Wellingsbüttel

Wellingsbüttel is a district of Hamburg in the district Wandsbek. Wellingsbüttel belongs together with Poppenbuettel, Sasel and Hummelsbüttel the regional area Alster.

Geography

The majority of residential areas dominated district is bordered to the north by Poppenbuettel, limited in part by the Alster. To the east lies Sasel, in the south Bramfeld, southwest Ohlsdorf and to the northwest, also beyond the Alster, Hummelsbüttel.

History

Wellingsbüttel, first mentioned in 1296 and was named Waldingsbutle or Waldegesbutle. The name goes back to an Saxon was founded by a man named Walding. It was located since 1412 in the possession of Bremen archbishops who pledged it notably at Hamburg canons. With the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 the estate came to Sweden. Under Queen Christine Wellingsbüttel in 1649 hereditary possession of the lawyer Reinkingk, last chancellor archbishops of Bremen.

1673, the family acquired the estate v. Kurtz rock. The Rocks v. Kurtz directed the fortunes of the estate until 1806. Around 1750 was Maximilian Günther v. Kurtz rock, Minister of Lower Saxony circle and postmaster, to Hamburg, built the mansion in Wellingsbüttel. 1757 Gregg Georg Hofer created for him the gatehouse. After dispute with Denmark, the Danish Crown Prince was in 1806 occupied the estate, so that the squire Clemens August von Kurtz rock had to sell it to Denmark.

1810 the Danish king enfeoffed his relatives Duke Friedrich Carl Ludwig of Holstein- Beck with the good and the good raised to Kanzleigut, which made it the royal chancery reports directly.

After initially Hamburg merchant Hercules horse had acquired the estate of Denmark, it was 1846 in the possession of Johann Christian Jauch jun. (1802-1880) Carl Jauch (1828-1880) on. The Jauch were upper middle class to Hamburg. Among the Jauchs the estate was in its heyday. The agriculture receded into the background, the estate was the scene of extensive hunting and social events. By purchasing many country places the impoverished rural population the Jauch brought the estate to its greatest extent.

1888 acquired the banker 's widow Behrens, the estate of the heirs of Carl Jauch ( 1828-1888 ) rebuilt the manor house, but died in 1891. New owner was the Hamburg businessman Otto Jonathan Hiibbe, who in 1910 in the Alster valley terrain mbH earned, which merged in 1912 in the Alster valley terrain Actien Society ( ATAG ). The ATAG parceled the estate for individual housing construction.

1937 Wellingsbüttel well as some other communities in the Prussian district Stormarn through the Greater Hamburg Act was part of Hamburg. In the same year, the first independent church in Wellingsbüttel was built with the Lutheran Church.

1973 disappeared the last agricultural land and Wellingsbüttel urbanized final.

Population

  • Minors rate: 17.1%, slightly higher than the Hamburg average of 15.6%.
  • Old rate: 28.8 %, well above the Hamburg average of 19.1%.
  • Proportion of foreign nationals: 5.1%, well below the average of 13.6 % of Hamburg.
  • Unemployment Rate: 3.0%, well below the Hamburg average of 6.3%.

Wellingsbüttel one of the richest districts of Hamburg. The average income here is about 72,000 euros per year, making it more than twice as high as the overall average hamburger.

Policy

For the election of the Hamburg Parliament and the District Assembly Wellingsbüttel part of the constituency Alster - forest villages. The state election in 2011 led to the following result:

  • SPD 39.8 % ( 18.1 )
  • CDU 32.3 % ( -26.3 )
  • FDP 14.6 % ( 5.9 )
  • GAL 7.8% ( 0.1 )
  • The Left 2.3% (-0.2 )
  • Others 3.2% ( 2.4 )

Education

  • Irena Sendler - school ( district school, to November 7, 2010 Peter -Petersen School )
  • Strict School (primary school)

Sports

  • TSC Wellingsbüttel v. 1937 ( sports field at Pfeilshof, Waldingstr. 91)
  • Klipper THC ( Eckernkamp 40)
  • The Club an der Alster (Am Pfeilshof 16)

Traffic

By Wellingsbüttel leads the Alster path that the district with the stations Wellingsbüttel and Hoheneichen today's lines S1 and S11 of the Hamburg S-Bahn has two railway stations. In 2010, the Hoheneichen station received a lift. The Wellingsbüttel station, which has a bus stop is not accessible.

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