Oberbergischer Kreis
The Oberbergischer Kreis is a Kreis in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Neighboring districts are Ennepe-Ruhr, Märkischer Kreis, Olpe, Altenkirchen, Rhein-Sieg, Rheinisch-Bergischer Kreis, and the urban districts Remscheid and Wuppertal.
Name
The district was named after the region known as Bergisches Land, which belonged to the County of Berg for most of the medieval era. What is called Oberbergisch lies in the southeast of that earldom. By 1740, descriptions of the area distinguished between Niederbergisch, which was north of the river Wupper, and Oberbergisch to its south.In 1816, after the entire Rhineland was annexed to Prussia, the districts of Waldbröl, Homburg, Gimborn, Wipperfürth, and Lennep were created within the area now covered by the district. In 1825 the districts Gimborn and Homburg were merged into the district Gummersbach. In 1932 it was merged with the district of Waldbröl, and the region became known as Oberbergischer Kreis. The restructuring of 1969/75 created the current boundaries of the district.
Geography
The Oberbergischer Kreis covers the hills west of the Sauerland and north of the Westerwald. It constitutes the eastern part of the Bergisches Land nature reserve. Situated at an altitude of 100–520 meters above sea level, it is rich in wood and water and thus a recreational area for citizens from Cologne, the Ruhr area and the Netherlands.The prevailing rock is greywacke, which was and in places still is mined in large stone quarries.
Coat of arms
The coat of arms is a combination of the heraldic signs of the territories the district belonged to. The red-white bar in the top symbolizes the County of Mark and the lion that of Berg. Homburg Castle was the seat of the Princes of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg.Politics
Nazi Era
Robert Ley, a Nazi politician who helped organize the recruitment of slave labor during World War II, and published an anti-Semitic newspaper, the Westdeutscher Beobachter, was born in Niederbreidenbach, a town in Oberbergischer Kreis.District Administrator
- 1945-1951: August Dresbach, CDU
- 1951-1952: Fritz Eschmann, SPD
- 1952-1956: Wilhelm Henn, CDU
- 1956-1961: Fritz Eschmann, SPD
- 1961-1964: Reinhard Kaufmann, CDU
- 1964-1969: Heinrich Schild, CDU
- 1969-1989: Hans Wichelhaus, CDU
- 1989-1994: Hans-Leo Kausemann, CDU
- 1994-1999: Herbert Heidtman, SPD
- 1999-2004: Hans-Leo Kausemann, CDU
- 2004-2015: Hagen Jobi, CDU
- 2015-today: Jochen Hagt, CDU
District Administrator for the management
- 1946-1979: Friedrich-Wilhelm Goldenbogen, CDU
- 1979-1987: Dieter Fuchs, CDU
- 1987-1994: Gert Ammermann, CDU
- 1995-1999: Heribert Rohr, SPD
Economy
The district's economy is marked by small and middle-sized industry, particularly in the areas of plastic and metal processing.Transport
The Oberbergischer Kreis district is connected via Autobahn A1, A4 and A45. A regional train connects the municipalities Engelskirchen, Gummersbach and Marienheide with Cologne and via Lüdenscheid with Hagen and Dortmund. The closest airports are Cologne Bonn, Düsseldorf and Dortmund.Places of interest
- The so-called "colored churches" are known nationally
- Stalactite cave in Wiehl
- Rhenish industry museum in Engelskirchen
- House Dahl
- Open-air museum in Lindlar
- Gimborn Castle
- Homburg Castle
- Hückeswagen Castle and the historical part of Hückeswagen
- Ehreshoven Castle
- Denklingen Castle