Blasdorf (Lieberose)

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Blasdorf
City of Lieberose
Coordinates: 51 ° 59 ′ 2 ″  N , 14 ° 20 ′ 26 ″  E
Height : 53 m above sea level NN
Residents : 82  (Jan 1, 2011)
Incorporation : December 29, 1997
Postal code : 15868
Area code : 033671
Dorfstrasse, about level with Blasdorf 2, view to the northeast
Dorfstrasse, about 3/4 height Blasdorf, view to the southeast

Blasdorf ( Brjazka in Lower Sorbian ) is a district of the official city of Lieberose in the Dahme-Spreewald district ( Brandenburg ). From the late Middle Ages to the 19th century, the place belonged to the Lieberose dominion, from the 17th century it was called Lieberose dominion . Blasdorf was an independent municipality until it was incorporated into the city of Lieberose in 1997. The city of Lieberose is administered by the Lieberose / Oberspreewald office.

Geographical location

Blasdorf is about three kilometers as the crow flies east-southeast of the core town of Lieberose. The district borders in the northeast on the core town of Jamlitz and is otherwise surrounded by the district of the core town of Lieberose. It can be reached directly from Lieberose via the K6102, or via the B 320 from Lieberose in the direction of Jamlitz via the K6102 junction. However, the K6102 leads past the actual town center; the actual town center is a dead end.

The place is on the edge of the large former military training area Lieberose . The Lieberoser Mühlenfließ flows past north of the village . There are two small ponds in the local area. The comparatively large powder pond is located in the south-western part of the district . Two other smaller ponds are in the eastern part of the district. In the north, the Blasdorfer Graben, which flows from the Schäferteich (on Jamlitz district) into the Lieberoser Mühlenfließ, forms the northern boundary of the district.

Blasdorf on the Urmes table sheet 4052 Jamlitz from 1845

history

Blasdorf is mentioned for the first time in a document from 1302 as Blogozchsdorf . The name is a Slavic-German mixed name and is to be interpreted as "the village of a man named Blogosch". The place belonged to the Lieberose rule from the Middle Ages until the middle of the 19th century . The structure of the village is a dead end village . In 1708 four farmers, two gardeners and one Büdner lived in Blasdorf. In 1718 there were only four farmers and one housekeeper. The village was but, amazingly, to 740 guilders estimate prized. In 1723 11 subjects were counted, but only the adults are counted here. In 1820 the number of residents had risen to 100; 17 fireplaces were counted. In 1844 21 residential buildings were registered in which 131 people lived. In the Urmes table sheet 4052 (Jamlitz) from 1845 a sub-forestry is recorded at the southern exit of the village . In 1854 there was a country school in town. In 1864 there was an expanded homestead, d. H. (southeast) outside the actual village center, 24 houses in total and 172 inhabitants.

Population growth from 1818 to 2011

year 1818 1846 1870 1875 1890 1900 1910 1925 1939 1946 1950 1964 1971 1981 1991 1996 2011
Residents 100 141 170 179 162 149 152 134 109 146 139 114 120 98 89 88 82

Political conditions

In 1519 Hans von Lidlau, the guardian of the underage sons of Caspar von Köckritz, who died in 1519, sold the Lieberose estate for 16,000 guilders to Jacob and Richard von der Schulenburg , including Blasdorf . Due to the location of Blasdorf near Lieberose, it can be assumed that Blasdorf belonged to the Lieberose dominion much earlier than is documented or that Blasdorf originally belonged to the Lieberose dominion. The von der Schulenburg were also owned by the lords of Lübbenau and Neu Zauche , which Jacob von der Schulenburg took over; the Lieberose reign went to Richard von der Schulenburg. After Richard's death, his son Joachim inherited the Lieberose rule, and in 1560 also the Lübbenau and Neu Zauche rule from his cousin Georg, the son of Jacob. He became one of the richest men in Niederlausitz. The village remained under the Lieberose class until the middle of the 19th century when jurisdiction was transferred to the Lübben district .

The rule Lieberose was in the Krummspreeischen Kreis , which gradually developed in the 15th and 16th centuries , which was renamed in 1815 with the transition to Prussia in the Lübben district (later called the Lübben district (Spreewald) ). In the district reform of 1952, in which the Lübben district was re-cut and reduced in size, Blasdorf came to the newly created Beeskow district . In the district reform of 1993, the districts of Königs Wusterhausen , Lübben and Luckau were combined to form the district of Dahme-Spreewald. In contrast, the Beeskow district in the Oder-Spree district went out. However, Blasdorf was assigned to the new district of Dahme-Spreewald.

In 1992, Blasdorf merged with 13 other municipalities and the city of Lieberose to form the Lieberose Office , which carried out the administrative tasks of these mostly very small municipalities. On December 29, 1997, Blasdorf incorporated itself “voluntarily” into the town of Lieberose and has been part of the town of Lieberose ever since. The Lieberose office was merged with the Oberspreewald office in 2003 to form the new Lieberose / Oberspreewald office , which has since been responsible for the administration of the town of Lieberose and its Blasdorf district.

The local council has three members. In 2014, Mr. Joachim Rinza was mayor.

Church conditions

Blasdorf was parish in the Wendish Church in Lieberose.

supporting documents

literature

  • Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz. Volume 3, Adolph Müller, Brandenburg 1856 ( online at Google Books ) (hereinafter abbreviated to Berghaus, Landbuch, 3 with the corresponding page number)
  • 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 , pp. 168–169

Individual evidence

  1. Entry “Brjazka” in the Lower Sorbian place name database on dolnoserbski.de
  2. Main Statute of the City of Lieberose from March 9, 2009, PDF ( Memento of the original from January 16, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.amt-lieberose-oberspreewald.de
  3. Reinhard E. Fischer : The place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin. Age - origin - meaning. be.bra Wissenschaft, Berlin 2005 (= Brandenburg historical studies, volume 13), ISBN 3-937233-30-X , p. 165, snippet view , p. 28
  4. ^ Berghaus, Landbuch 3, p. 667 .
  5. ^ Lehmann, Historisches Ortslexikon, Niederlausitz, 1, p. 161.
  6. August Schumann: Complete State, Post and Newspaper Lexicon of Saxony. Volume 14: Aa-Bückgen. Verlag der Gebrüder Schumann, Zwickau 1827, online at Google Books , p. 476
  7. Contribution to the statistics of the State Office for Data Processing and Statistics, Historical Community Directory of the State of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 19.3 District Dahme-Spreewald, PDF
  8. Müller's Large German Local Book 2012: Complete local dictionary. 33. revised and exp. Ed., Walter de Gruyter, Berlin and Boston 2012, ISBN 978-3-11-027420-2 , online at Google Books , p. 155
  9. Sixth law on state-wide municipal area reform relating to the districts of Dahme-Spreewald, Elbe-Elster, Oberspreewald-Lausitz, Oder-Spree and Spree-Neiße (6th GemGebRefGBbg) of March 24, 2003, Law and Ordinance Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, I ( Laws), 2003, No. 05, p. 93.
  10. ^ Office Lieberose / Oberspreewald: The city of Lieberose

Web links