Jump to content

Erbsen

Coordinates: 51°35′0″N 9°48′20″E / 51.58333°N 9.80556°E / 51.58333; 9.80556
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs) at 03:56, 21 April 2020 (External links: add authority control). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Erbsen
Coat of arms of Erbsen
Location of Erbsen
Map
Erbsen is located in Germany
Erbsen
Erbsen
Erbsen is located in Lower Saxony
Erbsen
Erbsen
Coordinates: 51°35′0″N 9°48′20″E / 51.58333°N 9.80556°E / 51.58333; 9.80556
CountryGermany
StateLower Saxony
DistrictGöttingen
MunicipalityAdelebsen
Elevation
195 m (640 ft)
Population
 • Total400
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
37139
Dialling codes05506
Vehicle registration
Websitewww.adelebsen.de

Erbsen is a village in the Flecken (market town) Adelebsen in the Landkreis Göttingen in Lower Saxony, Germany. The village has about four hundred inhabitants. It lies some twelve kilometers west of Göttingen on the main road to Adelebsen proper.

History

The oldest known written reference to Erbsen is some time between AD 826 and 876 in the Traditiones Corbeienses, where it was called Erpeshusen. The exact date of this reference is uncertain since it is only directly known from a fifteenth-century copy. In addition, the certainty that "Erpeshusen" actually refers to Erbsen has not been established, since it has been suggested that it could be referring to an abandoned village near Driburg. The name Erpessun is used in the Vita Meinwercci around 1015 to 1036. (The fact that Erbsen is German for "pea" is purely coincidental and not connected to the community's etymology.)[1]

In the 1920s, the village expanded northward. After the Second World War, an additional expansion (Auf dem Höbel) was added between the original village area and the train tracks.[2]

Church

The earliest known reference to a church in Erbsen is from 1446.[3] Today's St. Vitus is a Neo-Romantic building with a medieval core with seventeenth-century renovations and expansion. In 1975, a parsonage was built on the village hill of Kirchberg. Both buildings are designated cultural heritage sites.

References

  1. ^ Kirstin Casemir; Uwe Ohainski; Jürgen Udolph (2003), Jürgen Udolph (ed.), "Die Ortsnamen des Landkreises Göttingen", Niedersächsisches Ortsnamensbuch (NOB) (in German), vol. Teil IV, Bielefeld: Verlag für Regionalgeschichte, pp. 133f, ISBN 3-89534-494-X
  2. ^ Peter Ferdinand Lufen (1993), Christiane Segers-Glocke (ed.), "Landkreis Göttingen, Teil 1. Altkreis Münden mit den Gemeinden Adelebsen, Bovenden und Rosdorf", Denkmaltopographie Bundesrepublik Deutschland. Baudenkmale in Niedersachsen (in German), vol. 5.2, Hameln: CW Niemeyer, pp. 84f, ISBN 3-87585-251-6
  3. ^ Philipp Meyer: Die Pastoren der Landeskirchen Hannovers und Schaumburg-Lippes seit der Reformation, 2 Bde., Göttingen 1941/42, Bd. 1, S. 270: kerken to Erpsen, Urkunde im Freiherrlich von Adelebsenschen Archiv.