Good Bülk

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The Bülk Manor , since 1718 the Alt-Bülk Manor , opened in the 18th – 19th centuries. Alt-Bülck was written in the 18th century, is a noble estate in what is now the area of ​​the municipality of Strande in the Danish Wohld , district of Rendsburg-Eckernförde , Schleswig-Holstein .

history

Until the division

Bülk Castle before 1616

In 1304 the noble manor Bülk was first documented. With Bülk or "Bülleke" one described the entire property belonging together from Seekamp and Knoop to Danish-Nienhof inclusive. In 1350 the knight Ivan Reventlow is named as the owner, his wife was Beke Pogwisch . The property was sold to Wulf Pogwisch , a brother of Beke Pogwisch , in 1353 .

From 1414 the Rantzau family is named as the owner, for example Otto Rantzau in 1486 († 1511). He rebuilt Bülk Castle on the foundations of an old castle or house. The castle is demolished in 1796. Otto Rantzau received a crypt in the Nikolai Church in Kiel, which was completely destroyed by a British bomb in 1945. Otto Rantzau was also the owner of the Seekamp , Knoop , Borghorsterhütten and Schinkel estates .

His son Christoph Rantzau inherited these goods, in 1561 his son Hyronimus Rantzau , 1571 Heinrich Rantzau († 1579). His four sons shared his property. Paul Rantzau inherited Gut Knoop , Hyronimus Rantzau Gut Seekamp , Lorentz Rantzau Gut Bülk and the last, whose name has not been passed down, inherited a farm, a town house and cash.

Lorentz Rantzau was murdered in Dänischenhagen in 1602 on behalf of Claus von der Wisch (1552 - November 6, 1621), owner of the Kaltenhof and Danish-Nienhof estates to the north-west . The murdered man's sister, Dorothea Rantzau, sat alone on Bülk from then on until she married Claus von Buchwald from the Sierhagen family near Plön in 1616 . In 1626, Cai von Ahlefeldt von Mehlbeck, Steinburg district, acquired the Bülk estate as well as the Knoop and Seekamp estates. In 1632 he sold all three goods to Christian IV (Denmark and Norway) . The reason was the building of the Friedrichsort fortress . After this had been razed, Claus von Buchwald bought the three goods back. He left it to his son Wulf von Buchwald as an inheritance. This went bankrupt, from which then in 1687 Claus Christoph I von Thienen (1657–1708) bought the Bülk estate. In 1708 he laid out the Meierhöfe Ravensbek (later Neu-Bülk) and Eckhof. His son Claus Christoph II von Thienen (1693–1752) then divided the estate into three parts:

  • The Meierhof Ravensbek becomes the noble Gut Neu-Bülk .
  • The Meierhof Eckhof becomes the noble Gut Eckhof .
  • The old Bülk estate was greatly reduced in size and is now called Alt-Bülk.

Good Alt-Bülk

Manor house on Gut Alt-Bülk,
photo 2009

After the death of Claus Christoph II von Thienen (1693–1752) the Alt-Bülk estate goes to his son Ludwig Christian Carl von Thienen. He sells it, the size of 9 plows, in 1757 to Christian Albrecht Liliencron (1728–1787), owner of the Wulfshagen and Hütten estates . The farm of the Alt-Bülk estate has deteriorated to such an extent that Liliencron continues to live in Wulfshagen. When he dies, the heirs vacate what is still to be had and sell the estate to Chamberlain Jens Peter Bruun Neergard (1764–1848) in 1795 . He tore down the old buildings and had new farm buildings rebuilt from the demolition material one and a half kilometers further in the northwest. In 1828 Bruun Neergard went bankrupt.

Rodde

Stone on the legacy of the Rodde family Photo
taken in 2009

In 1828 the estate for 84200 Reichsthalers came into the possession of Carl August Rodde (June 16, 1798 - February 2, 1873) from Westphalia. In 1833 he built the manor house, which is still standing today. In 1870, his son Carl August Rodde (December 25, 1845 - March 17, 1916) took over the “landlord and police business in the noble estates of Alt-Bülk and Neu-Bülk”. Gut Alt-Bülk was followed by his son Albrecht Rodde (November 8, 1874 - December 24, 1952), his son Hans-Helmut Rodde (April 12, 1905 - November 27, 1988).


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Carl August Rodde
(June 16, 1798 - February 2, 1873)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Carl August Rodde
(December 25, 1845 - March 17, 1916)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Albrecht Rodde
(November 8, 1874 - December 24, 1952)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Wilhelmine Stresow
(April 24, 1846 - June 8, 1936)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hans-Helmut Rodde
(April 12, 1905 - November 27, 1988)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Johanna Hansen
(November 10, 1888 - April 1, 1971)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Rodde
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hildegard Schwerdtfeger
(May 1, 1915 - April 26, 2008)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Personalities

  • Jens Peter Bruun Neergard (* December 7, 1764, † January 7, 1848), owner of Alt-Bülk, Neu-Bülk and Eckhof
  • Christian Albrecht von Liliencron (* March 28, 1728, † May 2, 1787)

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Westphalia monumente inedita IV v. Hennings Genealogi familia nobile.
    quoted by F. Sellmer: The goods in the area . In: Our closer homeland , part II, 1954. Location: Schleswig-Holstein State Archives, Schleswig, signature, EI 6157
  2. ^ A b c F. Sellmer: The goods of the area . In: Our closer homeland , part II, 1954. Location: Schleswig-Holstein State Archives, Schleswig, signature, EI 6157
  3. ^ Landesarchiv Schleswig-Holstein, Department 65.1, No. 513
  4. Heimatbuch des Kreis Eckernförde on behalf of Heimatgemeinschaft Eckernförde e. V. ed. by Karl Graucob and Detlef Thomsen, Volume II, 3rd edition, pp. 202, 203
  5. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Schleswig , May 16, 1870

Coordinates: 54 ° 27 '28 "  N , 10 ° 9' 53.2"  E