Office Trebatsch

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Trebatsch manor, seat of the Trebatsch office

The Trebatsch office was a royal Prussian domain office based in Trebatsch (today: Oder-Spree district , Brandenburg), which was later also called the Rent Office and House Fideikommißamt. The office was formed in 1737 with the acquisition of the Trebatsch estate and its accessories, incorporated into the royal lordship of Wusterhausen (later Königs Wusterhausen) and dissolved again in 1874.

history

On March 15, 1737, the then Brandenburg elector and king in Prussia, Friedrich Wilhelm I, bought the small manor Trebatsch with the Vorwerk there and the villages of Sabrodt and Sawall for 60,000 thalers from the captain Johann Friedrich v. Weissenfels. Falkenberg and Stremmen were added later.

  • Falkenberg . Friedrich Wilhelm I had the village on December 2, 1727 from Captain Friedrich v. Blumenthal. However, he sold it again on February 7, 1730 to District Administrator Eberhard Wilhelm von Hohnstedt. On April 28, 1738 he bought the place back for 18,000 thalers from Eberhard Wilhelm von Hohnstedt (also Hohenstedt) and incorporated it into the Trebatsch office.
  • Sabrodt
  • Sawall
  • Strain . The village and Vorwerk Stremmen was on June 9, 1738 for 21,000 thalers by Deichhauptmann and Hofrat Adolf Friedrich v. Beerfelde on Klossow in the Neumark (today Kłosów , Landgem. Mieszkowice , Poland) bought and incorporated into the Trebatsch office.
  • Trebatsch with Vorwerk

In 1737 the Prince General Chamber was formed in Wusterhausen, which was responsible for the administration of the offices of the Wusterhausen rulership, which were part of the private assets of the Prussian kings (later called the rulership of Königs Wusterhausen). In 1775 Büsching designated it as the Princely Office . In 1786 there was no longer a Prince General Chamber, but the administration was now called the Royal Prussian Domain Chamber in Wusterhausen. In 1806, Friedrich Wilhelm III decided that the Royal Prussian Domain Chamber in Wusterhausen should be merged with the government in Potsdam; however, the actual unification did not take place until 1809. One of the first measures taken by the government in Potsdam was to reduce the original 14 offices to just ten offices. The Tauche Office was merged with the Trebatsch Office. In the following years, the offices of the Königs Wusterhausen rule were administered like state domains. In 1818 the Trebatsch office is listed as the Trebatsch domain office. Since around 1820, Trebatsch has also been responsible for the administration of the Kossenblatt office . This means that the Trebatsch Office also managed Briescht , Giesensdorf , Kossenblatt , Plattkow , Schwenow , Werder / Spree and Tauche , and the pensions that were incurred in these villages were collected. In 1841 it was called Trebatsch Office in general . From 1844 the administration of the offices of the rule of Königs Wusterhausen was carried out by the court chamber of the royal family estates , which was formed in 1843 and which had emerged from the domain chamber of the Prince of Prussia . This was followed by the renaming of the Trebatsch office to Fideikommißamt Trebatsch ; it was a lease office. The Trebatsch office was dissolved in 1872/4, but the Vorwerk in Trebatsch remained a state domain until 1945. After 1945, the estate was first placed under the province of Brandenburg as a provincial estate. Later it became the people's own property (VEG) for animal and plant production. It was also a training center for cattle breeding and agricultural engineering. After German reunification, it was taken over by the Treuhandanstalt and is now privately owned.

Explanation board in front of the Trebatsch estate

Officials and tenants

  • 1764 Johann Christoph Sydow, chief magistrate
  • 1818 Otto Friedrich Theodor Zier, senior magistrate
  • 1843 ornamental
  • 1856 Zier, councilor and general tenant
  • 1859 Councilor Zier Heirs
  • 1861 Korth, tenant
  • 1865 Korth, tenant
  • 1874 Korth, chief magistrate
  • 1877 Karl Theodor Buchholtz
  • ? until 1927 Emil Fricke, domain tenant (+ February 9, 1927). His tomb is in the former cemetery near the village church of Trebatsch.

supporting documents

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 p. 352.
  • 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.
  • Francesko Rocca: History and administration of the royal family property: according to the files and documents of the Kgl. Court Chamber in Charlottenburg compiled. 522 pp., Berlin, Rohde, 1913–1914 (p. 4)

Individual evidence

  1. Rocca, Royal Family Estates, p. 5
  2. a b Rocca, Königliche Familiengüter, p. 6
  3. ^ Anton Friedrich Büsching: Complete topography of the Mark Brandenburg . 348 p., Berlin, Verlag der Buchhandlung der Realschule 1775 Online at Google Books (p. 287)
  4. Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Frankfurth ad O. 388 S., Berlin, G. Hayn 1820 (p. 218).
  5. August von Sellentin: Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Potsdam and the city of Berlin. 292 p., Berlin, Verlag der Sanderschen Buchhandlung, 1841 (p. 256)
  6. ^ Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus: Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz in the middle of the 19th century; or geographical-historical-statistical description of the Province of Brandenburg, at the instigation of the State Minister and Upper President Flottwell. Second volume. 650 p., Printed and published by Adolph Müller, Brandenburg 1855 (p. 594)
  7. Ingrid Reisinger, Walter Reisinger: Well-known, unknown and forgotten manor houses and manor houses in the state of Brandenburg. An inventory. Volume 1. Stapp Verlag, Berlin, 2012 ISBN 9783877760826 (p. 253)
  8. Götz Freiherr v. Houwald : The Niederlausitz manors and their owners. Volume V: Luckau district. 558 S., Neustadt an der Aisch, Verlag Degener & Co., owner Manfred Dreiss, 1996 ISBN 3-7686-4109-0 (p. 360)
  9. ^ Günter Bayerl, Tim S. Müller: Ludwig Leichhardt (1813–1848), Niederlausitz and Australia: For the 200th birthday of the naturalist and Australian explorer. 284 pp., Münster, Westfalen, Waxmann, 2013 ISBN 3-8309-2890-4 , ISBN 978-3-8309-2890-4 Preview on Google Books (p. 81)
  10. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1818. 459 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1818 (p. 199)
  11. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1843. 734 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1843 (p. 300)
  12. Royal Prussian State Calendar for the year 1856. Berlin, Decker Online at Google Books (p. 13)
  13. Royal Prussian State Calendar for the year 1859. Berlin, Decker Online at Google Books (p. 13)
  14. Royal Prussian State Calendar for the year 1861. Berlin, Decker Online at Google Books (p. 13)
  15. Royal Prussian State Calendar for the year 1865. Berlin, Decker Online at Google Books (p. 14)
  16. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, Supplement to Part 27 of the Official Gazette, from July 3, 1874, p. 14 Online at Google Books .
  17. ^ Address book for merchants, manufacturers and tradespeople in Brandenburg and Berlin. Verlag C. Leuchs & Comp., Nuremberg, 1877 (Volume 8 of the 31-volume new edition of the large address book of all countries in the world) Online at Goole Books , p. 4.


Coordinates: 52 ° 5 '  N , 14 ° 10'  E