Office Neukloster (Sweden)

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The Neukloster office was created as a result of the Thirty Years' War and, like the Hanseatic city of Wismar, came to the Kingdom of Sweden with the island of Poel from Mecklenburg in 1648 . It was located in the vicinity of the city of Neukloster with its seat in the city. On June 26, 1803, the Malmö pledge agreement gave it to the Duchy of Mecklenburg, initially for 99 years as a pledge and only a hundred years later on June 20, 1903. In a further contract between Mecklenburg and Sweden, the Neukloster and Wismar office with the island of Poel became Mecklenburg again after a corresponding waiver by Sweden of existing further contractual rights. In September 1903, Grand Duke Friedrich Franz IV of Mecklenburg took the city back to Mecklenburg with great celebrations in Wismar.

literature

  • Friedrich Schlie : The art and history monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Volume II: The district court districts of Wismar, Grevesmühlen, Rehna, Gadebusch and Schwerin. Schwerin 1898, reprint Schwerin 1992, p. 22 ff. ISBN 3910179061
  • Carl Schröder: The Swedish pledge of Wismar to Mecklenburg-Schwerin 1803. In: Association for Mecklenburg history and antiquity: Yearbooks of the association for Mecklenburg history and antiquity. - Vol. 77 (1912), pp. 177–240 digitized version ( Memento from August 28, 2005 in the Internet Archive )
  • Bruno Schmidt: The Swedish-Mecklenburg pledge agreement on the city and rule of Wismar. Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot 1901 ( digitized )
  • Hans Witt: Wismar under the pledge agreement, 1803-1903: Festschrift for the centenary of the reunification of Wismar with Mecklenburg. Rostock: Hinstorffs̕che Hofbuchhandlung 1903 ( digitized )

Web links

Single receipts

  1. Friedrich Schlie (1898), p. 24, footnote 1.