Dambeck (Salzwedel)

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Dambeck
City of Salzwedel
Coordinates: 52 ° 48 ′ 8 "  N , 11 ° 9 ′ 43"  E
Height : 33 m above sea level NHN
Area : 13.56 km²
Residents : 200  (December 31, 2015)
Population density : 15 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 2003
Postal code : 29410
Area code : 03901
Dambeck village church
Dambeck village church
Dambeck (Saxony-Anhalt)
Dambeck
Dambeck
Location of Dambeck in Saxony-Anhalt

Dambeck is a village and part of the town of Salzwedel in the Altmarkkreis Salzwedel in Saxony-Anhalt .

geography

The Altmark village of Dambeck, a street village with a church, is located around five kilometers south of the core town of Salzwedel in an agricultural area. The Jeetze flows east of the village. About 1.5 kilometers to the south is the Dambeck district with the Dambeck monastery .

The closest localities are the Salzwedeler districts of Brewitz in the north and Altensalzwedel in the south as well as Kuhfelde in the southwest and Maxdorf in the southeast. The place is characterized by the village street running in east-west direction, on which almost all houses are. A total of 320 inhabitants live in Dambeck, Amt Dambeck and Brewitz.

Local division

The village of Dambeck consists of the districts Dambeck, Dambeck and Brewitz.

history

In 1349 dominus gotscalcus plebanus in villa dambeke , the pastor in the village of Dambeck, is mentioned as a witness.

Wilhelm Zahn lists dambke in 1359 as the first mention of the village without giving any details. In 1359 a document reports about nobles in Dambeke .

In a will from 1360 there is talk of to dambeke .

In the Landbuch der Mark Brandenburg from 1375 the place is listed as Dambeke . In 1804 the village was called Dambeck or Kirchdambeck .

During the land reform in 1945, the following were determined: 34 properties under 100 hectares with a total of 499 hectares of land. The church had 10 hectares and the school property in the Dambeck district had 267 hectares. At the time it was administered and operated by SMA . In 1954 the first agricultural production cooperative of type III, the LPG "Neues Deutschland", was established.

Incorporations

On September 30, 1928 the manor district Amt Dambeck was united with the rural community Dambeck.

On July 1, 1950, the previously independent community of Brewitz from the district of Salzwedel was incorporated into the community of Dambeck.

On January 1, 2003, the Dambeck community was incorporated into Salzwedel. At the same time the village of Dambeck was created with the districts Dambeck, Dambeck and Brewitz.

Population development

year Residents
1734 140
1774 169
1789 154
1798 134
1801 139
1818 162
year Residents
1840 237
1864 266
1871 238
1885 226
1892 [0]227
1895 227
year Residents
1900 [0]244
1905 234
1910 [0]222
1925 376
1939 299
1946 490
year Residents
1964 553
1971 472
1981 393
1993 392

Source if not stated:

religion

The Protestant parish Dambeck belonged to the parish Dambeck. The Evangelicals from Dambeck today belong to the parish of Apenburg in the parish of Salzwedel in the Provostspengel Stendal-Magdeburg of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany .

Culture and sights

  • The Dambeck village church was built as a field stone church in the second half of the 12th century .
  • The local cemetery is in the churchyard.
  • In Dambeck, in front of the church, there is a memorial for those who fell in the wars of the 19th century and the First and Second World Wars, a square column.
  • From 1224 the Dambeck Monastery was built , which is located in today's Dambeck district.

Economy and Infrastructure

Dambeck station (2012)

The Salzwedel Süd industrial park is located in Dambeck and is home to a steel pipe manufacturer and a filter manufacturer.

The place is connected by district roads with the B 248 in the west and the districts of Brewitz and Altensalzwedel.

Dambeck owned the Dambeck (Altm) station on the Salzwedel – Oebisfelde railway line ; the line was closed in 2002. Since then, a bus line has been connecting the town with Salzwedel and Oebisfelde every two hours. The railway systems are in place in 2012.

Personalities

The German lawyer and education politician Konrad Müller (1912–1979) was born in Dambeck . His father, who later became Bishop Ludolf Hermann Müller , was a pastor at the Dambeck Church from 1909 onwards.

Others

At the former train station there is a stork's nest in which white storks regularly breed.

literature

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Peter P. Rohrlach: Historical local lexicon for the Altmark (Historical local lexicon for Brandenburg, Part XII) . Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-8305-2235-5 , pp. 459-463 .
  2. Jens Heymann: Core town and villages of the unified municipality of Salzwedel are growing . In: Altmark Zeitung , Salzwedel edition . January 15, 2016 ( az-online.de ).
  3. Saxony-Anhalt viewer of the State Office for Surveying and Geoinformation ( notes )
  4. a b Website of the city of Salzwedel , accessed on February 7, 2016
  5. Main statute of the Hanseatic city of Salzwedel . Reading version (2nd amendment 08/10/2016). September 5, 2016 ( salzwedel.de [PDF; 317 kB ; accessed on April 9, 2019]).
  6. ^ Adolph Friedrich Riedel : Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis : Collection of documents, chronicles and other source documents . Main part 1st volume 6 . Berlin 1846, p. 31 ( digitized version ).
  7. a b c d 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. 137 .
  8. ^ Adolph Friedrich Riedel : Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis : Collection of documents, chronicles and other source documents . Main part 1st volume 16 . Berlin 1859, p. 431 ( digitized version ).
  9. ^ Adolph Friedrich Riedel : Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis : Collection of documents, chronicles and other source documents . Main part 1st volume 14 . Berlin 1857, p. 117 ( digitized version ).
  10. Johannes Schultze : The land book of the Mark Brandenburg from 1375 (=  Brandenburg land books . Volume 2 ). Commission publisher von Gsellius, Berlin 1940, p. 404 ( uni-potsdam.de ).
  11. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm August Bratring : Statistical-topographical description of the entire Mark Brandenburg . For statisticians, businessmen, especially for camera operators. Ed .: Berlin. tape 1 , 1804, p. 370 ( digitized versionhttp: //vorlage_digitalisat.test/1%3D~GB%3D~IA%3D~MDZ%3D%0A10000735~SZ%3D00392~ double-sided%3D~LT%3D~PUR%3D ).
  12. Administrative region of Magdeburg (Ed.): Official Gazette of the Government of Magdeburg . 1928, ZDB -ID 3766-7 , p. 216 .
  13. 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. 358 .
  14. Parish Almanac or the Protestant clergy and churches of the Province of Saxony in the counties of Wernigerode, Rossla and Stolberg . 19th year, 1903, ZDB -ID 551010-7 , p. 97 ( wiki-de.genealogy.net [accessed April 10, 2019]).
  15. ^ Apenburg parish area. Retrieved April 10, 2019 .
  16. Online project monuments to the likes. Dambeck at www.denkmalprojekt.org. April 1, 2018, accessed April 10, 2019 .
  17. ^ Website of the IHK Magdeburg , accessed on September 23, 2012