Gut Hohenholz (also Hohenholtz or Hoegenholtz) is a medieval, free-noble feudal estate surrounded by high elms near Bedburg in the Rhine Erft circle, i. e. in the former office of Kaster, to the south of the old, by the brown coal opencast mining Garzweiler II destroyed city of Alt-Königshoven. The court carries the name earlier there, later in Königshoven, resident free-aristocratic gender of wood and belonged originally to the Heinsberger court in Harff. 1365 sold Messrs. von Heinsberg with many other goods also the court Hohenholtz to the knight Johann von Harff. His descendant Johann von Harff and his Mrs. Jutta von Wevelinghoven sold this in 1430 to the God's hard living on house Harff of Harff. When Margarethe, daughter and heiress died of knight Arnold von Harff and his wife Maria von Bongert, in 1522, broke out a hereditary quarrel which Messrs. von Buer who had married into the family Merode to franc mountain could decide concerning high wood for themselves. With it high wood was at the latest from 1541-1735 in the possession of the family of Buer. In 1556 compared themselves from Buer with the still living mother of the Margarethe of Harff after which both should inherit half of it. Then in 1639 high wood was raised to a knight's seat capable of Landtag. Duke Wolfgang Wilhelm confirmed this in 1643 once again. 1690 belonged at home high wood 300 mornings country, 14 mornings Benden and orchard, in 1860 even 317 mornings country with 962 talers of net proceeds. Later owners were the families forest messenger of Bassenheim, Waldbott-Bornheim, Dackweiler, scratch, Schunck, from 1815 new court and later the Hambloch related with them. Still today the main entrance of the modern mansion is with the initial HH - FN and the annual number 1884 provide. The initials stand for Heinrich Hambloch and Franziska Neuhof.
After demise of the last postarrival of the family Hambloch Gut Hohenholz went to the Catholic church in Bedburg Kaster, who sold later to the family Sartoris from Neuss.
Since the end of 2009, Eduard Hilger ownes Gut Hohenholz.