Wardow

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coat of arms Germany map
Wardow parish does not have a coat of arms
Wardow
Map of Germany, position of the municipality of Wardow highlighted

Coordinates: 53 ° 56 '  N , 12 ° 25'  E

Basic data
State : Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
County : Rostock
Office : Laage
Height : 39 m above sea level NHN
Area : 68.98 km 2
Residents: 1320 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 19 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 18299
Area code : 038459
License plate : LRO, BÜZ, DBR, GÜ, ROS, TET
Community key : 13 0 72 112
Office administration address: Am Markt 7
18299 Laage
Website : www.amt-laage.de
Mayor : Günther Schink
Location of Wardow in the Rostock district
Rostock Schwerin Landkreis Mecklenburgische Seenplatte Landkreis Vorpommern-Rügen Landkreis Nordwestmecklenburg Landkreis Nordwestmecklenburg Landkreis Ludwigslust-Parchim Admannshagen-Bargeshagen Bartenshagen-Parkentin Börgerende-Rethwisch Hohenfelde (Mecklenburg) Nienhagen (Landkreis Rostock) Reddelich Retschow Steffenshagen Wittenbeck Baumgarten (Warnow) Bernitt Bützow Dreetz (Mecklenburg) Jürgenshagen Klein Belitz Penzin Rühn Steinhagen (Mecklenburg) Tarnow (Mecklenburg) Warnow (bei Bützow) Zepelin Broderstorf Blankenhagen Poppendorf (Mecklenburg) Roggentin (bei Rostock) Broderstorf Thulendorf Altkalen Behren-Lübchin Finkenthal Gnoien Walkendorf Behren-Lübchin Glasewitz Groß Schwiesow Gülzow-Prüzen Gutow Klein Upahl Kuhs Lohmen (Mecklenburg) Lüssow (Mecklenburg) Mistorf Mühl Rosin Plaaz Reimershagen Sarmstorf Dolgen am See Hohen Sprenz Laage Wardow Dobbin-Linstow Hoppenrade Krakow am See Kuchelmiß Lalendorf Lalendorf Alt Sührkow Dahmen Dalkendorf Groß Roge Groß Wokern Groß Wüstenfelde Hohen Demzin Jördenstorf Lelkendorf Prebberede Schorssow Schwasdorf Sukow-Levitzow Thürkow Warnkenhagen Alt Bukow Am Salzhaff Bastorf Bastorf Biendorf (Mecklenburg) Carinerland Rerik Bentwisch Blankenhagen Gelbensande Mönchhagen Rövershagen Benitz Bröbberow Kassow Rukieten Schwaan Vorbeck Wiendorf (Mecklenburg) Cammin (bei Rostock) Gnewitz Grammow Nustrow Selpin Stubbendorf (bei Tessin) Tessin (bei Rostock) Thelkow Zarnewanz Elmenhorst/Lichtenhagen Kritzmow Lambrechtshagen Papendorf (Warnow) Pölchow Stäbelow Ziesendorf Bad Doberan Dummerstorf Graal-Müritz Güstrow Kröpelin Kühlungsborn Neubukow Sanitz Satow Teterowmap
About this picture

Wardow is a municipality in the Rostock district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (Germany). The municipality is administered by the Laage office based in the city ​​of the same name .

geography

The community of Wardow is located north and east of the city of Laage, approx. 25 km from Rostock . The municipal area extends from the terminal moraine west of the Recknitz over the Recknitz lowland to the east into a gently hilly area that is drained by the Pludderbach and the Polchow (both tributaries of the Recknitz). The heights barely reach 50 m above sea level. NN. Today the municipality is mainly characterized by agriculture.

Districts

The villages Wozeten and Spotendorf have belonged to Wardow for centuries . Other districts of the extended community Wardow are Alt Kätwin, Goritz, Groß Ridsenow, Klein Ridsenow, Kobrow, Kossow, Neu Kätwin, Polchow, Teschow and Vipernitz.

history

The barrows and stone barrows are among the significant early traces of settlement around Wardow. Mecklenburg's oldest trade route, the Via Regia , ran along here 1000 years ago. It was used by both Slavic and Arab traders. At that time Polchow was a rest stop, while Wardow had a protective hill fort. The earthwork of this castle wall is still preserved.

Wardow was first mentioned in a document in 1270. Landowners were u. a. the families Graf von Bassewitz (from 1728), von Heyden-Linden , Mierendorff (from 1852) and von Ammon. In 1934 the estate was relocated. The neo-Gothic , two-storey manor house (manor house) in Tudor style dates from 1840. It was greatly simplified in 1970 and has been renovated since 2008.

The landscape park of the Wardow manor follows the early medieval ramparts. The neo-Gothic manor house from the 19th century was used as a school until the 2000s and is currently being renovated.

In 1788 a mill was built. The now still existing Erdholländermühle, which was in operation until 1967, dates from 1891. Since 1798 there was also a knightly school in the village. From 1990, with the construction of new homes, Wardow's townscape has changed significantly.

Old Kätwin was first mentioned in 1238.

Groß Ridsenow was first mentioned in 1304. The baroque half-timbered manor house was built for the von Wendhausen family around 1776, who had owned the property from 1724, initially as a pledge. From 1783 frequent changes of ownership, most recently from 1912 to around 1930 Rittmeister a. D. Paul Mierendorff. In 1938 the estate with a size of 837.5 hectares was settled by the "Ostland" settlement company. The manor house and park are under monument protection. The now private manor house is recommended for an emergency backup program.

In the 1930s the place was settled by farmers from the Black Forest, East Friesland and Holstein: There is a bell tower in the village, whose bell was stolen. The church burned down in the Thirty Years War . The manor house dates from 1776.

Kobrow is first found in the annals in 1346. Landowners included the von Vieregge (1741–1755), von Gundlach (1760–1784), von Genzkow (1796–1804), Hundt (1804–1825) and von Bülow (1859–1930) families . Lieutenant Colonel Ernst August Wilhelm von Bülow had the Kobrow manor house built in 1860. The estate was settled in 1937 for 44 settlers.

Spotendorf is one of the old settlement areas. In terms of location, it also has one of the most beautiful manors in the Güstrow district. In 1284 Heinrich Frese owned the estate, which he left to the city of Rostock in 1286. The manor house was built around 1870 with a park facing north. Until 1945 it was owned by Albrecht Wendhausen , who was involved in the Kapp Putsch during the Weimar Republic . A beautiful barn is still preserved.

Teschow: The estate was owned by the Levetzow (noble family) (from 1776), Oberamtmann Siebmann (from 1823), Bencard (from 1837), the Oertzen (noble family) (from 1842), the Gadow (noble family) (from 1870), Otto Glantz and Erben (from 1892) and Karl Rehm (from 1914). The manor house is privately owned.

Polchow

Polchow village church
Polchow manor

Polchow was first mentioned in a document in 1216. At that time, the Dargun monastery received the Polchow estate from Casimir , Duke of Pomerania. The monastery also received the right of patronage over the Polchower Church from Bishop Konrad von Cammin. During the Reformation, around 1552, the monastery was dissolved. Polchow passed into ducal possession. In 1613 the place became a knightly estate. It was given to Jürgen von Moltke as a feudal estate . In 1631 the Moltkes were deprived of the estate because of their services for Wallenstein and it was given to the Swedish General Acke von Tott , then Colonel James Ramsey . In 1653 the Moltkes got the property back. In 1728 Polchow was sold for 19,666 thalers to Count Henning Friedrich von Bassewitz and from 1748 to 1750 the Neu Polchow farm was laid out as a subsidiary property of Groß Ridsenow by the Baron von Wendhausen .

A church from the 13th century was demolished in 1888 due to dilapidation and a new church was built by 1891. The thousand-year-old summer linden tree stands in the cemetery by the church. It was declared a natural monument in 1937 and is the oldest linden tree in Mecklenburg.

Polchow Manor was built between 1904 and 1907. In its place stood a previous building that Wilhelm von Lowtzow , whose parents bought the property in 1893, had demolished. From 1934 to 1945 the estate was owned by the Cottbus cloth manufacturer Fritz Loll.

The manor house was then a refugee camp and then a social institution. The building, which was privatized in 2002, was converted into holiday apartments.

Incorporations

Spotendorf and Wozeten were incorporated on July 1, 1950. On the same day, Alt Polchow was incorporated into Groß Ridsenow. On July 1, 1972, the place was reclassified to Wardow.

Goritz came to Kobrow on July 1, 1950, which has belonged to Wardow since July 1, 1972.

On January 1, 2002, the formerly independent community Groß Ridsenow was incorporated into Wardow. Alt Kätwin followed on January 1, 2004 .

Attractions

  • Neo-Gothic village church Polchow from 1891 built by the Teterow master builder Pitschner according to plans by Gotthilf Ludwig Möckel
  • Millennial summer linden tree in Polchow; stands in the Polchower Kirchhof; Natural monument and oldest linden tree in Mecklenburg
  • Manor house on Gut Alt Kätwin, two-storey building around 1820/1830
  • Manor house on Gut Kobrow, two-storey plastered building around 1860
  • Manor house on Gut Groß Ridsenow with park, single-storey half-timbered building around 1776 with mansard roof and gable
  • Manor house on Gut Polchow in Alt Polchow, neo-baroque , two-storey plastered building from 1907 according to plans by Gotthilf Ludwig Möckel for Wilhelm von Lowtzow
  • Manor house on Gut Spotendorf with fragment of a park, neoclassical , single-storey brick building from around 1870 with a basement and medium risalit ; A beautiful barn and a pond walled with boulders in the south have also been preserved.
  • Manor house on Gut Teschow, two-story plastered building with a half-hip roof
  • Manor on Gut Wardow, neo-Gothic , two-storey plastered building from 1840 ( Tudor style ); Greatly simplified in the GDR era

Transport links

The connecting road from Laage to Ticino runs through the municipality . The B 108 (Rostock - Laage - Teterow ) runs south of Wardow and the A 20 north (junctions Dummerstorf, Sanitz and Ticino ). In the nearby town of Laage there is a rail connection to Rostock, Güstrow and Berlin .

Personalities

Web links

Commons : Wardow  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Statistisches Amt MV - population status of the districts, offices and municipalities 2019 (XLS file) (official population figures in the update of the 2011 census) ( help ).
  2. ^ Association for Meklenburg History and Archeology (ed.): Meklenburgisches Urkundenbuch, Volume 2: 1251–1280 . Publishing house by Carl Christoph Stiller , Schwerin 1864. p. 381, certificate no. 1190.
  3. Groß Ridsenow manor house
  4. ^ Foundation for Cultural Heritage
  5. https://www.svz.de/lokales/guestrower-anzeiger/glockendiebstahl-erneut-vor-gericht-id7578941.html
  6. a b Municipalities 1994 and their changes since January 1st, 1948 in the new federal states , Metzler-Poeschel publishing house, Stuttgart, 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 , publisher: Federal Statistical Office
  7. StBA: Changes in the municipalities in Germany, see 2002
  8. ^ StBA: Changes in the municipalities in Germany, see 2004
  9. "Kirchhofslinde in Alt Polchow" in the tree register at www.baumkunde.de