Barmbek

Barmbek (German pronunciation), until 27 September 1946 Barmbeck, is the name of a former village that was absorbed into the city of Hamburg, Germany. In 1951 it was divided into the quarters Barmbek-Süd, Barmbek-Nord and Dulsberg in the borough Hamburg-Nord.

Barmbek
Barmbeck
Village
St. Sophia's Catholic Church built in 1900
St. Sophia's Catholic Church built in 1900
Map, situation in the north-east of Hamburg around 1800
Map, situation in the north-east of Hamburg around 1800
CountryGermany
CityHamburg

History

It was first recorded in 1271 as "Bernebeke". Up until 1946 it was written with a 'c' as Barmbeck. Barmbeck and Barmbek are pronounced with a long e, similar to the English "Barm Bake". The village of Barmbeck had been under Hamburg administration since 1830, and it became a suburb of Hamburg in 1894,[1] while the area of Barmbek-Nord was incorporated into Hamburg in 1937 with the Greater Hamburg Act.[2]

Buildings

High-rise built in 1955

near Habichtstraße (Hamburg U-Bahn station)

  • St. Sophia's Catholic Church
  • Evangelical–Lutheran Bugenhagenkirche[3]
  • AK Barmbek clinic
  • AK Eilbek clinic[4]
  • Museum of work
  • Barmbek station[5]

References

  1. History of Barmbek, History Workshop Barmbek, in German
  2. Barmbek-Nord, Hamburg.de, in German
  3. "Offene Kirchen in der Nordkirche". Archived from the original on 17 February 2013.
  4. "Quality and world-class medicine through specialisation".
  5. "Bahnhof Hamburg-Barmbek Station Building". 3 April 2012.

53°34′58″N 10°02′28″E

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