Eversburg
Eversburg is a district located in the north-west of the city of Osnabrück, Lower Saxony, Germany.
Location
On the north side, Eversburg borders on the district of Büren in the municipality of Lotte, in North Rhine-Westphalia. It also borders on the Osnabrück districts of Pye, Hafen, Westerberg and Atter (in a clockwise direction).
Name origin
This formerly infertile area – through which a stream today known as the Landwehrbach flows – was once the site of the Hof Eversfeld (Eversfeld estate) which belonged to the nobleman Hermann von Blankena; in 1223 he sold it to the cathedral chapter of Osnabrück. Continuous disputes with the counts of Tecklenburg necessitated the establishment of a territorial army in Osnabrück and the fortification of the estate around 1300. The cathedral chapter converted the Hof Eversfeld into a moated castle, whose trenches were supplied from the river. From this point onwards the estate became known as Eversburg; this name was first mentioned in civic records in 1383.[1]
District
The evangelical St. Michaeliskirche (St. Michael's Church), Catholic Liebfrauenkirche Eversburg (Church of Our Lady), an Orthodox church and a mosque are located in Eversburg. As a result of the city's troubled economic situation, the district library is under threat of closure.
There is a local recreation area in the south-west of the district (along with the Rubbenbruchsee).
Transport links
Eversburg is positioned on several rail lines; earlier it had its own train station (Osnabrück-Eversburg). Lines which passed/pass through here include the Hannover-Amsterdam, Delmenhorst/Oldenburg-Osnabrück and Tecklenburger Nordbahn (Tecklenburg Northern Rail, from Rheine via Mettingen) routes. In the SPNV Westfalen-Lippe local transport plan, the restoration of a half-hourly regional rail service from Osnabrück to Recke is suggested on account of its potential profitability. This could possibly entail the reopening of the Osnabrück-Eversburg station. Furthermore, a new railway station (Osnabrück/Lotte) is envisioned on the city boundary. Eversburg was also attached to Osnabrück's first O-Buslinie (O bus line); line number 5 ran (with tram link) from Rißmüllerplatz through Natruper Straße, dividing into two sub-lines heading towards Eversburg-Büren and Eversburg-Atter. Today, city buses travel through Eversburg heading from the terminus stations with these same names.
References
- Rudolf vom Bruch: Die Rittersitze des Fürstenstums Osnabrück. S.70