*** Welcome to piglix ***

Amelinghausen

Amelinghausen
Lutheran church of Saint Hippolytus
Lutheran church of Saint Hippolytus
Coat of arms of Amelinghausen
Coat of arms
Amelinghausen   is located in Germany
Amelinghausen
Amelinghausen
Coordinates: 53°07′36″N 10°12′53″E / 53.12667°N 10.21472°E / 53.12667; 10.21472Coordinates: 53°07′36″N 10°12′53″E / 53.12667°N 10.21472°E / 53.12667; 10.21472
Country Germany
State Lower Saxony
District Lüneburg
Municipal assoc. Amelinghausen
Area
 • Total 27.26 km2 (10.53 sq mi)
Elevation 62 m (203 ft)
Population (2015-12-31)
 • Total 4,062
 • Density 150/km2 (390/sq mi)
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes 21385
Dialling codes 04132
Vehicle registration LG
Website www.amelinghausen.de

Amelinghausen is a municipality in the district of Lüneburg in Lower Saxony, Germany. It is also the seat of the collective municipality (Samtgemeinde) of Amelinghausen.

The municipality lies in the middle of the Lüneburg Heath Nature Park. East of Amelinghausen the upper reaches of the River Lopau are impounded to form the Lopausee, a lake that is used by tourists.

The villages in the municipality are:

The village of Amelinghausen was first mentioned in the records on 22 May 1293. The beginnings of settlement began, however, in the New Stone Age. The first people in this region were migrant hunters and gatherers around 15,000 B. C. They followed reindeer herds coming from the west, for which this area, the present-day Lüneburg Heath, offered a new habitat thanks to its more moderate climate (having hitherto being the Ice Age).

Thousands of years later, about 3,700 B. C., the first humans settled here. The first settlers of the region established themselves on the banks of the River Luhe. As a result of communication with the folk to the south they had already acquired a knowledge of farming. Surviving grave sites are witnesses to the permanent settlement of the present-day Lüneburg Heath from the New Bronze AGe (1100–800 B. C.), through the Early Iron Age (600–800 B. C.) and the Pre-Roman Iron Age (600 B. C. – birth of Christ), into the Migration Period (2nd–6th century A. D.).

One of the best-known grave sites, that like almost all of them dates to the New Stone Age, lies in a small area of restored heathland and is known today as the Oldendorfer Totenstatt. Here several of the different types of grave are located together(tumuli, Urnfield gravesites and dolmens) and may still be viewed today.


...
Wikipedia

...