Beeskow

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the city of Beeskow
Beeskow
Map of Germany, position of the city of Beeskow highlighted

Coordinates: 52 ° 10 ′  N , 14 ° 15 ′  E

Basic data
State : Brandenburg
County : Oder-Spree
Height : 40 m above sea level NHN
Area : 77.82 km 2
Residents: 8040 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 103 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 15848
Area code : 03366
License plate : LOS, BSK, EH, FW
Community key : 12 0 67 036
City structure: Core city and 7 districts

City administration address :
Berliner Strasse 30
15848 Beeskow
Website : www.beeskow.de
Mayor : Frank Steffen ( SPD )
Location of the district town of Beeskow in the Oder-Spree district
Bad Saarow Beeskow Berkenbrück Briesen Brieskow-Finkenheerd Diensdorf-Radlow Eisenhüttenstadt Erkner Friedland Fürstenwalde/Spree Gosen-Neu Zittau Groß Lindow Grünheide Grunow-Dammendorf Jacobsdorf Langewahl Lawitz Briesen (Mark) Mixdorf Müllrose Neißemünde Neuzelle Ragow-Merz Rauen Reichenwalde Rietz-Neuendorf Schlaubetal Schöneiche Siehdichum Spreenhagen Steinhöfel Storkow Tauche Vogelsang Wendisch Rietz Wiesenau Woltersdorf Ziltendorf Brandenburgmap
About this picture

Beeskow  [ ˈbeːsko ] , ( Lower Sorbian Bezkow ) is the district town of the Oder-Spree district in Brandenburg ( Germany ). Please click to listen!Play

geography

Beeskow is located on the eastern edge of the Beeskower Platte on the Spree , about 80 km southeast of Berlin and about 30 km southwest of Frankfurt (Oder) ; the Oder is about 30 km to the east. Large forest and meadow areas with many smaller and larger lakes extend around the city. Beeskow is called the "gateway to Lower Lusatia ".

City structure

Beeskow consists of the core city of Beeskow and seven districts:

In addition, the following residential spaces are shown: Bahrensdorf, Bornower Berg, Charlottenhof, Hannemannei, Hufenfeld, Kietz, Radinkendorf expansion, Vorheide, Weinberge and Wilhelmshöhe.

history

Market square, east side with Marienkirche
Market square, west side
City wall with stork tower in the background
city ​​wall
View from the castle tower to the Marienkirche

Until the 19th century

Beeskow was created at the point where the long-distance route from Frankfurt (Oder) to Leipzig crosses the Spree. The place name, which comes from Sorbian , is derived either from bez or baz for " elder ", or from a personal name Bezek or Bezik (from b (j) ez = "without").

The city founders and first city lords were the Knights of Strele in the 13th century . Under the protection of the castle, which was first mentioned in 1316, the city was laid out according to plan. The castle and city wall have largely been preserved. Since 1375 there was evidence of a leprosarium in Beeskow "in front of the Fürstenwalder Tor" , which was dedicated to St. Nicholas. The associated chapel was rebuilt in 1486.

In the 15th and 16th centuries, Beeskow gained importance as a customs post and as the center of the Beeskow rule , which belonged to Lower Lusatia in the Middle Ages . The city was also ecclesiastically oriented to the south. She belonged to the diocese of Meissen ; the city parish was under the patronage of the Neuzelle monastery . In the late Middle Ages, the city and the rulers changed hands several times. Towards the end of the 14th century, the Beeskow rule was owned by Duke Swantibor of Pomerania. After that she belonged among other things to members of the von Bieberstein family (last 1512–1551). Since 1518 Beeskow was owned by the Lubusz bishops .

After the Lords of Bieberstein died out in December 1551, the Bohemian King Ferdinand I enfeoffed the Margraves of Brandenburg with the Lords of Beeskow and Storkow five years later . Officially, Beeskow remained a Bohemian fiefdom and part of Niederlausitz, but in the following decades the Hohenzollerns succeeded in loosening their newly won rule more and more from Niederlausitz. Around 1600 Beeskow had finally become part of Brandenburg in its entirety, even though the Lower Lusatian estates did not want to recognize this fact for a long time. Nominally, the Bohemian lordship remained in place until 1742, when Frederick II broke the lordship from Maria Theresa's feudal lordship .

In two city fires in the 16th and 17th centuries, Beeskow was almost completely destroyed, after the reconstruction it became a garrison town . Beeskow experienced an economic heyday in the 19th century, especially with cloth, linen and beer.

With the opening of the railway line to Grunow , Beeskow received a train station and connection to the German railway network on May 15, 1888 . This was followed by the lines to Königs Wusterhausen (1898), Lübben via the Niederlausitzer Eisenbahn (1901, closed in 1996) and Bad Saarow via the Fürstenwalde – Beeskow district railway (1911, until 1998).

20th century

On April 23, 1945, a Soviet air raid partially destroyed the old town. The heavy artillery fire of the following days fell u. a. the Gothic brick church of St. Mary's Sacrifice. The destroyed areas of the city were partly rebuilt in rows in the 1950s and 1960s. After the fall of the Wall , the historical buildings in the old town, including the Marienkirche, were restored . The city is a member of the working group "Cities with historic city centers" of the state of Brandenburg.

In Beeskow there was a small Jewish community ( Kehillah ) with a synagogue , which today serves as a residential building. A Jewish cemetery from the first half of the 19th century was not destroyed during the Nazi era; existing gravestones were combined to form a monument in the 1980s. Two stumbling blocks were laid in 2014, but they were stolen the following day.

From 1836 to 1950 Beeskow was in the Beeskow-Storkow district in the Prussian province of Brandenburg . The seat of the district office was in the city. After the district was dissolved, the city moved to the Frankfurt (Oder) district from 1950–1952 , before the Beeskow district was re-created in 1952 . Beeskow was a district town from 1952 to 1993 (until 1990 in the GDR district of Frankfurt (Oder) , from 1990 to 1993 in the state of Brandenburg ).

From 1960 to 1990, Beeskow was home to the Institute of Civil Defense of the GDR, the College of Civil Defense .

Incorporations

On July 1, 1950, Neuendorf and Radinkendorf on July 1, 1974, were incorporated into the urban area. On December 6, 1993, the former communities Bornow, Kohlsdorf, Krügersdorf, Oegeln and Schneeberg were incorporated.

Population development

year Residents
1875 5 078
1890 5 144
1910 5 025
1925 5 454
1933 6 098
1939 5 856
1946 7 571
1950 7 544
1964 7 426
1971 7 610
year Residents
1981 8 722
1985 8 862
1989 9 016
1990 8 892
1991 8 771
1992 8 774
1993 9 415
1994 9 329
1995 9 403
1996 9 549
year Residents
1997 9 398
1998 9 294
1999 9 100
2000 8 946
2001 8,865
2002 8 756
2003 8 612
2004 8 594
2005 8 432
2006 8 365
year Residents
2007 8 314
2008 8 235
2009 8 206
2010 8 120
2011 8 030
2012 7 996
2013 7,981
2014 7,964
2015 8 122
2016 8 099
year Residents
2017 8 080
2018 8 042
2019 8 040

Territory of the respective year, number of inhabitants: as of December 31 (from 1991), from 2011 based on the 2011 census

politics

City Council

The city council of Beeskow consists of 18 city councilors and the full-time mayor. Since the local elections on May 26, 2019, it has been composed as follows:

Party / group of voters Share of votes Seats
SPD 22.3% 4th
Citizens' forum Beeskow 20.5% 4th
CDU 18.7% 3
The left 17.6% 3
Beeskow and districts in view 08.7% 2
Farmer-hunter-angler 06.9% 1
FDP 05.3% 1

mayor

  • 1901–1933: Friedrich Wilhelm Berthold
  • 1934–1945: SA Brigade Leader Heuer
  • 1945–1946: Arthur Fehlauer
  • 1946–1950: Fritz Seiffert
  • 1950–1952: Erich Noack
  • 1952–1954: Otto Pirke
  • 1954–1956: Rudolf Schütz
  • 1956–1960: Edmund Stahl
  • 1960–1961: Irene Schlingelhof
  • 1961–1964: Hans Göldner
  • 1964–1965: Rudi Buder
  • 1965–1974: Otto Pirke
  • 1974–1990: Peter Prang ( SED )
  • 1990–2010: Fritz Taschenberger ( SPD )
  • since 2010: 0.Frank Steffen (SPD)

In the mayoral election on September 24, 2017, Steffen was confirmed in office with 62.7% of the valid votes for a further term of eight years.

coat of arms

Coat of arms of the Beeskow-Storkow district (1836–1950) above the portal of the Kreissparkasse building

The coat of arms was approved on March 15, 1997.

Blazon : “In red a pointed Gothic portal decorated with four pinnacles and provided with two openings placed one above the other, covered with two shields placed diagonally against one another. In front three silver scythe blades, one on top of the other, in red (with the edge turned upwards); behind in gold a red, five-ended stag pole, bent to the right. "

The shield with three scythes is the coat of arms of the first city lords, the Knights of Strele. The red stag pole in the golden background is the coat of arms of the Lords of Biberstein . The four turrets have emerged over time from four rods that towered over the head of the shield of the oldest known Beeskow city coat of arms. The rods should represent bishop's rods, since the Beeskow rule belonged to the diocese of Lebus in the 16th century . The gate facade is a general city symbol and has no relation to any local historical structure. This coat of arms is documented in the Brandenburg State Main Archives on sealed documents from the years 1534 and 1540.

Town twinning

Beeskow maintains partnerships with Kamen in North Rhine-Westphalia and with Sulęcin (until 1945: Zielenzig) in Poland .

Sights and culture

Architectural monuments

Beeskow's oldest house
Manor house in the district of Krügersdorf
  • Medieval Beeskow Castle , today serves as an educational, cultural and music school center for the Oder-Spree district. The castle complex houses the regional museum for the Beeskow-Storkow region with a medieval magazine and torture cellar as well as changing exhibitions, especially on art in the GDR , which is kept here in the Beeskow art archive . In addition, in May 2018 in the castle previously in Monschau -based Museum of Music Beeskow reopened.
  • St. Marien Church , one of the largest brick Gothic churches in the Mark Brandenburg, was built as a four-aisled hall church with an ambulatory choir from 1370/80 and completed in 1511 when the tower pyramid was completed. A comprehensive restoration was completed in 1933. The church was destroyed on April 26, 1945 by artillery fire from the advancing Red Army at the end of the Second World War. The tower collapsed, the burning roof collapsed into the nave . The fire was exacerbated by books moved from the Prussian State Library to the church. In 1949 the seven huge pillars of the nave collapsed. After the heavy destruction, the remains were secured in an emergency, the south aisle was consecrated as an emergency church and in 1965 a Schuke organ was installed . In 1976 extensive securing work began on the wall crowns and roofs. The planned reconstruction of the church was not possible until 1991, also with support from the German Foundation for Monument Protection .
  • Oldest house in Beeskow, built around 1482, between Marienkirche and market square
  • City wall, largely preserved, with well-preserved towers, including the Luckau gate tower, known as the "Dicker Turm", a landmark of the city
  • Former monk's hostel right next to the city wall, was once accommodation for wandering monks, Theodor Fontane stopped here
  • Fischerkiez
  • Jewish cemetery on Kohlsdorfer Chaussee
  • Graves of Lithuanian and Polish forced laborers in the cemetery on Storkower Strasse
  • Memorial for the Victims of Fascism (since 1969) in Breitscheidstrasse
  • Former fire brigade school "Schloss Bahrensdorf" consisting of the former manor house (rest home), riser and fire watch tower with siren, gas training house and infirmary, car hall / training building, administration and residential building as well as granite paving in front of the car hall. It was opened in July 1927 as the first German fire brigade school.

See also: List of architectural monuments in Beeskow and List of ground monuments in Beeskow with the monuments entered in the monuments list of the state of Brandenburg.

museum

In August 2016 a music museum opened in Beeskow , in which mechanical and self-playing musical instruments are exhibited. After some of its exhibits were exhibited in a former department store , it was integrated into Beeskow Castle in May 2018.

Cultural events

  • New year run
  • Concert series St. Marien (all year round)
  • Walpurgis Night and Hollefest
  • Spring market and autumn market
  • Festival of Cultures
  • Old Town Festival (1st weekend in June)
  • Old town run
  • Long night
  • Kiezer water sports festival
  • Fishing Festival (August)
  • Opera Oder / Spree (August)
  • Farmer's market with harvest crown competition (September)
  • medieval wool market (end of October)
  • Christmas market (November / December)

literature

A scholarship for writers is awarded annually. The “Burgschreiber” lives from June 11th of each year for a period of six months at Beeskow Castle to deal with the region and its people, to actively participate in social life and to have the opportunity to work in peace. The castle scribes offer readings and other events for guests at the castle.

The writer Günter de Bruyn lives near Beeskow and has the landscape offside in his book . Declaration of love to a landscape (Frankfurt 2006) set a literary monument.

Movie

On the night of June 16, 2004, two young people from Beeskow attacked a homeless man, tried to rob him and set him on fire. The homeless suffered life-threatening burns. The circumstances of this act were dealt with in the feature film Weltstadt , which premiered in 2008 and directed by Christian Klandt , who grew up in Beeskow, with Florian Bartholomäi in the lead role. Most of the film was shot in Beeskow, and numerous amateur actors from the city also took part.

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

media

education

  • Benjamin Blümchen day care center
  • Day care center Maya the Bee
  • Kiefernzwerge day care center
  • Day care center AWO-Hort in the elementary school on the city wall
  • Spreespatzen day care center
  • Fontane Elementary School
  • Elementary school on the city wall
  • Albert Schweitzer High School
  • Rouanet high school
  • Community College

Sports

The largest sports club in the city is SV Preußen 90 Beeskow with the departments football, volleyball, table tennis, tennis, gymnastics, badminton , taekwondo , dragon boat and boxing (as of 2017).

The Athletics Association in Beeskow organizes various sporting events, such as the New Year's Run, the Beeskow Old Town Run (held for the first time in 2012), the Beeskow track walking and the children's Olympics.

In the sports and leisure center on Bertholdplatz there are several soccer fields, a 400 m circular track with tartan surface, a throwing area, two gyms (one of which has space for around 200 spectators) as well as tennis and beach volleyball courts. There is also the possibility of bowling and bowling.

Personalities

sons and daughters of the town

Personalities associated with Beeskow

literature

  • Beeskow. Then and now. Culturcon / Märkische Oderzeitung, 2011, ISBN 978-3-941092-72-3
  • City of Beeskow (ed.): Information brochure Beeskow 2017. without date, p. 42

Web links

Commons : Beeskow  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files
Wikivoyage: Beeskow  - travel guide

Individual evidence

  1. Population in the State of Brandenburg according to municipalities, offices and municipalities not subject to official registration on December 31, 2019 (XLSX file; 223 KB) (updated official population figures) ( help on this ).
  2. Place names Niederlausitz / Wejsne mjenja Dolna Łužyca ( Memento from March 2, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  3. ^ The place names of the Beeskow-Storkow district. ISBN 3-515-08664-1 , pp. 226-228
  4. Main statute of the city of Beeskow from April 22, 2009 PDF
  5. ^ Service portal of the state administration of the state of Brandenburg: City of Beeskow
  6. ^ Walter Wenzel: New interpretations of Niederlausitzer place names . In: Lětopis . tape 2 , 2006, p. 73-89 .
  7. ^ Heinrich Gottfried Philipp Gengler : Regesta and documents on the legal and constitutional history of German cities in the Middle Ages. Erlangen 1863, pp. 169-179 .
  8. see overview of the Society for Leprosy, Documentation: Medieval Leprosy Houses in today's Brandenburg and Berlin ( memento of October 11, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), Die Klapper 1998, accessed October 11, 2016
  9. About Duke Swantibor of Pomerania taking possession of the Beeskow rule in the last years of the 14th century. In: General Archive for the History of the Prussian State. Volume 3. Berlin / Posen / Bromberg 1830, pp. 130-136 ( full text )
  10. 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 .
  11. ^ Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. Landkreis Oder-Spree . Pp. 14-17
  12. Population in the state of Brandenburg from 1991 to 2015 according to independent cities, districts and municipalities , Table 7
  13. ^ Office for Statistics Berlin-Brandenburg (Ed.): Statistical report AI 7, A II 3, A III 3. Population development and population status in the state of Brandenburg (respective editions of the month of December)
  14. ^ Result of the local elections on May 26, 2016
  15. wahlen.beeskow.de Former mayors
  16. ^ Result of the mayoral election on September 24, 2017
  17. Coat of arms information on the service portal of the state administration of Brandenburg
  18. ^ Website of the music museum Burg Beeskow
  19. ^ Franz-Josef Sehr : Development of fire protection . In: Freiwillige Feuerwehr Obertiefenbach e. V. (Ed.): 125 years of the Obertiefenbach volunteer fire brigade . Reference 2005, ISBN 978-3-926262-03-5 , pp. 116-117 .
  20. Music Museum starts in Kaufhalle . In: Märkische Onlinezeitung , May 21, 2016
  21. Homeless man was robbed and set on fire. In: Berliner Zeitung . July 3, 2004
  22. ^ Website for the film Weltstadt
  23. ^ Obituary by Otto Hoffmann