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Alt-Hohenschönhausen

Alt-Hohenschönhausen (German: [ˈalt ˌhoːənˌʃøːnˈhaʊ̯zn̩] (listen), lit.'Old Hohenschönhausen') is a quarter (Ortsteil) in the borough (Bezirk) of Lichtenberg, Berlin. Known also as Hohenschönhausen it was, until 2001, the main and the eponymous locality of the former Hohenschönhausen borough. In 2008 the population was in excess of 41,000.

Alt-Hohenschönhausen
Bruno-Taut-Siedlung
Location of Alt-Hohenschönhausen in Lichtenberg borough and Berlin
Alt-Hohenschönhausen
Alt-Hohenschönhausen
Coordinates: 52°35′55″N 13°30′27″E / 52.59861°N 13.50750°E / 52.59861; 13.50750
CountryGermany
StateBerlin
CityBerlin
BoroughLichtenberg
Subdivisions8 zones
Area
 • Total9.33 km2 (3.60 sq mi)
Elevation
52 m (171 ft)
Population
 (2020-12-31)[1]
 • Total50,070
 • Density5,400/km2 (14,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
(nr. 1110) 13053, 13055
Vehicle registrationB

History

Early history

The earliest evidence of settlement in Alt-Hohenschönhausen are from the Bronze Age, and when the settlement history of the wider Berlin area is taken into consideration, there could have been settlements there since 10,000BC. Alt-Hohenschönhausen was first mentioned in 1230. In the initial centuries of the Common Era the area was mainly inhabited by the Sprevane and Hevelli tribes. By the 13th century the area had been colonised by Germans, particularly from the settlement of Schönhausen, during the eastward migration and settlement of Germans in the medieval period. By the 14th century, the prefix Hoh (high) was added to the name of the village to distinguish itself from the southerly village of Niederschönhausen. The first definitive written record of Hohenschönhausen is from an official certificate to Conradus de Schonehusen, dated 19 August 1284.[2]

Effects of War

Thirty Years' War

From 1626 Hohenschönhausen was affected by the Thirty Years' War. Apart from the Swedish forces who were passing through the area, the troops of Albrecht von Wallenstein also plundered the area and its surroundings, with only the village church remaining undamaged. The result of this was a large-scale desertion of the area by its inhabitants and widespread famine. In the following years, The Plague and other epidemics were reported, including a plague of locusts in 1651. As a result of these factors, the village had lost 58% of its inhabitants by the mid-17th century.

Seven Years' War and Industrialisation

Hohenschönhausen was affected by the Seven Years' War, and was plundered by Austrian and Russian troops after Frederick the Great's defeat at the Battle of Kunersdorf. From 1817 the village and the surrounding estates were under the control of the local state councillor, Christian Friedrich Scharnweber. Under his tenure and those of his successors, Hohenschönhausen began expanding along the road to Berlin. Apart from the settlements, at this point cereals were also widely grown and, after the easing of restrictions in 1810, milled on-site. As the 19th century progressed and Germany began to industrialise, Hohenschönhausen benefitted from investment in infrastructure, such as the opening of an electric tram line in 1899, and a brewery which opened in the early 1890s.

Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany

Amalgamation with Berlin

With the Greater Berlin Act of October 1920, Alt-Hohenschönhausen officially became incorporated as part of Greater Berlin within the Weißensee district. Along with the rest of the city, Hohenschönhausen saw food and housing shortages throughout the financial crisis of the mid-1920s.

Nazi Germany

The district was broadly left-wing in the early 1930s; when the Nazi Party took power in 1933, the majority of residents were members of the social democratic parties, the USPD and the SPD. Nevertheless, more than 100 local civil servants were replaced by officials more favourable to the Party on 7 April 1933. After the pogroms of Kristallnacht on 9 November 1938, only some isolated Jews were still allowed to carry out their business, among them was Hohenschönhausen doctor Victor Aronstein, whose waiting room served as a secret meeting place for communists and social democrats until 1939.[3] In 1938 the district's synagogue was completely destroyed by the Nazis; its location is now the site of a memorial to the persecuted Jews of Hohenschönhausen.

 
A plaque commemorating Hohenschönhausen's synagogue, which was destroyed by the Nazis in 1938.

Post-war History

Capitulation

Together with Wartenberg, Falkenberg and Marzahn, Hohenschönhausen was one of the first parts of Greater Berlin to be capitulated by the Red Army in the evening of 21 April 1945. Like most of Berlin, the immediate problems facing the area included outbreaks of Typhus and Shigellosis, a lack of gas and electricity, and widespread homelessness and orphancy. By the end of the summer of 1945, schools had re-opened and Hohenschönhausen Castle began functioning as a hospital, which continued until 1989. At around the same time, the Soviet secret police took over a building in an industrial area formerly occupied by the Nazi welfare organisation, the NSV,[4] and converted into use as a detainment and transit camp for prisoners of war, which continued to be used until the beginning of the fall of the German Democratic Republic in 1989.[5]

Hohenschönhausen as part of the GDR

On 18 June 1953 more than 1,000 residents of Alt-Hohenschönhausen took part in the mass uprising which spread throughout the country. Like most of the country, the district saw a reduction in its population up until 1961 when the Berlin Wall was built. In the 1970s the district was expanded with the construction of new high-rise apartment buildings. Thanks to the secretive nature of the prison in Hohenschönhausen, a large part of the district where the facility was located was left blank on official maps.[6]

Post-1989 History

After Die Wende in 1989, East and West Berlin merged to form the federal state of Berlin in 1990. On 1 January 2001 the former borough of Hohenschönhausen, consisting of Alt-Hohenschönhausen as well as the localities Neu-Hohenschönhausen, Malchow, Wartenberg and Falkenberg, was merged with the borough of Lichtenberg into the contemporary borough of Lichtenberg.[7]

Geography

Position

Alt-Hohenschönhausen is situated on the Barnim Plateau in the northeast of Berlin. It borders on the localities of Neu-Hohenschönhausen, Lichtenberg, Fennpfuhl, Marzahn (in Marzahn-Hellersdorf borough) and Weißensee (in Pankow borough).

Subdivision

The district is divided into 8 zones (Viertel):

  • Dorfkern
  • Gartenstadt
  • Märkisches Viertel
  • Siedlung Dingelstädter Straße
  • Siedlung Malchower Weg
  • Villenviertel am Oranksee
  • Weiße Taube
  • Wilhelmsberg

Culture

Hohenschönhausen Castle is located in Alt-Hohenschönhausen. The Association Hohenschönhausen Castle cares for the restoration and cultural revitalization of this manor house and regularly organizes different events in the castle, such as exhibitions, readings, and concerts.

Transport

Personal transport

The road network in Alt-Hohenschönhausen focuses mainly on some of the historic major roads of the Berlin network, such as Main Street (Hauptstraße) and Konrad Wolf Street (Konrad-Wolf-Straße). According to some estimates, daily traffic on some of the busiest roads in the area can reach 32,000 movements.

Public transport

The district is served by the M4, M5, M6, 16, M17 and 27 lines of the Berlin tram network and by the S-Bahn stations Berlin Gehrenseestraße (S75 line) and Berlin Hohenschönhausen (S75 + DB).

Photo gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ "Einwohnerinnen und Einwohner im Land Berlin am 31. Dezember 2020" (PDF). Amt für Statistik Berlin-Brandenburg. February 2021.
  2. ^ (in German)Horst Ulrich, Uwe Prell, Ernst Luuk: Hohenschönhausen. In: Berlin Handbuch. Das Lexikon der Bundeshauptstadt. FAB-Verlag, Berlin 1992, ISBN 3-927551-27-9, S. 566.
  3. ^ (in German)Edition Luisenstadt: Victor Aronstein
  4. ^ Gedenkstätte Berlin-Hohenschönhausen. . Archived from the original on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 9 August 2011.
  5. ^ Gedenkstätte Berlin-Hohenschönhausen. . Archived from the original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 9 August 2011.
  6. ^ History of Hohenschönhausen Prison AwayPlan
  7. ^ (in German) Historical chronicles of Alt-Hohenschönhausen on the official website of Berlin

Further reading

  • Anke Huschner: Geschichte der Berliner Verwaltungsbezirke. Hohenschönhausen. Band 15. Stapp Verlag, Berlin 1995, ISBN 3-87776-070-8.
  • Bärbel Ruben: Hohenschönhausen wie es früher war. 1. Auflage. Wartberg Verlag GmbH, 1999, ISBN 3-86134-532-3.
  • Walter Püschel: Spaziergänge in Hohenschönhausen. Haude & Spenersche Verlagsbuchhandlung GmbH, Berlin 1995, ISBN 3-7759-0398-4.
  • Peter Erler, Hubertus Knabe: Der verbotene Stadtteil. Stasi-Sperrbezirk Berlin-Hohenschönhausen. Jaron Verlag, 2004, ISBN 3-89773-506-7.

External links

  Media related to Alt-Hohenschönhausen at Wikimedia Commons

  • (in German) Alt-Hohenschönhausen page on www.berlin.de

hohenschönhausen, german, ˈalt, ˌhoːənˌʃøːnˈhaʊ, listen, hohenschönhausen, quarter, ortsteil, borough, bezirk, lichtenberg, berlin, known, also, hohenschönhausen, until, 2001, main, eponymous, locality, former, hohenschönhausen, borough, 2008, population, exce. Alt Hohenschonhausen German ˈalt ˌhoːenˌʃoːnˈhaʊ zn listen lit Old Hohenschonhausen is a quarter Ortsteil in the borough Bezirk of Lichtenberg Berlin Known also as Hohenschonhausen it was until 2001 the main and the eponymous locality of the former Hohenschonhausen borough In 2008 the population was in excess of 41 000 Alt HohenschonhausenQuarter of BerlinBruno Taut SiedlungCoat of armsLocation of Alt Hohenschonhausen in Lichtenberg borough and BerlinAlt HohenschonhausenShow map of GermanyAlt HohenschonhausenShow map of BerlinCoordinates 52 35 55 N 13 30 27 E 52 59861 N 13 50750 E 52 59861 13 50750CountryGermanyStateBerlinCityBerlinBoroughLichtenbergSubdivisions8 zonesArea Total9 33 km2 3 60 sq mi Elevation52 m 171 ft Population 2020 12 31 1 Total50 070 Density5 400 km2 14 000 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes nr 1110 13053 13055Vehicle registrationB Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Effects of War 1 2 1 Thirty Years War 1 2 2 Seven Years War and Industrialisation 1 3 Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany 1 3 1 Amalgamation with Berlin 1 3 2 Nazi Germany 1 4 Post war History 1 4 1 Capitulation 1 4 2 Hohenschonhausen as part of the GDR 1 5 Post 1989 History 2 Geography 2 1 Position 2 2 Subdivision 3 Culture 4 Transport 4 1 Personal transport 4 2 Public transport 5 Photo gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit The earliest evidence of settlement in Alt Hohenschonhausen are from the Bronze Age and when the settlement history of the wider Berlin area is taken into consideration there could have been settlements there since 10 000BC Alt Hohenschonhausen was first mentioned in 1230 In the initial centuries of the Common Era the area was mainly inhabited by the Sprevane and Hevelli tribes By the 13th century the area had been colonised by Germans particularly from the settlement of Schonhausen during the eastward migration and settlement of Germans in the medieval period By the 14th century the prefix Hoh high was added to the name of the village to distinguish itself from the southerly village of Niederschonhausen The first definitive written record of Hohenschonhausen is from an official certificate to Conradus de Schonehusen dated 19 August 1284 2 Effects of War Edit Thirty Years War Edit From 1626 Hohenschonhausen was affected by the Thirty Years War Apart from the Swedish forces who were passing through the area the troops of Albrecht von Wallenstein also plundered the area and its surroundings with only the village church remaining undamaged The result of this was a large scale desertion of the area by its inhabitants and widespread famine In the following years The Plague and other epidemics were reported including a plague of locusts in 1651 As a result of these factors the village had lost 58 of its inhabitants by the mid 17th century Seven Years War and Industrialisation Edit Hohenschonhausen was affected by the Seven Years War and was plundered by Austrian and Russian troops after Frederick the Great s defeat at the Battle of Kunersdorf From 1817 the village and the surrounding estates were under the control of the local state councillor Christian Friedrich Scharnweber Under his tenure and those of his successors Hohenschonhausen began expanding along the road to Berlin Apart from the settlements at this point cereals were also widely grown and after the easing of restrictions in 1810 milled on site As the 19th century progressed and Germany began to industrialise Hohenschonhausen benefitted from investment in infrastructure such as the opening of an electric tram line in 1899 and a brewery which opened in the early 1890s Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany Edit Amalgamation with Berlin Edit With the Greater Berlin Act of October 1920 Alt Hohenschonhausen officially became incorporated as part of Greater Berlin within the Weissensee district Along with the rest of the city Hohenschonhausen saw food and housing shortages throughout the financial crisis of the mid 1920s Nazi Germany Edit The district was broadly left wing in the early 1930s when the Nazi Party took power in 1933 the majority of residents were members of the social democratic parties the USPD and the SPD Nevertheless more than 100 local civil servants were replaced by officials more favourable to the Party on 7 April 1933 After the pogroms of Kristallnacht on 9 November 1938 only some isolated Jews were still allowed to carry out their business among them was Hohenschonhausen doctor Victor Aronstein whose waiting room served as a secret meeting place for communists and social democrats until 1939 3 In 1938 the district s synagogue was completely destroyed by the Nazis its location is now the site of a memorial to the persecuted Jews of Hohenschonhausen A plaque commemorating Hohenschonhausen s synagogue which was destroyed by the Nazis in 1938 Post war History Edit Capitulation Edit Together with Wartenberg Falkenberg and Marzahn Hohenschonhausen was one of the first parts of Greater Berlin to be capitulated by the Red Army in the evening of 21 April 1945 Like most of Berlin the immediate problems facing the area included outbreaks of Typhus and Shigellosis a lack of gas and electricity and widespread homelessness and orphancy By the end of the summer of 1945 schools had re opened and Hohenschonhausen Castle began functioning as a hospital which continued until 1989 At around the same time the Soviet secret police took over a building in an industrial area formerly occupied by the Nazi welfare organisation the NSV 4 and converted into use as a detainment and transit camp for prisoners of war which continued to be used until the beginning of the fall of the German Democratic Republic in 1989 5 Hohenschonhausen as part of the GDR Edit On 18 June 1953 more than 1 000 residents of Alt Hohenschonhausen took part in the mass uprising which spread throughout the country Like most of the country the district saw a reduction in its population up until 1961 when the Berlin Wall was built In the 1970s the district was expanded with the construction of new high rise apartment buildings Thanks to the secretive nature of the prison in Hohenschonhausen a large part of the district where the facility was located was left blank on official maps 6 Post 1989 History Edit After Die Wende in 1989 East and West Berlin merged to form the federal state of Berlin in 1990 On 1 January 2001 the former borough of Hohenschonhausen consisting of Alt Hohenschonhausen as well as the localities Neu Hohenschonhausen Malchow Wartenberg and Falkenberg was merged with the borough of Lichtenberg into the contemporary borough of Lichtenberg 7 Geography EditPosition Edit Alt Hohenschonhausen is situated on the Barnim Plateau in the northeast of Berlin It borders on the localities of Neu Hohenschonhausen Lichtenberg Fennpfuhl Marzahn in Marzahn Hellersdorf borough and Weissensee in Pankow borough Subdivision Edit The district is divided into 8 zones Viertel Dorfkern Gartenstadt Markisches Viertel Siedlung Dingelstadter Strasse Siedlung Malchower Weg Villenviertel am Oranksee Weisse Taube WilhelmsbergCulture EditHohenschonhausen Castle is located in Alt Hohenschonhausen The Association Hohenschonhausen Castle cares for the restoration and cultural revitalization of this manor house and regularly organizes different events in the castle such as exhibitions readings and concerts Transport EditPersonal transport Edit The road network in Alt Hohenschonhausen focuses mainly on some of the historic major roads of the Berlin network such as Main Street Hauptstrasse and Konrad Wolf Street Konrad Wolf Strasse According to some estimates daily traffic on some of the busiest roads in the area can reach 32 000 movements Public transport Edit The district is served by the M4 M5 M6 16 M17 and 27 lines of the Berlin tram network and by the S Bahn stations Berlin Gehrenseestrasse S75 line and Berlin Hohenschonhausen S75 DB Photo gallery Edit Protestant Tabor Church on the main road Main road The Obersee lake Gottfriedstrasse in Gartenstadt The Siedlung FlusspferdhofSee also EditBerlin Hohenschonhausen MemorialReferences Edit Einwohnerinnen und Einwohner im Land Berlin am 31 Dezember 2020 PDF Amt fur Statistik Berlin Brandenburg February 2021 in German Horst Ulrich Uwe Prell Ernst Luuk Hohenschonhausen In Berlin Handbuch Das Lexikon der Bundeshauptstadt FAB Verlag Berlin 1992 ISBN 3 927551 27 9 S 566 in German Edition Luisenstadt Victor Aronstein Gedenkstatte Berlin Hohenschonhausen Special Camp 3 Archived from the original on 2 October 2011 Retrieved 9 August 2011 Gedenkstatte Berlin Hohenschonhausen Historical Location Archived from the original on 27 July 2011 Retrieved 9 August 2011 History of Hohenschonhausen Prison AwayPlan in German Historical chronicles of Alt Hohenschonhausen on the official website of BerlinFurther reading EditAnke Huschner Geschichte der Berliner Verwaltungsbezirke Hohenschonhausen Band 15 Stapp Verlag Berlin 1995 ISBN 3 87776 070 8 Barbel Ruben Hohenschonhausen wie es fruher war 1 Auflage Wartberg Verlag GmbH 1999 ISBN 3 86134 532 3 Walter Puschel Spaziergange in Hohenschonhausen Haude amp Spenersche Verlagsbuchhandlung GmbH Berlin 1995 ISBN 3 7759 0398 4 Peter Erler Hubertus Knabe Der verbotene Stadtteil Stasi Sperrbezirk Berlin Hohenschonhausen Jaron Verlag 2004 ISBN 3 89773 506 7 External links Edit Media related to Alt Hohenschonhausen at Wikimedia Commons in German Alt Hohenschonhausen page on www berlin de Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alt Hohenschonhausen amp oldid 1170190092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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