Office Zehdenick

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The office of Zehdenick was an electoral Brandenburg , later a royal Prussian administrative unit in today's Oberhavel district around the town of Zehdenick . Parts of the old office now also belong to the Uckermark district . It emerged in the late Middle Ages from the small rule of Zehdenick , which was converted into a lordly office (also Schlossamt Zehdenick ) in 1524 . In 1551 it was greatly enlarged by the possessions of the secularized Zehdenick Monastery (and now also called Zehdenick Monastery Office ). With the incorporation of the Badingen office in 1815, the office was further expanded. In 1872/4 the Zehdenick office was dissolved.

history

The Zehdenick office consisted of three completely different rule complexes around 1820: the small Zehdenick rule, the property of the former Zehdenick monastery and the property of the former Himmelpfort monastery (affiliated as Badingen office in 1815).

Reign of Zehdenick

At the end of the Middle Ages, the castle and town of Zehdenick were the center of a small lordship, the extent of which, however, only becomes apparent in 1438. It emerged from the Bailiwick of Zehdenick , d. H. the area that was administered by the Vogt of Burg Zehdenick. In 1438 the Elector Friedrich I gave them to von Arnim as a fief. The rule included: Schloss Zehdenick with accessories (with the suburbs Damm and Hast), with the iron hammer and the sawmill, income from the mill in Zehdenick and the services of the villages of Gollin, Kleinmutz, Hammelspring, Hindenburg, Storkow, Krewelin and Wesendorf. The villages themselves (upper and lower court, farmers' taxes, patronage) belonged to the Zehdenick monastery. In 1468 Elector Friedrich II and in 1473 Elector Albrecht Achilles confirmed this enfeoffment. A first intended (re) purchase of the small rulership by Elector Joachim I failed in 1503 initially due to the sovereign's lack of financial strength . It was not until 1528 that he was able to acquire the rule again, albeit in exchange for the rule of Boitzenburg . He converted the new property into a sovereign office, the Zehdenick office.

Zehdenick Monastery

The Cistercian convent of Kloster Zehdenick, founded around 1250, acquired extensive property, income and rights in the Uckermark, Barnim, Ruppin and Havelland until the secularization in 1541. Some property titles were already lost before the secularization or were sold again because of the great distance (e.g. in Havelland). Most of the possessions were assigned to Amt Zehdenick in 1551, which was enormously enlarged as a result. A smaller part of the monastery properties came under the rule of Badingen and Himmelpfort . Some of the former monastery properties located further away were separated from the Zehdenick office in the 17th century and attached to other offices.

Badingen Office

In 1815 Amt Zehdenick was enlarged again by dissolving the Amt Badingen and transferring its rights and income to the Amt Zehdenick.

The Zehdenick office was dissolved in Prussia in 1872/4 with the district reform. The last rights were transferred to the district administrations.

Associated places

Since the administrative area of ​​the Badingen office did not change significantly after 1815 or only became smaller due to sales, the state of the Zehdenick office before the merger of the two offices is shown here.

  • Ackerhof (see Damm or Dammhast)
  • Ahrensfelde ( municipality in the Barnim district ). The Zehdenick monastery had unspecified increases here (standing interest), which were passed on to the Zehdenick office and were still claimed in 1590.
  • Altlüdersdorf (today part of the town of Gransee) (see Lüdersdorf)
  • Freedom of office Kamp (1801: freedom of office) (today in Zehdenick). In 1590, the Amtsvorwerk had fields near the customs house, called the "Kamp". In 1706 the area in front of and next to the office, the large and small freedom of office, and the camp were settled with new posts. The municipality of the freedom of office Kamp was not united with Zehdenick until 1900.
  • Bebersee (now part of the municipality in the Groß Dölln district , town of Templin). In 1723 a fence setter was created. "Big Wild Fence" in the Reiersdorfer Forest made the Vorwerk. In 1749 four colonist families were added. Bebersee initially formed a community with Grand Fathers; was an independent municipality from 1782.
  • Beiersdorf (part of the Beiersdorf-Freudenberg community ). Even before 1375, the Zehdenick monastery had the lifting of five hooves here, which later passed to the Zehdenick office.
  • Bergluch (today living space in the Vogelsang district of the city of Zehdenick). In 1718, Gottfried Wittkopp's fence post at the Wildzaun in the Zehdenicker Revier is mentioned for the first time. In 1725 the fence was converted into a Vorwerk. In 1766 three settled colonists left the Vorwerk again. In 1767 the Vorwerk including the three abandoned colonist farms was given to Oberamtmann Lufft on a long lease.
  • Bag . The village was deserted as early as 1375. It came into the possession of the Glutzer family in 1376 from the von Barsdorf family, who first sold the Feldmark in 1387 for repurchase, then in 1393 finally to the Zehdenick monastery. In 1404 the monastery sold the Trift to the farmers of Röddelin via the Feldmark Beutel. In 1558 Röddelin came first as a deposit, then finally in 1577 to von Trott in Himmelpfort and thus to the rule of Badingen and Himmelpfort. It should have been administered in the short period from the secularization of the Zehdenick monastery in 1541 until it was pledged to von Trott's in 1558 by the Zehdenick office.
  • Buberow (now part of the town of Gransee ). The village had already come into the possession of the Lindow monastery before 1438. In 1542 the monastery property was secularized and the monastery properties came to the office of Lindow. At the beginning of 1765, after the Lindow office was dissolved, it was incorporated into the Zehlendorf office (or after its renaming to the Friedrichsthal office ), and in 1819 after the Friedrichsthal office was dissolved, it was assigned to the Alt Ruppin office. In 1846 the Alt Ruppin office ceded the place to the Zehdenick office.
  • Burgwall (today part of the city of Zehdenick). In 1790/1 a coal-fired glassworks was built here at the instigation of the entrepreneur Rathmann, but it had to close again in 1797. In 1801, 19 residents lived next to the leaseholder Rathmann in Burgwall.
  • Dammhast (1801: suburb of Damm, also called Ackerhof) (today in Zehdenick). The dam in front of Zehdenick Castle, which was the customs post, is mentioned as early as 1528. The independent municipality of Dammhast was only united with Zehdenick in 1900. 1689 is a hirer (Unterforester) resident in Hast. In 1801, Bratring treated Hast and Damm separately.
  • Densow . The village was desolate as early as 1375. From the von Barsdorf family it came into the possession of the Glutzer family in 1376, who first sold the Feldmark in 1387 for repurchase, then in 1393 finally to the monastery. In 1558 the Feldmark came first as a deposit, then in 1577 finally to the von Trott in Himmelpfort and thus to the rule of Badingen and Himmelpfort. It should have been administered in the short period from the secularization of the Zehdenick monastery in 1541 to the pledge to von Trott's in 1558 by the Zehdenick office.
  • Deutschboden (today living space in the Vogelsang district, town of Zehdenick). In 1745, a forester's house in the heath near Storkow is mentioned for the first time. The position had been paid since 1721/2, i. H. the forester's house could have existed since that time.
  • Dusterlake (today a place to live in the Grunewald district , town of Templin). In 1793 a forester's house was built in the Reiersdorf forest.
  • Exin (today living space in the Falkenthal district, a district of the Löwenberger Land community). In 1745 a sub - forestry was established on the Exin field . It is unclear whether the Exin field is the field mark of a medieval, desolate village. Documentary evidence is not available. The area was owned by the monastery in 1541 and came to the Zehdenick office in 1551. In 1801 it was the seat of a royal guardian.
  • Falkenthal (today part of the community of Löwenberger Land ). The village originally belonged to the Zehdenick monastery. It was assigned to the office of Zehdenick in 1541. In 1801 it was a secondary customs office.
  • Fischerwall ( establishment and customs house ). Already in 1698 there was a dilapidated house on the area of ​​the Alt Ruppin office, also called Firscherhaus in 1800. In 1800 and 1817 there was also a (subsidiary) customs office here. In 1846 the location was given to the Zehdenick office.
  • Hammelspringer Försterei (today living space in the Hammelspring district, part of the town of Templin). In 1803, the entrepreneur Pritzkow von Vogelsang created a mulberry plantation on the bridge over the Dölln river. In 1825 a sub-forestry was built next door .
  • Germendorf ( Quadengermendorf ) (today part of the city of Oranienburg ). Until 1448 the place belonged to the castle or castle Bötzow, which later became Oranienburg. So it must have come to the Zehdenick monastery before 1450. Germendorf first came to the Zehdenick office in 1541; In 1652 it was assigned to the Oranienburg office.
  • Görlsdorf (from around 1400 desert Feldmark, today part of Hammelspring and Röddelin). The Große Lankesee and the Kuhwallsee had belonged to the monastery since 1309. In 1375 the village was still inhabited. Presumably it was destroyed around 1400 and not rebuilt. The field mark of the village must have come to the Zehdenick monastery after 1500, because in 1560 the Zehdenick office received taxes from the farmers of Hammelspring. As late as 1590, the Görlsdorf field mark was part of the so-called Zehdenicker Klosterheide.
  • Gollin (today part of the city of Templin). Since 1576 there was an electoral heath arena in Gollin (chief forester). Possibly the office also had six large hoof rates and the smoking chicken of the 36 (or 44 hooves) by Gollin. In 1704/06 the Heidereiterei was relocated to Reiersdorf and the property with the building was sold to von Holzendorf, the owners of the village of Gollin.
  • Groß Dölln (today part of the city of Templin). In 1560 the Dellensche pond was mentioned, which belonged to the Zehdenick office. A glassworks was built here in 1725, plus two small houses for the workers in the glassworks.
  • Grossenhof . The Grossenhof colony and Vorwerk were laid out before 1800. Grossenhof was an independent establishment until 1858 when it was attached to Dammhast. Dammhast was an independent municipality until 1900 and was only incorporated into Zehdenick that year.
  • Großmutz (part of the community Löwenberger Land). The village came into the possession of the Zehdenick monastery in 1323. In 1551 the Zehdenick office came into being. In 1671 it was reclassified from the Zehdenick office to the Oranienburg office.
  • Groß Väter (today part of the municipality of Groß Dölln , a district of the city of Templin). In 1723, a fence was set up on the so-called "Great Wild Fence" in the Reiersdorfer Forest. In 1749 five colonist families were then added. Groß Väter and Bebersee initially formed a community. In 1782, Grand Fathers became an independent community.
  • Großwoltersdorf (municipality in the Oberhavel district). The village belonged to the Lindow Monastery until 1502 . Before 1525 it went to the Zehdenick monastery and then in 1551 to the Zehdenick office.
  • Grunewald (now part of the city of Templin). In 1727, a fence setter at the so-called "Big Wild Fence" was converted into a works. In 1751 ten colonist families from Mecklenburg were assigned.
  • Gutengermendorf . The place already belonged to the house of the Counts of Lindow, who only had jurisdiction in the place. The landlord was the Zehdenick monastery , to which services and leases were due. In 1664 the place came first as a pledge, later hereditary to the Liebenberg rule .
  • Hammelspring (today part of the city of Templin). The village belonged to the Zehdenick monastery before 1375. The Zehdenick rule was entitled to serve the farmers. In 1551 it went into the administration of the Zehdenick office. In 1803, a mulberry plantation was set up in the area near the Hammelspringer bridge, and a little later a forestry. In 1866, the Alsenhof was laid out in the district.
  • Hammelstall (today residential area southwest of the (core) city of Zehdenick). In 1705, roofing work is documented on the Zehdenick office's mutton stables. In 1731 an extension with four containers and a barn was built.
  • Hast (1801: suburb Hast) (see Dammhast).
  • Hindenburg (today part of the city of Templin). The acquisition of the village by the Zehdenick monastery has not been documented, but it probably took place in the Middle Ages. Excepted from this were the services of the peasants, which had to be performed at Zehdenick Castle since 1368 at the latest. With the secularization of the monastery in 1541, all rights were combined (1551 at the latest) and went to the Zehdenick office. In 1801, Hindenburg already owned a brick factory.
  • Hohenfelde (today a residential area of ​​the city of Templin). In 1857 the Lehnschulze Bahrfeld built a homestead on the official territory, which was called Hohenfelde.
  • Kamp (1801: Vorstadt Camp) (see freedom of office Kamp)
  • Kannenburger Schleuse (today a place to live in the Hammelspring district, a district of the town of Templin). In 1580 the locality formed the border between the rule Badingen and Himmelpfort and the Amt Zehdenick. In 1740 a lock master's farm was built here, which was only incorporated into the Hammelspring municipality in 1858. In the Middle Ages there was a castle or permanent house here and probably also a settlement.
  • Cap (today part of the city of Zehdenick). Mentioned for the first time in 1664, the area of ​​the cap belonged to the riding of the Heidereiter von Zehdenick. In 1766/7 the construction of the cap colony began. In 1775 more than 200 people lived in cap.
  • Kelkendorf (today a place to live in the Großwoltersdorf community). The medieval village fell into desolation in the 14th century. The field mark belonged to the Zehdenick monastery since at least 1326. In the 16th century the field mark was used by the farmers of Großwoltersdorf. With the secularization of the Zehdenick Monastery, the Feldmark also came to the Zehdenick Office. In 1701 and 1746 the field mark was measured. Apparently there were plans to rebuild the settlement. However, these were not implemented until 1753. Eight small foreign landlords were appointed by 1756 . In 1817 Kelkendorf was described as a colony and a sheep farm .
  • Klein Dölln (today part of the municipality of Groß Dölln, a district of the city of Templin). In 1757 an undershot mill with a corridor "by the Potzern-Schleuse" was built on the Döllnfließ. In 1790/1 six Büdner were settled here. The mill was named Dölln mill in 1791 and Poltzener mill in 1795. By 1801 a tar stove and a jug had also been set up there.
  • Klein-Mutz (today part of the city of Zehdenik). In 1288 the Brandenburg margraves Otto IV and Konrad confirmed the transfer of 16 Hufen land by Thethardus de Wozstrow to the Zehdenick monastery. Later, the entire village was owned by the monastery with the exception of the services of the farmers who had to be performed at the castle or castle Zehdenick. In 1551 it came to the Zehdenick office.
  • Klosterwalde (today part of the city of Templin). The village was owned by the monastery even before 1375. In the village all dues went to the monastery with the exception of the bede that H. Romer was allowed to collect.
  • Kraatz . The village of Kraatz belonged to the property of the Counts of Lindow-Ruppin and came to the Alt Ruppin office in this way, in 1846 the place was given to the Zehdenick office.
  • Krewelin (today part of the city of Zehdenick). In 1318 a goose at Putlitz was enfeoffed with a yard and the church in Krewelin. Even before 1438, the farmers had to do their services at Zehdenick Castle. The village itself had also come to the Zehdenick monastery before 1438.
  • Kurtschlag (today part of the city of Zehdenick). The Kurtschlag lock on the Döllnfließ was first mentioned in 1733. In 1736, a Vorwerk was built there from the former potash boiler. In 1749/50 ten colonist families were settled near the Vorwerk and on the Vorwerkland. The Vorwerk was given up.
  • Lamprechtswalde (today a place to live in the Klein-Mutz district, a district of the town of Zehdenick). In 1825, the Lamprechtswalde establishment was rebuilt by the Lehnschulzen Lamprecht zu Klein-Mutz on a plot of land between Krewelin and Neuholland bought by the Zehdenick office .
  • Lindenberg (now part of the Ahrensfelde community , Barnim district). The monastery had already acquired the village of Lindenberg before 1375, with the exception of the services and lease. In 1685 the place was assigned to the Biesenthal office, in 1748 it was moved to the Mühlenhof office.
  • Lüdersdorf, Dorf (today Altlüdersdorf and Neulüdersdorf ). The village, or afterwards the Feldmark, was owned by the Counts of Lindow-Ruppin and then belonged to the Alt Ruppin office. The medieval village was robbed in 1422 and 1429 by Mecklenburg knights and their entourage. Presumably the place was so damaged that it was abandoned. In 1525 Lüdersdorf is a desert field mark (without a village), which was cultivated by the office with the help of plowing services from farmers from other official villages. In 1537 a Vorwerk was built on the Feldmark. In 1691 the Vorwerk was converted into a village. Twelve Swiss families were assigned to the old village location. In 1827 the northern part of the Feldmark is separated and designated for the establishment of 21 individual farmsteads. By 1846 only 12 houses had been built. The settlement is called Neulüdersdorf, while Lüdersdorf is named Altlüdersdorf. In 1846 Alt- and Neulüdersdorf was ceded to the Zehdenick office.
  • Nassenheide (now part of the community of Löwenberger Land). In 1428 the Zehdenick monastery was owned by the village. However, the services of the farmers went to Bötzow Castle. From 1541/51 the village was administered by the Zehdenick Office. In 1652 the village came to the Oranienburg office.
  • Neuhof (today a residential area of ​​the city of Zehdenick). In 1706, a fence setter is mentioned for the first time in the so-called Klosterheide, which in 1736 was made a suburb of the Zehdenick office. When the "Feldmark Neuhof desert" (so called in 1590) came to the monastery, and whether there actually was a medieval village, is not documented. From 1766/7 the Vorwerk was given a long lease.
  • Neulögow (now part of the town of Gransee). The village of Neulögow was robbed and destroyed by Mecklenburg troops in 1421. It was not rebuilt. The desert Feldmark was owned by the Zehdenick office in 1590. How and when it came into its possession is unclear. It could have been owned by the Zehdenick monastery. In 1688 the village was rebuilt by French colonists; however, this seems to have been a failure, as the colonists soon left the place. It was not until 1747 that the present village was repopulated by colonists from the Palatinate.
  • Neulüdersdorf (part of the town of Gransee) (see Lüdersdorf)
  • Polzow ( Boltze ) (desert, the village village was northwest of the Kleiner Wentowsee ). The monastery acquired this village in 1393 from a previous owner named von der Osten . The village was probably desolate as early as 1393. The Feldmark remained in the possession of the Zehdenick Monastery until 1541 and was transferred to the administration of the office in 1551. In 1753 a Büdner colony called Poltzow was set up near Großwoltersdorf, but it soon grew together with Großwoltersdorf. On the old Feldmark, but also well away from the old village, is the Polzower Wachthaus , which today belongs to the Seilershof district (town of Gransee) and was built around 1850 .
  • Forsthaus Ramin (closed forester's house near Zehdenick).
  • Reiersdorf (today part of the municipality of Gollin, a district of the city of Templin). The medieval village was probably desolate as early as 1375. In 1572 the Feldmark was owned by von Greiffenberg zu Flemsdorf and Bruchhagen, which they sold to the Zehdenick office that year. A few years before 1704 ( 1704 ... built several years ago ... ) a new house was built for the Heidereiter (head forester). On the Feldmark, later forest district, the Bergluch, Dusterlake and Grunewald farms were built from 1723.
  • Melt, lime distillery (no longer exists, probably in the area of ​​the melt flow, dissolved in Zehdenick).
  • Storkow (now part of the city of Templin). The village belonged to the lordship of Badingen and Himmelpfort, but according to the inheritance register of 1574, the farmers had to do the services for the "Haus Zehdenick" and for hunting. The residents had 2½ shock 6 gr. Block money and 18 bushels of oats to the castle office to pay.
  • Vogelsang (today part of the city of Zehdenick). A few years before 1736, a fence was built from a fence setter named in 1704 on the so-called "Great Wild Fence". In 1745 a “tavern” is mentioned next to the Vorwerk. In 1761 the Vorwerk was given a long lease.
  • Wesendorf . The village was owned by von Barsdorf until 1452 , who sold it to the Zehdenick monastery that year. However, the farmers' services had to be performed at the Zehdenick castle or palace. In 1551 the two parts were reunited.
  • Meadow keeper, Heidewärterhaus (raised in Zehdenick)
  • Wolfsluch (today living space in the community of Großwoltersdorf). In 1816 a new sub-forestry was established here . In 1808 the old forest ranger's department burned down in the fire in the village of Großwoltersdorf.
  • Wucker (1801: Wackersee, Wöckersee) (today a residential area in the Groß Dölln district of the city of Templin). In 1781 a new sub-forestry was built in the Reiersdorfer Heide .
  • Zehdenick. To the south of the city, on the site of the former monastery, was the official seat of the Zehdenick Office. In the city, this included the Vorwerk, two water mills, a tale mill, a fulling mill and a cutting mill.

After the merger with the Badingen office, the following were created on the official territory:

  • Steinfeld (today living space in the Storkow district, part of the city of Templin). In 1846 7 cottages were settled at this location.
  • Alsenhof (today living space in the Hammelspring district of the city of Templin). In 1866 the farmstead, which had previously been built by the master streichhan and was owned by Carl Nietner at that time, was called Alsenhof.

Officials and tenants

  • undefined, Raban Freiherr von Canstein († 1680)
  • 1775 Carl Gottlieb Luft, chief magistrate
  • 1798 heirs of Lufft
  • 1804 heirs of Lufft, Kriele's assistant
  • 1818 Klemming, rent clerk
  • 1824 Klemming, Schulze, rent officials
  • 1832 Wimmer, Domain Actuarius ad interim
  • 1841 Wimmer, domain rent master
  • 1848 Wimmer, domain councilor
  • 1868 Fischer, Oberamtmann, became fire-fighting commissarius for the IX in 1868. District of the Templin district elected

literature

  • Friedrich Wilhelm August Bratring : The Graffschaft Ruppin in historical, statistical and geographical terms: a contribution to the customer of the Mark Brandenburg. Haym, Berlin 1799 Online at Google Books .
  • 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. Böhlau, Weimar 1964 (overview of the holdings of the Brandenburg State Main Archive Potsdam; Part 1, Series of publications: Publications of the Brandenburg State Main Archive / State Archive Administration), ISSN  0435-5946 ; 4th
  • Fritz Bünger : The Diocese of Brandenburg. Part 2, de Gruyter, Berlin 1941.
  • Lieselott Enders: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part II: Ruppin. Weimar 1972.
  • Lieselott Enders: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part III: Havelland. Weimar 1972.
  • Lieselott Enders (with the assistance of Margot Beck): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part VI: Barnim. Weimar 1980.
  • Lieselott Enders: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part VIII: Uckermark. Weimar 1986, ISBN 3-7400-0042-2 .
  • Reinhard E. Fischer (co-authors: Elzbieta Foster, Klaus Müller, Gerhard Schlimpert , Sophie Wauer, Cornelia Willich): Brandenburgisches Namenbuch. Part 10: The names of the waters of Brandenburg. Verlag Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1996, ISBN 3-7400-1001-0 .
  • Heinz-Dieter Heimann, Klaus Neitmann, Winfried Schich (eds.): Brandenburg monastery book. Handbook of the monasteries, pens and commander by the mid-16th century. 2 volumes. Berlin 2007 (Zehdenick Monastery: 2nd volume, pp. 1325–1337).
  • Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel : Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis A. First main part or collection of documents on the history of spiritual foundations, the noble families, as well as the towns and castles of the Mark Brandenburg, XIII. Band, Die Uckermark: Lychen, Zehdenik, Templin, Angermünde, Chorin Monastery; Uckermark documents. Berlin, Reimer 1857 Online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated CDB A XIII with the corresponding document number and page number)
  • Johannes Schultze: The land book of the Mark Brandenburg from 1375. Brandenburg land books Volume 2, commission publisher by Gsellius, Berlin 1940.

Individual evidence

  1. CDB A XIII, No. 5, p. 130.
  2. a b Ortschafts = 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, ecclesiastical circumstances, owner and address, along with an alphabetical register. Georg Decker, Berlin Online at Google Books .
  3. CDB A XIII, No. 122, p. 114ff., Storkow: p. 121.
  4. CDB A XIII, No. 28, p. 146.
  5. ^ Johann Seifert: Genealogy of Hoch-Adelicher Eltern parents and children. For more accurate erection and improvement of your family and ancestral tables. Johann Conrad Peetz, Regensburg 1724. Online at Google Books , p. 63
  6. Address calendar, the all royal. Prussia. Lands and provinces, apart from the residences of Berlin, the Kingdom of Prussia and the Sovereign Duchy of Silesia; of the high and low colleges, instances and expeditions located therein, the same of the royal. Servants, magistrates, universities, preachers etc. on the year MDCCLXXV (1775). Royal Prussian Academy of Sciences, Berlin 1775. Online at Sächsische Landesbibliothek State and University Library Dresden (additional sheet stapled behind p. 72)
  7. Handbook on the Royal Prussian Court and State for the year 1798. Decker, Berlin 1798 [books.google.de/books?id=nR4PAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA58&dq= Online at Google Books]
  8. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1808. Georg Decker, Berlin 1804 Online at Google Books , p. 26
  9. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1818. Georg Decker, Berlin 1818, p. 188
  10. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1824. Georg Decker, Berlin 1824 Online at Google Books , p. 182
  11. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1832. Georg Decker, Berlin 1832, p. 242
  12. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1841. Georg Decker, Berlin 1841, p. 283
  13. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1848. Georg Decker, Berlin 1848, p. 315
  14. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, 7th issue of February 14, 1868, p. 53 Online at Google Books

annotation

  1. The villages of the Zehdenick monastery are not described in the land book of Charles IV , only if they are partially owned by the monastery.