Haßleben (Boitzenburger Land)
Hate life
Boitzenburger Land municipality
Coordinates: 53 ° 12 ′ 56 " N , 13 ° 41 ′ 35" E
|
||
---|---|---|
Height : | 75 m | |
Residents : | 598 (2006) | |
Incorporation : | December 31, 2001 | |
Postal code : | 17268 | |
Area code : | 039884 | |
Location of Haßleben in Brandenburg |
Haßleben is a district of the municipality Boitzenburger Land , which belongs to the district of Uckermark in the state of Brandenburg . The village was first mentioned in 1317 as heresleve . Until 2001, Haßleben belonged to the former Boitzenburg office as an independent municipality.
Townscape
location
To the west of Haßleben is the Kuhz residential area, further behind in the northwest is Wichmannsdorf . In the northeast are Beenz, Ferdinandshof and Lindenhagen. Buchholz is to the east and Blankensee and Mittenwalde to the south . The closest cities are Templin and Prenzlau .
Around Haßleben there are several small bodies of water (above all Sölle ) such as the Kuhzsche Grenzbruch, the Rohrpfuhl, the Krumme Bruch, the Igelpfuhl or the Büttbruch. In the west is the Kuhzer See with the eastern foothills Haßleben'sche Lanke and Schulzenort.
Historic districts
The following districts and residential areas belonged to the former community of Haßleben, which are now also part of the community of Boitzenburger Land:
|
|
Population development
year | 1875 | 1890 | 1910 | 1925 | 1933 | 1946 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2006 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Residents | 270 | 316 | 338 | 331 | 384 | 624 | 967 | 947 | 943 | 948 | 866 | 790 | 756 | 775 | 598 |
(With the sudden changes, note the time distances, historical events and incorporations.)
history
In 1317 Haßleben was first mentioned in a document as Heresleve . The spelling Haßleben has been known since 1723.
On May 1, 1849, as a result of the completion of the Chaussee from Templin to its confluence with Berlin-Prenzlauer Chaussee, a post expedition with a station in Haßleben was opened. (The tour of the Berlin-Prenzlauer Personenpost between Templin and Prenzlau had been moved to the new direct Chaussee. As a result, the post expedition and station in Milmersdorf was closed and relocated to Haßleben.)
The pig fattening facility in Haßleben (VEB Pig Breeding and Fattening Combine "Friendship", SZM), which went into operation in 1979, was designed for up to 174,000 animals. After it was shut down in 1991, it was bought by the Dutch investor Harrie van Gennip, who tried to get it back into operation from 2005. He initially planned a population of 80,000 pigs, later the projected capacity was reduced to 37,000 animals and approved by the Brandenburg State Environment Agency in 2013. An objection to this was rejected in 2016. According to lawsuit and a. Several environmental associations and a citizens' initiative, the approval for the re-operation of the facility was revoked by the Potsdam Administrative Court in October 2017 for reasons of building planning law . The Higher Administrative Court of Berlin-Brandenburg rejected the application for admission of the appeal against the judgment of the administrative court in July 2020 , the judgment of 2017 thus became final.
Sightseeing
The Haßleben village church is a hall church from the first half of the 13th century and a south porch from 1887. Inside there is a neo-Gothic pulpit from 1887 and an organ by Friedrich Hermann Lütkemüller from 1863.
traffic
The Haßleben station was on the Löwenberg – Prenzlau railway line . On May 28, 2000, passenger traffic between Templin Stadt and Prenzlau was stopped.
Web links
- Haßleben on the website of the municipality Boitzenburger Land
- rbb series Landschleicher about Haßleben
Individual evidence
- ^ The place names of the Uckermark on Google books
- ↑ Rbb24 : Haßleben pig fattening facility is finally off the table. Retrieved July 10, 2020 .
- ^ NABU Brandenburg: Administrative court stops pig fattening. July 9, 2020, accessed July 10, 2020.