Apr 10, 2012

Ginheim

The Ginheim is also District of Frankfurt Germany. This District has 16,450 population and size that under this District is 2.701 Km2. This District is in city Frankfurt and city Frankfurt is in state Hessen. The Boundaries of this district is with Hausan, Heddernheim, Eschersheim and also with Dorn Busch. 

History

Middle Ages

The oldest mention of Ginnheim dates back to 772, when the occasion called Gennenheim a donation to the Abbey of Lorsch. Later it came to the monastery Seligenstadt. The village belonged to the court of justice of the monastery of Fulda, headquartered in Eschersheim, called Cremser court. The monastery Seligenstadt enfeoffed the Lords and Counts of Hanau with Ginnheim who bought it in 1479 from the monastery. Thus it passed definitively to the county of Hanau-Münzenberg. It in the arms of Ginnheim remember the red and yellow chevrons, originally the coat of arms of the county of Hanau. In the county was part of the Office Ginnheim Bornheimer mountain. 
In Medieval times, the parish Ginnheim Praunheim.




Historical forms of names


The name probably comes from Ginnheim some Genno, Gennenheim means of Genno home.



  • Gennenheim (772)
  • Gennenheim (about 850)
  • Ginnheim (1159)
  • Ginninheim (1222)
  • Ginneheim (1253)
  • Ginnheim (1261)
  • De Gynnenheim (1289)
  • Ginheym (1309)




Reformation
In the first half of the 16th Century completed the county of Hanau-Münzenberg and thus the village Ginnheim the Reformation Lutheran after initially modeled. 1597 sat Count Philipp Ludwig II by a second Reformation in favor of the Reformed confession. 48 Ginnheimer families refused, however, to take this step and remained Lutheran. Since all the church building and the pastor belonged exclusively to the Reformed Church of the county government, the Lutheran majority of the village now had to Eschersheim go to church and was supervised by the pastor in Bonames. It was not until 1642 in the county of Hanau-Münzenberg likewise Lutheran Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg ruled, eased the situation for Lutherans in Ginnheim: From 1678 she again had its own priest and from 1700 again has its own church, [1] today's Old Bethlehem Church.

Modern Times
After the death of the last Count Hanauer, Johann Reinhard III., Inherited the Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel, the county of Hanau-Münzenberg. From the Hesse-Kassel 1803, the electorate of Hesse. Temporarily Ginnheim belonged in Napoleonic times to the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt (1810-1813). After the administrative reform of the Electorate of Hesse in 1821, was divided under which Kurhessen in four provinces and 22 districts, the district belonged Ginnheim Hanau. The electorate defeated in 1866 in the Austro-Prussian War, allied as well as the Free City of Frankfurt, with Austria, the Kingdom of Prussia. This subsequently annexed both Kurhessen and Frankfurt, and thus Ginnheim. From 1867 it belonged so the Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau and the Region of Kassel. In 1886 it became part of the newly formed district of Frankfurt. On 1 April 1910 Ginnheim amalgamated with all other municipalities in the county to date Frankfurt in the city and thus a district of Frankfurt. Just one year later the first tram of Bockenheim drove Coming after Ginnheim, from 1911 there was a second line from the bush was on the road to Raimund Ginnheimer school.
Construction projects such as the urbanization level view of the architect and city planner Ernst May, the 1926 has / 1927 on the hill road built by the nonprofit warriors home Allotment peace or on the same street after the Second World War established by the Bank of German countries settlement the district in the 20th Century to grow strongly. Ernst May has. 1923 in the Ludwig Tieck-Str 11 built in the settlement Höhenblick his own house. Its construction director Martin Elsaesser, who was responsible for, among other buildings, the Frankfurt market hall, had its 37th private villa of his own design in 1925 at the height of a view For members of the U.S. armed forces was 1954/1955 on 65 acres between Raymond Street and Hill Street, the Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben settlement, 17 buildings with 268 apartments. After the withdrawal of the American forces, these apartments rented out and the population rose again sharply. 1989 to the present Nidda Park site hosted the National Garden Festival.

Population Statistics


  • 1597: ca. 90 Herdstellen
  • 1634: 50 Haushaltungen
  • 1753: 80 Familien mit 1713 Einwohnern
  • 1834: 579 Einwohner
  • 1840: 599 Einwohner
  • 1846: 657 Einwohner
  • 1852: 681 Einwohner
  • 1858: 700 Einwohner
  • 1864: 752 Einwohner
  • 1871: 797 Einwohner
  • 1875: 1170 Einwohner
  • 1885: 1324 Einwohner
  • 1895: 1713 Einwohner
  • 1905: 2293 Einwohner
Attractions

The Old Bethlehem Church in Ginnheim is a baroque church hall, the former Lutheran church. Your first direction dated to the year 1699/1700. In 1910 it was converted into a parish church. The surrounding churchyard was refurbished in 2003 and renewed. Noteworthy is also the property Woogstraße 43 from the 17th Century, which is preserved as well structurally comprehensible Franconian Hofreite and is a listed building. In that place was the first brewery Ginn's home, which was not open all year round.

Traffic
Ginnheim has connection. The underground lines U1 and U9 units who have their terminus Ginnheim is also the terminus of the tram line 16 from Offenbach's city limits on the Sachsenhausen Main Station. Bus lines 34, 39 and 64 connect with the Ginnheim Rebstockgelände, Bornheim, Berkersheim and Northrend. 
It is discussed, with the four-tracked expansion of the Main-Weser line build near the current Metro Station Niddapark an additional breakpoint Frankfurt Ginnheim, the S6 a transition to underground line U1 and to the S-Bahn line enabled. 
A bicycle route runs from the northwest to the city center via the Woogstraße, Raimundstraße and Platenstraße. 
By Ginnheim leads the Rosa Luxembourg Street, a highway-like developed high street. 

Economy and Trade
The district Ginnheim large farms are located, but many small and medium businesses. Many of them have joined in Gewerbering Ginnheim with currently about 55 members, who regularly reports its own newspaper Ginnemer Blättche over Ginnheimer internals, club activities, events, history.

Pics