Old cloth tape

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coat of arms Germany map
The Alt Tucheband community does not have a coat of arms
Old cloth tape
Map of Germany, position of the municipality Alt Tucheband highlighted

Coordinates: 52 ° 32 '  N , 14 ° 31'  E

Basic data
State : Brandenburg
County : Märkisch-Oderland
Office : Golzow
Height : 11 m above sea level NHN
Area : 30.51 km 2
Residents: 792 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 26 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 15328
Area code : 033472
License plate : MOL, FRW, SEE, SRB
Community key : 12 0 64 009
Community structure: 3 districts
Office administration address: Seelower Strasse 14
15328 Golzow
Website : www.amt-golzow.de
Mayor : Thomas Kowalzik
Location of the municipality of Alt Tucheband in the Märkisch-Oderland district
Altlandsberg Alt Tucheband Bad Freienwalde Beiersdorf-Freudenberg Bleyen-Genschmar Bliesdorf Buckow Falkenberg Falkenhagen Fichtenhöhe Fredersdorf-Vogelsdorf Garzau-Garzin Golzow Gusow-Platkow Heckelberg-Brunow Höhenland Hoppegarten Küstriner Vorland Lebus Letschin Lietzen Lindendorf Märkische Höhe Müncheberg Neuenhagen bei Berlin Neuhardenberg Neulewin Neutrebbin Oberbarnim Oderaue Petershagen/Eggersdorf Podelzig Prötzel Rehfelde Reichenow-Möglin Reitwein Rüdersdorf bei Berlin Seelow Strausberg Treplin Vierlinden Waldsieversdorf Wriezen Zechin Zeschdorf Brandenburgmap
About this picture

Alt Tucheband is a municipality in the Märkisch-Oderland district in Brandenburg . It is administered by the Golzow Office.

Community structure

Districts are the former communities of Alt Tucheband, Hathenow and Rathstock with the inhabited districts of Alt Tucheband, Hackenow , Hathenow, Neu Tucheband and Rathstock.

history

14th to 18th century

Alt Tucheband was first mentioned in a document dated May 9, 1336. The magistrate of Frankfurt (Oder) exchanged Reitwein and the lake Piscenige for half the village Alt Tucheband and half the village Maatzinova with the Margrave of Brandenburg Ludwig I. In 1355 Henning and Otto von Haken were named as the owners of the village, which subsequently from 1401 to 1456 remained in the possession of the Bishop of Lebus . In 1456, the von Schapelow family, who owned Hathenow from 1405 to 1450 until it went to the Order of St. John , acquired the place. In 1487, Tucheband came into the possession of the von Pfuel family .

In 1601 the witch trial against Gertrud Paul can be proven in the cloth tape.

The Thirty Years War (1618 to 1648) and especially the plague epidemic from 1634 to 1636, which killed around 12,000 people in Tucheband and the surrounding area, caused severe damage to the place.

In 1663 the Tucheband estate was bought by Maximilian von Schlieben , commander of the Johanniterkommende Lietzen . He was followed by his son Adam Georg von Schlieben , also commander in Lietzen. Tucheband finally came into the possession of Count Paul Anton von Kameke through the marriage of his daughter Agnes Juliane von Schlieben . In 1797 it was sold to one of Bornstaedt, heir and court lord on Ehrenberg.

In 1787, the construction of the shortest east-west connection through Prussia, which led from Kleve to Königsberg , connected Tucheband to the army and trade route.

19th and 20th centuries

In 1800 the place including the church burned down almost completely in a fire disaster. In 1814, Gilbert, a commissioner who founded the new Tucheband by releasing land for long-term lease, acquired the estate. In 1820 the syndic and later mayor of Berlin, Ludwig Wilhelm Rehfeld , bought the estate, which last changed hands in 1896 when it was acquired by the Schmelzer family.

In the course of the Napoleonic Wars , Tucheband was repeatedly affected by billeting and the associated looting of the village. The then pastor Fleischfresser reported that in the run-up to the storming of the Küstriner fortress not only the entire church inventory, but also all ladders were stolen.

The slow economic upturn made it possible to rebuild the church as a neo-Gothic brick building in 1862. In 1864 a brick factory, a distillery, a syrup and starch and a sugar factory were built. In 1911 the Oderbruch Railway was built.

In 1928 and 1929 the Hackenow estate merged with Alt Tucheband.

Towards the end of the Second World War , Alt Tucheband was evacuated on February 5, 1945. When the Red Army attacked the Seelow Heights in April 1945 (as part of the Battle of Berlin ), the site was almost completely destroyed. The church remained in ruins. In 1996 the square around the ruins was redesigned.

The rupture of the Oder dam on March 22, 1947 caused the flood to rise to around 100 m in front of the town sign, but did no damage to the buildings.

Construction of the pigsty for the LPG Liberated Earth

During the land reform of 1945, over 650 hectares of land were distributed to small tenants, resettlers, rural poor and farm workers, in 1946 a local association of the VdgB was founded and in 1952 the LPG Liberated Earth . In 1955 a waterworks was built to supply the surrounding towns with drinking water.

Alt Tucheband, Hathenow and Rathstock belonged to the Lebus district in the province of Brandenburg since 1817 and to the Seelow district in the GDR district of Frankfurt (Oder) from 1952 . Since 1993 the places have been in the Brandenburg district of Märkisch-Oderland.

In 1991, Alt Tucheband joined the Golzow administrative community and, from 1992, the Golzow office . With effect from December 31, 2001, the municipalities of Hathenow, Rathstock and Alt Tucheband voluntarily merged to form today's municipality of Alt Tucheband as part of the municipal reform of the state of Brandenburg.

Population development

year Residents
1875 1 213
1890 1 154
1910 0 738
1925 0 869
1933 0 767
1939 0 744
1946 0 640
1950 0 808
1964 0 850
1971 0 891
year Residents
1981 735
1985 714
1989 687
1990 687
1991 670
1992 661
1993 656
1994 629
1995 629
1996 644
year Residents
1997 0 656
1998 0 651
1999 0 652
2000 0 659
2001 1 015
2002 1 011
2003 1 015
2004 1 027
2005 1 026
2006 0 973
year Residents
2007 936
2008 927
2009 914
2010 886
2011 846
2012 811
2013 790
2014 760
2015 766
2016 793
year Residents
2017 777
2018 790
2019 792

Territory of the respective year, number of inhabitants: as of December 31 (from 1991), from 2011 based on the 2011 census

politics

Community representation

The community council consists of 10 community representatives and the honorary mayor.

Party / group of voters Seats
Großgemeinde Alt Tucheband 8th
Pro future Märkisch-Oderland 2

(As of: local election on May 26, 2019)

mayor

  • 1999–2019: Detlef Baar (group of voters in the large community of Alt Tucheband)
  • since 2019: Thomas Kowalzik

Kowalzik was elected on June 20, 2019 by the municipal council for a term of five years.

coat of arms

The community has neither coat of arms nor flag.

Coat of arms from Alt Tucheband

The district of Alt Tucheband continues the coat of arms and the flag of the former municipality of Alt Tucheband as district symbols. The coat of arms was approved on June 17, 1999. With the following blazon : "In blue a widened oblique golden wave bar, covered with three four-leaf green clover leaves."

Coat of arms of Hathenow

The district of Hathenow has a coat of arms as the district symbol with the following description: "Three golden ears of wheat in red and a golden star in blue divided by two silver wavy lines".

Rathstock coat of arms

The Rathstock district continues the coat of arms of the former Rathstock community as a district symbol. The coat of arms has the following description: "In silver over a blue shield base, two red posts covered by a blue bar".

Attractions

  • Country house on the old military and trade route; closed
  • Rathstock home parlor, exhibition about the region of Lebus , the origin and development of the Rathstock community

traffic

The federal highways B 1 ( Seelow - Küstrin-Kietz ) and B 112 ( Manschnow - Frankfurt (Oder) ) cross the municipality.

The nearest train station is Golzow (Oderbruch) on the Berlin – Kostrzyn railway line .

Document information

  1. Population in the State of Brandenburg according to municipalities, offices and municipalities not subject to official registration on December 31, 2019 (XLSX file; 223 KB) (updated official population figures) ( help on this ).
  2. ^ Service portal of the state administration Brandenburg. Alt Tucheband community
  3. Central and State Library Berlin-Duncker Collection: Reitwein (pdf, 225 kByte)
  4. ^ Leopold von Ledebur: Adelslexikon der Prussischen Monarchy . Rauh, 1856, pp. 196-197.
  5. ^ Formation of the new community Alt Tucheband Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of October 17, 2001. Official Gazette for Brandenburg Common Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 12, 2001, Number 46, Potsdam, November 14, 2001, p. 779 PDF
  6. ^ Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. Landkreis Märkisch-Oderland . Pp. 18-21.
  7. Population in the state of Brandenburg from 1991 to 2015 according to independent cities, districts and municipalities , Table 7
  8. ^ Office for Statistics Berlin-Brandenburg (Ed.): Statistical report AI 7, A II 3, A III 3. Population development and population status in the state of Brandenburg (respective editions of the month of December)
  9. ^ Result of the local election on May 26, 2019
  10. Mourning for Mayor Detlef Baar. In: Märkische Oderzeitung , April 15, 2019
  11. Section 73 of the Brandenburg Local Election Act
  12. Thomas Kowalzik new mayor. In: Märkische Oderzeitung , June 22, 2019
  13. Coat of arms information on the service portal of the state administration of Brandenburg

Web links

Commons : Alt Tucheband  - collection of images, videos and audio files