Dobbertiner Sandpropstei

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Röbel (1600)

Over 400 years of managed Sand provost of Röbel / Müritz on the ground owned by the monastery Dobbertin at the Müritz and southeastern Mecklenburg .

history

After the conversion of the Dobbertine Benedictine monastery into a nunnery of the same order in 1234, the nuns there received from the Schwerin Bishop Brunward the right of free choice of provost and prioress . The important and probably unique position of the provost, also vis-à-vis the prioress, was particularly evident in his central position in the clarification of external worldly matters for the monastery. The sovereigns granted the Dobbertiner monastery provost special privileges and he carried his own seal . The spiritual and secular concerns were already visible between 1227 and 1234, when the Dobbertiner monastery provost Ulrich received archdeaconate rights over the churches in Goldberg , Lohmen , Ruchow , Karcheez and Woserin .

In addition to the monastic property in the core area around Dobbertin, the occupation of two larger complexes in south-eastern Mecklenburg between Malchow and Müritz: in the Röbel region, later called Vordere Sandpropstei, with the villages of Zielow, Lexow, Roez, Sietow and Schamper, testifies to the further upswing of the nunnery Mill; in the Land of Turne, the then Amt Lübz, with the neighborhood to Pomerania and Brandenburg, the Hintere Sandpropstei with the villages of Lärz, Krümmel, Sagwitz, Wale, Diemitz, Schwarz with Schwarzer Hof.

The first references to Dobbertiner possessions in the Sandpropstei are documented in 1237 at the Müritz. After that, the nunnery in the local Röbel had six hooves in the village of Zielow, in the country of Turne the whole village of Lärz with forty hooves and thirty hooves between Krümmel and Schwarz. At that time, the farm of a farmer (Hufner) with a share in the village area was called Hufe. 1257 saw the first amalgamation of sand propsteid villages, as in the later submerged villages of Verling and Zeten mit Schwarz.

Two tithe awards by Bishop Heinrich I von der Schulenburg (1244–1272) of Havelberg for the villages of Lärz and Schwarz were also important. In 1280 and 1282 in Kyritz and Wesenberg the former Brandenburg estates Sagwitz, Zeten and Schwarz were secured by the Margraves Albrecht and Otto von Brandenburg as possessions of the Dobbertiner nunnery in the Sandpropstei. Prince Heinrich of Mecklenburg confirmed and renewed the margravial privileges for the monastery Dobberin over the villages Sagwitz, Schwarz, Zeten, Diemitz and Wale in the Sandpropstei on March 2, 1324 in Sternberg . In the following period, the Dobbertiner endeavor to round off the possessions in the Sandpropstei could be seen, for example in 1344 with the acquisition of the village of Sietow and the associated church patronage.

A document from 1249 attests to the fact that the monastery possessions in the Brandenburg-Mecklenburg border area also had disputes in the Sandpropsteidörfern. The Dobbertiner Benedictine Monastery owned the village of Lärz together with the Benedictine Monastery of Krevese . The conflict that had broken out between the convents was resolved in Röbel by an arbitration tribunal in favor of Dobbertin. The provosts Heinrich von Krevese and Volrad von Dobbertin agreed on September 21, 1249 in Röbel not to go to court. The arbitrators, led by Provost Stephan von Röbel, had given the village of Lärz to the Dobbertiner Church as permanent possession. The Dobbertin monastery had to pay the nuns of Krevese 30 marks of Slavic silver pennies on the next feast day for the Purification of Mary on February 2, 1250 for this acquisition. This document was sealed as witnesses by Mr. Nikolaus von Werle and the Junker Johann von Havelberg.

A good 100 years later, documented rural activities in the monastery properties of the Sandpropstei deserve attention. Around 1385 there was repeated violence between the farmers of Lärzburen van der Lortze and the neighboring knights Godeke Ploten, Arent Culen and Vrytzen van Arnesberghe. In an open feud there was mort, dotslach vunde all harm. The three van Arnesberghe brothers demanded vengeance for their father, who had been slain by the farmers. On February 14, 1386, the Dobbertiner monastery provost Nicolaus Mezstrop negotiated an atonement agreement with both parties, according to which the knights vowed to keep peace and the farmers of Lärzer had to pay an atonement. This was to continue more often in the later years in the Sandpropstei.

Little known was Duke Friedrich's proposal to swap the Sandpropstei for land in the Goldberg office near Dobbertin Monastery as early as 1710. Lieutenant Colonel von Oertzen auf Roggow, Kammer-Junker von Strahlendorff from Groß Eixen, Marshal von Vieregge and the Junker von Pederstorff were entrusted with the investigations. The second attempt to exchange them failed in 1714 because of the difficult times in the country due to the Northern Wars . In the food registers of the monastery office from 1712 to 1714, interesting incidents of the march of Russian, Prussian and Swedish troops through the Sandpropstei have been noted. On September 14, 1713, a messenger from the Sandpropst brought an invoice with the damage caused by the Russians in the villages. But the farmers also had to deliver grain, cattle and game to the monastery in Dobbertin. So on August 12th, 1712 two farmers from the Sandpropstei brought game, on August 19th a deer, on August 20th a pig, on August 23rd a deer and on August 26th a pig. On October 24, 1713, the sand slug farmers brought grain to Dobbertin on 18 wagons and received 18 cans of beer for their immediate return trip.

In the further historical processing of the Sandpropsteidörfer in the following years up to the dissolution of the Dobbertiner monastery office in 1918, the extensive files in the state archive in Schwerin would be very helpful. In the protocols, some of which existed from 1611, it is noted what happened in one or the other of the Dobberinsche Sandpropstei villages of Lärz, Schwarz, Diemitz, Sietow, Lexow, Roez, Schamper Mühle, Wolschem Feld. There are annual records of all kinds of income and expenditure in money, grain, lambs, geese, chickens, tar, flax, hemp, boards from the Dobbertian subjects in the Sandpropstei. Protocols and notices about the requests and complaints made by the subjects of the Sandpropstei. Annual income and expenditure registers of the Sandpropstei. Taxes and rents from the villages of the Sandpropstei. Border and field regulation. Jurisdictions. Farmsteads, hoof occupation, cottages in the villages. Parish, sexton, school, churches and buildings of the Sandpropstei. The logs and registers written by Sandpropst and which have been in existence since 1644 allow a good insight into the life of the village communities there. For the years from 1711 to 1720 there are also accurate records of what happened in the Sandpropstei.

Administrative seat of the Sandpropst

Spiritual houses in Röbel

Even with the carriage from the Dobbertin monastery it was not possible to travel there and back on the then unpaved monastery path through the Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide in one day. With the extensive land transfer from initially over 70 Hufen in the villages, mainly farmers with their own farms were settled there. At that time there must have been accommodation for the Dobbertiner monastery provost in Röbel as the administrative seat for the properties around Röbel, because all the sandy propsteid villages were only half a day's ride away from Röbel. The previously irregular visits from Dobbertin were no longer sufficient for the constant care of the villages with its schools and patronage churches. Here in Röbel the place for the Dobbertiner monastery courtyard between Mönchteich and Predigerstraße next to the Dominican monastery was ideal. From there, the Sandpropst had to move in 1389 to a new apartment opposite the house of the von Morin family near the Nikolaikirche for an annual payment of eight shillings.

In Röbel, a Dobbertiner monastery provost took over the secular and spiritual business. Because there were three provosts in the old and new town of Röbel and there were constant mix-ups, the Dobbertiner was simply called Sandpropst as a joke . Because the lands and goods of the monastery, especially in the Hinteren Sandpropstei, lay on sandy arable land. The designations as Vordere and Rückere Sandpropstei are still common in the area today. Since the Sandpropst could hardly fulfill his administrative, household and pastoral duties on his own, friars or lay friars will have stood by his side. The pastoral care in the monastery villages was probably carried out in the 13th century from the court of the Sandpropst in Röbel. It was quite possible that the Dobbertiner Propstei helped out with pastoral care in the city parish. Provost Henricus appeared in a document issued for Dobbertin on December 20, 1281 in Röbel. In the document issued on June 4, 1288 for the city of Röbel in Röbel, the Dobbertiner provost Hinricus de Berscen was even named as the first witness. It is obvious how actively the provosts of the Dobbertiner nunnery were already striving to secure the property in the Sandpropstei in the early years.

The villages of the Vorderen and Hinteren Sandpropstei were under the court of the Sandpropstes in Röbel. The organization in the village was incumbent on Schulzen, today's mayor. The seat of the Dobbertiner Sandpropstes in Röbel could be seen as a kind of town courtyard of the monastery. The close and lively connection between the Dobbertin monastery, the Malchow monastery and the town of Malchow could also be recognized by the fact that in 1356 the monastery provost Eckhard was given free passage through Malchow for his car to the Sandpropstei. During the Thirty Years' War , the monastery granary is said to have been torn down completely. And in 1651 Ike von Below sold his Mönchshof located in Röbel to the Dobbertiner Sandpropst. The Sandpropst Gerlach bought 11,000 roof baffles, wood and boards as well as a ton of tar to protect the official building from rain, as was precisely noted in the main accounts of the monastery office from 1674 by the chef Arendt Kalsow. Even paper, ink, powder, sealing wax and varnish were registered under expenditure.

Prison cell, state 2011

Many of the sand shots went down in Röbel history. The son of the priest Hieronymus Christoph Gerlach became mayor of the city. The sandbotters also had to deal with requests and complaints, disputes and court cases. It is noted in the clag book of the monastery office in 1595 that Claus von Oldenburg stabbed Jürgen von Siman in Sietow. The deceased was examined by the Balbeers Hans Pierstorf from Röbel and Heinrich Pierstorf from Malchow. The monastery district court met according to Mecklenburg usage by the kitchen master , notary, Sandpropst and three Schulzen, namely zu Sietow, Lexow and Penkow in the Dobbertiner monastery courtyard at Röbel. The legal scholars of the Faculty of Law at Rostock University suggested the sentence. The auditor came from Waren and the executioner from Röbel. Two land riders were also often sent to the villages of the Sandpropstei to collect the grain lease, because the farmers had to deliver the grain lease to the office in Röbel. This was also debated in the state parliament in Sternberg on March 6, 1663.

Between 1634 and 1682 there were seven witch trials in Lexow and two in Sietow .

Unlike his predecessors, the Sandpropst Hieronymus Gerlach had the habit of enclosing all letters addressed to him regarding matters of the Sandpropstei in the minutes. Since there were many farmers in the villages who did not know how to write, complaints to the Sandpropst were put on paper by a town clerk. Here it was the notary Johann Christian Schröder from Röbel. The sand prostitute Franz Mundheim from Sietow is said to have been sued in 1720 by the farmer Paul strenghts for unreasonable violence and violation of property even before the monastery district court.

Succession of ownership

Front sand propstei

  • Zielow acquired in 1237, exchanged with the village of Grobe in Malchin as early as 1274 .
  • Roez first mentioned in 1278, sold to Dobbertin monastery in 1284.
  • Lexow first mentioned in 1298, partial acquisition by Dobbertin Monastery in 1332, 1345
  • Sietow 1300 first mentioned, 1342 partial acquisition by the Dobbertin monastery.
  • Schamper Mühle 1342 Acquisition of Schamper Mühle.
  • Penkow 1309 property of the Dobbertin monastery, 1678 exchange with the Malchow monastery for Roez.

Rear sand propstei

  • Lärz 1237 monastery ownership, 1249 dispute with Krevese monastery ended with atonement agreement.
  • Krümmel (Lärz) first mentioned in 1237 and owned by a monastery in 1274.
  • Schwarz 1237 first mentioned with monastery property.
  • Schwarzer Hof owned by a monastery in 1237, after 1800 a glassworks and forestry yard.
  • Diemitz 1237 first mentioned with monastery property.

Monastery property, later devastation

  • Sagwitz 1237–1347 In the Sagwitz field near Schwarz.
  • Tralow 1285-1459 on the Lärzer Weder peninsula north of Lake Tralow .
  • Verling 1257–1288 north on Verling Lake was put to black.
  • Wale 1285-1560 was placed as Walsche Feldmark zu Diemitz.
  • Zeten (Cetin) 1257–1274 on the south bank of Lake Zethern, was united with black.

Sandpropst

Seal of the monastery provost Arnold 1302

Names and years indicate the verifiable mention as sandpropst. It was not until 1389 that there was a house in Röbel for the Dobbertiner monastery provost as the administrative seat.

  • 1228–1243 Ulrich / Olricus, temporarily, was provost in Dobbertin.
  • 1257–1275 Volrad / Volradus, temporarily, was provost of the monastery in Dobbertin.
  • 1277–1288 Hermann / Henricus, temporarily, was provost in Dobbertin.
  • 1302–1305 Arnold / Arnoldus, temporarily, was provost of the monastery in Dobbertin.
  • 1350–1356 Eckhard / Eghardus, temporarily, was provost of the monastery in Dobbertin.
  • 1562– 0000Joachim Thomas.
  • 1656–1696 Hieronymus Christoph Gerlach, was also the mayor of Röbel.
  • 0000–1757 Christoph Gerlach, son of the predecessor, was also the mayor of Röbel.
  • 1709–1723 Franz Mundheim from Sietow.
  • 0000–1712 Sant-Pobsten heirs.
  • 1723–1724 Johann Lohmann.
  • 1732–1738 Simon Friedrich Giesen from Sietow.
  • 1738–1742 Joachim Friedrich Jacobsen from Lärz.

Syndicus

Christian Engel 1788-1871
Syndicus Christian Engel 1841

The Syndicus was legal counsel and judge in the monastery district court.

  • 1705–1709 Dr. Wolff.
  • 1841–1862 Privy Councilor Mayor Christian Engel from Röbel.
  • 1863–1880 Privy Councilor Mayor and city judge Karl Hermes from Röbel.

See also

literature

  • David Franck : Of the old and new Mecklenburgs. Fourteenth book of Mecklenburg's comparisons. Güstrow, Leipzig 1756, p. 312 A 1711.
  • David Franck: Of the old and new Mecklenburgs. Sixteenth book of Mecklenburgs Zerrüttung , Güstrow, Leipzig 1756, p. 27 A 1714.
  • Friedrich August Rudloff: Pragmatic Handbook of Mecklenburg History. Schwerin 1780.
  • Friedrich Schlie : The art and history monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. IV. Volume: The district court districts of Schwaan, Büzow, Sternberg, Güstrow, Krakow, Goldberg, Parchim, Lübz and Plau. Schwerin 1901 (reprint 1993) ISBN 3-910179-08-8 pp. 349-371.
  • Friedrich Schlie: The art and history monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Volume 5: The district courts of Teterow, Malchin, Stavenhagen, Penzlin, Waren, Malchow and Röbel. Schwerin 1902 (reprint 1993) ISBN 3-910179-09-6 .
  • Friedrich Lisch : About the Land Turne, also about the Land Lieze and the other old districts of southeast Mecklenburg. MJB II. (1837), pp. 89-91.
  • Friedrich Lisch: The church at Röbel. MJB VIII. (1843), pp. 109-119.
  • Arthur Pries: The Hintersandpropstei. In: Mecklenburgische Monatshefte. 1926, No. 5, pp. 237-239.
  • The old Röbel. A memorial book for the 700th anniversary. Rostock 1926 (reprint 1992) Röbel 1992.
  • P. Linshöft: From the story of Schwarz in the Hintersandpropstei. 1930 (unpublished)
  • Jochen Richter: Nature and function of the late feudal rural community. Explained at the villages of the Sandpropstei of the Dobbertin monastery office. In: Yearbook for the History of Feudalism. Volume 11, Berlin 1987, pp. 223-269.
  • Detlev Kunter: 700 years of Sietow. So it could have been ... Sietow 2000.
  • Hans-Joachim Deppe, Ulrich Schoknecht : On the founding history of the cities of the Müritz district. (= Series of publications by the Waren Museum and History Association, Issue 24) Waren 2002.
  • Rolf Jackewitz: Röbel and the Sandpropstei: 400 years of relationships with Dobbertin. In: Röbeler Zeitung. Historical bulletin from Heimatstuben and Röbel archive. Röbel 2003.
  • Dieter Kurth: 700 years of Lexow 1298–1998. Waren (Müritz) 2008.
  • Rolf Jackewitz: The Dobbertiner Sandpropstei, a key and the Röbel monastery. In: Bull and Griffin. Jhrg. 19, Schwerin 2009, pp. 32–39.
  • Festschrift 775 years for the villages of Lärz and Krümmel 1237–2012. March 2012.
  • Ernst Münch : On the medieval history of Dobbertin monastery. In: Dobbertin Monastery. History-building-life. (= Contributions to the history of art and the preservation of monuments in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania) Volume 2, Schwerin 2012, ISBN 978-3-935770-35-4 , pp. 11-19.
  • Ernst Münch (with the assistance of Horst Alsleben ), Frank Nikulka , Bettina Gnekow, Dirk Schumann : Dobbertin. S. Maria, S. Johannes Evangelist (Ordo Sancti Benedicti / Benedictine Sisters). In: Wolfgang Huschner , Ernst Münch, Cornelia Neustadt, Wolfgang Eric Wagner : Mecklenburg monastery book. Manual of the monasteries, monasteries, comers and priories. (10th / 11th - 16th centuries). Volume I., Rostock 2016, ISBN 978-3-356-01514-0 , pp. 177-187.
  • Jörg Gast: From monastery to monastery through the Nossentiner / Schinzer Heide nature reserve. Goldberg 2018.

swell

Printed sources

Unprinted sources

  • State Main Archive Schwerin (LHAS)
    • LHAS 1.5-4 / 3 documents Dobbertin monastery.
    • LHAS 2.12-3 / 2 Monasteries and orders of knights. Dobbertin Monastery, Sandpropstei 1636–1843.
    • LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Provincial Monastery / Monastery Office Dobbertin.
    • LHAS 3.2-4 Knightly fire insurance company.
    • LHAS 5.11-2 Landtag assemblies , Landtag negotiations , Landtag minutes , Landtag committee.
    • LHAS 5.12-3 / 1 Mecklenburg-Schwerin Ministry of the Interior.
    • LHAS 5.12-4 / 2 Mecklenburg Ministry of Agriculture, Domains and Forests.

cards

  • Bertram Christian von Hoinckhusen : Mecklenburg Atlas with description of the offices around 1700, sheet 61 description of the monastery office Dobberin.
  • Topographical, economic and military chart of the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin 1758/1788: The Dobbertin monastery with the sand prosthesis of Count Schmettau.
  • Historical Atlas of Mecklenburg, Wiebekingsche map from 1786, sheet 23, scale 1: 25,000.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. MUB I. (1863) No. 425.
  2. ^ Ernst Münch: On the medieval history of Dobbertin monastery. 2012, p. 13.
  3. MUB I. (1863) No. 425.
  4. ^ Ernst Münch: On the medieval history of the Dobberin monastery. 2012, p. 16.
  5. ^ Horst Alsleben: Obtaining possessions quite early on. SVZ Lübz-Goldberg-Plau, October 10, 2000.
  6. Meaning of Turne and Ture: is probably Slavic from Tur, maybe it was related to the Mecklenburg coat of arms of that time. Friedrich Lisch: MJB II. (1837) p. 87.
  7. ^ Friedrich Schlie: The Dobbertin Monastery. 1901, p. 355.
  8. Horst Alsleben: The Sandpropst from the monastery office. Schweriner Volkszeitung, Mecklenburg-Magazin, June 29, 2018.
  9. MUB I. (1863) No. 469, 790.
  10. Ernst Münch, Horst Alsleben: Property history and economic order. In: Mecklenburg monastery book. 2012, p. 182.
  11. MUB I. (1863) No. 790.
  12. Lieslott Enders: The Prignitz. History of a Kurmark landscape from the 12th to the 18th century. Potsdam, 2000, p. 102.
  13. MUB II. (1864) No. 1513, 1610, 1814.
  14. MUB VV. (1872) No. 4418.
  15. MUB IX. (1875) no.6390.
  16. MUB I. (1863) No. 634.
  17. Christoph Entzelts: Altmärkische Chronica. Salzwedel, 1736, p. 56.
  18. ^ Joachim Pohl: Krevese, Benediktinerinnen. In: Brandenburg monastery book. 2007, p. 288.
  19. ^ Ernst Münch: On the medieval history of the Dobbertin monastery. 2012, p. 18.
  20. MUB XX. (1900) No. 11684.
  21. MUB XXI. (1903) No. 11757.
  22. Horst Alsleben: Peasants of the Propstei fought with knights. SVZ Lübz-Goldberg-Plau, August 1, 1996.
  23. ^ David Franck: The old and new Mecklenburgs. Sixteenth and seventeenth books. 1757, pp. 27, 312.
  24. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 1190 revenue 1712/13.
  25. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 1190 revenue 1712/13.
  26. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. Finding aid.
  27. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 893, 894.
  28. The Malchower Landstrasse led from Dobbertin north of the Goldberger See and Damerower See over the Samoter Krug and Alt Schwerin to Malchow and Röbel.
  29. Jörg Gast: From monastery to monastery through the Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide nature reserve. 2018.
  30. Hufe - farm business of a farmer (Hufners) with the share of the village area (pasture, forest, water and meadow use), the farm and residential buildings and the arable land. The hoof was also a regionally and temporally different land measure that served as a control unit.
  31. Ralf Jackewitz: The Dobbertiner Sandpropstei, a key and the Röbel monastery. 2009, p. 34.
  32. MUB XXI. (1903) No. 12089.
  33. The old Röbel. From seven centuries. 1926, p. 57.
  34. Friedrich Lisch: The church at Röbel. MJB VIII. (1843) p. 117.
  35. ^ A b Horst Alsleben: The Sandpropst from the monastery office . Schweriner Volkszeitung, Mecklenburg-Magazin, June 29, 2018
  36. Ralf Jackewitz: The Dobbertiner Sandpropstei, a key and the Röbel monastery. 2009, p. 34.
  37. MUB III. (1865) No. 1593.
  38. MUB III. (1865) No. 1962.
  39. MUB XIV. (1886) No. 8204.
  40. ^ Horst Alsleben: Obtaining possessions quite early on. SVZ Lübz - Goldberg - Plau, October 10, 2000.
  41. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 1103, 1104, 1105 main accounts 1674–1676.
  42. Lhas 10.63-1 association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology. No. 275.
  43. LHAS 5.11-2 Minutes of the Landtag. March 6, 1663.
  44. ^ Witch trials in the Dobbertin monastery office
  45. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 4266, 4334.
  46. MUB I. (1863) No. 469.
  47. MUB II. (1864) No. 1347.
  48. MUB II. (1863) No. 1451.
  49. MUB III. (1865) No. 1758.
  50. MUB IV. (1867) No. 2503.
  51. MUB VIII. (1873) No. 5370.
  52. MUB IX. (1875) no.6550.
  53. MUB IX. (1875) No. 2618.
  54. MUB IX. (1875) No. 6229.
  55. MUB IX (1875) No. 6229.
  56. MUB V. (1869) No. 3311.
  57. MUB I. (1863) No. 469, 790.
  58. MUB I. (1863) No. 634.
  59. MUB I. (1863) No. 469, 790.
  60. MUB II. (1864) No. 1347.
  61. MUB I. (1863) No. 469, 790.
  62. MUB I. (1863) No. 469, 790.
  63. MUB I. (1863) No. 169.790.
  64. MUB I. (1863) No. 469, MUB II. (1864) No. 1513.
  65. MUB III. (1865) No. 1808, 1963.
  66. MUB I. (1863) No. 790, MUB III. (1865) No. 1963.
  67. Erich Zimmermann: From the history of the village black, district Neustrelitz.
  68. MUB III. (1865) No. 1814, 1963, MUB XVI. (1893) No. 9484.
  69. MUB I. (1863) No. 790. MUB II. (1864) No. 1347.
  70. MUB XXI. (1903) No. 12089.
  71. Horst Alsleben: List of the personalities of the Dobbertin monastery. 2010-2013.
  72. MUB II. (1864) No. 1440.
  73. MUB V. (1869) No. 2795, 2905, 2989.
  74. MUB X. (1877) No. 7105.
  75. ^ Wilhelm Polthier: family book of Polthier. Rostock 1927, p. 80.
  76. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 3944.
  77. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landekloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 915 inventory office building.
  78. On the inscription of the bell in Lärz 1724 named as pastor in Lärz.
  79. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 3740, 4542.
  80. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 3277, was confirmed on June 14, 1738 by the monastery captain Joachim von Bassewitz .
  81. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 3944.
  82. From 1786 Christian Engel was head chef at Malchow Monastery .
  83. The old Röbel. Mayor Hermes. 1926, pp. 86-89.