World Ringhausen

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World Ringhausen
City of Attendorn
Coordinates: 51 ° 8 ′ 32 "  N , 7 ° 50 ′ 33"  E
Residents : 17  (Jun 30, 2019)
Postal code : 57439
Area code : 02722
Weltringhausen (North Rhine-Westphalia)
World Ringhausen

Location of Weltringhausen in North Rhine-Westphalia

World Ringhausen near Attendorn
World Ringhausen near Attendorn

Weltringhausen is a district of the city of Attendorn in the Olpe district ( North Rhine-Westphalia ) and has 17 inhabitants.

geography

Weltringhausen is located northwest of the core town of Attendorn on the edge of the Ebbegebirge , west of Windhausen and south of Lichtringhausen . The local mountain is the 506 m high Deimershardt.

history

Weltringhausen was first mentioned in a document in 1326 with " Henkelen zo Welterynghusen ". 1459 a Gese van Welterkusen is mentioned. The place was, however, a settlement of the so-called “inghausen” type that was probably built in the 10th century. As the basic word -hausen shows, the place names on -inghausen are pure settlement names in their origin. Its defining word is an Old Saxon male personal name that names the owner of the settlement in question at the time it was named, but not necessarily also when it came into being. The place name can therefore be interpreted as " at the houses of the people of Waltheri ".

Politically, Weltringhausen formerly belonged to the Waldenburg office and in the Gogericht and parish of Attendorn to the Windhausen peasantry , which also included surrounding towns such as Lichtringhausen, Hebberg , Windhausen and others. In the treasury register of 1543, a Peter zu Waltringhaußen with a tax of 1½ gold gulden is named in the Winterhuißer Burschektiven with 21 taxpayers . In the registry of 1565, a Claes zu Weltlingkhausen is taxed with 1 gold guilder. On June 18, 1637, the council of Attendorn sold the Attendorn mayor Peter Christiani and his wife Anna their farm and their goods in Weltringhausen.

In Weltringhausen, the pension book listed two farms. The lowest estate was a large courtyard that belonged to the hospital in Attendorn. Managed by Johann Schnütgen until his death in 1679, then by his son Johann, and after his death in 1688 by Hans Niggehus, who had married the widow.

The highest good was a Köttergut. Managed by a certain Tillmann until his death in 1679, then by Rötger Sasse and Jakob Bree. The estate belonged to Johannes Christiani, a citizen of Attendorn, and his wife Johanna, who sold it to the Ewig monastery on January 12, 1678 . At the beginning of the 19th century, each of the two farms in Weltringhausen was owned by a Schulte family.

The address book from 1929 in Weltringhausen has the names "Linke, Schlatter, Schulte (6 people), Stahl and Zeppenfeld". In 1936 there were 5 houses with 7 households and 43 residents in the village. In 1988 the place had 17 residents.

From 1819 Weltringhausen belonged in the Attendorn office to the Attendorn-Land community until the community was incorporated into the city of Attendorn in 1969.

Religion, associations

Weltringhausen belongs to the parish of Lichtringhausen. The sports club LWL 05 Listernohl-Windhausen-Lichtringhausen eV has an artificial turf sports field in Weltringhausen with a clubhouse and an attached camping area.

Individual evidence

  1. Population statistics of the city of Attendorn (as of June 30, 2019) , accessed on August 18, 2019.
  2. Michael Flöer: The place names of the district of Olpe , in: Westfälisches Ortsnamenbuch, Volume 8, Bielefeld 2014, page 249
  3. ↑ Estimation register from 1543, page 69 [1]
  4. The 16th century appraisal registers for the Duchy of Westphalia, Part 1 (1536 and 1565), Münster 1971, page 219
  5. Norbert Scheele (ed.): Regesten of the former monastery Ewig , Olpe 1963, Urk 505, page 134
  6. Julius Pickert: The farms of the Attendorn parish in the 17th century , in: Heimatblätter des Kreis Olpe, 4th century. 1926/27, page 42
  7. Official address book of the Olpe district 1928/29, section Attendorn-Land municipality, page 89
  8. Official residents' register of the district of Olpe 1938, Attendorn Office, page XV
  9. ^ Attendorn - Gestern und heute, Verein für Orts- und Heimatkunde Attendorn eV, No. 14 (1990), page 15/16