Ratingen-Homberg is that part of the city of Ratingen, in Mettman district, North Rhine-Westphalia that, until the bringing of industrialisation to the city, was the independent village of Homberg - at that time being in the district Homberg-Meiersberg, with its scenic churches, one Protestant and one Catholic.
The older, Catholic church is devoted to Saint James. Both church towers together form the characteristic silhouette of Homberg ("Wiesnasen") in the surrounding meadows in the Bergisches Land.
Homberg consists of an older (northern) part with about 1000 inhabitants, three taverns and two churches and a new residential area for about 5000 residents and one restaurant.
The first documented reference to Homberg goes back to the year 1067.
In the twelfth century the Catholic Church devoted to James of Zebedee was built.
By middle of the 14th century Homberg was part of the district "Rheinamt Angermund" and had its own jurisdiction.
1684 the first Protestant church in Homberg was built, north of the village in "im Grund".
In 1685 - opposite to the Protestant church - a Protestant school was built.
The current Protestant church was built in 1912.
On August 14, 1959 new waterworks which continue to operate were opened.
In 1968 the school in Meiersberg closed, so did the confessional schools in Homberg and a common school was founded, using the common building of the former confessional schools within the settlement at Alt-Homberg.
In the 1970s Homberg was extended with residential areas south of the country road L2422 from Ratingen to Wülfrath (Meiersberger Straße), to occupy parts of the former Meiersberg area. Today, Homberg's only school ("Christian-Morgenstern-Schule") is in that southern area, as the former school was closed in the meantime.
As part of an ongoing restructuring of municipalities, Homberg-Bracht-Bellscheid became part of the new district "Amt Hubbelrath" in the county (land) Düsseldorf-Mettmann on 29 July 1929.
By 1. April 1967 the municipalities Homberg-Bracht-Bellscheidt and Meiersberg voluntarily merged to become Gemeinde Homberg-Meiersberg. It consisted of the village of Homberg as well as Hofermühle and Oberheide plus some solitary farms; it belonged to the jurisdiction of local court or "Amtsgericht" Ratingen.