Borstel (Stendal)

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Borstel
City of Stendal
Coordinates: 52 ° 38 ′ 29 ″  N , 11 ° 50 ′ 10 ″  E
Height : 48 m
Area : 9.98 km²
Residents : 536  (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 54 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : July 1, 1973
Postal code : 39576
Area code : 03931
Borstel (Saxony-Anhalt)
Borstel

Location in Saxony-Anhalt

Evangelical village church Borstel
Evangelical village church Borstel

Borstel is a district and a town in the Hanseatic city of Stendal in the Stendal district in Saxony-Anhalt .

geography

Borstel, a round village with a church, is located around two kilometers north of Stendal in the Altmark . The Stendal-Borstel airfield is in the immediate vicinity .

history

The place, laid out as a ring village below the church, was first mentioned in a document in 1140 (according to the literature of the Altmark Museum in Stendal). Count Otto von Hillersleben made the Borstel district a gift to the diocese of Havelberg. In 1170, Margrave Otto I (von Tangermünde) administered the area and ensured that numerous new subjects settled there.

In 1209 the place is mentioned as the headquarters of the von Borstell family, who were the brothers Otto and Bernwart von Borstell. The coat of arms of this family and thus also of the town is a green clover leaf on a silver field, decorated with three eagle wings. A village church, a fortified church made of field stone, was built in 1249.

Little is known about precise events from the Middle Ages. In the literature, an alleged castle between Borstel and Eichstedt is repeatedly mentioned, which presumably stood on the site of a court building built by the Slavs at the time of the Great Migration (around 500). It was not until 1541 that the residents of Borstel reported cattle breeding, agriculture and beekeeping as a type of employment. During the Thirty Years' War Borstel was temporarily the headquarters of the imperial general Gallas. Around 1800 a descendant of those von Borstell, Hans Friedrich Heinrich von Borstel (1728–1804), earned services as a Prussian lieutenant general. During the Napoleonic period there was fighting between Prussian and French troops in the immediate vicinity of the village. In the middle of the 19th century, the area south of the village (towards Stendal) was used for the further expansion of the Prussian garrison.

In 1907/1908 a railway line between Stendal and Arendsee was built past Borstel and the place received its own train station. The construction of a hard stone works, according to plans by the engineer Thießen from Neumünster, took place in 1908. This way, bricks could be made from locally occurring sand-lime stone. Initially 14 workers were employed there who worked ten hours a day. Around 130,000 stones were produced every week. In 1930 the workforce consisted of 17 workers. The hard stone plant was dismantled by Russia as a reparation payment after the Second World War.

After the first airplane that the Stendalers saw in their lives landed on the parade ground on the right of the road from Stendal to Borstel in 1910, construction of the Borstel airfield began in 1934. 6,000 workers build barracks for a paratrooper school, roads, a siding and twelve hangars. After the Second World War, this airfield became a base for Soviet troops.

Around 1920 more and more farmers began growing asparagus, which was soon typical for the entire Altmark. In 1953 the Agricultural Production Cooperative (LPG) Borstel was founded and until 1960 the local farmers were fully affiliated to the cooperative.

After the turbulent political events of 1989, which also left a trace on Borstel, partnerships began with residents of “Borstels” - a district of Neustadt am Rübenberge in Lower Saxony .

In 1990 Borstel was 850 years old. The residents and numerous guests celebrated this anniversary from July 5th to 7th. Seven years later, the long overdue sewage side development of Borstel took place. In 1997, the expansion of Osterburger Strasse began. In 2000, the children's playground on the festival meadow was inaugurated on June 1st. After 2002 the former Borsteler train station could be used as a village community center. Furthermore, the construction of the Hartsteinweg and the Eichstedter Bridge (inauguration 2003), the expansion of the Dorfstrasse (released in 2003) and the Borsteler Strasse (inauguration in 2004), and in 2006 the expansion of the Kurzen Strasse began.

In 2005 the memorial stone was ceremoniously unveiled on Lindenplatz and the village renewal program ended in 2007 . DSL has also been available in Borstel since 2011 !

Origin of the place name

The name of the place is of German origin: in 1271 "borstal", 1540 "borstell" is written. It means something like “place of residence”, “farmhouse”, or “farmhouse parlor”, “protection”, “dwelling”.

Incorporations

On July 1, 1973, the Borstel community was incorporated into the city of Stendal from the Stendal district .

Population development

year Residents
1734 246
1772 236
1790 245
1798 262
1801 262
year Residents
1818 265
1840 263
1864 345
1871 341
1885 342
year Residents
1892 [0]362
1895 331
1900 [0]361
1905 321
1910 [0]363
year Residents
1925 0411
1931 1152
1946 0802
1964 0618
1971 0575
year Residents
2013 546
2014 553
2018 548
2019 536

Source if not stated:

religion

The Protestant parish Borstel, which formerly belonged to the parish Neuendorf am Speck near Stendal, is looked after by the parish of Stendal, St. Jacobi in the parish of Stendal in the provost district of Stendal-Magdeburg of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany . Borstel was a mater comibinata, it did not belong to the "mother church" Neuendorf until 1838.

The oldest surviving church registers for Borstel date from 1679.

politics

mayor

The local mayor of Borstel is Karl-Heinz Krause.

Local council

In the local council election on May 26, 2019, 5 individual applicants were elected from 6 individual applicants and 2 individual applicants (5 seats). A council became local mayor. Of 477 eligible voters, 313 had cast their vote, making the turnout 65.6 percent.

Culture and sights

Church with cemetery wall
  • The Protestant village church Borstel, a field stone building from the 13th century, was expanded in 1858. The west transverse tower has a half-timbered tower and a gable roof. The association for the preservation of the village church in Borstel takes care of the preservation of the church.
  • The church is in the local cemetery.
  • On the southern part of the cemetery wall, about two meters west of the gate, the shaft of a broken cross protrudes from the wall.

Local transport

Regular buses and on-call buses run by Regionalverkehrsbetriebe Westsachsen (RVW) under the brand name stendalbus . The Borstel depot (Kr Stendal) is on the Magdeburg – Wittenberge railway line . In addition, Borstel used to be on the Stendaler Kleinbahn .

air traffic

The Stendal airfield (identifier: EDOV) is located in the Borstel district of Stendal. In addition to private sport aviation, it is also used by business aviators as well as by the federal police and the armed forces.

Organizations and associations

Borstel owns the Altmark Village Association Borstel e. V. , which was founded in 1996 and tries to maintain and promote social life in Borstel. The members organize village festivals, work assignments and information events for the citizens of Borstel. Furthermore, the Schröderhof Borstel e. V. , who plans to build a multi-generation farm based on the vision of some Borsteler. The foundation stone was laid in 2017 after the renovation of an old farm began and living space for young and old was built there. For active leisure activities, there is the Borstel volunteer fire brigade, Volkssolidarität, the local council and a regulars' table for Skat fans.

literature

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Donald Lyco: After ten years again below 40,000 . In: Stendaler Volksstimme . January 10, 2020, p. 13 .
  2. District of Stendal: Main statutes of the Hanseatic city of Stendal . In: Official Journal for the district of Stendal . 26th year, no. 35 , December 7, 2016, ZDB -ID 2665593-7 , p. 203–207 ( landkreis-stendal.de [PDF; 2.1 MB ; accessed on July 26, 2020]).
  3. ^ A b Peter P. Rohrlach: Historical Ortlexikon für die Altmark (Historical Ortlexikon für Brandenburg, Part XII) . Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-8305-2235-5 , pp. 305-309 .
  4. Stendal's Borstel district at stendal.de, accessed on May 16, 2018.
  5. a b Friedrich Hoßfeld, Ernst Haetge: The district of Stendal Land (=  The art monuments of the province of Saxony . Volume 3 ). Hopfer, 1933, DNB  362544441 , p. 35-37 .
  6. Federal Statistical Office (Ed.): Municipalities 1994 and their changes since 01.01.1948 in the new federal states . Metzler-Poeschel, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 , pp. 345 .
  7. ^ A b c Wilhelm Zahn : Local history of the Altmark. Edited by Martin Ehlies based on the bequests of the author. 2nd Edition. Verlag Salzwedeler Wochenblatt, Graphische Anstalt, Salzwedel 1928, DNB  578458357 , OCLC 614308966 , p. 107-108 .
  8. a b Bernd-Volker Brahms: For the first time since the fall of the Wall, a plus . In: Stendaler Volksstimme . January 13, 2015, p. 13 .
  9. ^ A b parish almanac or the evangelical clergy and churches of the province of Saxony in the counties of Wernigerode, Rossla and Stolberg . 19th year, 1903, ZDB -ID 551010-7 , p. 112 ( wiki-de.genealogy.net [accessed August 4, 2020]).
  10. ^ Parish area Stendal, St. Jacobi. Retrieved April 11, 2020 .
  11. Altmärkischer Dorfverein Borstel e. V. In: stendal-borstel.de. 2019, accessed August 3, 2020 .
  12. Ernst Machholz: The church books of the Protestant churches in the province of Saxony (=  communications from the Central Office for German Personal and Family History . 30th issue). Leipzig 1925, p. 16 ( wiki-de.genealogy.net [accessed August 3, 2020]).
  13. Hanseatic City of Stendal: Localities of the Hanseatic City of Stendal. In: stendal.de. July 9, 2020, accessed August 3, 2020 .
  14. ^ The City Returning Officer, Hanseatic City of Stendal: Public election announcement. Determination of the final result of the local council election in the village of Borstel in the Hanseatic city of Stendal on May 26, 2019 . In: Official Journal for the district of Stendal . 29th year, no. 19 , June 12, 2019, ZDB -ID 2665593-7 , p. 138 139 ( landkreis-stendal.de [PDF; 642 kB ; accessed on August 2, 2020]).
  15. Thomas Hartwig: All Altmark churches from A to Z . Elbe-Havel-Verlag, Havelberg 2012, ISBN 978-3-9814039-5-4 , p. 65 .
  16. Altmärkischer Dorfverein Borstel e. V. at stendal-borstel.de, accessed on May 16, 2018.
  17. Altmärkischer Dorfverein Borstel e. V. at stendal-borstel.de, accessed on May 16, 2018.