Engelbostel

Engelbostel

Coat of arms
Engelbostel
Coordinates: DE 52°26′48″N 9°39′36″E / 52.446751°N 9.660072°E / 52.446751; 9.660072Coordinates: DE 52°26′48″N 9°39′36″E / 52.446751°N 9.660072°E / 52.446751; 9.660072
Country Germany
Region Hanover region
City Langenhagen
Elevation 55 m (180 ft)
Population (31 December 2010)
  Total 3,000
Area code(s) 0511

Engelbostel is a district of the city of Langenhagen in the Hanover region. It was independent until 1974 when the village was incorporated into Langenhagen. The town is located southwest of the Hannover-Langenhagen airport. To the east is Schulenburg, and to the west are the town of Garbsen and the villages of Berenbostel and Stelingen.

History

In 2008 Engelbostel celebrated its 975-year anniversary, but the site was probably established around the year 900. The archaeologist Helmut Plath considers that St. Gallenhof, the nucleus of the town, was present by 1100 CE. It was assigned to the parish of Saint Mary's of Hanover.[1] In 1196 the church building was given by the Grafen von Roden to the monastery of Marienwerder. The 15th century church was built on the foundations of its predecessors, and the steeple remains. The nave was attached to it in 1788.

The parish records for the year 1808 report 64 homes in the town. The name "Engelbostel" is derived from the original "Endelindebostelde", which means something like: "castle of the noblemen." Engelbostel is historically the oldest part of the city of Langenhagen. In 1928 the previously unincorporated Gutsbezirk Kananohe was combined with the community of Engelbostel.

Economy and infrastructure

The town has a primary school and the nursery of Martin Parish. Engelbostel Elementary School is a social center of the town developed into an all-day school. Engelbostel is served by three lines of Üstra and Regiobus Hanover. There are connections to Hanover-North Port (light rail), Langenhagen, Garbsen and Stöckendrebber .

People

The composer and music theorist Augustus Frederic Christopher Kollmann came from Engelbostel, later moving to London.

Gallery

Notes and references

Citations

Sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.