Deinstedt

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the municipality of Deinstedt
Deinstedt
Map of Germany, position of the municipality of Deinstedt highlighted

Coordinates: 53 ° 25 '  N , 9 ° 13'  E

Basic data
State : Lower Saxony
County : Rotenburg (Wümme)
Joint municipality : Singing
Height : 14 m above sea level NHN
Area : 20.2 km 2
Residents: 664 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 33 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 27446
Primaries : 04284, 04762
License plate : ROW, BRV
Community key : 03 3 57 011
Community structure: 2 districts
Association administration address: Hauptstrasse 30
27446 Selsingen
Mayor : Hans Jürgen Pietsch ( WG-Malstedt )
Location of the municipality of Deinstedt in the district of Rotenburg (Wümme)
Bremen Hamburg Schleswig-Holstein Landkreis Cuxhaven Landkreis Diepholz Landkreis Harburg Landkreis Osterholz Landkreis Stade Landkreis Heidekreis Landkreis Verden Ahausen Alfstedt Anderlingen Basdahl Rotenburg (Wümme) Bötersen Bothel (Niedersachsen) Breddorf Bremervörde Brockel Bülstedt Deinstedt Ebersdorf (Niedersachsen) Elsdorf (Niedersachsen) Farven Fintel Gnarrenburg Groß Meckelsen Gyhum Hamersen Hamersen Hassendorf Heeslingen Hellwege Helvesiek Hemsbünde Hemslingen Hepstedt Hipstedt Horstedt (Niedersachsen) Horstedt (Niedersachsen) Kalbe (Niedersachsen) Kirchtimke Kirchwalsede Klein Meckelsen Lauenbrück Sittensen Lengenbostel Oerel Ostereistedt Reeßum Rhade Rotenburg (Wümme) Sandbostel Scheeßel Seedorf (bei Zeven) Selsingen Sittensen Sittensen Sottrum Stemmen (Landkreis Rotenburg) Tarmstedt Tiste Tiste Vahlde Vahlde Vierden Visselhövede Vorwerk (Niedersachsen) Westertimke Westerwalsede Wilstedt Wohnste Zevenmap
About this picture

Deinstedt ( Low German yours ) is a municipality in the Samtgemeinde Selsingen in Lower Saxony Rotenburg (Wümme) .

geography

location

Deinstedt is located in the northeastern part of the Rotenburg (Wümme) district. The Bever flows through the northern part of the municipality and Malstedt .

Community structure

In addition to the main town of Deinstedt, the district of Malstedt and the towns of Stüh, Rohr, Löh, Hastenbeck and Visoh also belong to the municipality.

Neighboring communities

The community borders in the north-west on the unitary community Bremervörde , in the north-east on Farven , in the south-east on Anderlingen and on the basic center Selsingen in the south-west.

history

Deinstedt was first mentioned in 1148, while Malstedt is mentioned as early as 1132 in the registers of the Archdiocese of Bremen . When Deinstedt was first mentioned, Archbishop Dietmar I von Verden gave the Verden cathedral chapter his tithe in Deynstede . In 1714 the whole place burned down in a major fire except for a single house. In 1911 there was another major fire in which half the village burned down. The fire broke out in the house that was the only one to survive the major fire of 1714.

Rohr emerged from a single courtyard. Near Rohr on the old Farvener-Selsinger Kirchenweg lies the Rugenberg , where there is said to have been a fabulous witch's cave.

Visoh was created around 1820 on Deilweg, a mixed forest.

Löh was founded on the road to Deinstedter Bahnhof.

Around 1500 Malstedt consisted of the mill on the Bever and five farms, all of which belonged to the St. George Monastery in Stade.

Origin of the place name

Old names from Deinstedt are 1329 in Deynstede (the name is apparently identical to Deinste near Stade), around 900 villa Tunstede (assignment unclear), 1315 Deinstede, 1383 Deynstede, 1433 tho Deyenste, 1542 tho Deynstede, 1587 Deinste and 1684 Deinste. The basic form "Dein-s-sted-" can be assumed. It is a strongly inflected male personal name + "‑sted (e)"; Personal name Dego, Dago. The name Deinstedt probably goes back to the personal name Deinhart (Degenhart). In Low German , there is no original "-ei-". This emerged secondary in place names, mostly due to the loss of a consonant, either “-g-” or “-d-”. "-G-" and a personal name "Dego, Dago" are appropriate here.

Incorporations

In the course of the regional reform in Lower Saxony , which took place on March 1, 1974, the previously independent municipality of Malstedt was incorporated into the municipality of Deinstedt.

religion

Deinstedt is evangelical-Lutheran and belongs to the parish of the St. Lambertus Church in Selsingen.

politics

Municipal council

The council of the municipality of Deinstedt consists of eight councilors. This is the specified number for the member municipality of an integrated municipality with a population between 501 and 1000 inhabitants. The council members are elected for a five-year term by local elections. The current term of office began on November 1, 2016 and ends on October 31, 2021.

The honorary mayor is also entitled to vote and sit on the municipal council.

The last local election on September 11, 2016 resulted in the following:

Political party Share of votes Number of seats
Deinstedt community of voters 50.53% 5
Malstedt community of voters 49.46% 4th

The turnout in the 2016 local elections was 77.63%, above the Lower Saxony average of 55.5%.

mayor

The local council elected council member Hans Jürgen Pietsch (WG Malstedt) as honorary mayor for the current electoral term. His deputies are Benjamin Baden (WG Deinstedt) and Gunda Braasch (WG Deinstedt).

coat of arms

Deinstedt coat of arms
Blazon : "In blue under a golden spiral hook clasp of a neck ring, a four-spoke golden mill wheel ."
Justification for the coat of arms: The Selsingen community writes on their website:

“The golden spiral hooks on a neck ring clasp point to the old settlement, which is attested by the hoard found in 1938 in Deinstedt from the younger Bronze Age . The golden mill wheel indicates the town of Malstedt. In Malstedt, a mill owned by the St. Georg monastery in Stade is mentioned as early as 1132. "

flag

Flag Deinstedt.svg 00Hoisted flag: "The flag is blue-yellow-blue in a ratio of 1: 2: 1 with horizontal stripes with the coat of arms in the middle shifted towards the leech."

Culture and sights

The Fehrenbruch stone box is located in the municipality.

traffic

Street

Deinstedt is on the K 108 district road , which joins the B 71 federal road about one kilometer outside the town , which touches the municipality here. The town is connected to Bremervörde and Zeven via the B 71 .

rail

The Bremervörde-Rotenburg (Wümme) railway line , which is now only operated by EVB for freight traffic, runs through the district of Deinstedt . In 2007, remnants of the former Deinstedt stop for passenger traffic, which had been shut down since 1969, could still be seen along the B 71. In 2020, apart from a row of chestnut trees that used to line the platform and a treeless open space, no remains of the station can be seen. A memorial plaque near the former location now reminds of the train station.

Web links

Commons : Deinstedt  - collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. State Office for Statistics Lower Saxony, LSN-Online regional database, Table 12411: Update of the population, as of December 31, 2019  ( help ).
  2. ^ Jürgen Udolph (research): The "place name researcher". (No longer available online.) In: Website NDR 1 Lower Saxony . Archived from the original on January 26, 2016 ; accessed on July 23, 2020 .
  3. ^ Federal Statistical Office (ed.): Historical municipality directory for the Federal Republic of Germany. Name, border and key number changes in municipalities, counties and administrative districts from May 27, 1970 to December 31, 1982 . W. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart / Mainz 1983, ISBN 3-17-003263-1 , p.  242 .
  4. ^ Lower Saxony Municipal Constitutional Law (NKomVG); Section 46 - Number of Deputies. In: Lower Saxony Regulations Information System (NI-VORIS). December 17, 2010, accessed July 23, 2020 .
  5. a b Municipality of Deinstedt - overall results of the municipal council election 2016. (No longer available online.) In: Website Zweckverband Kommunale Datenverarbeitung Oldenburg (KDO). September 11, 2016, archived from the original on March 20, 2017 ; accessed on July 23, 2020 .
  6. The CDU gets the most votes nationwide. In: Website Norddeutscher Rundfunk . September 12, 2016. Retrieved March 19, 2017 .
  7. ^ Municipality of Deinstedt. In: Website of the Selsingen community. Retrieved July 23, 2020 .
  8. a b Arms of Deinstedt. (PDF; 31 kB) In: Website of the Selsingen municipality. Retrieved July 23, 2020 .