Immenrode

Immenrode
Location of Immenrode
Immenrode
Immenrode
Coordinates: 51°57′32″N 10°29′03″E / 51.95875°N 10.48419°E / 51.95875; 10.48419
CountryGermany
StateLower Saxony
DistrictGoslar
CityGoslar
Area
 • District of Goslar
10.07 km2 (3.89 sq mi)
Elevation
181 m (594 ft)
Population
 • Metro
1,607
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
38690
Dialling codes05324
Websiteimmenro.de

Immenrode is a German village and Stadtteil (district) of the town of Goslar, Lower Saxony. The village is located approximately 5 kilometers west of Vienenburg, 7 kilometers northeast of Goslar, and 20 kilometers south of Braunschweig. Immenrode lies south of some small, wooded ridges in a flat area a few kilometres north of the Harz.

History

The place name belongs to the so-called Rodungsnamen and indicates that, as with many toponyms ending in -rode, was built on a plot of land, originally woods or heath, cleared to make room for cultivation or pasture. The suffix -rode stems from the Germanic verb ryddan, which means "to remove", "to clear" or "to rid". The prefix immen- is common in place names, field names and also in personal names. It likely recalls the name of the founder of the settlement, perhaps an Immo.[1][2]

The village was first mentioned in 1086 in a document in which Emperor Henry IV transferred the Royal Palace of Werla to Bishop Udo of Hildesheim, along with villas Immenrothe et Jehthere (probably referring to Gitter near Salzgitter).[1] In the Middle Ages, the Counts of Woldenberg, the Neuwerk monastery and Count Gerhard of Holstein-Itzehoe owned property here. Immenrode has been a church village since the Middle Ages; the Wöltingerode Abbey held the patronage for several centuries.

References

  1. ^ a b Thieleman, Otto. "Geschichte die Flurnamen" [History of the field names]. Immenrode (in German). Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  2. ^ Casemir, Kirstin; Ohainski, Uwe. Die Ortsnamen des Landkreises Goslar [The place names of the district of Goslar] (PDF) (in German). Bielefeld: Verlag für Regionalgeschichte. pp. 101–102.

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