Baroldmühle

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Baroldmühle (Sorb. Baroldowy młyn), occasionally just Barold, is a residential area in the Doberburg district of the city of Lieberose in the Dahme-Spreewald district ( Brandenburg ). There was probably a water mill on the Baroldschen Mühlenfließ here at the end of the Middle Ages, where a forestry department was later established.

Eastern part of the residential area, view from west to east, on the left the mill building from 1841
Western part of the living space, view from east to west

Geographical location

Baroldmühle is located on the Barolder Fließ, also called Barolder Mühlenfließ, about 1 km southwest of the center of Doberburg. The living space can be reached via a small street that branches off from the K6105 (Doberburg-Lieberose). The road ends there.

history

The Baroldmühle was (probably) first mentioned as early as 1519, when the desert (Barische?) Mühle is identified with the Baroldmühle. In the Schmettau'schen map from 1767/87 it is recorded as Barollsche Mühle. In 1820 the Baroldmühle is described as a watermill and forestry. At that time the living space consisted of three houses in which 22 people lived. In 1841 the Baroldmühle was rebuilt partly massive, partly in half-timbered houses. In 1844 there were four residential buildings (watermill and forester's apartment) and 30 residents on the Baroldmühle residential area. For 1846 five houses and 28 inhabitants are named. In 1858 there are still five houses, but already 46 residents. In 1864 the Baroldmühle was a grinding and cutting mill. For 1912, 26 residents are named.

Baroldmühle on the original table sheet from 1846. Combined excerpts from the original table sheets Trebatsch 3951 and Lieberose 4051

Affiliation

Baroldmühle is now a residential area in the Doberburg district of the city of Lieberose. Already in the 18th century it belonged to the place Dobberbus, which was renamed Doberburg in 1937, and was thus part of the Lieberose class . Doberburg was incorporated into the town of Lieberose in 2003 and has been part of the town of Lieberose ever since. The city of Lieberose is administered by the Lieberose / Oberspreewald office and is the official seat.

literature

  • Götz Freiherr von Houwald : The Niederlausitz manors and their owners. Volume III: District of Lübben. Verlag Degener & Co., owner Gerhard Gessner, Neustadt an der Aisch 1984, ISBN 3-7686-4109-0 , p. 164
  • Rudolf Lehmann : Historical local lexicon for Niederlausitz. Volume 1: Introduction and Overviews. The districts of Luckau, Lübben and Calau. Hessian State Office for Historical Regional Studies, Marburg 1979, ISBN 3-921254-96-5 , p. 159

Individual evidence

  1. ^ The city of Lieberose on the pages of the Lieberose / Oberspreewald office
  2. Schmettau's map in the Brandenburg Viewer (longer loading time!)
  3. ^ Johann Daniel Friedrich Rumpf , Heinrich Friedrich Rumpf: Complete topographical dictionary of the Prussian state. Part 1: A to H. Hayn, Berlin 1820, p. 43.
  4. ^ A b Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus : Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz in the middle of the 19th century. Volume 3, printed and published by Adolph Müller, Brandenburg 1856, p. 667.
  5. Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Frankfurt ad O. Gustav Harnecker's Buchhandlung, Frankfurt ad O. 1844, p. 166
  6. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm Messow: Topographical-statistical manual of the Prussian state. First volume: A – K. Publishing house by Emil Baensch, Magdeburg 1846, p. 32
  7. ^ Wilhelm Riehl, J. Scheu: Berlin and the Mark Brandenburg with the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz in their history and in their present existence. Scheu, Berlin 1861, online at Google Books , p. 634
  8. ^ Meyers Orts- und Verkehrs-Lexikon des Deutschen Reichs. Volume 1, 1912, p. 352 under Dobberbus = Doberburg

Coordinates: 51 ° 59 ′ 58 ″  N , 14 ° 13 ′ 48 ″  E