Aching

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Aching
Municipality Bad Zwischenahn
Coordinates: 53 ° 10 ′ 21 ″  N , 8 ° 7 ′ 56 ″  E
Residents : 1083  (Dec. 31, 2019)
Postal code : 26160
Area code : 0441
Wehnen (Lower Saxony)
Aching

Location of Wehnen in Lower Saxony

Karl Jaspers Clinic
Karl Jaspers Clinic

Wehnen is a district of the Bad Zwischenahn community in the Ammerland district in Lower Saxony .

The peasantry borders in the west on Westerholtsfelde-Süd , in the north on the districts Westerholtsfelde-Nord and Wehnerfeld , which belong to the municipality of Wiefelstede , in the northeast on Ofen , in the southeast on Bloh and in the south on Petersfehn I and II .

South of the Oldenburg – Leer railway line running through Wehnen , on the border with Petersfehn, is the Wold , the largest contiguous forest area in the municipality, with the Woldsee . This quarry pond served as a sand extraction point during the construction of the nearby Autobahn 28 and is now a popular swimming area.

history

Old pathology pains

Wehnen is first documented in 1278 as Weneden in the fief registers of the counts of Oldenburg called. The earliest archaeological finds, however, date from the Middle and Neolithic , and a Chaukisches burial ground found near Wehnen (for which no settlement has yet been found) is dated to the first or second century AD. Up to the end of the 17th century, only three farms are documented in Wehnen, and in 1860 there were ten houses with 128 inhabitants.

In 1858 the insane asylum in Wehnen was opened on the Wehner Esch , which has been called the Karl Jaspers Clinic since 2007 . On the grounds of the clinic you will find the Alte Pathologie Wehnen , where a memorial for the victims of the Nazi murders was set up.

Wehnen did not join the Bad Zwischenahn community until 1933 as part of the last Oldenburg administrative reform, when the previously independent community of Ofen was dissolved and the community area between Bad Zwischenahn and Wiefelstede was divided. Up to this point in time, Wehnen also belonged to the Oldenburg office and not, as it is today, to the Ammerland .

In 1945 there was a camp for "Displaced Persons" from Eastern Europe on the site of a confiscated Wehrmacht camp site at the Oldenburg airfield . A small memorial on Bloher Landstrasse indicates this.

traffic

Is Wehnen morning (for the pupil traffic) through the bus number 310 Wehnen- Oldenburg (ZOB) of the transport and water (VWG) and full time by the regional bus 350 Oldenburg- Westerstede the traffic group Bremen / Lower Saxony to the public transport connected.

Although the Autobahn 28 runs through the Wehner area, the village has no connection to the trunk road network. The closest interchanges are Neuenkruge from the west and Oldenburg- Wechloy from the east .

literature

  • Karl Benke, Hellmuth Boelsen, Wilhelm Bruns, Heike Düselder, Gerd Fischer, Eilert Freese, Jürgen Günther, Michael Hansing, Klaus Harms, Wolfgang Hartung, Walter Helmerichs, Paul Hinrichs, Ulrich Hellweg, Günter König, Uwe Krüger, Günter Kühl, Axel Lüers , Bernhard Menke, Wilhelm Friedrich Meyer, Helmut Ottenjann, Christoph Reinders-Düselder, Karl Veit Riedel, Ilse-Jutta Sandstede, Wilhelm Sandstede, Gerd Schmidt-Möck, Carl-Heinz Schöfer, Peter Schulze, Gerd von Seggern, Erhard Steiner, Klaus Taux , Günther Wiechmann, Christian Wöbcken, Karl-Heinz Ziessow, Dieter Zoller, Dirk Zoller, Marianne Zoller: The Bad Zwischenahn community . People, history, landscape. Ed .: Municipality of Bad Zwischenahn. Friedrich Schmücker GmbH, Bad Zwischenahn 1994 (1062 pages, alternative title: Chronicle of the Bad Zwischenahn community on google-books ).

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Annual statistical report of the Bad Zwischenahn community as of December 31, 2019
  2. Overview of the natural pools in the Bad Zwischenahn community
  3. ^ History on the website of the Karl Jaspers Clinic