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Französisch Buchholz


FieldValue
nameFranzösisch Buchholz
typeQuarter
CityBerlin
image_coaCoat of arms de-be buchholz 1987.png
coordinates
stateBerlin
boroughPankow
elevation80
area12
pop_ref
population
population_as_of
postal_code13127
licenceB
year1242
plantextLocation of Französisch Buchholz in Pankow and Berlin
image_planBerlin Pankow Französisch Buchholz.png
websiteOfficial website

Französisch Buchholz (), also known simply as Buchholz, is a German locality (Ortsteil) within the Berlin borough (Bezirk) of Pankow.

History

First mentioned in 1242 as Buckholtz in a document, it became the property of Frederick William I in 1670. In 1685, after the Edict of Potsdam, it was formed as a French colony (Französische Kolonie), a residence for French Huguenots. An autonomous municipality of Brandenburg, named Berlin-Buchholz after 1913, it was merged into Berlin in 1920 by the "Greater Berlin Act". From 1949 to 1990 it was part of East Berlin.

Geography

Located in the northern suburbs of the city, but totally surrounded by the territory of Berlin, Buchholz borders on Buch, Karow, Blankenburg, Pankow, Niederschönhausen, Rosenthal and Blankenfelde. In the north of the quarter is situated the natural reserve "Karower Teiche", part of the Barnim Nature Park.

Transport

Crossed by the S-Bahn line S8 and by the Heidekrautbahn, it is not directly served by urban railways except for the tramway line 50, that passes through all the quarter. The nearest S-Bahn stations are Blankenburg and Pankow-Heinersdorf, situated on the lines S2 and S8. Französisch Buchholz is also traversed, at its northern borders, by the Berliner beltway (A10, known as "Berliner Ring"), that is linked to the short motorway A114. The exits n.2 ("Schönerlinder Straße"), n.3 (Bucher Straße) and n.4 ("Pasewalker Straße") serve the locality.

Photogallery

File:Karowerteiche-August-2008-19.png|View of the natural reserve "Karower Teiche" File:Tram stop Berlin Rosenthaler Str (2010).jpg|Tram stop at Rosenthaler Straße (line 50) File:FriedhofIX-Feierhalle1.jpg|Feierhalle at the local cemetery

References

References

  1. {{Population Germany
  2. The word ''Französisch'' stands for "French"
  3. {{in lang. de [http://www.franzoesisch-buchholz.de/zeittafel.html Detailed historical chronicles of Französisch Buchholz] {{Webarchive. link. (6 March 2012)
  4. [http://www.np-barnim.de/ Infos on the NPB official website]. Click on "Naturpark", then click on "Region"
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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