Gutssee
Gutssee | ||
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The Gutssee in February 2014, view from the north bank to the southwest | ||
Geographical location | Brandenburg , Dahme-Spreewald district | |
Tributaries | Flow from the Linowsee | |
Drain | Graben to Schweriner See → Groß Schauener Seenkette → Köllnitzer Fließ → Wolziger See → Storkower Gewässer → Dahme-Wasserstraße → Spree | |
Places on the shore | Punching | |
Location close to the shore | Storkow | |
Data | ||
Coordinates | 52 ° 12 '19 " N , 13 ° 50' 7" E | |
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Altitude above sea level | 38 m above sea level NHN | |
surface | 12 ha | |
length | 400 m | |
width | 400 m | |
scope | 1.26 kilometers |
The Gutssee (formerly: Wagenschützens See , Rittergutssee ) is a small, 12- hectare natural lake in the district of Streganz , a district of the Heidesee municipality in the Dahme-Spreewald district of Brandenburg . The water is part of the Dahme-Heideseen nature park .
Location and natural space
The Gutssee is located immediately north of the village center of Streganz. The Linowsee , part of the Linowsee-Dutzendsee nature reserve, follows around 550 meters south-east of the village floodplain of the Rundlingsdorf and continues in a moored valley to the south-east as far as Schwerin . The region belongs to the East Brandenburg Heath and Lake District , which is listed as No. 82 in the main natural areas of Germany . The numerous lakes in the area are a relic of the Brandenburg stage (24,000 to 22,000) of the Vistula Ice Age .
Hydrology
The almost circular Gutssee has a diameter of around 400 meters and an area of 12 hectares. The lake level is about 38 m above sea level. NHN . A river brings him water from the Linowsee. The drainage takes place to the north via a ditch that flows into the main gates A. The main ditch in turn runs to the southeast and flows into the Schweriner See , from which the waters reach the Spree via various lakes, rivers and canals . Most of the lake is surrounded by a belt of reeds , which are pronounced in places .
history
First mentions and names
The body of water was first recorded on a map in 1767 as Wagenschützensche See . In 1776 there was an entry as Wagenschützen's lake . At that time it was named after the von Wagenschütz family, who owned the knightly seat of Streganz, for which 114 inhabitants are given in 1774, between 1756 and 1777. The original record of the Prussian first recording named the lake in 1844 as the Rittergutssee . Streganz has been known as a manor since 1837. The current spelling Gutssee followed on the measuring table sheet of the Prussian new recording created around 1900 . The lake is named after the Streganz estate. The place itself was first mentioned as Stregantcz as early as 1321 .
In municipal ownership since 2014
Until mid-2012, the lake was under the administration of BVVG Bodenverwertungs- und -verwaltungs GmbH , a company of the Federal Republic of Germany for the administration, leasing and sale of agricultural and forestry land in the new federal states . In order to prevent the privatization of Brandenburg waters planned by the federal government , after two years of negotiations , the state government pushed through the purchase of 80 affected waters for almost four million euros, including the Gutssee, in 2012 following protests from residents, environmental associations and politicians. As the agronomist and politician Bettina Fortunato ( Die Linke ), a member of the Brandenburg state parliament , announced, the state government formed an inter-ministerial working group to sound out the interests of the individual lakes and, if necessary, to prepare the transfer to interested municipalities. For future use, tourism development, the fishing industry, nature and water protection as well as local interests should be in the foreground. In 2013 the state offered interested municipalities various lakes from the package for free takeover, the municipality of Heidesee the Gutssee and the Ziestsee . In 2014 the municipality of Heidesee decided to accept the offer for both lakes.
literature
- K. Gutschmidt, H. Schmidt, T. Witkowski (Eds.): The names of the waters of Brandenburg. (= Brandenburg name book, part 10; Berlin contributions to name research, volume 11). Founded by Gerhard Schlimpert , edited by Reinhard E. Fischer . Verlag Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1996, ISBN 3-7400-1001-0 .
- Joachim Schölzel (edit.): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. 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 ).
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Landtag Brandenburg, printed matter 5/3497 (PDF file; 362 kB) 5th electoral term. Answer of the state government to the major question No. 10 of the parliamentary group of the FDP, printed matter 5/2832, fishing and fish farming in Brandenburg. July 2011. See Table IV, No. 29.
- ↑ a b Land surveying and geographic base information Brandenburg : Brandenburg viewer, digital topographic maps 1: 10,000 (menu - "More data" - click and select accordingly; switch to the district boundaries "real estate cadastre" and there "districts".)
- ↑ Brigitte Nixdorf, Mike Hemm u. a .: Documentation of the condition and development of the most important lakes in Germany, Part 5, Brandenburg. Environmental research plan of the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety , final report R&D project FKZ 299 24 274, on behalf of the Federal Environment Agency at the Chair of Water Protection at the Brandenburg Technical University of Cottbus , 2004. Chapter 1.37 Wolziger See. P. 155. PDF
- ^ The names of the waters of Brandenburg. 1996, pp. 230, 298.
- ↑ a b Joachim Schölzel (edit.): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part IX, p. 269ff.
- ↑ Land surveying and geographic base information Brandenburg : Brandenburg viewer, digital topographic maps 1: 10,000 (Menu - "More data" - click and select accordingly. After selecting the map section in the menu, click on the "German Empire" map, the section is then displayed with the historical map overwritten.)
- ^ The names of the waters of Brandenburg. 1996, p. 101.
- ↑ Two lakes in Falkenhagen in the purchase package. In: Märkische Oderzeitung . (MOZ), June 30, 2012.
- ^ Franziska Mohr: Heidesee community takes over two bodies of water. In: Märkische Allgemeine . (MAZ-online), 19./20. February 2014.