Borgsee

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Borgsee
New Schwinz Borgsee 2012-03-23 ​​534.JPG
Geographical location Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania , Ludwigslust-Parchim district
Drain Ditch to Lüschow
Location close to the shore New Schwinz , Schwinz brick factory
Data
Coordinates 53 ° 37 '11 "  N , 12 ° 6' 46"  E Coordinates: 53 ° 37 '11 "  N , 12 ° 6' 46"  E
Borgsee (Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania)
Borgsee
Altitude above sea level 46  m above sea level NHN
surface 4.8 ha
scope 820 m
Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE AREA Template: Infobox Lake / Maintenance / EVIDENCE SCOPE

The Borgsee is a lake in the area of ​​the municipality of Dobbertin in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania . It was once part of the Lüschow , to which there is still a moat connection today.

geography

The body of water is located in the Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide nature park, about 2.4 kilometers east of the village of Dobbertin and 3.2 kilometers northeast of Goldberg city ​​center. Although the Borgsee lies in the municipality of Dobbertin, a large part of the bank, with the exception of the northern bank area, forms the border with Goldberg. About 260 meters east of the lake is the Dobbertiner district of Neu Schwinz , about 190 meters south of the Schwinzer Ziegelei settlement belonging to Goldberg. The lake is completely surrounded by forest. The terrain rises relatively steeply to the west and east. The flatter bank areas in the south and north to the Lüschow are swampy.

The 4.8 hectare body of water has a poorly structured, almost circular shape with a diameter of around 250 meters. The circumference of the water surface is about 820 meters, the water level is 46 meters above sea ​​level . To the north the lake drains over a ditch to the Lüschow. In 1937 the Borgsee still had an area of ​​9 hectares and an average water depth of two meters.

history

The Borgsee was once part of the northern neighboring lake, the Lüschow. Between the larger lake area in the north and the basin of today's Borgsee, the peninsula, known as Tannen Werder , in more recent maps as an island , protruded into the lake. On Wiebeking's map from 1786, today's Borgsee is still part of the Lüschow.

In the middle of Tannen Werder there is an almost circular alder population (quarry forest) on mineral soil. This alder population is likely to stand on or in a Slavic ring wall . The castle that gave the Burgsee (Borgsee) its name is said to have stood there.

Due to changes in the water network in the Dobbertiner lake area after 1772, in particular the drainage of the Dobbiner and Klädener lakes after 1816 and the lowering of the Dobbertiner lake until 1865, the Borgsee was separated from the Lüschow by siltation before 1882.

On November 10, 1901, the forest inspector Julius Garthe from the Dobbertin monastery forest office reported that only a narrow ditch connects the Borgsee with the Lüschow as the border of the Dobbertin monastery between the Schwinzer Forst and the Grand Ducal Forest Goldberg.

See also

literature

  • Klaus Weidermann: In: On the history of forests, forests and settlements. Ed .: Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide Nature Park. Karow, 1999. (From culture and science; Issue 1)

cards

  • Topographical, economic and military chart of the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin 1788 Dobbertin monastery office with the Sandpropstei of Count Schmettau.
  • Wiebeking map of Mecklenburg 1786.
  • Economic map of the Dobbertin Forestry Office 1927/1928.

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. a b Borgsee on map DTK10 and aerial photos in the Geoportal MV
  2. Topographic map 1: 10,000 0506-114 Goldberg ( Memento of the original from December 25, 2015 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. on geogreif.de @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / greif.uni-greifswald.de
  3. Measurement table sheet 1885/1993
  4. Sebastian Lorenz: In: Dobbertiner Seengebiet and Mildenitz-Durchbruchstal. Chapter 3, dissertation at the Ernst-Moritz-Arndt University of Greifswald, 2007.
  5. Museum Goldberg: Forest record of Dobbertin monastery. 1425.