Wackenstedt

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Wackenstedt is a desert in what is now the city of Hildesheim .

The village already existed when Hildesheim was founded. It was first mentioned in a document in 1140 as "still inhabited". In 1437 Wackenstedt was mentioned for the last time in a list of the Moritzstift estates, so it consisted of two yards and three Hufen at that time. It was abandoned around 1440. The Wackenstedter Kirchhof was later called "Kirchofsländerei", which in turn can be found in the Achtumer Feld near the Sauteiches on Einumer Straße. Although the place for lots Becker Villikation So, for Dompropstei had heard, moved to his downfall the rights to his 1665 Morning comprehensive corridor the Hildesheim Old Town itself. It was only in the course of a land consolidation that this was incorporated into the urban area - the meanwhile unified city - and thus placed under the authority of the municipal authorities.

Hildesheim district Bavenstedt remember Wackenstedt which passes through his former hall, already mentioned in Hildesheim address of 1901 as "Wackenstedter field" and in 1921 renamed Wackenstedter road and the "industrial area Wackenstedt" near the A7 . In 2001, 99 people lived in 27 houses on Wackenstedter Strasse, where the Protestant St. Martins Chapel was built in 1929.

literature

  • Johannes Heinrich Gebauer : History of the city of Hildesheim. 2 volumes, Lax, Hildesheim / Leipzig 1922/24 (unchanged reprint)
  • Anton J. Knott: Street, paths, squares and alleys in Hildesheim. Gerstenberg, Hildesheim 1984, ISBN 3-8067-8082-X

Individual evidence

  1. Gebauer, Volume I, p. 13 f
  2. a b Knott, p. 107
  3. suehnekreuz.de , accessed on December 12, 2007 at 11:15 p.m.
  4. Gebauer, Volume I, p. 361
  5. Gebauer, Volume I, p. 170
  6. Gebauer, Volume II, p. 411
  7. Gebauer, Volume I, p. 174
  8. Gebauer, Volume II, p. 413

Coordinates: 52 ° 10 ′  N , 9 ° 59 ′  E