Lübseerhagen manor

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Manor house Lübseerhagen

The Lübseerhagen estate is located in the municipality of Menzendorf , in the north-west Mecklenburg district , between Schönberg and Grevesmühlen . The rural estate is located directly on Lake Menzendorfer See in a hilly area bordered by the Maurine , Radegast and Stepenitz rivers. The church village Lübsee is in the immediate vicinity . Lübseerhagen belongs to the parish of Schönberg, but was incorporated into Lübsee.

history

A farm (Hufe III) at this place is first mentioned in a document in 1525. At that time it belonged to the Ratzeburg cathedral chapter . It can be assumed, however, that it is actually much older, as presumably already in 1376 when Bishop Heinrich II von Wittorf von Danquardus de Bulowe bought the property in Lübseerhagen, a former forest hoof village , there was a corresponding farm. Until 1648 the estate belonged to the diocese of Ratzeburg or the Ratzeburg bishopric, after the Reformation it belonged to the principality of Ratzeburg and thus to the dukes of Mecklenburg and Mecklenburg-Strelitz . Until the 17th century, the farm was owned by the Parbs family as landlords (landlords), after which it was owned by different families. The last landowner before 1945 was Otto Modersohn, who came from a Bielefeld industrial family and had to leave the farm with his family in 1945. The farm was expropriated and settled in the land reform . During the GDR era, the manor house was used for residential purposes, the barns, arable land and pasture areas for agricultural purposes.

Drawing Lübseerhagen2.png

After the fall of the Wall , the manor house was used as a single and multi-family house. It is privately owned.

investment

The one-story manor house was built in 1878 on the foundation walls of a previous building that burned down in 1878, which was probably built in the first half of the 19th century in place of a hall house, as a brick building on a field stone base. The courtyard, a three-sided courtyard in the historic manor house type , consists of the main house at the head of the rectangular courtyard and two two-story barns and stable buildings, symmetrically arranged in front of the main house, which delimit the courtyard. A pigsty and a chicken house on the north side of the right barn were demolished during GDR times. The two wooden sheds on the side of the barns were also demolished and replaced on the left by a modern stone building. The right barn was used until the end of World War II for the storage of agricultural products, the left barn as a horse and cowshed and as a hayloft. The right Remise originally contained wagons, the Left Remise fertilizers and equipment. Today only the orchard, the remains of the kitchen gardens and the pasture are left of the estate garden. The arable land was sold. The farm also had two farms, which were inhabited by farm workers. One of the two Büdnereien is still today on the left side behind the village entrance when coming from Menzendorf.

literature

  • Fritz Stössel: The settlements of northwest Mecklenburg. Adler, 1913, DNB 57159770X .
  • Armin Behrendt: No Schnack! That's how it was in Lübsee. Grevesmühlen 2015, ISBN 978-3-937431-95-6 .
  • Franz Stoppel: The development of the sovereignty of the bishops of Ratzeburg up to the end of the 14th century. Hofdruckerei Bohls, 1927, DNB 571263895 , pp. 45-48.
  • Otto Vitense: Mecklenburg history. GJ Göschen, 1912, DNB 362963991 .
  • Heidemarie Frimodig: Schönberg in the Ratzeburg region. Maurine-Radegast, Schönberg 2003, ISBN 3-8311-4928-3 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Eberhard Specht u. a .: 30 villages in the Principality of Ratzeburg . Heimatbund for the Principality of Ratzeburg v. 1901, Schönberg 1997, p. 215 ff .
  2. ^ Friedrich Bertheau: The historical development of the rural conditions in the Principality of Ratzeburg . In: Association for Mecklenburg history and antiquity (ed.): Yearbooks of the association for Mecklenburg history and antiquity . tape 79 . Schönberg 1914, p. 125 .
  3. ^ Mecklenburg-Strelitzer Association for History and Local History: Mecklenburg-Strelitzer Geschichtsblätter . tape ? , 1925, p. 151-154 .
  4. News . In: NN (Hrsg.): Weekly advertisements for the Principality of Ratzeburg . No. 42 , May 28, 1878.
  5. Hannelore Deya: New historical lexicon - Edition Vorpommern . Haff Verlag, Grambin 2013, p. 164 .

Coordinates: 53 ° 50 ′ 30.6 ″  N , 11 ° 0 ′ 17.1 ″  E