Giesensdorf (diving)

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Giesensdorf
Community of Tauche
Coordinates: 52 ° 8 ′ 17 ″  N , 14 ° 7 ′ 48 ″  E
Height : 59 m
Area : 8.97 km²
Residents : 236  (December 31, 2017)
Population density : 26 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : December 31, 2001
Postal code : 15848
Area code : 033675
State road L 443 in Giesensdorf.  Branch of the district road K 6725 to Wulfersdorf → Görsdorf.
State road L 443 in Giesensdorf. Branch of the district road K 6725 to Wulfersdorf → Görsdorf.
Anger with a war memorial

Giesensdorf ( Gižojce in Lower Sorbian ) is a district of the municipality of Tauche in the Oder-Spree district (Brandenburg). Giesensdorf was an independent municipality until 2001.

geography

Giesensdorf is just under three kilometers southwest of the center of Tauche and nine kilometers southwest of Beeskow . The Wulfersdorf residential area belongs to Giesensdorf . The district of Giesensdorf borders in the north on the district of Wulfersdorf and on the district of the core town Tauche , which is part of the (large) community Tauche. In the east, the Giesensdorf district borders on Stremmen , in the south on Briescht and in the west on Kossenblatt . The place can be reached via the L443 from Tauche or Kossenblatt. A small road leads from the town center to Wulfersdorf.

Giesensdorfer pond

To the northwest and west of the village lies the Große Kossenblatter See . The historically northeastern branch of the Großer Kossenblatter See was drained as early as the end of the Middle Ages. Due to the recent flooding of the wet meadows, a lake has formed again, the Giesensdorfer pond. To the north of the town center, the only part of the water-bearing Giesensdorfer Graben leads to this newly formed spur of the Great Kossenblatter See. In the southeast, the boundary of the district is formed by the slope of the site to the Briescht-Stremmener Fließ. In the southeast corner of the district there is a small pond with no name in the topographic map 1: 25,000. The highest point of the district is the Illingsberg at 65.6  m above sea level. NHN . In the further course of the range of hills to the south there is another small hill at 63.4  m above sea level. NHN . The lowest point is the lake level of the Großer Kossenblatter See at 43  m above sea level. NHN . The greater part of the district is used for agriculture. But there are some small forest areas in the east and south of the district.

The Wulfersdorf residential area, which was an independent municipality until December 31, 1961, also belongs to the district of Giesensdorf. The story therefore only refers to the core town of Giesensdorf, before the incorporation of Wulfersdorf.

Giesensdorf and Wulfersdorf, excerpt from the Urmes table sheet 3850 Kossen sheet from 1846

history

The place appears in the spelling Geyselßdorf for the first time in 1476 in a document. The name comes from the time of the eastern colonization and means the village, which is named after a man (locator) named Giselmar. The second part of the personal name is, however, insecure due to the very late tradition and strong change in the name. In terms of the village structure, it is an anger village.

Ownership history

According to the estate register of the Storkow lordship, established on June 15, 1518 , the Giesensdorf manor ( Giessmesdorff ) had to provide half a knight's horse (or, of course, half of the equipping and maintenance of a knight's horse). In 1519 Giesensdorf belonged to the cousins ​​Hans and Caspar vom Thore, otherwise known as Eckert. Hans died in 1534 and Giesensdorf now belonged to Caspar vom Thore alone, as was the case in 1553, when Caspar (called Eckard) vom Thore was enfeoffed by Bishop Johann VIII von Lebus with Giesensdorf ( Gißmannsdorff ) on Thursday after Bartholomäi (August 24) . Apparently Caspar also died without a physical heir, because on October 19, 1556 the Brandenburg (co-) margrave Hans von Küstrin , to whom the fief had fallen , enfeoffed his court marshal Nickel von Wiedebach with the village of Giesensdorf and its accessories. However, only one year later, he sold Giesensdorf to Barthold von Schlieben. Hans von Küstrin enfeoffed this with Giesensdorf on June 18, 1558. On June 5, 1565, Barthold von Schlieben concluded a preliminary contract with Nickel von Maltitz for the sale of the village of Giesensdorf.

The village was finally transferred to Nickel von Maltitz in Klein Rietz by contract of May 28, 1566 for 5,480 guilders . However, disputes subsequently arose due to unclear points in the sales contract. After all, negotiators had to compare Nickel von Maltitz zu Giesensdorf on the one hand with Andreas von Schlieben, Komtur der Johanniterkommende zu Lagow , and Nickel von Langen on Münchehofe on the other.

According to the list of horse services in Storkowschen and Beskoschen Weichbilde in 1583 , the Nickel Maltitzen zu Gießmerstorff and the Hobecken zu Falckenberg put together a well-equipped horse. According to the judgment of the draft commission, they were well armed with anything. In 1597 Kaspar von Flanß, governor of Fürstenwalde (1581–1594) married Ursula, daughter of Nickel von Maltitz auf Giesensdorf, for the second time.

On February 24, 1600 Georg von Langen sold a farm in Giesensdorf to Hans von Maltitz. Hans von Maltitz was married to Barbara Sabina von Wulffen adH Madlitz . The daughter Barbara von Maltitz (born March 9, 1609) was married to David von Oppen on Kossenblatt. She died on April 24, 1641 at the age of only 32 in Giesensdorf. On November 11, 1602, Jacob von Schapelow zu Trebatsch sold a vineyard in the Feldmark Wulfersdorf to Hans von Maltitz zu Giesensdorf for 100 thalers. Hans von Maltitz died in 1615. His inscription tombstone with the armored figure of the deceased is still in the church of Giesensdorf.

A Joachim von Maltitz von Giesensdorf, very likely a son of Hans, bought the village of Göllnitz from Hans Caspar von Klitzing for 16,000 thalers in 1632 . His brother Nicol auf Giesensdorf and other cousins ​​von Maltitz were also lent. On June 22, 1644, Elector Friedrich Wilhelm, Margrave of Brandenburg, enfeoffed the Maltitz brothers and cousins ​​with the village of Giesensdorf. Among them, Joachim's brother Nicol von Maltitz, mentioned above, must have been, because he is documented as the owner of Giesensdorf in 1652. In 1644 Nickel von Maltitz was enfeoffed with the Falkenberg estate by the Brandenburg Elector.

On September 3, 1652, Nickel von Maltitz zu Giesensdorf sold the Birkholz estate for 8,600 thalers to David von Oppen, son of Georg von Oppen on Kossenblatt. According to the historical local lexicon, Nickel von Maltitz (or his heirs) had to sell Giesensdorf in 1661 to the von Oppen in Krausnick and Groß Köris. The son Georg (the younger) of Georg von Oppen (the elder) had received Schwenow when the inheritance was divided. In 1644 he had acquired Groß Köris and in 1647 half of Krausnick and Köthen and a quarter of Leibsch. His first marriage was to Anna Sibylle von Langen from the Groß Wasserburg house . With her he had the sons Georg, Christoph and Erdmann. His second marriage was to Sabina von Maltitz von Giesensdorf, with whom he had nine other sons: Jobst, Caspar, David, Hans Georg, Gustav, Albrecht, Johann Niclaus, Joachim and Christoph. Georg the Younger died in Schwenow in 1651 . Sabina von Maltitz von Giesensdorf must have been the sister of Nicol and Joachim von Maltitz and daughter of Hans von Maltitz auf Giesensdorf.

The brothers von Oppen zu Krausnick and Groß Köris, the sons of Georg von Oppen (the younger), pledged the village of Giesensdorf and all its accessories on March 18, 1667 for 4,400 thalers and for 40 years to Wolf Joachim von Rohr zu Ragow. Apparently the pledge did not materialize or was released after two years, because on March 18, 1669, the von Oppen brothers pledged Giesensdorf again, this time to Christof Wilhelm von Krummensee. On April 13, 1685, Elector Friedrich Wilhelm gave his (subsequent) consensus on this pledge. On October 1, 1687, an electoral commission had to decide a border dispute between Christof Wilhelm von Krummensee on Giesensdorf and that of Schapelow on Stremmen.

Even before 1689 the von Maltitz auf Tauche succeeded in taking Giesensdorf into their possession. From 1689 to 1792 the pastor of Wulfersdorf litigated Nicol von Maltitz auf Giesensdorf because of the parish decem. In 1690 Caspar Sigismund von Muschwitz pledged the village of Birkholz to Nickel von Maltitz for 2,000 thalers for a period of 20 years. In addition, the Brandenburg Elector Friedrich III. his consensus on February 11, 1690. And finally Nickel reached from Maltitz zu Tauche that he was on July 14, 1698 by Elector Friedrich III. was enfeoffed with the Giesendorf estate. Nickel von Maltitz first married Katharina von Stutterheim adH Golßen in 1679, who died on November 13, 1692. On October 16, 1694 he entered into a second marriage with Elisabeth Hedwig von Burgsdorf, a daughter of Adam von Burgsdorf auf Podelzig and Anna Sophie von Buch adH Stolpe. On June 13, 1699, Nickel von Maltitz zu Tauche set up a marriage foundation for his wife, Elisabeth Hedwig b. from Burgsdorf. Nickel von Maltitz zu Tauche received a renewed enfeoffment with Gut Giesensdorf by King Friedrich Wilhelm I on October 10, 1714. Nickel von Maltitz was district administrator of the Beeskow-Storkowischen district. He died on April 15, 1732 while diving.

He was followed by his son Sigismund Wilhelm (* 1680 in Tauche). He was married to Charlotte Dorothea von Langen, daughter of Otto Joachim von Langen auf Groß Wasserburg and Christine Dorothea von Stutterheim adH Kablitz . Sigismund Wilhelm made it to the rank of captain in the Prussian army, most recently he was in the Graf Lottum Regiment, No. 15. In the Beeskow-Storkowischen Kreis he was elected district administrator. He had the church there built in 1717. Sigismund Wilhelm and Charlotte Dorothea had three sons, Nicol Otto (later on Luckaitz ), Siegmund (inherited the Tauche estate) and Friedrich Ludwig (later on Lipten ). Sigismund Wilhelm died on May 15, 1723, Charlotte Dorothea on December 6, 1751 in Göllnitz.

On June 12, 1737 Sigmund v. Maltitz Giesensdorf for 16,000 thalers to the Brandenburg Elector and King in Prussia Friedrich Wilhelm I , who incorporated Giesensdorf into the office of Kossenblatt . On February 20, 1737, Sigmund von Maltitz bought the village of Lipten and the jug there for 20,000 thalers and 200 thalers key money. He fell on September 30, 1745 as Rittmeister in the Battle of Thrush in Bohemia. Since he had no physical heirs, his two brothers Nicol Otto and Friedrich Ludwig inherited the Lipten estate. In the hereditary comparison of the two brothers, it was finally taken over by Friedrich Ludwig alone in 1757, but immediately sold it to Wilhelm Leopold von Muschwitz for 28,000 thalers.

The Giesensdorf estate was managed by the bailiff in Kossenblatt from 1737 onwards. From 1811 the Giesensdorf estate was given a long lease. The Kossenblatt office became a pure rent office in 1811, collecting the pensions from the villages and the leases for the farms. Around after 1820/22 it was united with the Trebatsch office.

The Vorwerk Giesensdorf (or the former manor) was leased from Karl Ludwig Buchholtz together with Kossenblatt. He had previously been the clerk of the Kossenblatt office. In 1851 the two goods were sold for free. In 1853, the widow of the Oberamtmann Buchholz (associated with Kossenblatt) owned the two estates.

Rambouillet merino

In 1879, the Real Estate Handbook lists an Albert Symons as a landowner. In Handbook of land ownership from 1885 under the heading Industrial equipment called a starch factory. Under the heading breeding special cattle breeds ... is the rearing of young cattle and Rambouillet called -Schäferei. The size of the property is given as 353.48 ha. Of this, 280.07 hectares were in fields, 22.40 hectares in meadows, 17.39 hectares in guarding and 33.62 hectares in forest. The net property tax amounted to 3240 marks. In 1903 the widowed Mrs. Symons is registered. In 1910 it was taken over by the son Walter Symons, who was still the owner of the estate in 1914. Shortly afterwards, by 1917 at the latest, Gustav and Clara Knauer took over the business. In 1921 a new owner appears with Gustav Knauer. However, he had the business run by an inspector Bartel. The production of grain and beet seed is specified as a special feature. Gustav Knauer is also registered as the owner for 1923. The animal population amounted to 31 horses and 74 head of cattle, 54 of them cows alone. The size of the farm was 356 hectares, of which 209 hectares were arable, 22 hectares were meadows, 120 hectares were forest and 5 hectares were unland and farms. The property tax entry is now numbered at 3224 marks. The company was administered by Hans Grunwald. In 1929 Mrs. Klara Knauer owned the business. The estate was still managed by Hans Grunwald as administrator. In the land reform of 1946, the property was expropriated.

Population development from 1774 to 2000
year 1774 1801 1818 1837 1858 1875 1890 1910 1925 1939 1946 1959 1964 1971 1981 1991 2000
Residents 104 138 143 153 174 154 169 140 205 305 278 279 417 386 315 264 274

Local history

In the Middle Ages, wine was grown near Giesensdorf. A vineyard near Giesensdorf was already occupied in 1476. In 1576 eight farmers, nine cottagers and two cottagers lived in the village. In 1600 there were 20 farmer's hooves and ten knight's hooves on the Giesensdorf field mark. In addition to the local rule and the hoof farmers, nine kossa families, a shepherd and a shepherd lived in the village.

The intended condition of the village was described in 1652: two Dreihufenhöfe, including the Lehnschulze and the Lehnmann, five Zweihufenhöfe, four Einhufenhöfe, nine Kossatenhöfe and a community shepherd's house. Almost all of the farms were desolate in 1652, but two two-hoofed farms had been confiscated by the rulers since ancient times . One of the four Einhufen farms was desolate and one was burned down. But the farmer lived on a desolate farm. Two of the nine cottages were abandoned, one was occupied by a former soldier and his mother. One house was empty, one house was occupied by a househusband and a carpenter, and one of the houses was occupied by the man who ran the manor for the Junker. A shepherd lived in the community shepherd's house.

Even in 1692 things looked bad in the village. The farms were all desolate, but were managed by the manor. Three of the new cottages were desolate. A shepherd lived in the village. The field mark was divided into three large fields, on the winter field 6 bushels of 8½ Metzen winter seed were sown, on the summer field 4½ bushels of summer seed. 4 bushels of winter seed and 2 bushels of 3 metzes of summer seed were sown in the fields. The fields only produced the 3rd grain. In the meadows, 6 loads of hay were brought in for each farmer's hoof and 3 loads of hay for each farm. The hats were bad and there was no wood in the area. The people of Giesensdorf had no fishing and were not allowed to keep sheep. As the following status report from 1743 shows, the local rulers had no interest in reoccupying the desolate farm positions that they had taken for their manor.

In 1732 there were 25 hooves on the Feldmark, on which 4 bison 6 bushels 6 ¾ Metzen winter seeds were sown. In 1743 there were 14 cottagers, two Büdners (including the county messenger), a househusband, a shepherd, a shepherd and a blacksmith in the village. In 1745 the manor was converted into a Vorwerk. The office had also set up a sheep farm. There was an official vineyard in the district. Eleven cottagers with their families lived in Giesensdorf. The number of Büdner is not mentioned.

In 1775 there were eleven Kossäts and ten Büdner living in the village; there were 22 fire places (= houses). Bratring brings the following information for 1801: eleven whole kossas, four Büdner, five granny, a blacksmith and a jug. There was also the official Vorwerk, a total of 24 fireplaces. There were 25 farmer's hooves and 10 knight's hooves on the Feldmark. However, this was only a repetition of the situation before the Thirty Years 'War, because most of the farmers' hooves had been united with the manor or the Amtvorwerk. In 1837 there were 22 houses in the village. In 1858 the municipality had a public building, 19 residential buildings and 43 farm buildings. There were three residential buildings and eight farm buildings in the manor district. In 1864, in addition to the Vorwerk, there were eleven Kossaten, four Büdner and a blacksmith. In 1900 there were 21 houses in the municipality and eight houses in the manor. In 1931 31 houses were counted in the village. In 1939 there was the large estate with over 350 hectares, five farms with 20 to 100 hectares, 12 farms with 10 to 20 hectares, 7 farms with 5 to 10 hectares and 10 smallest farms with 0.5 to 5 hectares.

In 1946 the large 360 ​​hectare estate was expropriated. Of this, 275 hectares were divided up and 87 hectares were distributed to 13 farm workers and landless farmers, 41 hectares went to 9 poor farmers, 130 hectares were distributed among 20 resettlers and 2 hectares to one worker. The rural community received 15 hectares. As early as 1955, the first LPG type I was formed, which was converted into type III in 1959. In 1960 LPG Type III comprised 49 farms, had 102 members and managed 591 hectares of agricultural land. A second type I LPG consisted of 6 farms, had 12 members and managed 61 hectares of usable area. In 1963 both LPGs were combined (type III) with 653 hectares of cultivated area. In 1977 there was a Cooperative Plant Production Department (KAP) in addition to the LPG

Communal history

The Beeskow-Storkowische Kreis was formed from the Beeskow and Storkow dominions in the course of the 17th and 18th centuries, and was dissolved during the district reform in 1816. Kummerow came to the Lübben-Beeskow district, which was dissolved again in 1835. The former lords of Beeskow and Storkow have now been combined to form the Beeskow district. The Beeskow district lasted until 1950 when Giesensdorf joined the Fürstenwalde district for two years . In 1952 the Beeskow district was re-created, but with changed borders in the Frankfurt / Oder district. This district lasted until 1993, when it was opened up during the district reform in the state of Brandenburg in the newly created district of Oder-Spree.

In 1849 the parish and manor district were established. In 1858 the parish had a size of 784 acres, including 3 acres of homesteads, 44 acres of garden land, 620 acres of arable land, 36 acres of meadow and 81 acres of pasture. The estate comprised 1,327 acres, including 3 acres of homesteads, 16 acres of garden land, 1,193 acres of arable land, 57 acres of meadow, 48 acres of pasture and 10 acres of forest. In 1900 that was in hectares: 210 hectares of municipal district and 354 hectares of manor district. It was not until 1928 that the manor district was combined with the municipality.

With the district reform of 1872/74 administrative districts were created. Giesensdorf formed together with Briescht , Falkenberg, Kossenblatt, Tauche and Wulfersdorf, the administrative district 17 Kossenblatt in the Beeskow-Storkow district. The head of office was the manor owner Buchholtz in Kossenblatt, the deputy of the manor owner Schumacher on diving.

In 1938 the neighboring village of Wulfersdorf was incorporated into Giesensdorf, but became independent again in 1945. On January 1, 1962, Wulfersdorf was again incorporated into Giesensdorf, Wulfersdorf became part of Giesensdorf.

In 1992 the municipality of Giesensdorf merged with seven other municipalities to form the Tauche Office , four other municipalities were assigned to the Tauche Office by ministerial resolution. On December 31, 2001, the municipalities of Briescht, Falkenberg, Giesendorf, Görsdorf bei Beeskow, Kossenblatt, Lindenberg, Mittweide, Ranzig, Tauche, Trebatsch and Werder merged to form the new (large) municipality of Tauche, Stremmen followed in 2003 Giesensdorf is a district of Tauche, which also includes the Wulfersdorf residential area. In the district of Giesensdorf, a local advisory council consisting of three members is elected, which in turn elects the local councilor from among its members for the duration of an election period. The mayor for Giesensdorf is currently (2018) Lutz Weber.

Monuments and sights

The list of monuments of the state of Brandenburg for the Oder-Spree district shows a single monument in the Giesensdorf district

literature

  • Friedrich Beck : Document inventory of the Brandenburg State Main Archives - Kurmark, 2: Municipal institutions and noble lords and goods. VII, 820 pp., Berlin, Berlin-Verl. Spitz 2002 ISBN 3830502923 (at the same time publications of the Brandenburg State Main Archive Potsdam 45) (in the following abbreviated Beck, document inventory , 3 with corresponding page number).
  • Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus : Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz in the middle of the 19th century; or geographical-historical-statistical description of the Province of Brandenburg, at the instigation of the State Minister and Upper President Flottwell. Second volume. 650 p., Printed and published by Adolph Müller, Brandenburg 1855. Online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated to Berghaus, Landbuch, Vol. 2 with corresponding page number)
  • Friedrich Wilhelm August Bratring : Statistical-topographical description of the entire Mark Brandenburg. Second volume. Containing the Mittelmark and Ukermark. VIII, 583 S., Berlin, Maurer, 1805 Online at Google Books (in the following abbreviated Bratring, Description, Vol. 2 with corresponding page number).
  • Alexander Freiherr von Dachenhausen: von Maltitz. Genealogical paperback of the primitive nobility, 2: 360–377, Brno, 1893 (hereinafter abbreviated to Dachenhausen, Maltitz with corresponding page number)
  • Carl von Eickstedt: Contributions to a newer land book of the Brandenburg brands: prelates, knights, cities, fiefdoms, or Roßdienst and fiefdom. 590 p., Creutz, Magdeburg 1840 (hereinafter Eickstedt, Landbuch with corresponding page number)
  • Adolph Friedrich Riedel: Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis: Collection of documents, chronicles and other source documents. Part 1 (A) Vol. 20 516 pp., Reimer, Berlin 1861 Online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated to Riedel, Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis, A 20, with the corresponding page number)
  • 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 p., Berlin, Rohde, 1913–1914 (in the following abbreviated, Rocca, family estates with corresponding page number)
  • Joachim Schölzel: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part IX Beeskow-Storkow. 334 p., Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1989 ISBN 3-7400-0104-6 (hereinafter Schölzel, Historisches Ortslexikon, Beeskow-Storkow, page number).
  • Siegmund Wilhelm Wohlbrück : History of the former diocese of Lebus and the country of this taking. Second part. 545 S., Berlin, self-published by the author, 1829 (hereinafter abbreviated to Wohlbrück, Bistum Lebus, Vol. 2 with corresponding page number) Online at Google Books
  • Siegmund Wilhelm Wohlbrück: History of the former diocese of Lebus and the country of this taking. Third part. 575 p., Berlin, self-published by the author, 1832 (hereinafter abbreviated to Wohlbrück, Diocese of Lebus, vol. 3 with corresponding page number)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Giesensdorf on the website of the community of Tauche
  2. ^ Sophie Wauer: The place names of the Beeskow-Storkow district. Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-515-08664-1 , p. 226.
  3. ^ Sophie Wauer, Klaus Müller: Brandenburgisches Namenbuch. Volume 12. The place names of the Beeskow-Storkow district. Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart 2005 (= Berlin contributions to name research. Volume 13) ISBN 3-515-08664-1 Preview at Google Books , p. 62.
  4. a b Schölzel, Historisches Ortslexikon Beeskow Storkow, pp. 81–83.
  5. Riedel, Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis, A 20, document number CXXXVIII (= 138), p. 511 Online at Google Books
  6. Wohlbrück, Bistum Lebus, Vol. 2, p. 442 Online at Google Books
  7. Eickstedt, Landbuch, p. 19 Online at Google Books
  8. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Margrave Johann von Brandenburg enfeoffs his court marshal Nickel von Wiedebach with the village of Giesensdorf including all accessories. 1556 October 19.
  9. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Margrave Johann von Brandenburg enfeoffed Barthold von Schlieben with the village of Giesensdorf bought by Nickel von Wiedebach. 1557 June 18.
  10. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Barthold von Schlieben concludes a preliminary contract with Nickel von Maltitz for the sale of the village of Giesensdorf. 1565 June 5.
  11. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Barthold von Schlieben zu Giesensdorf sells Nickel von Maltitz zu Klein Rietz the village of Giesensdorf for 5,480 guilders. 1566 May 28.
  12. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Negotiators compare Nickel von Maltitz zu Giesendorf with Andreas von Schlieben, [Johanniterordens- Komtur zu Lagow, and Nickel von Langen zu Münchehofe because of controversial points of the sales contract concluded in the document of 1566 May 28th. 1568 October 21.]
  13. Eickstedt, Landbuch, p. 95 Online at Google Books
  14. Wohlbrück, Bistum Lebus, Vol. 3, p. 319 Online at Google Books
  15. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Georg Lange sold a farm in Giesensdorf to Hans von Maltitz. 1600 February 24.
  16. Justus Christoph Dithmar: Genealogical historical message from the most revered and transparent masters of the Knightly Order of St. John In the Mark / Saxony / Pomerania and Wendland, ... 83 S., Jeremias Hartmann, Frankfurt (Oder), 1737 online at Google Books , p. 56.
  17. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Jacob von Schapelow zu Trebatsch sells Hans von Maltitz zu Giesensdorf a vineyard in the field of Wulfersdorf for 100 thalers. 1602 November 11.
  18. Georg Dehio (edited by Gerhard Vinken and others): Handbook of German Art Monuments Brandenburg. 2. through and exp. Edition by Barbara Rimpel, Deutscher Kunstverlag, Berlin / Munich 2012, ISBN 978-3-422-03123-4 , p. 379.
  19. Götz Freiherr von Houwald: The Niederlausitzer manors and their owners. Volume V: Luckau district. XXIV, 558 pp., Verlag Degener & Co., owner Gerhard Gessner, Neustadt an der Aisch 1996, ISBN 3-7686-4145-7 , pp. 172-173.
  20. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Elector Friedrich Wilhelm, Margrave of Brandenburg, enfeoffed the von Maltitz brothers and cousins ​​with the village of Giesensdorf. 1644 June 22.
  21. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Elector Friedrich Wilhelm, Margrave of Brandenburg, enfeoffs Nickel von Maltitz with the Falkenberg estate. 1644 June 22
  22. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Nickel von Maltitz zu Giesensdorf sells David von Oppen zu Kossenblatt the Birkholz estate for 8,600 thalers, September 3, 1652
  23. Johann Christoph Eilers: Chronicon Beltizense or Beltziger Chronik, which includes the antiquity of the city and countryside Beltzig, u. the beginning of the Christl. Religion here still expelled the Wends. 644 p., Wittenberg, Eichsfelder, 1743 Online at Google Books (p. 477/8)
  24. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: The brothers von Oppen zu Krausnick and Groß Köris pledge Wolf Joachim von Rohr zu Ragow the village of Giesensdorf including all accessories for 4,400 thalers for 40 years. 1667 March 18.
  25. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Elector Friedrich Wilhelm, Margrave of Brandenburg, gives his consensus on the pledging of the village of Giesensdorf by the von Oppen brothers to Christof Wilhelm von Krummensee on March 18, 1669. 1685 April 13.
  26. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Electoral Brandenburg commissioners decide in a border dispute between von Krummensee zu Giesensdorf and von Schapelow zu Stremmen. 1687 October 1
  27. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Pastor zu Wulfersdorf against Nicol v. Maltitz on Giesensdorf because of the parish decem. 1689-1702
  28. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Elector Friedrich III., Margrave of Brandenburg, grants the consensus for Caspar Sigismund von Muschwitz to pledge Birkholz to Nickel von Maltitz for 2,000 thalers for 20 years. 1690 February 11
  29. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Elector Friedrich III., Margrave of Brandenburg, enfeoffs Nickel von Maltitz zu Tauche with the Giesendorf estate. 1698 July 14.
  30. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Nickel von Maltitz zu Tauche meets a marriage foundation for his wife, b. from Burgsdorf. 1699 June 13.
  31. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: King Friedrich Wilhelm [I. , Margrave of Brandenburg, enfeoffed Nickel von Maltitz zu Tauche with the Giesensdorf estate. 1714 October 10.]
  32. Rocca, Royal Family Estates, p. 6
  33. Götz Freiherr von Houwald : The Niederlausitzer manors and their owners. Volume IV District Calau Part II. 728 p., Neustadt an der Aisch 1992, Verlag Degener & Co. ISBN 3-7686-4130-9 , p. 45.
  34. Berghaus, Landbuch, 2, p. 599 []
  35. ^ Paul Ellerholz, H. Lodemann, H. von Wedell: General address book of the manor and estate owners in the German Empire. With details of the properties, their size (in Culturart), their net income from property tax, their tenants, branches of industry and post offices. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery The Province of Brandenburg. 311 pp., Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung R. Stricker, Berlin 1879, PDF , pp. 28-29.
  36. ^ A b Paul Ellerholz: Handbook of real estate in the German Empire. With indication of all goods, their quality, their size (in culture type); your property tax net income; their owners, tenants, administrators etc .; of industries; Postal stations; Breeding of special cattle, exploitation of livestock etc. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery: Province of Brandenburg. 2nd improved edition, 340 pp., Berlin, Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1885, pp. 182-183.
  37. ^ Ernst Kirstein (editor): Handbook of real estate in the German Empire. With indication of all goods, their quality, their size and type of culture; your property tax net income; their owners, tenants, administrators etc .; of industries; Post, telegraph and railroad stations; Breeding of special breeds of animals; Exploitation of the livestock etc. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery to the province of Brandenburg. 4th improved edition, LXX + 321 p., + 4 p., Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung, Berlin, 1903, pp. 176–177.
  38. Reinhold Reichert, Royal Authorities and Chamber of Agriculture for the Province of Brandenburg (Ed.): Handbook of real estate in the German Empire. Brandenburg Province. 5th completely revised edition. I-LXXXVI (1-86), 376 p., + 24 p. (Location register), Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung R. Stricker, Berlin, 1910 (p. 238–239)
  39. ^ Ernst Seyfert (ed.): Goods address book for the province of Brandenburg. List of all manors, estates and larger farms in the province with details of the property properties, the net income from property tax, the total area and area of ​​the individual crops, livestock, all industrial facilities and telephone connections, details of the property, tenants and administrators of the Post, telegraph and railway stations and their distance from the estate, the Protestant and Catholic parishes, the registry office districts, the city and administrative districts, the higher regional, regional and local courts, an alphabetical register of places and persons, the manual of the royal authorities as well a map of the province of Brandenburg at a scale of 1: 1,000,000. XLV, 433 pp., Reichenbach'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Leipzig, 1914, p. 14.
  40. Evangelical parish Giesensdorf Church Giesensdorf
  41. R. Stricker, with the participation of the authorities and chambers of agriculture (ed.): Handbuch des Grundbesitzes im Deutschen Reiche. Brandenburg Province. Complete address book of all manors, estates and larger farms with details of the owners, tenants and administrators, the post, telegraph and railway stations and their distance from the property, as well as the telephone connections, the property property, the property tax net income, the total area and the area of ​​the individual crops, livestock, livestock exploitation, animal breeding and special crops, industrial facilities, courts and administrative districts, along with an alphabetical register of places and persons, an overview of the agricultural and structural conditions of the respective part of the country, a directory of the agricultural authorities and associations, cooperatives and industrial companies, as well as an exact map. 6th completely revised edition, 296 pp., Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung, Berlin, 1921, pp. 148–149.
  42. ^ Oskar Koehler (arrangement), Kurt Schleising (introduction): Niekammer's agricultural goods address books. Agricultural goods address book of the province of Brandenburg: Directory of all manors, estates and larger farms in the province of approx. 30 hectares upwards with details of property properties, net income from property tax, the total area and the area of ​​the individual crops, livestock, all industrial plants and the telephone connections, details of the owners, tenants and administrators, the post, telegraph and railway stations and their distance from the property, the Protestant and Catholic parishes, the registry office districts, the city and official districts, the higher regional, regional and local courts, one alphabetical place and person registers, the manual of the royal authorities and a map in the scale 1: 175.0000. I-XXXII, 343 p., Reichenbach'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Leipzig, 1923, p. 13.
  43. Ernst Seyfert, Hans Wehner, Alexander Haußknecht, Ludwig Hogrefe (eds.): Agricultural address book of the manors, estates and farms of the province of Brandenburg: List of all manors, estates and farms from approx. 20 ha upwards with information on the property, the total area and the area of ​​the individual crops, the livestock, the company's own industrial facilities and telephone connections, details of the owners, tenants and administrators, the post, telegraph and railway stations and their distance from the property, the regional and local courts, an alphabetical register of places and persons , a directory of the most important government agencies and agencies, agricultural associations and corporations. 4th increased and improved edition, 464 p., Leipzig, Verlag von Niekammer's address books, Leipzig, 1929 (Niekammer's goods address books Volume VII), p. 15.
  44. Contribution to statistics. State Office for Data Processing State of Brandenburg Statistics. Historical community directory of the State of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 19.9 District Oder-Spree PDF ( Memento of the original from October 26, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.brandenburg.de
  45. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, Supplement to Part 27 of the Official Gazette, from July 3, 1874, p. 14 Online at Google Books .
  46. Main statute of the community of Tauche from March 16, 2009 PDF
  47. Mayor Lutz Weber