Immenrode is a German village and Stadtteil (district) of the town of Goslar, Lower Saxony.
Immenrode lies south of some small, wooded ridges in a flat area a few kilometres north of the Harz.
The place name belongs to the so-called Rodungsnamen and indicates that, as with many toponyms ending in -rode, was built on a plot of land, originally woods or heath, cleared to make room for cultivation or pasture.
[1][2] The village was first mentioned in 1086 in a document in which Emperor Henry IV transferred the Royal Palace of Werla to Bishop Udo of Hildesheim, along with villas Immenrothe et Jehthere (probably referring to Gitter near Salzgitter).
Immenrode has been a church village since the Middle Ages; the Wöltingerode Abbey held the patronage for several centuries.