wülfingen is also located.

Because the city of Hildesheim suffered from a lack of water and there was no water available in the vicinity of the city, it had extensive geological and hydrological investigations carried out in the wider area of ​​Hildesheim in 1907. In the spring of 1909, sufficient and good quality water was found when drilling in the Wülfingen district at a depth of around 20 meters. The city of Hildesheim therefore wanted to buy a large area of ​​arable land at this site and also provide Wülfingen with a water pipe with free drinking water for the entire village. The community committee of the community of Wülfingen feared that Wülfingen would dug up the water and lower the water level through the construction of a waterworks; therefore the community committee did not accept the offer, refused the Hildesheimers to drive on the Wülfinger field paths and hoped that the project would fail.

These expectations were not fulfilled. In 1909, the city of Hildesheim bought a 125,000 m³ field in the Poppenburg district at a reasonable price. After two years of construction, the Poppenburg waterworks went into operation there on July 11, 1911. The waterworks include 9 filter wells, a collecting well with a depth of 20 meters and the approximately 15 km long water pipe to Hildesheim as well as the buildings built on the property: the machine house with steam engines , the boiler house adjoining the machine house, the 45 meter high chimney and the residential building.

At the beginning of March 1911, when a suction channel was built, the workers found parts of the skull of a mammoth with two preserved molars that were in good condition . It was believed that the whole mammoth was stored in the same place and was as well preserved as the skull. However, since the site was eight meters below the surface of the ground in the groundwater, no excavation work was undertaken at the time.

In 1935, the pumping systems, which had previously been powered by steam engines, were converted to electricity. Two centrifugal pumps with 150 m³ / h were installed and put into operation on April 6, 1935. The Art Nouveau house is a listed building . In June 1959, the technical aid organization from the Hildesheim branch blew up the 45-meter-high chimney from the waterworks. The engine room in the engine house has been cleared. In 1955 Wülfingen received a water pipe; the drinking water must now be paid for. The waterworks has been remote controlled and monitored since 1976 via a remote control system installed in the Rotsberg elevated tank . The Hildesheim municipal utilities have the right to pump up to 1.64 million m³ of groundwater each year in the Poppenburg waterworks until December 31, 2026.

Persecution of the Jews

According to a letter from the Secret State Police (State Police Headquarters Hanover) of February 8, 1945, Helene Brockmann was born. Großmann from Wülfingen planned to be transported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp on February 19, 1945 . The born Jew, who became an Evangelical Lutheran on the occasion of her marriage. Faith had converted, had left Wülfingen without the knowledge of her husband and son before her arrest, was under the false name of Dr. Buchinger went into hiding as a nurse and only returned to Wülfingen after the Second World War, believed to be dead. Her husband Harald Brockmann died on June 13, 1945 before she returned.

Incorporations

On March 1, 1974, Wülfingen, which until then belonged to the Springe district , was incorporated into the town of Elze.

Population development

date Residents
1812 483
1858 476
1871 465
1888 431
1910 386
1925 500
1933 468
1939 483
1946 1200 1
1950 10600
date Residents
1961 792
1970 720
2008 828
2009 808
2011 795
2014 804
2018 777
0 0

1 Estimated figure
(sources: 1910, 1925–1939, 1950, 1961–1970, 2011–2014 according to version history, 2018)

politics

City Councilor and Mayor

At the municipal level, Wülfingen is represented by the Elze City Council.

Mayor

The mayor of Wülfingen is Flörke 2017 Jens. His deputy is Peer-Eryk Pietrowski.

religion

Evangelical Lutheran parish

Until the separation of church and state, the parish was responsible for the tasks of the registry office and the school. After the Reformation had prevailed in Wülfingen on April 16, 1543 and the Wülfingen parish had become Evangelical-Lutheran, their school was founded in Wülfingen in 1543. The teaching post was connected with the organist and the sexton. She still performs the tasks of the cemetery administration today.

Until 1924, the Wülfingen parish had its own pastor . Then the parishes of Adensen and Wülfingen were merged as independent parishes under a common pastoral office . The legal seat of the parish office was Wülfingen. The pastor's residence was initially in Wülfingen and since 1947 in Adensen. With effect from July 1, 2010, the parish connection between the parishes of Adensen and Wülfingen was canceled by the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hanover . The Ev. The parish of Wülfingen has been part of the I Mehle parish in Elze since then. The pastoral office Mehle takes care of the Evangelical Lutheran. Parishes of Mehle-Sehlde, Esbeck and Wülfingen. The parish of Wülfingen continues to be led by its own parish council, which is also responsible for the cemetery administration in Wülfingen.

Since January 1st, 2012 the Evangelical Lutheran parish of Wülfingen belongs to the Evangelical Lutheran Church . Parish Association Elze-Eime , which consists of the nine Ev.-luth. Parishes of Deilmissen, Deinsen, Dunsen, Elze, Eime, Esbeck, Mehle-Sehlde and Wülfingen with a total of around 7,380 members. The aim and purpose of the community association, which was formerly known as the community association Leinetal Elze-Eime , is the close substantive, personal and financial cooperation of the parishes and parishes involved in the fulfillment of their parish tasks. The organ of the community association is the association board, which consists of twelve members.

Evangelical Lutheran parish hall

The parish hall of the Evangelical Lutheran parish of Wülfingen is located in the purchased building of the former primary school, which was built in 1935. To the right of the entrance you can see a relief with the construction date and the coat of arms of Wülfingen, which is also the coat of arms of the Bock von Wülfingen family .

After the Reformation had prevailed in Wülfingen, a German-language school was founded in Wülfingen , in contrast to the Latin schools that were common at the time , so that everyone could find access to learning the German language and reading the German-language Luther Bible . Until the end of the 19th century, the school was owned by the Ev.-luth. Wülfingen parish. The teacher was both sexton and organist from Wülfingen.

In 1935, the Wülfingen community built their new school on the property between the cemetery and the "Klappe" alley. In the school there was a teacher's apartment and a classroom on the ground floor, and on the first floor there were various rooms that could be used as classrooms and as a teacher's apartment. At that time there was a hedge of white mulberry trees between the school and the "flap" . The green leaves of the white mulberry served as food for bred silk moths . Their dolls were used in the Second World War to obtain silk for parachutes.

After the city of Elze had moved school lessons from Wülfingen to the school in Mehle, the church council was able to buy the school building from the city of Elze in 1984 and use it as a parish hall and sexton house. In the following years, the church council renovated the building, rebuilt the toilets, bought the kitchenette and installed new windows.

From 1970 to 1985, the parish rented rooms in the multi-purpose hall Wülfingen as an archive room, parish office and classroom for confirmands as part of a usage contract with the city of Elze. After the renovation of the parish hall, the usage contract was terminated and the inventory was transferred to the parish hall. In 1995 the church council replaced the school yard with parking spaces and a "green space" for the parish festivals.

On the front of the parish hall is the Wülfinger coat of arms, which was in poor condition when it was purchased. In 1995 the defective coat of arms was replaced in natural stone by the Bock von Wülfingen family. The Heimatbund Wülfingen took over the replacement of the damaged year 1935 with the inscription "Built in 1935". After the service on May 12, 1995 the coat of arms was unveiled by the patronage representative Wolfram Bock von Wülfingen. Then the place in the green behind the parish hall was inaugurated.

Marienkirche

The Marienkirche stands in the middle of the cemetery. To the right of the church tower stood the Barchfried , the
ancestral seat of the Bock von Wülfingen family , until the end of the 16th century .

The Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. Mary in Wülfingen stands in the middle of the cemetery. The first church was the Romanesque church from 1290, which was built as a private church of the patron family Bock von Wülfingen. The second church was built in 1501 as a Renaissance church on the same site; it was 60 feet (17.53 meters) long  and 20 feet (5.84 meters) wide; the tower, built at the same time, was 18 feet (5.26 meters) wide and, after the spire was erected in 1585, 80 feet (23.37 meters) tall. The sacristy (1501) and a morgue (1649) were added to the church. The third church was added to the existing tower as a Rococo church between 1769 and 1773. It has been preserved almost unchanged. The church tower was raised by a bell storey from the ribbon cornice in the Luther year 1883 and provided with a tower spire . In addition to the bell from 1510, there are three bells from 1952 in the melodic tone sequence b-des-es-f and the chime from 1592.

Culture and sights

memorial

Memorial plaque for the fallen and missing of the First World War on the southern wall of the church tower in Wülfingen

On the south side of the church tower is the memorial for the fallen and missing of the two world wars. The memorial plaque for the First World War is on the wall of the church tower, in front of it is the memorial stone for the Second World War . There is also a bank for the bereaved.

The memorial plaque for the fallen and missing of the First World War was decided in February 1921. It was created by the sculptor Küsthardt from Hanover and inaugurated on Reformation Day , October 31, 1921. It shows the cherub with the flaming, flashing sword at the entrance to paradise , guarding the entrance to the tree of life. ( Gen 3.24  EU )

In 2001 the memorial plaque was restored by master stonemason Willi Lohse from Elze and provided with a cover by master roofer Heinrich Diehe from Wülfingen. Also in 2001 the memorial stone for the fallen and missing of the Second World War was cleaned and placed in front of the memorial plaque. The inauguration of the renovated memorial took place during a memorial hour on May 19, 2001.

Hardingsen desert

Hardingsen is a deserted, fallen settlement with a size of about 3  hectares . It was located northwest of Wülfingen and south of the Haller in the southeast of the Hoeben parcel on the western edge of the Rothenbleek parcel and on the northeast edge of the Strengenfeld parcel near the Alte Heerstrasse from Hanover to Kassel . The local desert is now cut through by the B 3 and the Hardingser Weg field path . The location of the local desert can be limited by the field names Hoeben , In den Höfen , Hardingser Anger and Hardingser Kirchhof . The Hardingser Bruch and Bei der Hardingser Straße districts are south of the Rosenmühle . According to previous research, Hardingsen was founded in the late 8th century or in the first half of the 9th century. Few prehistoric ceramic finds in the northern edge of the settlement area allow the as yet unsecured assumption that a settlement already existed here in the late Latène period or the Roman imperial period . Finds of medieval ceramics show that Hardingsen was continuously inhabited until the 15th century and was abandoned around the middle of the 15th century at the earliest. Former residents of Hardingsen settled in Wülfingen and built five Meierhöfe and four Kötnerstellen there. They were Meierhöfe von Oppermann, Mohnke-Severin, Rusche, Warnecke and Kötnerstellen von Weber-Kleine, Oehlerking, Brandes and Blume. According to medieval documents, farms located in Hardingsen were already managed from Wülfingen in 1460. However, since fragments of a special ceramic were found in Hardingsen, which were produced and used between 1450 and 1530/40, farmers in Hardingsen could still have lived on their farms after 1460.

Hardings Festival

In memory of the farmers from Hardingsen who left Hardingsen and moved to Wülfingen, the Wülfinger farmers in Wülfingen celebrated the so-called Hardings Festival, which was celebrated annually during the carnival period until 1846. It was celebrated again for the first time on February 12, 1941. The farmer Alfred Warnecke spoke about the meaning of the festival and the history of Hardingsen and the farms of the former Hardingser in Wülfingen. In the last quarter of the 20th century, the farmers in Wülfingen again celebrated the Hardings Festival as a social event.

Infrastructure

Association

Mixed choir Wülfingen

In 1924 the Wülfingen mixed choir began as a men's choir . In 1958 there was also a women's choir, which in 1964 merged with the men's choir to form the Wülfingen mixed choir. The Wülfingen mixed choir formed the Marienberg choir community with the choirs from Groß Escherde (from 1979), Betheln (from 1984) and Nordstemmen (from 1989) , which existed until December 1, 2013. The farewell concert of the mixed choir Wülfingen took place on December 1st, 2013 in the Marienkirche Wülfingen. The Mixed Choir Wülfingen was dissolved in 2014 due to the age of the members.

Other clubs

The following local associations exist in Wülfingen (as of July 19, 2017):

  • The accordion group Wülfingen was founded in 1981 by Ulla Nettelrodt. From 1981 to 2013 she worked with the Marienberg choir community .
  • The Wülfingen volunteer fire brigade was founded in 1876. The local fire chief is Uwe Wieckhorst.
  • The Heimatbund Wülfingen was founded in 1933 on the initiative of Alfred Warnecke. The 1st chairman is Walter Heuer.
  • The rural women's association in Wülfingen has members in the towns of Adensen , Alferde , Boitzum , Hallerburg , Sorsum , Wittenburg and Wülfingen. The chairmen are: Karen Storre, Ilsemarie Lendzian and Monika Köhsel.
  • The local association of the German Red Cross was founded on February 20, 1927. The local club includes a senior gymnastics group and a folk dance group. The 1st chairwoman is Petra Lübon.
  • The local association of the Social Association of Germany has existed since 1955. The 1st chairman is Werner Rieche.
  • The SV Wülfingen was founded in 1923rd In the men's soccer field, there has been a syndicate with VfL Adensen-Hallerburg since 1988 . 1. Chairman of the SV Wülfingen is Jörg Fasold.

Fire department in Wülfingen

Fire station in Wülfingen

Fires were not extinguished until 1750, instead people, livestock and property were saved as most of the houses had thatched roofs and burned down quickly. In 1750 there was the first fire insurance as compulsory insurance. Each house was given a house number and a fire bucket bearing this house number. In the event of a fire, the church bell was used to call out the fire. Every citizen and farmer had to take out fire insurance and take part in extinguishing fires with his leather fire bucket. The first fire extinguishers were several fire ladders and fire hooks, three nozzles, several lengths of hoses and six leather fire buckets.

In 1840, the municipality on Thie built a syringe house and bought a fire syringe that cost 469 thalers for four horses , which was filled with water from the leather fire buckets and had a hand pressure syringe . This hand pressure syringe was replaced by a suction device in 1877 and was used until 1939.

On January 10, 1876, 36 firefighters founded the Wülfingen volunteer fire department . The uniform consisted of brown woolen skirts with black belt buckles and black leather helmets with a brass caterpillar and the letters WF. The fire brigade comrades soon also took part in operations in neighboring villages. In 1903 they bought a cart sprayer and in 1914 a hand-operated sprayer that could be harnessed with horses.

According to the laws on fire extinguishing in the Third Reich passed in 1933 and 1938 , the fire brigade was subordinated to the regulatory police as an auxiliary police force . In 1934, the purchase of twelve TS 8 portable pumps marked the beginning of the motorization of fire fighting in the Springe district . With four existing power syringes, 16 fire fighting associations were formed, one of which became the Hallermundt fire fighting association, which consisted of Adensen , Hallerburg , Alferde , Sorsum , Wittenburg and Wülfingen. Wülfingen was the location of a Magirus TS 8. In 1942 the Hitler Youth was assigned to the fire brigade.

When cities and villages were increasingly exposed to the bombing war in the course of the Second World War, the restructuring of the fire fighting units into sub-districts was ordered. Wülfingen became sub-district V of the Springe district. From the subcircles, two fire fighting teams were put together, the first of which had to provide fire fighting assistance after air strikes. The fire extinguishing readiness was used in eleven major attacks, nine of them in Hanover , one in Hameln and one in Hildesheim . The last two deployments of readiness were on 23/24. March in Hildesheim and on March 25th in Hanover.

After the Second World War, the military government was very interested in a rapid expansion of fire fighting. As early as September 1945, the management of fire extinguishing was again in German hands. From 1949 the community had to take over the maintenance of the fire department. In 1951 the Magirus TS 8 was replaced by an LF 8 fire fighting group vehicle from Graff (Elze). In 1971 the fire brigade moved into the fire station near the newly built multi-purpose hall. At the same time, the LF 8 acquired in 1951 was replaced by an LF 8 Bachert-Bad Friedrichshall. In 1977 the fire brigade received the TS 8 portable pump and three breathing apparatus .

On October 16, 1993, the city of Elze handed over the new fire engine LF 8/6 with portable fire pump, rear pump, 600 liter water tank, ladder, hose material, modern hollow jet pipes and four breathing apparatus to the fire brigade . In June 2001 the newly built fire station on Im Teiche street was inaugurated with an open house .

In 2016, the turnout gear is made of special fabric with a maximum of safety for the emergency services. The helmet is made of fiberglass . The firefighters each have their own personal protective equipment .

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the place

People connected to the place

  • Friedrich Ludwig Arnold Taberger (1739–1810), pewter caster, works by him are among others. a. in the Wülfingen church
  • Karl Bock von Wülfingen (1772-1852), Hanoverian lieutenant general, was lord of Bockerode and Wülfingen
  • Burghard Bock von Wülfingen (1874–1950), Prussian district administrator, was co-owner of the Elze estate with Wülfingen
  • Erich Pollähne (1915–2005), precision mechanic and artist, is one of the most important sundial and exhibit builders of the modern age, created the wall sundial for the Marienkirche in Wülfingen
  • Hartwig Othmer (* 1963), lawyer, judge at the Federal Social Court in Kassel, he was the mayor in Wülfingen for around 15 years until the beginning of 2017, the reason for the termination of this honorary position was the established legal collision between his profession and the honorary position "local director “, Grew up in Wülfingen

literature

  • von Castell: Area between the Osterwald and the Leine around Holtensen and Wülfingen. 1857 in the series: Areas in the Kingdom of Hanover . 1857–1865 without location information.
  • Brinckmann: The camp near Nordstemmen during the concentration of the 10th Federal Army Corps in 1858. Pictures and humor from camp life. Schlüter'sche Hofbuchdruckerei, Hanover 1858.
  • G. Lutter: Description of the community Wülfingen in the agricultural district association Nordstemmen. Gerstenberg, Hildesheim 1890.
  • Georg Wulbrand Bock von Wülfingen: History of the Bock von Wülfingen. Göhmann'sche Buchdruckerei, Hanover 1896.
  • Karl Seifart: Legends from the city and monastery of Hildesheim. Hildesheimer Heimatbücher 1st issue, edited by H. Blume. Hildesheim 1913. - Wülfinger Sagen, p. 38.
  • Heiner Jürgens, Arnold Nöldeke , Joachim von Welck: The art monuments of the Springe district. Self-published by the Provinzialverwaltung, Hanover, 1941. Series: Die Kunstdenkmäler der Provinz Hannover I, 3, Vol. 29. S. 218–223. Fig. 109d + 120a.
  • Alfred Warnecke: From the organs in the Sankt-Marien-Kirche in Wülfingen. Ed .: Ev.-luth. Wülfingen church council. Wülfingen 1968.
  • Alfred Warnecke: From the history of the St. Marien Church in Wülfingen. Ed .: Ev.-luth. Wülfingen church council. Wülfingen around 1969.
  • Alfred Warnecke: The "Barchfried" in Wülfingen . In the magazine "Alt-Hildesheim" No. 45 pp. 51–56, Hildesheim 1974.
  • Birgit Wöbbeking: Finie, Strothebrink, Hallerburger Steinbruch, Innerstetal / Am Roten Steine, vineyard near Rühle: vegetation studies. Braunschweig 1984.
  • Klaus Michael Gäbler: Wülfingen parish. In: 450 years of the Reformation in the Calenberger Land. Festschrift for the anniversary in 1992. Ed .: Ev. Lutheran church district Laatzen-Pattensen. Selbstverlag, Laatzen 1992. pp. 117-118.
  • Ernst Wilhelms (ed.): From the history of the village of Wülfingen. Wülfingen 1995. An excerpt from this book was published here: Egon Wieckhorst: Wülfingen - a village in the Hildesheimer Land. In: Springer Yearbook 2011 for the city and the old district of Springe. Support association for the town history of Springe e. V., Springe 2011, pp. 26–29: Ill., Color table on p. 214.
  • Werner Müller: Monuments in the unified municipality of Elze with its districts Esbeck, Mehle, Sehlde, Sorsum, Wittenburg and Wülfingen. Series of publications of the local history museum Elze No. 5. Elze 2000.
  • Jürgen Huck: The aristocratic court in Wülfingen: a former lower court in the Calenbergisch-Hildesheim border area. In: The Diocese of Hildesheim in the past and present: Yearbook of the Association for History and Art in the Diocese of Hildesheim. Vol. 68 (2000) pp. 37-117. Bernward publishing house Hildesheim. ISSN  0341-9975
  • Jürgen Huck: From the village of Wülfingen and its gentlemen's services. Rebellious farmers between the Reformation and the 30-year war. In: Hildesheimer Jahrbuch für Stadt und Stift Hildesheim published on behalf of the city of Hildesheim. Vol. 72/73 (2000/2001) pp. 95-138. Hildesheim City Archives 2003. ISSN  0944-3045
  • Werner Müller: Selected dates on the history of the city of Elze with its districts Esbeck, Mehle, Sehlde, Sorsum, Wittenburg, Wülfingen. Publication series of the Heimat- und Geschichtsverein Elze, issue 4. Elze, 2nd edition 2004.
  • Wolfram Bock von Wülfingen: News about the Wülfinger Thurmbau. In: Springer Yearbook 2010 for the city and the old district of Springe. Ed .: Friends of the town history of Springe e. V., Springe 2010, pp. 129–141: Ill., Color table on p. 218.
  • Egon Wieckhorst: Wülfingen - a village in the Hildesheimer Land. In: Springer Yearbook 2011 for the city and the old district of Springe. Ed .: Friends of the town history of Springe e. V., Springe 2011, pp. 27–29: Ill.
  • Egon Wieckhorst: On the history of the Wülfinger Taternphales from 1635. In: Springer yearbook 2015 for the city and the old district of Springe. Ed .: Friends of the town history of Springe e. V., Springe 2015, pp. 100–106: Ill.
  • Egon Wieckhorst: Gasthaus Ziegenmeyer - Lindenkrug Wülfingen. In: Springer Yearbook 2015 for the city and the old district of Springe. Ed .: Friends of the town history of Springe e. V., Springe 2015, pp. 106–112: Ill., Map on p. 123.
  • Wülfingen volunteer fire brigade (ed.): Festival magazine: 140 years of the Wülfingen volunteer fire brigade. Fire brigade festival on June 18 and 19, 2016. 50 years of the Wülfingen youth fire brigade . Self-published, Wülfingen 2016 ( digitized version ( memento from June 20, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) [accessed on May 31, 2019]).
  • Egon Wieckhorst: Construction in the village of Wülfingen and the development of its settlements. In: Springer Yearbook 2017 for the city and the old district of Springe. Ed .: Friends of the town history of Springe e. V., Springe 2017, pp. 117–124: Ill., Map on p. 123.

Bibliography until 2001

  • Werner Müller: Bibliography by Jürgen Huck . In: Heimat- und Geschichtsverein Elze and its districts e. V. (Hrsg.): Series of publications of the local museum Elze . No. 8 . Elze 2001 ( digitized version of the bibliography for the unitary community of Elze with index card index [PDF; 138 kB ; accessed on June 1, 2019]).

Maps

  • Map: "Infanterie-Läger", lithographic establishment of the Royal General Staff 1858.
  • Heinz Weber (arrangement): Field name maps 1: 10,000 sheet 5/2 Alferde of the district of Hanover and field name lexicon Alferde . Hanover 1986.

Web links

Commons : Wülfingen  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Numbers and dates. In: City of Elze website. June 30, 2018, accessed April 10, 2019 .
  2. ^ Adolf Hoffmann: Explanations on the geological map of Prussia and neighboring German countries . Sheet Elze, Delivery 265, Gradabteilung 41, No. 51. In: Preußische Geologische Landesanstalt (Hrsg.): Geological map of Prussia and neighboring German countries . No. 2089 . Berlin 1927, p. 7-10 .
  3. Natural History Society Hannover (ed.): Geological hiking map of the district of Hannover . 1: 100,000. 2nd Edition. Self-published, Hanover 1977.
  4. ^ Heinz Jordan: Geological hiking map Leinebergland . 1: 100,000. Ed .: Lower Saxony State Office for Soil Research, Leinebergland Tourist Office. 2nd Edition. Self-published, Hanover 1989, OCLC 889217790 .
  5. Gerd Lüttig: New results of quaternary geological research in the Alfeld – Hameln – Elze area . In: Geological Yearbook . tape 77 . Hanover June 1960, p. 337–390 (→ see: pp. 378–382 ).
  6. Thomas Lessig: The archaeological sites in the district of Hildesheim. A catalog of archaeological monuments and finds up to 2000 . Hildesheim 2001, p. 80–81, nos. 703–714 (→ see: Find Map and Plate 17, No. 705 ).
  7. Roland Webersinn: A settlement site from the Roman Empire near Wülfingen on the middle Leine . In: Die Kunde: Journal for Lower Saxony Archeology, 1983/84 . No. 34/35 , 1984, ISSN  0342-0736 , pp. 237-245 .
  8. ^ Frank Berger: The found coins of the Roman period in Germany . Dept. VII. Lower Saxony and Bremen. tape 4-9 . Scientific Book Society (WBG), Berlin 1988, p. 86 (→ see under: 4076.1. ).
  9. Thomas Lessig: The archaeological sites in the district of Hildesheim. A catalog of archaeological monuments and finds up to 2000 . Hildesheim 2001, p. 80 (→ see under: No. 704 ).
  10. ^ Gerhard Meier-Hilbert: Geographical structures: The natural potential. (PDF; 1 MB, p. 27) (No longer available online.) In: www.nibis.de. P. 33 , archived from the original on July 16, 2011 ; accessed on May 25, 2019 .
  11. ^ Karl Janicke, Hermann Hoogeweg: Document book of the Hochstift Hildesheim and its bishops . tape 1 . Leipzig 1896, p. 370 . Quoted from: Ernst Förstemann: Old German name book . Reprint of the 3rd edition from 1913 in 1983. 2, Part 2 (LZ). Nordhausen 1913, p.
     1433 (→ see under: Vulfinga [No. 3, Wülfingen, Kreis Springe] ).
  12. Jürgen Huck: The buck from Wülfingen . General and growing of the sex 1175–1583 (=  sources and representations on the history of Lower Saxony . Volume 122 ). tape 1 . Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 2000, ISBN 3-7752-5809-4 , p. 9 ff., 99 . With reference to: Ernst Förstemann: Old German name book . Reprint of the 3rd edition from 1913 in 1983. 2, Part 2 (LZ). Nordhausen 1913, p.
     1433 (→ see under: Vulfinga [No. 3, Wülfingen, Kreis Springe] ).
  13. wiktionary: "Wulf".
  14. Jürgen Huck: The buck from Wülfingen . General and growing of the sex 1175–1583 (=  sources and representations on the history of Lower Saxony . Volume 122 ). tape 1 . Hahnsche Buchhandlung Verlag, Hannover 2000, ISBN 3-7752-5809-4 . Jürgen Huck: The buck from Wülfingen . General and Bockerode line (=  sources and representations on the history of Lower Saxony . Volume
     130 ). tape 2 , 1st half volume. Hahnsche Buchhandlung Verlag, Hanover 2010, ISBN 978-3-7752-5931-6 . Jürgen Huck: The buck from Wülfingen . Line Elze, sources and family tables (=  sources and representations on the history of Lower Saxony . Volume
     130 ). tape 2 , 2nd half volume. Hahnsche Buchhandlung Verlag, Hanover 2010, ISBN 978-3-7752-5931-6 .
  15. ^ Ordinance on the establishment of a water protection area in favor of the Poppenburg water catchment plant of Stadtwerke Hildesheim AG. (PDF; 293 kB) In: Website of the district of Hildesheim. December 6, 2006, accessed May 16, 2018 .
  16. a b Poppenburg waterworks. In: Website Heimatbund Wülfingen. Retrieved May 16, 2018 .
  17. ↑ A valuable find of a mummut skull . In: Lower Saxony Post . March 5, 1911 ( digitized version [on the website of the Heimat- und Geschichtsverein Elze and its districts eV]).
  18. ^ Heinz Röhl: Hildesheim water supply from 1880 . Self-published, Hildesheim, p. 58-84, 134-142 ( n.d. ).
  19. THW chronicle from 1952 to 1960. In: Internet site for technical aid organization - local association Hildesheim. June 1959, Retrieved May 16, 2018 .
  20. District of Hanover (Ed.): Yesterday and today - Jews in the district of Hanover . Hanover 1984, p. 189-192 .
  21. ^ Elly Brockmann: Letter from Lugano . September 11, 1988 (in the parish archive of Wülfingen).
  22. a b Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality register 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.  205 .
  23. ^ Ulrich Schubert: Community directory Germany 1900 - District Springe. Information from December 1, 1910. In: www.gemeindeververzeichnis.de. February 3, 2019, accessed April 10, 2019 .
  24. Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Landkreis Springe (→ see under: No. 50 ). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  25. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Official municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany . Final results according to the September 13, 1950 census. Volume 33 . W. Kohlhammer Verlag, Stuttgart / Cologne 1950, p. 32 , col. 1 ( digital version [PDF; 26.4 MB ; accessed on May 25, 2019] Landkreis Springe, p. 41).
  26. ^ The mayor of the city of Elze. In: City of Elze website. Retrieved July 2, 2017 .
  27. ^ Evangelical Lutheran Regional Church Hanover (ed.): Church Official Gazette . No. 4 . Self-published, Hanover 2010, No. 45, parish association of the Evangelical Lutheran parishes of Esbeck, Mehle and Wülfingen (Hildesheimer Land church district), p. 80–81 ( digitized version [PDF; 672 kB ; accessed on May 31, 2019] p. 16).
  28. ^ Evangelical Lutheran Regional Church Hanover (ed.): Church Official Gazette . No. 7 . Self-published, Hanover 2011, No. 83, establishment of the "Evangelical Lutheran Church Community Association Elze-Eime" (Hildesheimer Land-Alfeld Church District), p. 290 ( digital version [PDF; 1.9 MB ; accessed on May 31, 2019] p. 40).
  29. ^ Evangelical parish of Peter and Paul in Elze (ed.): Community letter Easter . Elze 2011, p. 6 ( digitized version ( memento from February 25, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) [PDF; 2.8 MB ] Community Association of the Leinetal Elze-Eime).
  30. ^ Evangelical Lutheran Regional Church Hanover (ed.): Church Official Gazette . No. 7 . Self-published, Hanover 2011, statutes of the Evangelical Lutheran Church Community Association Elze-Eime, § 3 Association Board, p. 291 ( digital version [PDF; 1.9 MB ; accessed on May 31, 2019] p. 41).
  31. ^ Egon Wieckhorst: The Wülfinger parish hall . In: Förderverein für die Stadtgeschichte von Springe e. V. (Ed.): Springer Yearbook 2016 for the city and the old district of Springe . Spring 2016, p. 217-218 .
  32. Egon Wieckhorst: Re-inauguration of the restored memorial on May 19, 2001 for the soldiers from Wülfingen who were killed and missing in the First World War . In: Förderverein für die Stadtgeschichte von Springe e. V. (Ed.): Springer yearbook 2014 for the city and the old district of Springe . Jump 2014, p. 138-139 .
  33. ^ A b Heinz Weber (edit.): Field name cards 1: 10,000 sheets 5/2 Alferde of the district of Hanover . Hanover 1986.
  34. Tobias Gärtner, Kirsten Casemir: The Eldagsen settlement chamber. A research project on the imperial and medieval settlement history of the Calenberger Börde . In: Ethnographic-Archaeological Journal (EAZ) . tape 48 , 2007, p. 523, map 7 .
  35. Heinz Weber (arrangement): Flurnamenlexikon Alferde . Hanover 1986, p. 119-123 .
  36. ^ Egon Wieckhorst: Hardingsen. A place that has become desolate . In: Förderverein für die Stadtgeschichte von Springe e. V. (Ed.): Springer Yearbook 2010 for the city and the old district of Springe . Jump 2010, p. 62-66 .
  37. Voluntary Fire Brigade Wülfingen (Ed.): Festival magazine: 140 years of volunteer fire brigade Wülfingen. Fire brigade festival on June 18 and 19, 2016. 50 years of the Wülfingen youth fire brigade . Self-published, Wülfingen 2016, p. 36 ( digitized version ( memento from June 20, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) [accessed on May 31, 2019]).
  38. ^ Hannoversche Heimatfreunde e. V. - founded in 1901 as Heimatbund Lower Saxony (ed.): Annual book . Hanover May 1941, p. 101 .
  39. Festschrift Mixed Choir Wülfingen. In: Internet site Heimat- und Geschichtsverein Elze and its districts e. V. Retrieved May 24, 2019 .
  40. Voluntary Fire Brigade Wülfingen (Ed.): Festival magazine: 140 years of volunteer fire brigade Wülfingen. Fire brigade festival on June 18 and 19, 2016. 50 years of the Wülfingen youth fire brigade . Self-published, Wülfingen 2016 ( digitized version ( memento from June 20, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) [accessed on May 31, 2019]).
  41. Alexander Raths: "I would do that again and again". In: Website Hildesheimer Allgemeine Zeitung. May 21, 2015, accessed May 16, 2018 .