Office Blossin

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Manor house in Blossin and the former seat of the Blossin office

The office Blossin was a royal Prussian office that belonged to the rule of Königs Wusterhausen . In 1729 it was created with the acquisition of the town of Blossin ( municipality of Heidesee , Dahme-Spreewald district , Brandenburg ), and in 1829 it was transferred to the Königs Wusterhausen office and dissolved. The seat was in the Amtsvorwerk Blossin. The official area comprised up to five municipalities as well as some farms and sheep farms and today belongs to the municipality of Heidesee and the non-official city of Storkow (Mark) ( Oder-Spree district ). In 1810 it was converted into a Blossin Rent Office . In 1817 it had 527 inhabitants.

Geographical location

The official area comprised three non-contiguous parts, the villages of Blossin, Kolberg and Görsdorf with a few farms and sheep farms, the village of Schwerin and the Klein-Eichholz farm on the Streganz district. Gräbendorf , which was assigned to the office for a few decades, was also not directly adjacent to the rest of the official area to the west of the main complex.

Associated municipalities and settlements

In 1817 the Blossin office comprised four villages, three farms, two sheep farms and a water and cutting mill .

  • Blossin (1817: village and administrative district , incl. Heideschäferei 169 inhabitants) (today a district of the Heidesee community). Was founded on October 31, 1729 by the then Prussian King from the President Friedrich Wilhelm v. Bartholdy, Baron v. Micrander bought for 22,000 thalers (16,000 thalers). In 1810 the Blossin Vorwerk was sold for a long lease.
  • Busch (1817: Vorwerk, part of Görsdorf ) (today part of the municipality in the district of Görsdorf, town of Storkow (Mark))
  • Kolberg (1817: Colberg , village, Vorwerk and brickworks , 82 inhabitants) (today a district of the Heidesee community). Was bought on March 14, 1730 together with Klein-Eichholz from Adam Christoph von Wins for 14,000 thalers.
  • Kurtmühle (1817: Curthmühle , water and cutting mill, part of Schwerin) (today a residential area in the Schwerin district of the city of Storkow (Mark))
  • Klein-Eichholz (1817: Vorwerk , 33 inh.) (Today part of the municipality in the Streganz district of the Heidesee community). Was bought on March 14, 1730 together with Kolberg from Adam Christoph von Wins for 14,000 thalers.
  • Görsdorf b. Storkow (1817: village , including Vorwerk Busch, 151 inhabitants) (today a district of the city of Storkow (Mark)). Was bought from Christian Ernst Steinkeller on March 14, 1730 for 14,000 thalers and placed in office.
  • Heideschäferei (later also called mountain sheep farm ) (1817: sheep farm, belonging to Blossin ) (today mountain sheep farm in the district of Blossin der Gem. Heidesee)
  • Lippe (1817: sheep farm, belonging to Schwerin ) (no longer exists, was located southwest of the center of Schwerin, and south of the dozen lakes ) (the area today belongs to Schwerin). There was a second sheep farm called Lippe, which was a little further south-west on the Streganzer district. To distinguish it, it was called Streganz-Lippe.
  • Prierosbrück (1805/1817: forester's house and jug ). Purchased together with trenches in 1717 by the brothers Johann and Paul Bergius. In 1805 it belonged to the Blossin office, then to the Königs Wusterhausen office in 1817
  • Schwerin (1817: village and estate , including sheep farm Lippe and Kurthmühle 92 inhabitants) (today part of the city of Storkow (Mark)). The village was in 1730 the v. Hohnstedt bought. Already on November 18, 1750 given a long lease to an NN carpenter.

The Gräbendorf (today part of the municipality of Heidesee), acquired by the brothers Johann and Paul Bergius for 22,000 thalers in 1717 , originally belonged to the Teupitz rulership . It must have been assigned to the Blossin office after 1729/30. As early as 1801, Wöhner no longer ran Gräbendorf under the Plossin office . In contrast, Büsching still lists it under the Blossin office, d. H. the assignment of Gräbendorf to the Blossin office must have been changed between 1775 and 1801 in favor of the Königs Wusterhausen office . In 1810 the outworks of the Blossin office were leased. The office has now been converted into a rent office, i. H. the official in charge only collected the pensions and taxes that had to be paid to the office. He no longer operated his own farm on the farms. The administration of the offices of the reign of Königs Wusterhausen , and thus also that of the office of Blossin, had been transferred to the royal government in Potsdam. In 1829 the Blossin office was dissolved and assigned to the Königs Wusterhausen office. In 1843 the rule of Wusterhausen was released from the administration of the royal government in Potsdam and assigned to the court chamber of the royal family estates. The office of Königs Wusterhausen was dissolved in 1872.

Officials (incomplete)

  • 1811 to 1824 Adolph Ferdinand Kiekebusch, chamber councilor and rent clerk

literature

  • Friedrich Beck , Lieselott Enders , Heinz Braun (with the assistance of Margot Beck, Barbara Merker): Authorities and institutions in the territories of Kurmark, Neumark, Niederlausitz until 1808/16. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv Corporation, Böhlau, Weimar 1964 (overview of the holdings of the Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv Potsdam, Part 1, Series of publications: Publications of the Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv Volume 4), ISSN  0435-5946 .
  • Lieselott Enders, Margot Beck: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part IV: Teltow. Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1976.
  • Francesko Rocca: History and administration of the royal family property: according to the files and documents of the Kgl. Court Chamber in Charlottenburg compiled. Rohde, Berlin 1913–1914 (hereinafter abbreviated to Rocca, royal family property with corresponding page number)
  • Joachim Schölzel: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part IX Beeskow-Storkow. Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1989, ISBN 3-7400-0104-6 .
  • Berthold Schulze: Property and settlement history statistics of the Brandenburg authorities and cities 1540-1800. Supplement to the Brandenburg office map. (Individual writings of the historical commission for the province of Brandenburg and the imperial capital Berlin, volume 7). Commissioned by Gsellius, Berlin 1935.
  • Wilhelm Spatz: The Teltow. Part 3: History of the localities in the Teltow district. Rohde, Berlin 1912.
  • Paul Gottlieb Wöhner: Tax constitution of the flat state of the Kurmark Brandenburg. Volume 2, Vossische Buchhandlung, Berlin 1805, p. 190. (online at Google Books)

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Location directory of the government district of Potsdam according to the latest district division from 1817, with a note of the district to which the place previously belonged, the quality, number of people, confession, church conditions, owner and address, along with an alphabetical register . Georg Decker, Berlin (online at Google Books)
  2. ^ Ernst Heinrich Kneschke: New general German nobility lexicon. Volume 6, Friedrich Voigt's Buchhandlung, Leipzig 1865, p. 286.
  3. a b c d Rocca, Königliche Familiengüter, p. 4.
  4. Page no longer available , search in web archives: The Lippa sheep farm in the topographic map of the German Empire around 1900 in the Brandenburg Viewer@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / isk.geobasis-bb.de
  5. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm August Bratring: Statistical-topographical description of the entire Mark Brandenburg. Second volume. Containing the Mittelmark and Ukermark. VIII, 583 S., Berlin, Maurer, 1805 Online at Google Books
  6. Rocca, Royal Family Estates, p. 10.
  7. cf. L. Enders, M. Beck: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part IV: Teltow. 1976, pp. 87/88. and Berthold Schulze: Property and settlement history statistics ... 1935, p. 107/108.
  8. ^ Wöhner: Tax Constitution of the Flat Country ... Volume 2, 1805, p. 190.
  9. ^ Anton Friedrich Büsching: Complete topography of the Mark Brandenburg. Verlag der Buchh. der Realschule, Berlin 1775 (online at Google Books) , p. 103.
  10. Notice. (Blossin, Colberg and Klein Eichholz and the Buschmeierei in Görsdorf are given out on lease). In: Annals of Agriculture. 11, Berlin 1810, pp. 99-100. (online at Google Books)
  11. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv - Online research: Long-term lease of 6 July 1811 with Chamber Councilor Adolph Ferdinand Kiekebusch regarding the transfer of the Kützingsee to the Blossin office. 1811, 1813
  12. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1818. Georg Decker, Berlin 1818, p. 188.
  13. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1824. Georg Decker, Berlin 1824, p. 194.


Coordinates: 52 ° 15 '  N , 13 ° 48'  E