Lemmie, District in Gehrden, Germany.
Lemmie is a residential district within Gehrden, positioned at 79 meters elevation in Lower Saxony. The area contains nine architectural monuments, including a manor house from the 1800s that was created by combining seven separate farmsteads.
The first written mention of this place appears in a 1216 document from Pope Innocent III, recording a land transfer to Loccum Monastery. This early connection to the church shaped its role as a religious center for centuries.
The chapel here holds a bell cast in 1652, reflecting the spiritual life that has shaped this place over centuries. Visitors can still hear its sound ring out during local celebrations and religious gatherings.
The area connects to surrounding towns through four bus lines of the Greater Hannover Transport network and has a stop on the Deister railway. Visitors can easily reach it by public transport and explore the district on foot.
The manor house created in 1852 tells an unusual story: it was built by merging seven separate farmsteads into one property. This building shows how earlier landowners restructured their holdings and left behind an architectural landmark that still stands today.
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