Bloischdorf

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
community Felixsee
Coordinates: 51 ° 35 ′ 23 "  N , 14 ° 28 ′ 38"  E
Height : 135 m above sea level NHN
Area : 4.82 km²
Residents : 145  (December 31, 2018)
Population density : 30 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : December 31, 2001
Postal code : 03130
Area code : 035600
Bloischdorf (Brandenburg)
Bloischdorf

Location of Bloischdorf in Brandenburg

Bloischdorf , Błobošojce in Lower Sorbian , is a district of the Felixsee municipality in the Spree-Neisse district in Brandenburg . Felixsee is administered by the Döbern-Land office. Until 1816 Bloischdorf was an exclave of the Silesian district Sagan in the then Saxon Lower Lusatia .

location

Bloischdorf is located in Niederlausitz and belongs to the official settlement area of ​​the Sorbs / Wends . It is located about ten kilometers east-northeast of Spremberg and just under six kilometers southwest of Döbern . It can be reached via a small road from Groß Luja , which branches off from the L 48 there , or via the K7105, which also branches off the L 48 in Groß Luja and leads via Türkendorf (district of the town of Spremberg) to Bloischdorf. The K7105 continues to Graustein. Smaller roads lead from Bloischdorf to Reuthen and Klein Loitz (both places are districts of the Felixsee community). The district of Bloischdorf borders in the north on the district of Wadelsdorf, in the northeast on Klein Loitz, in the east on Reuthen, in the southeast on Schönheide, in the south on Graustein, in the west on Türkendorf and in the northwest over a very short distance on Groß Luja.

Bloischdorf lies at 126  m above sea level. NHN . The highest point in the district is the Spitzberg at 162.4 m. The lowest point of the Kiebitzgraben Bloischdorf on the western edge of the district at 120 m. The lapwing ditch Bloischdorf has its origin southwest of the town center and is dammed up there to form a pond.

Bloischdorf includes the Bloischdorf-Kolonie residential area and a group of houses on the southern edge of the district (Bergstrasse 15 to 18).

history

Bloischdorf appears for the first time in writing in the Meißner diocese register from 1495. The first mention of 1296, as stated on the homepage of the Döbern-Land office, could not be verified due to a lack of sources. In the various manuscripts the name appears as Blasdorf, Blosdorff and Bloßdorff. In 1509 the place is mentioned as Blastorf . According to the structure of the village, it was originally a dead end village. The name is a Slavic-German mixed name. The epithet is derived from a Slavic personal name Blož or Bloš.

After 1474 Hans von Helwigsdorf ( Helbistorff ) was called Racke with an annual interest of 8 shock in the village of Bloischdorf, which is now part of the village and is located on a meadow in the Horlitza and enfeoffed the local Trift. He had bought the armchairs from Hans von Berge. In the list of homage from 1474 he is called Hans Racko . In the knight's service directory of 1472 he is listed among the foreigners: Hanß Racke 1 Pfert mitsampt Hanß vom Berge.

On April 16, 1509 an Erhardt Schkoppe (von Schkopp) was enfeoffed with his goods, including Bloischdorf. Since he hadn't brought his old mortgage letters with him, he was supposed to send them in later. In 1519 he appears in the directory of the Saganer men as Erhart Zschopp zu Blawnßdorff . In 1523 the brothers Christof, Heinrich and Hans von Schkopp were enfeoffed with Bloischdorf after the death of their father. The old mortgage letters were destroyed in a fire in their house. Christof died in 1535 and in 1540 Heinrich and Hans received the feud from Heinrich the Pious of Saxony, who was also Duke of Sagan.

In 1549, Heinrich and Hans von Skoppau exchanged Bloischdorf for a farm, house and farm including 2 Hufen fields with all the freedoms near Forst, also a meadow near Jänickendorf and 800 guilders, with Nicol, Hans and Joachim von Seydlitz. After the estimate of 1527 for the war against the Turks, the Seidelitz zu Blosdorf were estimated at 300 marks. In 1573 Seifried von Promnitz, the new pledgee of Sagan Michel (recte Nicol) and Heinrich von Seydlitz with Bloischdorf. Heinrich must have died soon after the enfeoffment in 1573. According to Houwald, a Nicol von Seydlitz sat on Bloischdorf in 1578/79. He was enfeoffed on September 27, 1583 with Bloischdorf. His nephew Baltzer, son of Heinrich, was also enfeoffed. In 1608 Nicol von Seydlitz is also the owner of Groß Luja . In 1583 four farmers lived in Bloischdorf, who are described as poor and whose goods were only worth around 50 to 60 shock groschen, and eight cottagers. According to the register of knight services in the principalities of Sagan, Priebus and Naumburg from June 10, 1594, Nicol Seidlitz had to provide a quarter of a knight's horse for Bloischdorf, along with other knights, in case of war.

Another Nicol von Seydlitz died in 1623. It can only have been the son of the above Nicol, and he had a brother Hans. In 1624 the sons of Nicol, Joachim, Heinrich and Christof were enfeoffed with Bloischdorf; The cousin Nicol, son of Hans, was also endowed. In 1630 they had to sell Groß Luja, and in 1639 also their share of gray stone . They are named as resident in Bloischdorf, so they had moved their knightly seat to Bloischdorf.

Joachim, Heinrich and Christof von Seydlitz died soon afterwards and Nicol became the sole owner of Bloischdorf. Unfortunately he made a fiefdom mistake and failed to seek the fief from the Duke of Sagan in good time. On March 1, 1659, the laying of Bloischdorf was drafted by Duke Wenzel von Lobkowitz. Nikol went to Sagan and asked for feudal payment for his oversight. He even offered to pay 2,150 thalers as a fief in order to get Bloischdorf back.

Now, however, the brothers Joachim, Kaspar, Balthasar, Nickol, Hans Günther and Heinrich Christian von Kottwitz appeared on Sommerfeld. They argued that Nicol's father Hans von Seydlitz, the guardian of her mother Anna Dorothea von Köckeritz, had borrowed 6,000 thalers from her mother for Gut Bloischdorf in 1620 in his role as guardian. So far, neither her father nor her mother nor she herself have been able to get the 6,000 thalers back from the guardian or his sons. They are thus authorized to hold themselves harmless against Bloischdorf up to the amount borrowed plus interest. In the dispute, the von Kottwitz also tried the Brandenburg Elector Friedrich Wilhelm, who campaigned for their cause with the Duke of Sagan in a letter dated September 19, 1660. On March 20, 1664, the Duke decided that Nicol von Seydlitz was owed to repay the 6,000 thalers. Of course, Nicol von Seydlitz could not raise this amount. In exchange for a payment of 900 thalers to the feudal lord in order to cancel the feudal caducity, the von Kottwitz family received the Bloischdorf, which had fallen to the feudal lord, on March 20, 1664. A feudal debt of 7,500 thalers was registered on Gut Bloischdorf, the original debt of 6,000 thalers and the interest accrued since then. Apparently Joachim Kaspar von Kottwitz took over Bloischdorf, under whose patronage the church became Catholic again. The Thirty Years' War had badly damaged Bloischdorf. In 1668 only one farmer and four gardeners lived in Bloischdorf.

A little later, the Bloischdorf estate must have come to Kaspar Friedrich von Maxen. Joachim Kaspar von Kottwitz surely had to compensate his brothers for the registered feudal debt. Kaspar Friedrich von Maxen sold Bloischdorf on August 17, 1682 to Christian Friedrich von Teitz and Gildenstern for 4,500 thalers. However, the latter failed to obtain the approval of the fiefdom and after the fiscal process the fiefdom of Bloischdorf was declared to have fallen to the fiefdom. Christian Friedrich von Teitz and Gildenstern appealed to the Duke and actually got the property back in exchange for a fiefdom of 1,000 Reichstaler. In September 1692 he sold Bloischdorf for 4,250 Reichstaler and 100 gulden key money to Wolf Christoph von Kottwitz on Muckwar and Neuhausen. He had to borrow 3,354 thalers to buy it. On June 12, 1672 he had Eva Elisabeth von Birckholtz, daughter of Ernst von Birckholtz auf Muckwar and Eva Kottwitz adH. Neuhausen married. On March 7, 1710, his widow and two sons Christoph Erdmann and Wilhelm Seyfried died. They took the vassal oath on October 27, 1710. On November 15, 1710, the two concluded an inheritance settlement, after which Wilhelm Seyfried Bloischdorf took over, his brother, Christoph Erdmann Neuhausen and Bresinchen was also enfeoffed. Wilhelm Seyfried also received 2,650 thalers in cash to compensate for the value. Wilhelm Seyfried was married to Anna Marianne Stutterheim. In 1753 he left Bloischdorf to his son Carl Ehrenreich because of old age and weakness . The daughter Marianne Eleonore married one von Gersdorf.

Carl Ehrenreich von Kottwitz was married to Anna Barbara von Spiller. The marriage produced a son and three daughters. In 1763 nine gardeners lived in Bloischdorf. On July 1, 1781, the son Heinrich Wilhelm Ehrenreich bought Bloischdorf from his father for the value of 4,350 Reichstalers. As early as June 28, 1788, he sold Bloischdorf for 9,500 thalers to the Royal Prussian District Council and general tenant of the offices of Cottbus and Sielow Christian Gottlieb Hubert in Cottbus. In 1791 Bloischdorf is described as a manorial farm with a rectory, a farmer, ten gardeners and a windmill. At that time the place had 98 inhabitants.

Christian Gottlieb Hubert died on February 8, 1811 in Cottbus, leaving behind five children, two sons and three daughters. In the hereditary comparison of the five siblings, Christian Gottlob took over Hubert Bloischdorf for the value of 11,000 Reichstaler. Christian Gottlob Hubert had "only" two daughters, of whom Caroline married the court trainee Theodor von Reinsperg, the other, Johanna, remained unmarried. The older daughter Caroline inherited Bloischdorf, the younger Johanna inherited Türkendorf . Caroline born Hubert and Theodor von Reinsperg had three children: Carl, Auguste and Therese.

In 1820 Bloischdorf had 21 campfire sites with 117 inhabitants. At that time, 39 residents lived in eight houses in Bloischdorf-Kolonie. Müller's dictionary from 1835 contains the following numbers: Bloischdorf 24 houses, 120 inhabitants, Bloischdorf colony 9 houses, 50 inhabitants.

In 1837 the lordly pensions were replaced in Bloischdorf: the lordship received compensation in the amount of 1,716 Reichstaler and 20 Groschen. In 1841 the manor owner von Reinsperg on Bloischdorf was appointed fire and road police commissarius for the 1st district of Spremberg. In the Urmes table sheet 4452 Spremberg from 1846, a windmill is entered south of the town center. In the Urmes table sheet 4352 Sellessen, Bloischdorf-Kolonie is registered as Bloischdorfer Schänke.

Bloischdorf combined on the Urmes table sheets 4352 Sellessen and 4452 Spremberg from 1845 and 1846

Berghaus names Mrs. Caroline von Reinsperg as the owner of Bloischdorf for 1853. At that time Gut Bloischdorf had a size of 1,131 acres, 148 square rods, of which 498 acres were 150 square rods arable, 25 acres 165 square rods were meadows and 515 acres were 130 square rods forest. In 1856 the Bloischdorf estate was run by a manager Vogel. In 1857 the address book of manor owners and manors in the Prussian states names the used . Mrs. von Reinsperg as the owner of Bloischdorf. In 1858 Bloischdorf had 35 houses and 185 inhabitants. The rule ran a distillery.

On December 17, 1862, Auguste von Reinsperg, daughter of Theodor von Reinsperg and Caroline née. Hubert gave Rudolph Friedrich Wilhelm Johannes d'Houdan de Villeneuve in Drebkau. She later inherited the Bloischdorf estate. In 1875 the manor owner became Premier-Lieutenant a. D. von Villeneuve appointed head of the 3rd district of the Spremberg district. In 1879 Gut Bloischdorf had a total size of 251.52 hectares, of which 73.88 hectares were arable, 6.71 hectares were meadows, 10.09 hectares and 2.2 hectares of water. The property tax net income is estimated at 1465.77 marks. The handbook of real estate in the German Empire of 1885 gives the following figures: 257 hectares in total, of which 75 hectares are arable, 7 hectares of meadows, 10 hectares of Hutung, 163 hectares of forest and 2 hectares of water. The property tax net income is noted here as 1466 marks. The owners are Mrs. Auguste von Villeneuve, nee. v. Reinsperg's heirs stated.

On September 9, 1887, the government trainee Georg Seydel-Liebesitz bought Gut Bloischdorf, who on October 3, 1888 passed it on to Mrs. Rentier Emma Heckmann nee. Kilian from Drebkau sold on, who had the property managed by caretaker Carl Johannes Kypke. On November 19, 1898, the businessman Fritz Carl Bonn from Berlin bought it. On September 1, 1900, Gut Bloischdorf was acquired by Lieutenant Julius Hugo Böhm, who also owned the estate in the neighboring Turkish village. In 1929 the estate had a total size of 283 hectares, of which 152 hectares were arable, 13 hectares were meadows, 12 hectares were pastures, 98 hectares of wood, 8 hectares of land and 0.3 hectares of water. The basic tax income is set at 1622 marks. There were 12 horses and 60 cattle on the farm, 30 of which were cows. His son Hugo Julius Böhm (* 1903) managed the estate until it was expropriated in 1945.

Population development from 1818 to 2000
year 1791 1818 1846 1858 1871 1890 1900 1910 1925 1939 1946 1950 1964 1971 1981 1991 2000
Residents 98 117 195 185 211 202 196 211 252 215 193 222 229 224 204 196 200

Communal affiliation

In the Middle Ages, the place belonged to the Priebus rule as an exclave . This originally Lower Lusatian rule was united with the Duchy of Sagan in 1419 and annexed to Silesia in 1429 . How this connection came about is unclear. It remained a Silesian exclave until 1816. In 1742 or finally in 1763 Silesia became Prussian and Bloischdorf thus also became a Prussian exclave in the Saxon Lower Lusatia. In 1815 the Kingdom of Saxony had to cede Niederlausitz to Prussia. With that, the neighboring towns came to Prussia. With the district reform of 1816, Bloischdorf first came to the Spremberg-Hoyerswerda district , which was dissolved again in 1824. Bloischberg now came back to circle Spremberg and remained through the wider circle reforms of 1950 and 1952 in the former GDR always circle Spremberg . The Spremberg district was renamed the Spremberg district in 1990 and merged with the Forst (Lausitz) , Guben and Cottbus districts to form the Spree-Neisse district in 1993 .

Around 1860 Bloischdorf was divided into a municipality and a manor district. With the formation of the districts in 1874 Bloischdorf was assigned to the district 3 Reuthen. The manor owner Rudolph Friedrich Wilhelm Johannes d'Houdan de Villeneuve von Bloischdorf was appointed head of office in 1875. In 1928 the municipality and manor district were combined to form the rural municipality of Bloischdorf. With the formation of the offices in Brandenburg in 1992, Bloischdorf merged with 13 other municipalities to form the Hornow / Simmersdorf office . On December 31, 2001 Bloischdorf merged with Bohsdorf, Friedrichshain and Klein Loitz to form the Felixsee municipality. The new municipality was assigned to the Döbern-Land office. Since then, Bloischdorf has been part of the Felixsee municipality. Mayor 2019 is Enrico Kranig.

Church affiliation

In the course of the introduction of the Reformation, Bloischdorf, like almost all of Niederlausitz, became Protestant in the 16th century . In 1668 in Bloischdorf, after implementing the principle cuius regio, eius religio as a result of the Peace of Westphalia , as in the whole of the Catholic Duchy of Sagan , the evangelical pastor was expelled. As a result, the medieval village church became Catholic again, but the population of the village remained Protestant. The Josefskirche in Bloischdorf is the only medieval Catholic village church in Brandenburg today. The evangelical residents of the village go to church in Graustein to this day. The Josefskirche belongs to the Catholic parish Spremberg . The Protestant parish belongs to Groß Luja / Graustein in the Evangelical Church Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia.

Monuments and sights

The list of monuments of the state of Brandenburg for the district of Spree-Neisse shows the following monuments.

  • No. 09125025 Dorfstrasse, Catholic village church
  • No. 09125026 Dorfstrasse 8 residential building
  • No. 09125027 Dorfstrasse 24 residential building
  • No. 09125028 Dorfstrasse 25 Residential house with stable building
  • No. 09125363 Gartenstraße 34 Courtyard with residential house, stable building, barn, coach house, shed, orchard and meadow

Also worth seeing is the museum barn with an exhibition on the historical house landscape and rural life, living and working with special consideration of the Sorbian culture, the Sorbian settlement area in the Lower Lusatia, enriched by changing special exhibitions and events.

literature

  • Artur Heinrich: History of the Principality of Sagan. Sagan, Schönborn in Komm., 1911 (in the following abbreviated Heinrich, Sagan with corresponding page number)
  • Götz Freiherr von Houwald : The Niederlausitzer manors and their owners Volume I District Spremberg. XIV, 273 p., Degener & Co., Neustadt an der Aisch, 1978 (hereinafter abbreviated to Houwald, Rittergüter, vol. 1 Spremberg with corresponding page number)
  • Rudolf Lehmann : Historical local lexicon of Niederlausitz. Volume 2. The districts of Cottbus, Spremberg, Guben and Sorau. 439 p., Hessisches Landesamt für Geschichtliche Landeskunde, Marburg 1979, ISBN 3-921-254-96-5 (in the following abbreviated Historisches Ortslexikon Niederlausitz, Vol. 2 with corresponding page number).
  • Georg Steller: Regesten Saganer fiefdoms before 1510. 68 p., Manuscript reproduced in 30 copies, near Kiev, Ukraine, April 1942 (in the following abbreviated Steller, Saganer fiefdoms with corresponding regest number)
  • Georg Steller: The nobility of the Principality of Sagan 1440-1714. Documented contributions to its history. Yearbook of the Schlesische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Breslau, 13: 7–60, 1968 (in the following abbreviated Steller, nobility with corresponding page number)

Individual evidence

  1. Facts and Figures. In: amt-doebern-land.de. Office Döbern-Land , accessed on February 22, 2019 .
  2. Otto Posse (Ed.): Documents from the Margraves of Meissen and Landgraves of Thuringia. 948-1099 Online at Codex Diplomaticus Saxoniae Regiae
  3. Welcome to the Döbern-Land office. (PDF; 699 KB) Reuthen. Office Döbern-Land, June 2015, accessed on May 28, 2017 .
  4. a b c Lehmann, Historisches Ortslexikon, Niederlausitz, 2, pp. 122/23.
  5. Ernst Eichler: The place names of Niederlausitz. VEB Domowina-Verlag, Bautzen 1975
  6. Steller, Saganer Lehenbriefe, Regest no. 8th.
  7. Steller, Adel, p. 26.
  8. a b Vetter: On the history of Bloischdorf. Calau-Cottbus-Spremberger district calendar 2 (1908): 31–47, Potsdam, 1907.
  9. Steller, Adel, p. 34.
  10. Steller, Saganer Lehenbriefe, Regest no. 91.
  11. ^ Heinrich, Geschichte, p. 203 (= p. 111 of the document). Online at Biblioteka Cyfrowa of Uniwersytet Wrocławski
  12. ^ Heinrich, Geschichte, p. 198 (= p. 108 of the document). Online at Biblioteka Cyfrowa of Uniwersytet Wrocławski
  13. Houwald, Rittergüter, Vol. 1, Spremberg, p. 31.
  14. Steller, Adel, p. 50.
  15. a b Sigismund Justus Ehrhardt: Several old documents, which concern the church history of the Principality of Sagan, from the originals. New diplomatic contributions to explain the old Lower Silesian history. Second piece. P. 66–94 S., Johann Friedrich Korn, Breslau 1773 Online at Google Books (p. 89)
  16. a b Friedrich Gottlob Leonhardi: Earth Description of the Prussian Monarchy, Volume 2. 744 S., Hemmerde & Schwetschke, Halle 1791 Online at Google Books (p. 596)
  17. Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Frankfurth ad O. 388 S., G. Hayn, Berlin, 1820, p. 295.
  18. JC Müller: Complete geographical-static-topographical dictionary of the Prussian state. First volume AE. JC Müllersche Buchhandlung, Erfurt 1835. Online at Google Books , p. 301.
  19. Official Gazette of the Royal Prussian Government in Frankfurt an der Oder, Oeffentlicher Anzeiger as a supplement to the Official Gazette No. 19 of May 10, 1837, p. 173 online at Google Books
  20. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Prussian Government in Frankfurt an der Oder, No. 12 of March 24, 1841, p. 87 Online at Google Books
  21. ^ Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus: Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz in the middle of the 19th century; or geographical-historical-statistical description of the Province of Brandenburg, at the instigation of the State Minister and Upper President Flottwell. Third volume. XCV S. + 783 S., printed and published by Adolph Müller, Brandenburg, 1856. Online at Google Books , p. 728.
  22. official journal of the Royal Prussian government to Frankfurt an der Oder, the special supplement to the Official Journal No.41 of 8 October 1856 25. Live on Google Books
  23. ^ Karl Friedrich Rauer: Address book of the manor owners and manors in the Prussian states; 2: Alphabetical evidence (address book) of the aristocracy resident in the Prussian states with manorial estates. Berlin, Kühn 1857 Online at Google Books
  24. First supplement to No. 598 of the national newspaper of December 23, 1862 Online at Google Books
  25. a b Official Journal of the Royal Prussian Government in Frankfurt an der Oder, No. 10 of March 10, 1875, p. 70 Online at Google Books
  26. ^ Paul Ellerholz, H. Lodemann, H. von Wedell: General address book of the manor and estate owners in the German Empire. With details of the properties, their size (in Culturart), their net income from property tax, their tenants, branches of industry and post offices. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery The Province of Brandenburg. 311 pp., Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung R. Stricker, Berlin 1879, PDF , pp. 184-185.
  27. ^ Paul Ellerholz: Handbook of real estate in the German Empire. With indication of all goods, their quality, their size (in culture type); your property tax net income; their owners, tenants, administrators etc .; of industries; Postal stations; Breeding of special cattle, exploitation of livestock etc. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery: Province of Brandenburg. 2nd improved edition, 340 pp., Berlin, Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1885, pp. 120/21.
  28. 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. 118/19.
  29. Ernst Seyfert, Hans Wehner, Alexander Haußknecht, Ludwig Hogrefe (eds.): Agricultural address book of the manors, estates and farms of the province of Brandenburg: List of all manors, estates and farms from approx. 20 ha upwards with information on the property, the total area and the area of ​​the individual crops, the livestock, the company's own industrial facilities and telephone connections, details of the owners, tenants and administrators, the post, telegraph and railway stations and their distance from the property, the regional and local courts, an alphabetical register of places and persons , a directory of the most important government agencies and agencies, agricultural associations and corporations. 4th increased and improved edition, 464 p., Leipzig, Verlag von Niekammer's address books, Leipzig, 1929 (Niekammer's goods address books, Volume VII), p. 222/23.
  30. ^ German gender book (Genealogisches Handbuch Bürgerlicher Familien), volume 142, p. 164 snippets at Google Books
  31. Royal Statistical Bureau: 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. The Province of Brandenburg. Verlag des Königlich Statistischen Bureau, Berlin 1873 Online at Google Books , pp. 234–37.
  32. Contribution to the statistics of the State Office for Data Processing and Statistics. Historical community directory of the State of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 19.13 District Spree-Neisse PDF
  33. a b 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. 598
  34. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Prussian Government in Frankfurt an der Oder, Extraordinary Supplement to Official Gazette No. 20 of May 20, 1874, pp. 1–2 online at Bayerische Staatssammlung digital Books
  35. ^ Church Bloischdorf on the website kath-spremberg.de: Chronology. Accessed October 1, 2018 (German).
  36. Catholic village church St. Joseph in Bloischdorf
  37. List of monuments of the state of Brandenburg: District Spree-Neiße (PDF) Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum
  38. ^ The museum barn in Bloischdorf

annotation

  1. The Meißner diocese registers are often given as 1346, but they can be dated as 1495. However, they are based on an older template.