Satzkorn manor house

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The Satzkorn manor is a mansion in the Satzkorn district of Potsdam . It consists of two farm buildings, two stable buildings, an administrator's house and the actual manor house.

location

The manor house is on the outskirts of the village on Dorfstrasse. It is surrounded by fields and is in the vicinity of a fruit farm that is still active today.

history

The manor house in April 2013

As property of the Hünicke family

In 1406, a property in Satzkorn is mentioned for the first time, which was owned by the Hünicke family from 1416 onwards. At that time, the Hünickes also owned goods in nearby Kartzow .
The sentence grain saga of the three-legged hare refers to the sale of the property by Cuno von Hünicke to a commoner in 1731. It says that Hünicke is still haunted in town as a three-legged hare out of anger about the sale.

As property of the Brandhorst family

According to research by Ramona Simone Dornbusch, Johann Conrad Friedrich Brandhorst acquired the Satzkorner knight seat from Cuno von Hünicke in 1739. Brandhorst, who enjoyed the trust of the king as Friedrich Wilhelm I's personal physician and who as a councilor was even allowed to participate in the royal tobacco college, had the then existing medieval manor house largely demolished soon after purchasing the property and built a new building in baroque forms . Brandhorst did not live to see the completion of his manor house, however, as he died on May 1, 1740 in his house at Am Kanal 26 in Potsdam.

According to the publication by Dornbusch, today an employee of the Lower Monument Protection Authority, the Brandhorst family, in whose hands the property subsequently remained, celebrated the 150th anniversary of ownership in Satzkorn in 1889. Since then, says Dornbusch, the descendants of the family have borne the double name Brandhorst-Satzkorn.

Use as VEG

In 1945 the estate was taken over by the Red Army and served as a supply depot. In 1950 the property was handed over to the nationally owned Gut Satzkorn. In the following years, the focus was increasingly on growing fruit. Gradually, however, large estates were given to the Agricultural Production Cooperative (LPG) Marquardt , from which today's Obstgut Marquardt GbR emerged.

After 1990

After the reunification, the estate was sold to private owners in 1991. After that, the facility, which was placed under monument protection in April 2002 , changed hands several times. The building is currently empty and in danger of deteriorating. In 2020 the complex was sold again to the owners of the neighboring holiday apartments.

architecture

The manor house is a brick building consisting of eleven axes. There is a richly decorated attic on the east facade . The roof is a hipped mansard roof .

Web links

literature

  • Catrin During, Albrecht Ecke: Gebaut !: Architekturführer Potsdam Lukas Verlag, 2007, in Google Books

Individual evidence

  1. [1]
  2. Satzkorn's manor house is not being renovated, the requirements are too high . Märkische Allgemeine Zeitung of August 27, 2011, accessed on December 21, 2012.
  3. ^ The Satzkorn manor in new hands . Märkische Allgemeine Zeitung of July 6, 2020, accessed on July 18, 2020.

Coordinates: 52 ° 28 ′ 23.6 "  N , 12 ° 59 ′ 22.7"  E