Langenholtensen

51.72256111111110.0173135Koordinaten: 51 ° 43 ' 21 " N, 10 ° 1' 2 " O

Langenholtensen is a district of the county town of Northeim in Lower Saxony.

  • 3.1 Ortsrat
  • 3.2 mayor
  • 3.3 Coat of Arms

Geography

The village lies just north of Langenholtensen Northeimer core city. It is located between the Edesheimer forest ( max. 270 m above sea level. NN ) in the north, the Rethoberg (252 m above sea level. NN ) in the Northeast, the specialist mountain ( 246.9 m above sea level. NN ) in the east, to the Gallows (approx. 150 m above sea level. NN ) in the southwest and the Sultmerberg ( 226.3 m above sea level. NN ) in the west to 115 up to 150 m above sea level. NN. To the south, on the other side of the Rhumetals, is the Wieter.

By Langenholtensen flows from north to south, the dune ( also called Uhbach ), in the southern outskirts of the flows coming from Brunstein Leimkebach, after which the dune after a few hundred meters empties into the eastern line inflow Rhume.

The federal highway 248 which hiesig sharing the race track with the Deutsche avenue road leads west to Langenholtensen over and joins the Federal Highway 7 on the northerly junction with the south at True North buckets core city.

History

Origin of the name

The name comes from Holzhausen, a rather frequently occurring in Germany toponym. Pronounced in Ostfälischen as Holthusen it became Holtensen. To distinguish them from the same locations in this region, Holtensen ( Einbeck ) and Holtensen (Göttingen), sat down in the 20th century, suggestive of the elongated shape of the place name by Langenholtensen.

History

The first documentary mention there are only from the year 1141st The nearby Northeim the town rights in 1252. This resulted in the following centuries a country escape from the surrounding villages, which some of them were deserted ( Medenheim, Sultheim, special Hagen). Also from Langenholtensen attracted some families (at least 25 persons are detectable for the period 1338-1542 ) in the city and settled in the wooden houses street named after them.

During the Thirty Years' War the city was Northeim 1626/27 besieged by the imperial troops. In Langenholtensen some of the soldiers were quartered that left a devastated village after their withdrawal. Five of six full- Meier farms were destroyed. The also destroyed church was rebuilt in 1689. The tower has been preserved, the nave was 1877/78 canceled due to disrepair and fire and rebuilt in the Gothic style. In 2008, the church, the church belongs to the Church District Leash Solling, was renovated again.

On March 1, 1974 Langenholtensen was incorporated into the county town of Northeim.

To Langenholtensen also includes the settlement Brunstein. It is located near the former castle Brunstein.

Demographics

Policy

Ortsrat

The Ortsrat in Langenholtensen is made up of eleven women council and councilors:

  • CDU 7 seats
  • SPD 4 seats

The current election period runs from 1 November 2011 to 31 October 2016.

Mayor

Local mayor is Reta Fromme, deputy mayor is Eckhardt Joecks.

Coat of arms

" Under blue shield head, in a golden court staff, in silver, a gold ring, covered with five oak leaves, where in blue a silver rose with green sepals and a red of a black cross occupied the heart is (Coat of Arms Martin Luther ) "

In the old cemetery, a Luther- oak was planted on 10 November 1883 has evolved into a beautiful natural monument. The law is intended to alert staff to the jurisdiction of the former Office Brunstein. The coat of arms was approved on 20 March 1964.

498122
de