Cadenberge

Cadenberge ( Low German Cuddeldutt / Kumbarg ) is a municipality in Lower Saxony on the edge of the Geest in the district of Cuxhaven, which has teamed up with six other municipalities to Samtgemeinde On Dobrock.

  • 3.1 municipal
  • 3.2 Mayor and community leaders
  • 4.1 Park, Castle and dovecote
  • 4.2 Church
  • 4.3 Regular events

Geography

Cadenberge is close to the Oste and the Lower Elbe in the district of Cuxhaven and belongs to Samtgemeinde On Dobrock. Cadenberge is süd-/östlich of Cuxhaven and north of Stade and Hamburg. Neighboring towns are in the north Neuhaus ( Oste), in the northeast Geversdorf, in the east Oberdorf ( Oste), in the south Wingst in the west and northwest Bülkau Belum and Otter village.

History

Place name

Since 850 years the name of locality is preserved. The place name component may Cad goes back to the Middle Low German word for Cade cracklings, so bacon. The word cracklings stands for uncleanliness and dirt. Dirt, mud, scenic not so nice, could therefore be a possible interpretation. This place name is a derivation, however, is very difficult.

History

Cadenberge was first mentioned in documents in 1148. The original St. Nicholas Church was first recorded in 1319. From 1742 to 1752, a new building of the church on the old plan was carried out.

To 1319 the manor of Bremen was first mentioned. In 1724 the two-story mansion of the former the manor was built and later referred to as a manor Count of Bremen and lock Cadenberge. It is now a boarding school of vocational schools Cadenberge.

Cadenberge evolved since the Middle Ages to the market location of the region.

1881, the railway line of the Lower Elbe train from Hamburg to Cuxhaven was built. The breakpoint Cadenberge in 1905 and 1912 expanded to Cadenberge station.

On June 1, 1965, municipalities Cadenberge, Wingst and Opole joined a Samtgemeinde along with the name Samtgemeinde On Dobrock. The communities Bülkau and Oberndorf came 1970 and the spots Neuhaus ( Oste), and the municipalities Belum and Geversdorf 1972 added.

Population Development

( at December 31 )

Policy

Parish council

  • CDU - 5 seats
  • SPD - 10 seats

Mayor and community leaders

Culture and sights

In the list of monuments in Cadenberge are registered in the list of monuments of the country district Cuxhaven monuments.

Park, Castle and dovecote

In Counts Bremer shear Castle and Manor Park are the manor house, the wayward pigeon house and rare trees. The park was reconstructed in late 2008 in its historical form and is a listed building. From the park, a hiking trail leads through the Freese Moor in the Wingst.

The two-story mansion of brick with gables was built from 1724 to 1752. The hipped roof is provided with an octagonal wooden roof skylights.

The pigeon house is now a museum and hotel.

Church

The original Gothic St. Nicolai Church, named after Nicholas of Myra, was first mentioned by the papal collector Jacob de Rota in his report for 1319. From 1742 to 1752 took place on the foundations of a large building of brick as a rectangular hall church with polygonal Ostabschluss.

The detached, wooden, western bell tower was built in 1723. Since the construction of the church was significantly greater in relation to the old church substance, the tower looks a bit unterproportioniert. Today, no longer visible because covered by piled boulders, the tower stands on four masonry stone pillars. The tower has three bells, two Läutglocken and time bell. The two Läutglocken have the strike note As ' and G', the smaller of the two was cast in 1698 by Christoph Haupner in Stade, the greater was recast in 1732 by Caspar King, as they had jumped. The big bell had to leave during World War II, but returned thereafter without prejudice back. The Uhrschlagglocke was not until 1950 cast.

Inside: The pulpit altar was built in the early 18th century. Pews, gallery and Gutsprieche ( segregated seating for the landlords ) are from the late 18th century. The organ building began in the mid -18th century by Jacob Albrecht, was continued from 1754 to 1756 by Johann Heinrich Meyer folding and completed in 1764 by Dietrich Christoph Gloger.

Church and bell tower were renovated from 1962 to 1965.

Regular events

  • Frühjahrsmarkt Third weekend in April
  • Marksmen Cadenberge Fourth weekend in June (Saturday)
  • Marksmen Cadenberge - Long Road First weekend in September (Sunday)
  • Autumn market Third weekend in October
  • Advent gathering of the Cadenberger clubs (until 2004 Christmas market) third Advent

Today boarding

Dovecote

Railroad track in Cadenberge

Station in Cadenberge

Town hall of the velvet municipality in Cadenberge

Infrastructure

  • Town hall of the velvet municipality in Cadenberge, Am Markt 1
  • Primary school Cadenberge, Heather Lane 12a
  • Berufsbildungswerk Cadenberge, Töpferstraße 4
  • Cadenberge police station, Bahnhofstrasse 16
  • Volunteer Fire Cadenberge, at the flood 7
  • Fire Department Technical Center, Tannenweg 2

Traffic

Cadenberge is located on the main road 73 Hamburg- Cuxhaven and on the county road K 22 ( Long Street ) to Wingst.

The Lower Elbe Railway runs from Hamburg- Harburg to Cuxhaven station in Cadenberge.

Personalities

  • Johann Gotthard Schlichthorst (1723-1780), German theologian
  • Werner Stelly (1909-1997), German politician, city manager of Wuppertal
  • Benedict of Bremen (1717-1779), German jurist
  • Friedrich Franz Dietrich Graf von Bremen (1759-1836), Minister of the Kingdom of Hanover.

Pictures of Cadenberge

158364
de