Bomsdorf (Möckern)

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Bomsdorf
City of Möckern
Coordinates: 52 ° 7 ′ 27 ″  N , 12 ° 6 ′ 24 ″  E
Height : 84 m above sea level NHN
Area : 17.19 km²
Residents : 13  (Dec 31, 2018)
Population density : 1 inhabitant / km²
Incorporation : September 30, 1928
Incorporated into: Loburg
Postal code : 39279
Area code : 039245
South view of the manor house from the former manor Bomsdorf
South view of the manor house from the former manor Bomsdorf
East gable of the field stone barn from the former manor Bomsdorf
Former Bomsdorf train station

Bomsdorf is a district of Möckern in the Jerichower Land district in Saxony-Anhalt .

geography

The village is located three kilometers northeast of Loburg , on the eastern edge of the Loburger Vorfläming protected landscape area of around 2,449 hectares, which was established by ordinance on August 5, 2003 by the former district of Anhalt-Zerbst . The surrounding landscape is predominantly a rural cultural landscape characterized by Ice Age ground moraines . The district of the place belongs to the western Fläming plateau , a heather or grassy forest landscape of the north German lowlands. The terrain here reaches heights of around 80 meters.

Today Bomsdorf consists of two parts. The southern part of the development includes the buildings of the former manor , consisting of a manor house with a park, various barns, stables and other residential buildings. The historical elements formerly formed a rather large four-sided courtyard . After the Second World War , a new part of the village in the form of a street village was created north of it through the construction of several houses .

Some parts of the former manor are only preserved as a desert or in fragments. Outside the courtyard were u. a. two field barns , a cemetery, a Schnitter accommodation and the Vorwerk Heidesegen , located around a kilometer to the north, with a nearby brick factory . But today these are hard to find without local knowledge.

history

The first mention of the place can be found in a document in 1311, in which the ministerial family de Bomestorp is apparently named after its owned village. At that time, the area belonged to the 1st district in the Jerichow district of the ore monastery of Magdeburg. Still referred to as the desert village of Bomsdorf in 1568 , it became part of the property of the von Barby family on December 1, 1646 by loan letter . However, on November 27, 1672 Levin von Barby sold the village, which had meanwhile been re-established as a dairy farm, again. The place became part of the Brandenburg-Prussian Duchy of Magdeburg in 1680 and of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1701.

In a description from the year 1785 the place is called a Vorwerk and the number of inhabitants is given as 29. Eleven births and seven deaths were recorded as the population development over the past ten years. It is said to have included six fire pits, 727 acres of farmland, 35 acres of meadow, four acres of gardens and three small ponds. The residents were parish off to Loburg , the upper courts were held by the Royal Office of Loburg , and the lower courts by the owner of the Vorwerk, whose name is given as Pape . Around 1800, the independent manor Bomsdorf, including two residential buildings and a brick factory, emerged from the dairy or the Vorwerk.

Before 1807 it belonged to the Duchy of Magdeburg, the place became part of the Kurmark during the Westphalian interim rule in Magdeburg and after the end of the Wars of Liberation to the district of Jerichow I of the administrative district of Magdeburg in the Prussian province of Saxony . The manor suitable for the Landtag was given in 1818 with 33 and in 1842 with 40 inhabitants. According to a count from December 1861, there were eight campfire sites and 49 residents here, parish of the Protestant parish Loburg, which belonged to the superintendent district and post-order district of the same name . The relevant branch court was also there, the main course of the First Instance in Castle and the appeal court in Magdeburg. The then mandatory military ratio assigned the residents of the 5th  Company of the 2nd Battalion of Regiment No. 26 of the 1st Magdeburg Landwehr . On December 1, 1910, the manor district had a total of 84 inhabitants, probably one of the highest values ​​ever. On September 30, 1928, the manor district of Bomsdorf was united with the city of Loburg. This means that the village was part of the city of Loburg until it was incorporated on January 1, 2009. Today Bomsdorf is part of the unified municipality of Möckern.

traffic

Bomsdorf is on the Biederitz – Altengrabow railway line and has a rather inconspicuous stop here . This is only very rarely used to stop in the context of temporary museum traffic.

Personalities

  • Andreas Truckenbrodt (1852–1910), councilor and entrepreneur, worked in 1872 as an inspector at the manor Bomsdorf
  • Fritz Saacke (1926–2017), politician (CDU) and member of the Lower Saxony state parliament was born here

Web links

Commons : Bomsdorf  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. City of Möckern - Main Office (ed.): Development of the inhabitants in the districts and localities of the city of Möckern - Basis: City residents' registration file - as of December 31, 2018 . January 25, 2019.
  2. Main statute of the city of Möckern in the version of September 25, 2014 - including 1st and 2nd amendment . June 1, 2018 ( full text [PDF; 115 kB ; accessed on December 28, 2018]).
  3. Landkreis Anhalt-Zerbst (Ed.): Ordinance on the landscape protection area Loburger Vorfläming . Zerbst August 5, 2003 ( lau.sachsen-anhalt.de ( Memento from July 25, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) [PDF; 19.7 MB ; accessed on June 19, 2016]).
  4. Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation ( information )
  5. Gustav Reischel: Desert science of the districts Jerichow I and Jerichow II . 1930. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  6. ^ Johann Ludwig Heineccius: Detailed topographical description of the Duchy of Magdeburg. 1785, p. 224 , accessed April 20, 2013 .
  7. a b A. Bühling: Handbook of the administrative district of Magdeburg. Location directory. 1864, p. 22 f. , accessed September 18, 2016 .
  8. Eugen Huhn: Handbook from the administrative districts of Magdeburg . Historical commission for the province of Saxony and for Anhalt, 1848, p. 144, Textarchiv - Internet Archive
  9. ^ Royal Government of Magdeburg: Official Gazette . 1829. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
  10. ^ Uli Schubert: Municipal directory Germany 1900 . July 15, 2009. Retrieved April 21, 2013.
  11. Administrative region of Magdeburg (Ed.): Official Gazette of the Government of Magdeburg . 1928, ZDB -ID 3766-7 , p. 201 .
  12. Ludwig Weber: The print brodt (T.) zu Gutenswegen, undated . 1910. Retrieved April 20, 2013.