Falkenberg (diving)

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Falkenberg
Community of Tauche
Coordinates: 52 ° 9 ′ 42 ″  N , 14 ° 7 ′ 45 ″  E
Height : 68 m above sea level NN
Area : 4.21 km²
Residents : 189  (December 31, 2013)
Population density : 45 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : December 31, 2001
Postal code : 15848
Area code : 033675
Falkenberg (Brandenburg)
Falkenberg

Location of Falkenberg in Brandenburg

Falkenberger Hauptstrasse with gabled farmhouses
Falkenberger Hauptstrasse with gabled farmhouses

Falkenberg ( Sokolnica in Lower Sorbian ) is a district of the municipality of Tauche in the Oder-Spree district of Brandenburg with around 190 inhabitants.

Falkenberg is nine kilometers southwest of the district town of Beeskow in the middle of fields and meadows. Agriculture and cattle breeding determine the economic life of the square village and former manor that was first mentioned in 1495 . The church of the original parish village was demolished in 1770 and neither rebuilt nor replaced. In Falkenberg there is a branch of the Meteorological Observatory Lindenberg .

geography

Natural area and district

Falkenberg is located north of the Großer Kossenblatter See on the Beeskower Platte , which is listed as No. 824 in the natural spatial main units of Germany in the main unit group No. 82 East Brandenburg Heath and Lake District . In the subsurface of the plate , the Saale Ice Age ground moraine predominate , which is largely overlaid by the flat, undulating terminal moraine formations of the last Ice Age .

The square roughly 421  hectares comprehensive district Falkenberg is on the "flat land" at an altitude of about 75  meters above sea level. NN in the north and around 65  m above sea level. NN in the south. The village center is at an average altitude of 68  m above sea level. NN . The area is largely characterized by open land with meadows and fields. There are some large stands of trees along the river .

Neighboring towns and transport links

Falkenberg in the Prussian first recording from 1846. The map section roughly shows the current area of the place.

The Falkenberg district borders in the east on the Tauche district , the eponymous district and administrative seat of the large, non-governmental municipality of Tauche . The Wulfersdorf area joins in the south, the Görsdorf area in the west and the Lindenberg area in the northwest . These three villages also belong to the municipality of Tauche. In the northeast follows the district Buckow , a district of the municipality of Rietz-Neuendorf .

The main traffic artery of the village is the state road 422 , which connects the place to the west with Görsdorf and to the east with Kohlsdorf , a district of the district town of Beeskow . In Wendisch-Rietz and Beeskow, the state road connects to the federal road 246, and in Beeskow to the federal road 87 . From the north, the district road 6727 from Lindenberg joins the village and ends there. In local public transport, line 405 of the Oder-Spree  (BOS) bus network links Falkenberg with the surrounding villages and with the train stations in Lindenberg, Wendisch-Rietz, Beeskow and Storkow . The nearest train stations are in Lindenberg and Buckow, both stops on the single- track Königs Wusterhausen – Grunow branch line ( ODEG line 36 between Berlin-Lichtenberg and Frankfurt (Oder) ).

Village structure and waters

Falkenberg was laid out as a Viereckplatzdorf , a typical form of settlement in the German East Settlement . The square, oriented from north to south, still forms the center of the village and is bordered by Falkenberger Hauptstrasse (part of Landesstrasse 422). Most of the farmhouses are grouped around the square, facing the street. Further residential areas were later built in the west along Premsdorfer Strasse and in the southwest along Wulfersdorfer Weg.

Central village square with the Kossenblatter Mühlenfließ

The central elongated square consists of a partially tree-lined meadow and is traversed by the Kossenblatter Mühlenfließ in the middle. The flow occurs in the north at a height of 69.4 m above sea level. NN into the square and leaves it in the south at a height of 67.2 m, so that it loses 2.2 meters in altitude when running through the village center. The Kossenblatter Mühlenfließ rises west of Buckow at an altitude of around 82 m, flows through several fish ponds south of Falkenberg, then the Great and Small Kossenblatter Lake, and after 10.854 kilometers flows north of the Kossenblatt Castle at a height of around 40 meters into the Schlossspree , a tributary of the Krumme Spree . The 1.467 kilometer-long Falkenberger Graben rises east of the Falkenberg town center and, after a short walk south of the village center, flows into the Kossenblatter Mühlenfließ. In the northwest of the Falkenberg district begins the Görsdorf-Wulfersdorfer-Fließ, which also flows from north to south and ends after 4.952 kilometers west of Wulfersdorf in the Großer Kossenblatter See.

However, the watercourses are interrupted in places or are dry. The Kossenblatter Mühlenfließ is part of the Krumme Spree water development concept for the near-natural development of flowing water within the framework of the EU Water Framework Directive (WFD), which aims to restore the continuity of the Kossenblatter Mühlenfließ and other bodies of water in the region.

history

The list of soil monuments in Falkenberg shows a settlement from prehistory and one from the Bronze Age, as well as the “village center of the German Middle Ages ” and the “village center of modern times ”. There are no indications or findings for a Slavic conquest .

First mentions and naming

The first mention of the place - already in today's spelling "Falkenberg" - is located in the Meissen diocese matrikel of 1495. In Erbregister the rule Storkow 1518 (Falkenberg belonged however to the adjacent rule Beeskow ), and in a country riders report from 1652, the Village recorded as Falckenbergk .

The name goes back to the Middle Low German Valkenberch , from Middle Low German valke ' falcon ' and berch for 'mountain'. According to the Brandenburg name book, Falkenberg is a fashion name of the Deutsche Ostsiedlung that occurs seven times in the state of Brandenburg alone. Since there are no significant elevations near Falkenberg, the name book also considers a heraldic name to be possible. This means that the falcon could have been in the coat of arms of the founder or owner of the place.

The Lower Sorbian name Sokolnica is a more recent translation of the German place name Falkenberg (Upper and Lower Sorbian Sokoł = falcon), which is based on the work of the Sorbian folklorist Arnošt Muka from the 19th / 20th centuries. Century is based. The Sorbian form of the name Sokolnica certainly does not go back to a historical Slavic place name, especially since there is no evidence of any Slavic settlement activity in Falkenberg.

Falkenberg owned by von Maltitz and von Hobeck, 1520 to 1652

Coat of arms of the von Maltitz

In 1520, Falkenberg owned the Nickel von Maltitz from the old Meißnisch - Saxon noble family von Maltitz , who were wealthy in the area of ​​today's Tauche community and in other parts of the Beeskow lordship and which was one of the few families in the region that owned the parts could hold their property until the late 18th century. The von Maltitz family sold their last property, Kummerow , in 1793. However, according to the historian Carl Petersen , the widely ramified family did not succeed in consolidating and fortifying a large estate complex in this area for a long time.

According to Petersen, Nickel von Maltitz had overstretched his strength through his estate purchases to such an extent that he sold Falkenberg on to von Hobeck as early as 1530. On Thursday after Bartholomäi 1553 (August 24th) Joachim the Elder, Joachim the Younger and Asmus brothers von Hobeck received the enfeoffment for Falkenberg with accessories from Bishop Johann VIII. (Horneburg) of Lebus . Her cousins ​​Georg and Franz von Hobeck on Radlow were lent for the entire hand . Falkenberg remained the main estate of the von Hobeck family until after 1620. In the year 1600, the von Hobeck family had church patronage . The von Hobeck family soon fell into complete decline and their disputes and violence forced the elector to expel the last two owners of Falkenberg, Heinrich and Joachim von Hobeck, from the land. Around 1620 Falkenberg returned to the von Maltitz family, this time to Nickel von Maltitz zu Giesensdorf , in whose hands the village remained until 1652.

In 1553 Falkenberg is listed as a village, knight seat and Vorwerk . In 1576 there were two farmers, twelve cottagers and one housekeeper . In the year 1600 Falkenberg was divided into 19 knight's hooves and three farmer's hooves, there were also twelve cottages and one shepherd in the village. In the Thirty Years War (1618–1648) the church was probably destroyed. Four years after the end of the war, in 1652, only seven cottages were left; three wild farmer's hooves were drawn to the knight's seat. A Kossät, whose farm had burned down and who was a Meier des Junkers , lived on a Kossäthof that no longer had a host.

After the Thirty Years War, development from 1652 to 1738

Between 1652 and 1665 Falkenberg was owned by the von Oppen zu Kossenblatt . In 1581, the Upper Chamberlain of Brandenburg, Georg von Oppen, bought the manor and manor house in Kossenblatt , next to which the later royal Kossenblatt Castle was built from 1705 to 1712 . From 1665 to 1682 it was resold to the von Pannwitz family - a nobility from Upper and Lower Lusatia , Silesia and the County of Glatz  - Falkenberg then went to Siegmund Gottfried von Bredow , who sold it to Count Friedrich von Blumenthal in 1718 . Between 1727 and 1730 the place was in the hands of the tax authorities and from 1730 to 1738 in the hands of Eberhard Wilhelm Freiherr von Hohenstedt (mostly: Honstedt, Hohnstedt ; rural noble family from the Principality of Lüneburg ), the captain ( captain ) in the regiment of Loeben been, and from 1732 district Administrator of the circle was.

In 1692 Falkenberg was in the following economic / social structural condition, cultivation was carried out in the form of the three-field economy :

The village of Falkenberg in the Schmettauschen map series from 1767/87
  • A Zweihüfner (desert)
  • A Einhüfner (desert), the field of the desert hooves used the authorities
  • Twelve cottages (five desolate)
  • A tenant shepherd, a shepherd
    • Three farmer's hooves with a wispel , two bushels in winter and nine bushels in summer
    • Five bushels of winter and two bushels of summer sowing
      • total (according to HOL) three bison, fourteen bushels of winter and one bison, nine bushels of summer sowing
  • Three fields; won the third grain
  • No hay and no piping; mediocre guarding; no wood and no fishing; didn't keep sheep.

Falkenberg under the rule of Königs-Wusterhausen, 1738 to 1872

In 1736 the "soldier king" Friedrich Wilhelm I bought the Kossenblatt estate and castle, which he occasionally used as a hunting lodge . Königs Wusterhausen Castle remained the ancestral seat of the king . Friedrich Wilhelm expanded the Kossenblatt property, to which villages such as Briescht and Werder already belonged, by buying Falkenberg in 1738, so that Falkenberg was now under the rule of King Wusterhausen , under which the place remained until 1872. Friedrich Wilhelm III. leased Falkenberg in 1810 to Major Gustav Siegfried von Blücher (1770-1854), a nephew of Field Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher . The annual rent was 810 thalers, the inheritance money 3180 thalers. Gustav Siegfried, who died in 1854, was succeeded by Conrad Leberecht von Blücher, who later left the estate to Hugo Mack.

Farm building in the historical center of Falkenberg

In 1743 there was a Meier, twelve Kossäts, two Büdner, a shepherd and a shepherd resident in Falkenberg. Two years later a sheep farm and a vineyard are mentioned. In 1774, a population of 100 was recorded for the first time. For 1801 the following is given: 10 whole kosher, 8  granny , jug ; Amtvorwerk; 15 farmer's hooves, 19 knight's hooves; 18  fire places ; a total of 122 inhabitants. In 1818 the population rose to 144 and fell slightly to 139 in 1837, which were divided between the village and the leasehold farm. In the survey year 1858 Falkenberg had a total of 187 inhabitants and was divided into

  • the village with two public buildings, 19 residential buildings, 31 farm buildings and 129 inhabitants. The area of ​​561  acres was divided into 2 acres of homesteads, 34 acres of garden land, 464 acres of arable land, 17 acres of meadow and 44 acres of pasture, and
  • the Vorwerk (estate) with 8 residential buildings, 8 farm buildings and 58 residents. The area of ​​1004  acres was divided into 3 acres of homesteads, 9 acres of garden land, 812 acres of arable land, 43 acres of meadow, 112 acres of pasture and 25 acres of forest.
Population growth from 1774 to 2013
year 1774 1801 1818 1837 1858 1875 1895 1910 1925 1933 1939 1946 1964 1971 1981 1992 1994 1996 2013
Residents 100 122 144 139 187 198 163 195 238 182 189 314 244 218 178 164 151 162 189

Merging of the estate and village in 1928, development from 1895 to 1939

In 1895 the population of Falkenberg had fallen to 163, of which 111 lived in the village and 52 on the estate. In 1900 the village consisted of 19 and the estate of 7 houses. The land of the village extended over 155 hectares (including 137 hectares of arable and garden land, 6 hectares of meadow, 2 hectares of pasture and 2 hectares of forest), the land of the estate over 286 hectares (including 243 hectares of arable and garden land and 18 hectares of meadow).

In the following quarter of a century the population increased significantly - for 1925 a total of 238 residents are named. In 1928 the manor district was merged with the municipality of Falkenberg, which in 1931 was recorded as a rural municipality with 37 residential buildings and 441 hectares (for comparison, district in 2013: 421 hectares). At the beginning of the Second World War , in 1939, there were 16 agricultural and forestry holdings, which were divided as follows: one holding over 100 ha, seven holding 10–20 ha, three holding 5–10 ha and five holding 0.5– 5 ha.

Resettlers, New Glory, LPG in the GDR era

Farm building and FF in the center of Falkenberg

During the Soviet occupation zone , Falkenberg had its highest population of 374 in 1946, which then fell continuously with 244 in 1964, 218 in 1971 and 178 in 1981 (2013 figure: 189). The population peak in 1946 was due to the land reform and the order of the Soviet military administration to distribute land to resettlers from the areas on the other side of the Oder and to landless and poor farmers. In 1946 547 hectares were distributed to 8 agricultural workers and landless farmers (44 hectares), 5 poor farmers (45 hectares), 49 resettlers (417 hectares) and the self-government authorities (41 hectares).

In 1950 (as well as 1957) Falkenberg was listed as a rural community with the residential area "Neue Herrlichkeit". The farmstead, located north of Falkenberg, was first noted in the Prussian Urmes table sheet from 1846 (see map above) and previously belonged to Buckow and will be back in the 21st century . In 1895 the establishment consisted of a residential building with six, in 1925 with four residents. With the name New Glory, the settlers wanted to express their hope and joy in their new property, according to the Brandenburg name book.

In the so-called "collectivization phase" of the GDR between 1952 and 1960 with the state-organized amalgamation of private companies to form large cooperative companies, an agricultural production cooperative  (LPG) of type I was established in Falkenberg in 1952 , which was converted to the rather rare type III in 1953 . In 1960 there was a LPG type I with 10 companies, 18 members and 62 hectares of cultivated land, and a LPG type III with 31 businesses, 84 members and 385 hectares of usable space. In 1966 the merger to type III took place. In 1973 the LPG Premsdorf (residential area of ​​Görsdorf) was added to the Falkenberger LPG.

Church and Ecclesiastical Constitution

When it was first mentioned in 1495, the Meißen diocese listed matrikel Falkenberg as one of 16 churches that belonged to the Sedes ( archpriest's chair ) Beeskow. In the year 1600 it is recorded as the mother church (mater) cured (supervised) by Tauche; the patronage of the church this year lay with the landlords of Hobeck. The church building was probably destroyed in the Thirty Years War (1618–1648). In 1652 the Falkenberg parish was a daughter church of Tauche and in 1685 it was added to the pastor of Tauche as a union. In 1745 it is indicated as Mater vagans (mother church without its own parish office). In 1770 the church building was torn down and Falkenberg was given a church in Tauche. The inspection was the responsibility of Beeskow until 1738, then Königs Wusterhausen and from 1817 the Superintendentur Beeskow. In the 21st century, Falkenberg is part of the Evangelical Church Community Tauche in the Evangelical Church of Berlin-Brandenburg-Silesian Upper Lusatia .

The demolished church was not replaced. It was located in the cemetery on which foundations were found and on which (as of 2014) a stone vault still stands, in which a bell hung until the First World War .

Infrastructure and village life

Administration, economy, local supply

Former manor house, privatized house (back side)
Reference to the Brandenburger Landpartie 2014 at the entrance to the village / old manor

On the occasion of the German reunification , the district of Beeskow was awarded to the re-established state of Brandenburg in 1990. In 1992, Falkenberg was incorporated into the newly founded Tauche / Trebatsch office, from which the new Tauche municipality emerged in 2001 and became an office-free community from 2003. In the municipal assembly Dive Falkenberg is by a mayor and a three-member town council represented.

Agriculture and animal husbandry continue to determine the economic life of the village; There are no industry or craft businesses. The largest company is "Horst Müller, Dieter Hönicke & Olaf Sandrowsky GbR ", founded in 1991 , which mainly sells milk and a small amount of field crops on the former estate under the trade name "Falkenberger GbR" . The main focus of the company is on animal husbandry, dairy cow husbandry and milk production . The former, comparatively modest manor house on the edge of the site is now used as a private residence. Since there are no restaurants, pensions and shops in the village, the Falkenbergers take care of their local supplies in Tauche, around two kilometers away.

Volunteer fire brigade, Brandenburg hand pressure sprayers meeting and country party

The Falkenberg volunteer fire brigade , which was founded in 1923 and has a small fire station and fire engine , takes care of the fire protection of the village . Since 2013, the fire brigade and the Kutschen-Ruß company have been holding the “Brandenburger Handdruckspritzen-Treffen” annually on the former estate. The 2014 meeting included a historic fire spray parade, a hand pressure spraying competition, a historical fire extinguishing attack using old hand pressure sprayers and awards for the hand pressure sprayers. The event was framed with brass music, market bustle and a flea market.

The meeting was embedded in the “Brandenburger Landpartie” series of events that has been taking place since 1994, which supplemented the program with, among other things, a courtyard festival, dance and riding opportunities. According to Jörg Vogelsänger , Minister for Infrastructure and Agriculture of the State of Brandenburg , the Brandenburger Landpartie is one of the most popular and effective initiatives in the country every year. The aim is to present the Brandenburg villages and their farms, market gardens, fisheries and forestry companies in the spirit of rural and agriculture.

Other clubs and events

The Brandenburg country parties are co-organized by the "Falkenberg 1495" village club. The loud community representation enterprising village club also leads festive events such as Christmas tree fire and Osterfeuer or children's and senior citizens' Christmas celebrations, carnival celebrations with Zampern and pancakes ball , maypole celebrations , Halloween -Umzüge for children, seniors meetings and Rummy - and Skat through tournaments. In addition, there is an in Falkenberg volunteer -led youth club .

For the villagers, “SV Tauche e. V. “, whose sports facilities are located on Wulfersdorfer Strasse near Falkenberg. The club offers several sports , including tennis and soccer . The football department takes several juniors, a Altherren-, a men's and a women's team in the league operating part. As of 2014, the women's football team and the men's team were playing at the regional league level .

Branch of the Richard Assmann Observatory

In the Falkenberg area there is a measuring field of the Richard-Assmann-Observatory in Lindenberg , which was tested from 1996 and has been in operation since 1998. The branch consists of a 99 and a 10 meter high measuring mast, both of which were designed in the form of guyed steel framework constructions, a SODAR and eddy covariance turbulence measuring system. The boundary layer measuring field (GM) Falkenberg is used to record and monitor basic micrometeorological parameters in the ground, on the surface and in the atmosphere close to the ground , such as the ground temperature , the wind direction and the air pressure .

"The location for the measuring field was a flat area, unobstructed in the climatological main wind direction for more than 1 km, near the town of Falkenberg about 5 km south of Lindenberg, because the site of the observatory itself, due to its topographical conditions, is used to carry out representative measurements in the Soil and lower boundary layer is not suitable. The vegetation on the measuring field consists of different grasses with different vegetation densities and naturally mixed with numerous (in) herbs, legumes, etc. The average stand height is kept less than 20 cm by mowing several times over the course of a year. "

- German Weather Service: Meteorological Observatory Lindenberg - Richard-Assmann-Observatory. Falkenberg boundary layer measuring field.

In 2013 the German Weather Service (DWD) considered moving the wooden building of the Giessen weather station , which is no longer in use, to the Falkenberg measurement field. The extra light post construction of the building was to be dismantled and transported to Falkenberg by truck.

literature

  • Carl Petersen : The history of the Beeskow-Storkow district. Reprint of the 1922 edition. Ed .: Wolfgang de Bruyn . Findling Verlag, Neuenhagen 2002 ISBN 3-933603-19-6 .
  • Joachim Schölzel (edit.): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. (HOL) Part IX: Beeskow - Storkow. (Publications of the Potsdam State Archives , Volume 25). Publishing house Klaus-D. Becker, Potsdam 2011, ISBN 978-3-941919-86-0 (reprint of the edition: Verlag Hermann Böhlaus Nachhaben, Weimar 1989, ISBN 3-7400-0104-6 ).
  • Sophie Wauer: Brandenburg name book. Part 12: The place names of the Beeskow-Storkow district . After preliminary work by Klaus Müller. ( Berlin Contributions to Name Research , Volume 13). Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-515-08664-1 .

Web links

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

Remarks

  1. Reinhard E. Fischer are in the place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin , Volume 13 of the Brandenburg Historical Studies on behalf of the Brandenburg Historical Commission, be.bra Science, Berlin 2005, ISBN 3-937233-30-X , ISSN  1860-2436 on P. 53 the year 1346 as the first documentary mention of Falkenberg. Fischer names the HOL and the Brandenburg name book by Sophie Wauer as sources. However, since both works state 1495 and not 1346, either 1346 or Fischer's evidence cannot be correct.
  2. The term "Mater vagans" (often abbreviated as "Mat. Vag." Or "Mat. Vagans") means: mother church without its own pastoral office, but not, as mat. coni. [mater coniuncta, mater conjuncta, also: mater adiuncta, mater adjuncta], constantly but on the term of office of the pastor, added to another mater, now that one, now that one . Source: Georg Vorberg: The church records of the church communities admitted and licensed before 1874 in the districts of the General Superintendent of Berlin, urban districts of Berlin, Charlottenburg, Rixdorf, Schöneberg and parts of the districts of Nieder Barnim, East Havelland and Teltow and in the districts of Lebus and the city of Frankfurt a. O. (= publications of the Association for the History of the Mark Brandenburg, The Church Books of the Mark Brandenburg, Second Section, 1st Issue) Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1905 p. 69 (digitized) .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Sophie Wauer: Brandenburgisches Namenbuch. P. 226. For the Lower Sorbian naming see chapter First mentions and naming .
  2. Olaf Juschus: The young moraine south of Berlin - investigations into the young Quaternary landscape development between Unterspreewald and Nuthe. S. 2. Dissertation, Humboldt University Berlin, 2001. Also in: Berliner Geographische Arbeit 95. ISBN 3-9806807-2-X , Berlin 2003. See Figure 2 Plates and glacial valleys in the young moraine south of Berlin in Chapter 1 and Chapter 4 Fig. 32 and subsections 4.3.4.3 and 4.3.4.5 .
  3. a b c d e Land surveying and geographic base information Brandenburg : Brandenburg viewer, digital topographic maps 1: 10,000 (Menu - "More data" - click and select accordingly; switch on "Real estate cadastre" for the district boundaries and then "Landmarks".)
  4. Busverkehr Oder-Spree GmbH: Line 405 .
  5. a b c d e f g h i j k l Joachim Schölzel (edit.): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. (HOL). P. 72 f.
  6. ^ Landesumweltamt Brandenburg (LUGV): River directory, source data set gewnet25 Version 4.0 . As of April 25, 2014, p. 27.
  7. ^ Landesumweltamt Brandenburg (LUGV): River directory, source data set gewnet25 Version 4.0 . As of April 25, 2014, p. 9.
  8. ^ Landesumweltamt Brandenburg (LUGV): River directory, source data set gewnet25 Version 4.0 . As of April 25, 2014, p. 11.
  9. State Environment Agency Brandenburg: EU Water Framework Directive (WFD). Water development concept (GEK) Krumme Spree. ( Memento from August 8, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Flyer, Potsdam 2010.
  10. ↑ Inheritance register of the Storkow rule from 1518, reproduced in: Adolph Friedrich Riedel : Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis , first main part, Volume XX (A 20), Berlin 1861, p. 511 Google Book
  11. ^ A b Sophie Wauer: Brandenburgisches Namenbuch. P. 60.
  12. ^ Sophie Wauer: Brandenburgisches Namenbuch. P. 226.
  13. Carl Petersen: The history of the Beeskow-Storkow district. Pp. 413-416.
  14. ^ Carl von Eickstedt: Contributions to a newer land book of the Brandenburg brands: prelates, knights, cities, fiefdoms, or Roßdienst and fiefdom. Creutz, Magdeburg 1840, online at Google Books , p. 19.
  15. a b c d Carl Petersen: The history of the Beeskow-Storkow district. P. 414 f.
  16. a b c d e f g h Municipality of Tauche: Falkenberg
  17. New Prussian Adelslexikon or genealogical and diplomatic news - edited by scholars and friends of patriotic history under the leadership of Baron Leopold von Zedlitz-Neukirch, Supplement , Leipzig 1839 pp. 243, 245 ( full text ).
  18. ^ Rolf Straubel : Biographical manual of the Prussian administrative and judicial officials 1740–1806 / 15 . In: Historical Commission to Berlin (Ed.): Individual publications . 85. KG Saur Verlag, Munich 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-23229-9 , pp. 586 ( limited preview in the Google book search - see entry on District Administrator Erdmann Gottlob von Loesch (e) brand).
  19. Nobilitas, family tree database of the German nobility: Gustav Siegfried von Blücher, on Falkenberg. ( Memento from February 8, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  20. Francesko Rocca: History and administration of the royal family property: according to the files and documents of the Kgl. Court Chamber in Charlottenburg compiled. 522 pp., Berlin, Rohde, 1913–1914.
  21. a b Joachim Schölzel (edit.): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. (HOL). P. 73.
  22. State Office for Data Processing and Statistics State of Brandenburg: Contribution to statistics. Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 . Oder-Spree district, 19.9. Potsdam. Retrieved January 12, 2020 .
  23. Joachim Schölzel (edit.): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. (HOL). Pp. 47 f, 72, 111.
  24. ^ Sophie Wauer: Brandenburgisches Namenbuch. P. 70.
  25. Evangelical Church Community Tauche
  26. Cylex Business Directory Germany: Falk GbR, diving
  27. ^ Community Tauche: Business Directory.
  28. ↑ State Fire Brigade Association Brandenburg e. V .: 1st Brandenburg hand pressure syringe meeting. (2013)
  29. Kreisfeuerwehrverband Landkreis Oder-Spree e. V .: Brandenburger hand pressure syringe meeting 2014. ( Memento from October 12, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
  30. pro agro: 20th Brandenburger Landpartie. ( Memento of July 21, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) June 2014, p. 2 f, 25.
  31. ^ "Village club 'Falkenberg 1495'".
  32. Info brochure Tauche 2013, p. 1.
  33. SV Tauche e. V.
  34. a b German Weather Service : Meteorological Observatory Lindenberg - Richard-Assmann-Observatory. Falkenberg boundary layer measuring field.
  35. ^ Astrid Ziemann, Armin Raabe: Excursion of the Leipzig branch to Lindenberg. In: Mitteilungen DMG , Issue 04, 2009 ISSN  0177-8501 p. 21 f ( PDF ).
  36. ^ Gießener Allgemeine : The weather station house has been empty for five years. 18th July 2013.
This version was added to the list of articles worth reading on July 17, 2015 .