Appendorf (desert)

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Appendorf was the name of two villages south of Ottersleben near Magdeburg .

The names Abbendorf and Apendorf were also used .

location

Location of the western desert of Appendorf

One of the places was directly to the east of the Heerstraße coming from Ottersleben and leading via Langenweddingen in the direction of Halberstadt , the later Magdeburger Straße Halberstädter Chaussee . It was located well south of the Kleiner Wiesengraben watercourse , about southeast of the current intersection of Halberstädter Chaussee / Osterweddinger Chaussee in the area of ​​the city of Magdeburg. Geographical location (estimated using the map of Prof. Dr. Gustav Reischel): 52 ° 4 '36 "  N , 11 ° 33' 32"  O . The village was later also called Anger an der Chaussee and short ends .

Location of the eastern desert of Appendorf

The second place was in a south-easterly direction, a little east of Osterweddinger Strasse , south of the Großer Wiesengraben in the northern part of the old field marrow of Osterweddingen. Geographical location (estimated using the map of Prof. Dr. Gustav Reischel): 52 ° 4 '0 "  N , 11 ° 34' 54"  O . The village was also known as Anger and Häber in Appendorf .

history

The villages are first mentioned as the property of the Moritzkirche in the years between 937 and 946 . From 1145 to 1209 the places, initially only the western Appendorf, are mentioned as the property of the Berge monastery . In 1209 Pope Innocent III confirmed . Both places in Appendorf, along with various other places in the region, are owned by the Berge Monastery. While the ore monastery of Magdeburg existed as a tithe for Appendorf-Ost , Appendorf-West was likely to have been subject to the tithe right of the Berge monastery since the 10th or 11th century . Appendorf-West probably also had a church. At least the churchyard was the field name , which suggests a parish church.

Both places became desolate towards the end of the 15th century . 1479 14 farms and the mill at ( before ) Abbendorf are mentioned. The mill, presumably a water mill , was owned by the Berge monastery and was assigned as a fief mill . However, it is no longer mentioned in the monastery loan book from 1496 . It is believed that it was no longer in operation in 1479. In 1536 , Dr. Emeran Siering with 1 1/2 hooves and a desolate yard on the Großer Ottersleber field enfeoffed by Johann von der Asseburg. Since, according to Reischel, there is no further desertification in the Feldmark of Groß Ottersleben, this information can only refer to the deserted Abbendorf. In 1684 , the mayor of Magdeburg, Stephan von Lentke, is recorded as the owner of the Abbendorfer Garbenzehnt . The farmers of Osterweddingen raised 12 thalers for this.

The field corridors of both villages were then mainly attached to Ottersleben, partly also to Osterweddingen .

The naming of Appendorfer Straße in Ottersleben, which today belongs to Magdeburg, reminds of the existence of the places .

source

  • Gustav Reischel : Historical map of the districts Wolmirstedt and Wanzleben . Graphic arts institute Louis Koch, Halberstadt 1912, (1: 100,000).
  • Christof Römer: The Berge monastery near Magdeburg and its villages 968–1565. A contribution to the history of the ore monastery Magdeburg . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1970, ( Publications of the Max Planck Institute for History 30), ( Studies on Germania Sacra 10), (At the same time: Berlin, FU, Diss., 1967).