Blankensee (Mittenwalde)

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Blankensee
Municipality Mittenwalde
Coordinates: 53 ° 10 ′ 32 "  N , 13 ° 42 ′ 6"  E
Height : 76 m
Postal code : 17268
Area code : 039826
Blankensee (Brandenburg)
Blankensee

Location of Blankensee in Brandenburg

The castle in Blankensee
The castle in Blankensee

Blankensee is part of the municipality of Mittenwalde in the Uckermark district (Brandenburg). The village, laid out in the High Middle Ages, fell into desolation by the 15th century at the latest. The current settlement was rebuilt a little further north in the second half of the 17th century. The original village location is marked by a medieval church ruin. In the 19th century, Blankensee was owned by Achim von Arnim and his son Friedmund. Achim's wife, Bettina von Arnim , also stayed in the old manor house in Blankensee when she visited, but it was demolished in 1979.

Blankensee, Kienwerder and Krullenhaus (submitted), parts of the municipality of Mittenwalde, district of Uckermark, Brandenburg, excerpt from the Urmes table sheet 2848 Gerswalde from 1826

location

Blankensee is just under three kilometers northeast of the center of Mittenwalde and can be reached via a connecting road directly from Mittenwalde, or via a junction of the L 24 leading past to the east. The place is 76  m above sea level. NHN .

history

Blankensee was first mentioned in a document in the land register of Emperor Charles IV from 1375. The place was named after the now silted up Blankensee southeast of the place. The name is derived from mnd. blank = shiny, bright, white, blank. According to the village structure, it is a manor settlement.

The Landbuch Kaiser Karls IV describes Blankensee as follows:

“Blankense 60 mansi. Quilibet dat 1 talentum in pactum et non plus. Ad dotem iacent 4 mansi. Henryg Sueryng has 6 mansos ad curiam sub cultura. Rudghert de Rode has 5 mansos liberos ad curiam sub cultura. Wedego de Bentz has 7 mansos liberos sub cultura. Henning Kratz has 3 mansos liberos ad curiam sub cultura. Jurgen Cule 4 mansos liberos ad curiam sub cultura. Henning de Stegelitz has pactum super 8 mansos. Rudghart predictus has pactum super 2 mansos. Wedegho de Bentz has pactum super 4 mansos. Claus Luschow cum suis patruis habet pactum super 10 mansos. Musheym has 2 mansos. Ex hiis mansis sunt 6 in possessione, alii sunt desolati demptis liberis. Taberna dat 1 talentum, quod Ebyl Swanenbeke tollit. Costenworde 30, quelibet area dat 1 solidum. In hac villa dant pullos fumigales, demptis qui colunt mansos. Ex hiis areis sunt 25 in possessione, alie sunt desolate. Prope villam iacet 1 stagnum nomine Blankense super quod sunt 4 tractiones sage, idem stagnum pertinet Henningo Suerynge. Prope villam iacet ager in 2 locis, qui dicuntur Campe, dantos 41 pullos. Item sunt 4½ costenlande in possessione, de quibus dant 54 pullos, 7½ solidos. Nota quod in secundo anno 2 mansi sunt facti desolati. "

According to these taxes, Blankensee had 60 hooves , four of which were parish hooves. Henryg Sueryng had six (free?) Hooves on his farm under development and he owned the lake (Blankensee). He was allowed to fish four trains of yarn in the lake . Rudghert de Rode had five free hooves under the plow. Wedego de Bentz had seven free hooves, Henning Kratz had three free hooves and a Jurgen Cule had four free hooves. So a total of 25 free hooves. The lease of eight (farmer) hooves went to Henning de Stegelitz, Rudghart de Rode had the lease of two hooves, Wedegho de Bentz had the lease of four hooves, Claus Luschow and his uncles had the lease of 10 hooves and Musheym had ( the lease?) of two hooves (or free two hooves?), so a total of 26 lease hooves (?). Of the lease hooves, however, only six were built on, the others lay desolate. If you add free hooves, parish hooves and lease hooves together, there are only 55 hooves - contrary to the information in the land register. The pitcher gave a talent to Ebyl Swanenbeke. 25 of the 30 Kossatenwörden were occupied, the other five were desolate. Each of the (cultivated) Kossatenwörden gave a shilling and a smoking hen . In two places near the village there was a field, called Campe, from which 41 chickens had to be given. In addition, there were 4½ kossaten lands under development, of which 54 chickens and 7½ shillings had to be given. Two years ago two hooves had been destroyed. Soon the whole village must have fallen in desolation. The lap register from 1450 no longer mentions the village.

In 1461 von Arnim acquired half of Blankensee von Lippolt and Achim von Holzendorf. They probably already owned one half. In 1472 Henning, Achim, Claus, Hans and Berndt von Arnim received a mortgage loan from the Markbrandenburg Elector Albrecht Achilles for various goods in the Uckermark, a.o. a. also with blanket marriage, a desert village with everything right, pasture and wood . After the change to manu dominante , i.e. the accession of the Markbrandenburg Elector Johann Cicero , Henning von Arnim (the old man) in Gerswalde, Claus and Hans von Arnim in Zichow and Biesenthal as well as Berndt, Lippolt and Heinrich von Arnim brothers and cousins ​​in Zehdenick received another one Entire loan letter and confirmation of their fiefdom. It also mentions Blannckensehe, a desert dorpstede, with all rights, nothing uthgenomenn . Since Blankensee still belonged to Gerswalde at that time, Henning von Arnim should have been the owner of Blankensee or the deserted Feldmark. The complete loan letter from 1602 also lists the wuste dorfstette zue Blankensehe . "

Otto XII von Arnim (1682–1748) on Gerswalde received in 1717 a general loan letter. He was married twice; first marriage with Sophie von Eickstedt, second marriage in 1727 with Anne Louise von Arnim from the Fredenwalde family. From the two marriages he had seven sons, who each received parts of the huge property by lot. Only the eldest son received the main estate Gerswalde without drawing lots.

  • Christof Otto, Gerswalde
  • Ludolf Valentin von Arnim (1707–1758), Otto's second son, who made it up to major in the Prussian army, received Blankensee, Gruse and Werder .
  • Bogislav Berndt (1712–1783) received the Petznick , Dolgen and the village of Jakobshagen
  • Valentin Dietlof (1716–1802) received the Vorwerke Fergitz and Zollchow, and one half from the village of Zollchow
  • Otto (1729–1783) the Lemmersdorf estate and the Prenzlauer mill leaseholds
  • Magnus Wilhelm (1733–1810) received the Vorwerke Böckenberg and Berkenlatten
  • the youngest son Joachim Erdmann (1741-1804) received the Vorwerke Neudorf , Kölpin and the village of Kaakstedt .

In 1756 Ludolf Valentin von Arnim (1707–1758) was able to acquire the Kreuzkrug Vorwerk from the businessman Matthias Mohr. The Wolfinsprung Vorwerk (near Kreuzkrug) was also built under his aegis . He was married to Dorothea Sophia von Arnim. The marriage resulted in a son, who died as a small child, and the daughter Ottilie Henriette Sophie. He died in Liegnitz on April 4, 1758. The feudal estates fell to his brothers. His allodial goods went to his wife and daughter. Through the inheritance trial of April 23, 1759, Valentin Dietloff von Arnim (1716–1802) received the Blankensee manor.

In 1761, the Blankensee manor belonged to the Vorwerk Kienwerder and the small Rittervorwerke Gruse, Kreuzkrug, Werder and Wolfinsprung. Valentin Dietloff von Arnim was a judge of the chamber judge and dean of the cathedral chapter in Brandenburg an der Havel, and also chairman of the ordinates of the Kurmärkische landscape. From 1766 to 1776 he had border disputes with the farmers of Klosterwalde, whose field mark bordered on the Vorwerk Gruse. In 1772 he litigated with his tenant Henckel on Blankensee. In 1774 he was involved in a lawsuit with the following tenant Hoer on Blankensee; Hoer was turned away as a troublemaker. His widow continued the process until 1801. Valentin Dietloff married Beate Lucretia von Lüskow on March 13, 1749, the daughter of Balthasar Erdmann von Lüskow and Juliane Hedwig von Zastrow. The marriage had eight children, four sons and four daughters. The four daughters Beate Juliane Luise, Amalie Dorothea, Henriette Sophie and Eleonore Lucretia remained unmarried. One son died as a toddler, a second son Bogislav Bernd Valentin as an ensign in the Prussian army at the age of 17. The oldest son Otto Dietlof Albrecht is described in the older literature as stupid ; he remained unmarried and died in Blankensee in 1806. Chamber judge Valentin Dettloff / Dietloff von Arnim had died on Blankensee as early as 1802.

The Blankensee estate was inherited by the younger son of Valentin Dietloff, Carl Christof Joachim (1764–1821). He was Rittmeister in the cuirassier regiment No. 2 von Schleinitz and in 1804 took his leave as a major. He was married twice, the first to Albertine von Corwin-Wiersbitzki, and the second to her sister Wilhelmine, daughters of Major General Georg Ludwig von Corwin-Wiersbitzly and Julia Sophie von Grävenitz adH Schilde. There were no children from either marriage. He died on March 20, 1821 without a physical heir and his property fell to his cousins. From the estate of Colonel Curt Heinrich Gottlieb von Arnim in Sternhagen († 1800), the Gerswalder von Arnim line inherited half of Zollchow and Krullenhaus . These goods initially remained in common ownership.

Erdmann Christof Albrecht von Arnim, owner of the Petznick estate, died in 1821, too, without a physical heir. On October 1, 1821, the division of the fiefdom of Major Carl Christoph Joachim von Arnim (1764-1821) on Blankensee was initiated. This inheritance was distributed together with Gut Blankensee and the Sternhagen estate. A total of six beneficiaries were still alive,

  • Carl Ludolf Bernhard von Arnim auf Gerswalde, son of Christof Otto, who received Gerswalde. He inherited Kienwerder, which he exchanged for Zollchow.
  • Carl Heinrich Joachim (1763–1827), Friedrich Wilhelm Erdmann (1766–1852) and Ferdinand August Valentin (1768–1847), the sons of Magnus Wilhelm (1733–1810) on Böckenberg. Carl Heinrich Joachim inherited Zollchow and exchanged it for Kienwerder, Friedrich Wilhelm Erdmann (1766-1852) inherited Kreuzkrug and Ferdinand August Valentin inherited Petznick.
  • Carl Otto Ludwig ( Pitt ) and Carl Joachim Friedrich Ludwig ( Achim ), the sons of Joachim Erdmann (1741–1804), received Blankensee and Krullenhaus from the inheritance.

On July 1, 1825, Blankensee and Krullenhaus were transferred to the brothers Carl and Ludwig Achim von Arnim. They left the goods on lease. Achim von Arnim married Bettina von Brentano , with whom he had seven children. Carl Otto Ludwig remained unmarried. But he had an illegitimate son, named Carl Ludwig Arnhold, later ennobled Arnhold von Dannenberg. The fiefdom fell to the children of Achim and his wife Bettina. The allodial inheritance was inherited by Carl Ludwig Arnhold von Dannenberg, who was married and also had children.

After Achim von Arnim's early death in 1831, his son Anton Friedmund Nepomuk (1815–1883) inherited the goods around Templin (Blankensee, Krullenhaus, Neudorf and Kölpin). In 1840 he moved into the old manor house and gradually canceled the leases and managed the property himself. A trial by Friedmund von Arnim against the tenant Kiek von Blankensee in 1846 is probably also in this context. Friedmund von Arnim got engaged to Maria von Trott zu Solz in 1860 and had the new mansion built for this purpose. On July 20, 1861, he married Maria von Trott zu Solz, who, however, died on October 5, 1865, giving birth to their second child. After the death of his wife, Freimund moved back into the caretaker's house and let the castle fall into disrepair. After his death in 1883, the younger son Freimund Alarich Ottmar Eberhard von Arnim ( Ottmar ) von Arnim (1864–1929) took over Blankensee and restored the castle. In 1892 he married Amöne Auguste Klementine Luise von Trott zu Solz, daughter of the royal family. Prussian Chamberlain Bodo von Trott zu Solz and his wife Agnes born. from Trott to Solz adH Solz.

According to the Handbook of Landing in the German Empire of 1896, Blankensee had a total size of 630 hectares. Of this, 425 hectares were arable land, 100 hectares were meadows, 75 hectares of forest, 25 hectares of land and 5 hectares of water. The goods address book for the province of Brandenburg from 1914, on the other hand, gives the size of 587 hectares, of which 374 hectares are arable land, 126 hectares of meadows, 21 hectares of pastures, 52 hectares of forest, 12 hectares of land and 2 hectares of water. Together with Krullenhaus, the animal population totaled 49 horses, 180 head of cattle, including 60 cows, 900 sheep and 200 pigs. The property tax net amount was 6523 marks.

In 1461 and 1472 the von Arnim each received a mortgage loan from the Markbrandenburg electors for various estates in the Uckermark, among others. a. also with blanket marriage, a desert village with everything right, pasture and wood . In 1507 Stephan Klinkebyl sold the (then) desert village center of Buchholz . In this context, the neighboring Feldmark Blankensee is also mentioned. Nothing is reported about a village.

In 1536, 1571 and 1602 Blankensee is mentioned again as a desert village. In 1626 the Gerswalde feudal estate was pledged. The Uhlenhorst logging was exempt from the pledge. In 1675 the Uhlenhorst timber was part of the Suckow estate of the von Arnim. In 1689 there was a border visit to Prenzlauer Heide, which also mentions Gerswalde and Blankensee. Presumably there was already a Vorwerk in Blankensee at that time. In 1712 another border visit took place between Kuhz , Mittenwalde, Uhlenhorst and Prenzlauer Heide. In 1714, the Vorwerk Blankensee, also called the Uhlenhorst, belonged to the von Arnim'schen Lehngut Gerswalde. In 1734, four householders, two shepherds, eleven servants and a maid lived in the Uhlenhorst farm. In 1745 the Blankensee estate owned two dairy farms or cow leaseholds, one of which is definitely Kienwerder . The other means either the Vorwerk Blankensee itself or possibly also Herrenstein , which is referred to in the Schmettauschen map series as the lease .

In 1752 there was a court camp at Groß Blankensee and Klein Blankensee (= Kienwerder). Blankensee is referred to as a Vorwerk with a brick factory . In 1756/57 the Rittervorwerk had an annual sowing of 6 1/6 bison 1st and 2nd class or 10 19/24 bison reduced to 1st class. In 1761 the Vorwerk was enlarged to 21 Wispel sowings by clearing further areas. In 1775, Blankensee is a knight's seat , Vorwerk and sheep farm with 17 Büdners and residents and 14 fireplaces , eight of them in family houses. Blankensee had 94 inhabitants at that time. In 1790 the landowner and his family, a manager and six residents lived in Blankensee. There were nine fireplaces in total. In 1795 the brick factory was closed. In 1801 the estate had eight fireplaces and 11 residents. The estate included 400 acres of wood, for which a forester was responsible.

In 1840 there were ten houses in Blankensee in addition to the manor. In 1860 there were eleven houses and 20 farm buildings, including an oil mill and a forge . A master blacksmith and his assistant worked in the forge. Around 1900 there were 12 houses in Blankensee.

Population development from 1734 to 1925
year 1734 1774 1790 1801 1817 1840 1858 1871 1895 1925
Residents 42 94 80 115 106 101 156 167 143 170

In the land reform after World War II in 1948, 754 hectares were expropriated and divided. 441 hectares went to 58 landless farmers and farm workers, 253.5 hectares to 29 resettlers and 29.5 hectares to the community. In 1957 the first LPG Type I was formed with six members. Just a year later, the LPG was converted into Type III; now it already had 23 members with 350 hectares of agricultural land. In 1960 the LPG Blankensee had 95 members and cultivated 656 hectares of usable area. In 1967 the LPG Kienwerder was connected to the LPG in Blankensee. In 1976 LPG Blankensee was connected to LPG Haßleben. Blankensee formed the Blankensee department within LPG Haßleben.

Communal history

Since its (re-) establishment, Blankensee has always been a manor or, later, an estate district. There was also no rural community. At the time of the Mark Brandenburg Blankensee belonged to the Uckermark or, with the formation of the district constitution, to the Uckermärkischer Kreis . The neighboring Vorwerk Krullhaus formed its own estate district until around 1860, but was then incorporated into the Blankensee estate district.

With the formation of the administrative districts in 1874, Blankensee was assigned to the administrative district No.4 Gerswalde. The head of office was the manor owner von Arnim auf Gerswalde. Deputy was bailiff Kolbe on Krohnhorst .

In 1928 the Mittenwalde estate with Pappelwerder , the Blankensee estate, the Kienwerder estate from the Petznick estate, the Seeburg estate of the Ruhhof estate , and parcels of the Seeburg district of the Kröchlendorff estate to form the Mittenwalde municipality. Blankensee was Mittenwalde's residence in 1931 and 1957. In 1964 and 1971 it is referred to as a district.

In 1992 Mittenwalde merged with nine other municipalities to form the Gerswalde Office . Since then, Blankensee has been treated as part of Mittenwalde's municipality.

Church affiliation

Blankensee was the mother church in the Middle Ages, as the four parish hooves (1375) show. At that time it belonged to the diocese of Kammin. In 1722 Blankensee was churched in Gerswalde; there was no church yet. Since 1745 and the construction of the village church, Blankensee was a daughter church of Herzfelde . Krullenhaus and Kienwerder were churched in Blankensee. In addition, the residents of the Vorwerke Petznick, Klein Dolgen , Groß Dolgen , Kalkofen , Gruse, Werder, Kreuzkrug, Achimswalde , and Neudorf belonged to Blankensee or had to go to church in Blankensee . The patronage was the von Arnim on Blankensee.

Monuments and sights

The list of monuments of the state of Brandenburg for the district of Uckermark lists four architectural monuments in Blankensee:

  • No. 09130563 Blankensee village church . The small, rectangular roof-top church has no tower, but a porch over the south entrance. According to the Dehio , it dates from the 18th century. The pulpit altar bears the coats of arms and names of Otto von Arnim and his second wife Anne Louise von Arnim, whom he married in 1727. A tin plate was donated by him in 1736. One chalice has the year 1745. The bells also bear the year 1745. The church was built before 1745.
  • No. 09130564 Desert Church (ruin) (Location:) . According to the Dehio , it is the church of the village of Uhlenhorst, which was destroyed in the Thirty Years War. But there was no village of Uhlenhorst there. It is the church of the medieval village Blankensee.World icon
  • No. 09130565 Blankensee 10 manor house. The plastered building on a square floor plan was built by Friedmund von Arnim in 1860/62 (not in 1869 as in Dehio!) (Cf. Reisinger, and Arnim & Arnim, 2002). The former manor house, a half-timbered building from the beginning of the 19th century near the castle, in which Bettina von Arnim also stayed, was demolished in 1979.
  • No. 09130936 Blankensee 23 farm building (oil mill)
Blankensee village church

literature

  • Jochen von Arnim, Martin von Arnim: The von Arnim family: Chronicle of the family in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. 684 S., Degener, Neustadt ad Aisch, 2002 ISBN 3-7686-5178-9 (in the following abbreviated Arnim & Arnim, The sex of Arnim with corresponding page number)
  • Ernst Devrient: The Arnim family. 1st part: Document book. Verlag von HA Ludwig Degener, Leipzig 1914 (hereinafter abbreviated as Devrient, document book with corresponding page number)
  • Lieselott Enders : Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part VIII: Uckermark. Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1986 (hereinafter abbreviated to Enders, Historical Ortlexikon für Brandenburg, Uckermark with corresponding page number)
  • Johannes Schultze : The land book of the Mark Brandenburg from 1375. Brandenburg land books volume 2. Commission publishing house by Gsellius, Berlin 1940 (p. 262)

Source editions

  • Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel : Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis A. First main part or collection of documents on the history of the spiritual foundations, the noble families, as well as the towns and castles of the Mark Brandenburg, XII. Volume, continuation of the Mittelmark documents. Castle and town of Plaue. Castle, town and monastery Ziesar, Leitzkau monastery. Golzow Castle and the von Rochow family. Lehnin Monastery. Mixed documents. 516 S., Berlin, Reimer 1856 Online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated to Riedel, Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis, A 12, with the corresponding page number and certificate number)
  • Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel: Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis A. First main part or collection of documents on the history of the spiritual foundations, the noble families, as well as the towns and castles of the Mark Brandenburg, XIII. Volume, Fourth Section. The Ukermark. 523 S., Berlin, Reimer 1857 Online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated to Riedel, Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis, A 13, with corresponding page number and document number)
  • 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, volume 21. 520 S., Berlin, Reimer 1862 Online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated to Riedel, Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis, A 21, with the corresponding page number and certificate number)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Sophie Wauer: Brandenburgisches Namenbuch. Part 9. The place names of the Uckermark. 391 pp., Verlag Hermann Böhlaus Successor, Weimar 1996 ISBN 3-7400-1000-2 (p. 69)
  2. a b c d e Enders, Historisches Ortslexikon für Brandenburg, Uckermark, pp. 90–92.
  3. Devrient, Urkundenbuch, p. 97.
  4. a b Riedel, Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis, A 12, document no. X (= 10), pp. 214/15 Online at Google Books
  5. Riedel, Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis, A 13, document no. CLII (= 152), pp. 414-417 (416) online at Google Books .
  6. ^ Devrient, Urkundenbuch, p. 375.
  7. ^ Christian-Wilhelm Grundmann: An attempt at a Ucker-Märckische nobility history, compiled from Lehn letters and other credible watch customers. 320 S., Christian Ragoczy, Prenzlau 1744 Online at Google Books
  8. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv - Online research: Hereditary process between the feudal heirs of Major Ludolf Valentin von Arnim on Blankensee and his allodial heirs, from April 23, 1759
  9. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv - Online research: Copy of July 26, 1825 of the February 25, 1761 review, concluded between the six brothers of Major Ludof Valentin von Arnim on Blankensee, after his death on April 4, 1758. 1761
  10. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv - Online research: Ownership document for the chamber judge Valentin Dietloff von Arnim about the goods Blankensee, Gruse, Werder, Wolfsinsprung and Kreutzkrug from June 6th 1775
  11. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv - Online research: Arnim, Valentin Dettloff v., On Blankensee Chamber judge 1802
  12. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv - Online research: Recession on the division of the fiefdom of Major Carl Christoph Joachim von Arnim on Blankensee from July 1, 1825 and the introduction to it from October 1, 1821
  13. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv - Online research: Lehnserbteilung from July 1, 1825 on Blankensee and Krullenhaus, which were transferred to the brothers Carl and Ludwig Achim von Arnim in the division. 1825
  14. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv - Online research: Trial by Arnim against the tenant Kiek von Blankensee. 1846
  15. Paul Ellerholz, Ernst Kirstein, Traugott Müller, W. Gerland and Georg Volger: Handbuch des Grundbesitz im Deutschen Reiche. With indication of all goods, their quality, their size and type of culture; your property tax net income; their owners, tenants, administrators etc .; of industries; Post, telegraph and railroad stations; Breeding of special breeds of animals; Exploitation of the livestock etc. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery: Province of Brandenburg. 3rd improved edition, 310 pp., Berlin, Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1896, pp. 262/63.
  16. a b Ernst Seyfert (Ed.): Goods address book for the province of Brandenburg. List of all manors, estates and larger farms in the province with details of the property properties, the net income from property tax, the total area and area of ​​the individual crops, livestock, all industrial facilities and telephone connections, details of the property, tenants and administrators of the Post, telegraph and railway stations and their distance from the estate, the Protestant and Catholic parishes, the registry office districts, the city and administrative districts, the higher regional, regional and local courts, an alphabetical register of places and persons, the manual of the royal authorities as well a map of the province of Brandenburg at a scale of 1: 1,000,000. XLV, 433 pp., Reichenbach'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Leipzig, 1914, pp. 158/59.
  17. Riedel, Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis, A 13, document no. CCCXXVI (= 326), p. 373 Online at Google Books .
  18. ^ The municipalities and manor districts of the Prussian State and their population. According to the original materials of the general census of December 1, 1871. II. Province of Brandenburg. Verlag der Königliche Statistischen Bureaus (Dr. Engel), Berlin 1873. Online at Google Books , p. 12.
  19. Official Gazette of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin Extra sheet of June 6, 1874, p. 180 Online at Google Books
  20. ^ Service portal of the state administration of the state of Brandenburg: Mittenwalde community
  21. List of monuments of the State of Brandenburg: District Uckermark (PDF) Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum
  22. BrandenburgViewer: Church ruins south of Blankensee (longer loading time!)
  23. ^ Heinrich Jerchel, Paul Eichholz (preliminary work), with the collaboration of Eberhard Küster, Richard Moderhack, Karl H. Marschalleck: Die Kunstdenkmäler der Provinz Brandenburg. The art monuments of the Templin district. 277 pp., Deutscher Kunstverlag, Berlin 1937.
  24. Ingrid Reisinger, Walter Reisinger: Well-known, unknown and forgotten manor houses and manor houses in the state of Brandenburg. An inventory. Volume 2, Stapp Verlag, Berlin 2013, ISBN 978-3-87776-082-6 , pp. 647-648
  25. Arnim & Arnim, Das Sex von Arnim, p. 325.