Hagendorf (Zerbst)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hagendorf
Coordinates: 52 ° 4 ′ 11 ″  N , 12 ° 14 ′ 55 ″  E
Incorporation : July 1, 1950
Incorporated into: Nedlitz
Postal code : 39264

Hagendorf is a former manor and district of the village of Nedlitz in the city of Zerbst / Anhalt in the Anhalt-Bitterfeld district in Saxony-Anhalt .

location

The village of Hagendorf im Hohen Fläming is located near the Hagendorfer Nuthe in the Nedlitz lowlands of the Fläming Nature Park between the towns of Deetz , Nedlitz and Reuden / Anhalt on Dobritzer Strasse (K 1254). The state border with Brandenburg runs immediately east of Hagendorf. The city of Zerbst is about 15 kilometers to the west.

history

Anhaltinus Ducatus in 1645
Hagendorf, boulder, memorial stone

The exact date when Hagendorf was founded is not known. It is first mentioned in 1324 as Hagindorp and from 1397 as Hagendorp . The historian Matthias Friske suspected based on the still existing cemetery that there might have been a church in Hagendorf.

The area in the four-country corner between the Archbishopric of Magdeburg, Anhalt, Mittelmark and Saxony was in the 14th century as the County of Lindau in the possession of the noble Counts of Lindow-Ruppin . In 1370 Count Albrecht VI pledged it. from Lindow-Ruppin the lordship of Lindau to Prince Johann II of Anhalt-Köthen before it was finally sold in 1461 to the Prince of Anhalt-Köthen with a right of repurchase. With the extinction of the noble family Lindow-Ruppin in 1524, the right of repurchase passed to their liege lords, the Electors of Brandenburg . In 1577, Elector Johann Georg von Brandenburg left the rule of Lindau to the House of Anhalt as a man and an after fief .

With the inheritance of Anhalt in 1603, the area belonged to Anhalt-Zerbst. During the Thirty Years War , many places in the area fell into desolation. Hagendorf and the neighboring Deetz are not shown on a map from 1645. In the middle of the 17th century Ludwig Ernst von Kalitsch was in the service of the Anhalt-Zerbst princes and was enfeoffed by them with the Hagendorf manor around 1680. At that time Hagendorf belonged to the Lindau office together with Dobritz , Grimme , Reuden and Nedlitz. With the Zerbst division in 1797, Hagendorf was separated from the office of Lindau and came under Leopold III as a noble village . Friedrich Franz of Anhalt-Dessau .

With the landscape order of 1859 of the three Anhalt duchies to was after unification Duchy indication of the Parliament of the Duchy indication provided. 12 of the 36 deputies were elected by the knighthood. Among the 47 manors eligible for the state assembly was the manor Hagendorf of the Kalitsch family. Hagendorf belonged to the municipality Dobritz at that time and it consisted of 10 houses with 48 inhabitants as well as extensive lands. The estate belonged to District Administrator Friedrich von Kalitsch (1786–1870)

On July 1, 1950, Hagendorf was incorporated into Nedlitz. Until December 31, 2009 Nedlitz was an independent municipality with the associated district Hagendorf. After that, both belonged to the municipality of Zerbst. In 2015 Hagendorf had 28 residents.

particularities

  • In Hagendorf, on Dobritzer Strasse, there is the foundling Großer Stein , a memorial stone that names the Hagendorfer and Nedlitz victims of the First World War . It has been a natural monument since 1967.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Inge Bily: Place Name Book of the Middle Elbe region . Akademie Verlag, 1996, ISBN 3-05-002505-0 , pp. 194 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  2. ^ A b Matthias Friske : Medieval churches in western Fläming and Vorfläming . 1st edition. Lukas Verlag for art and intellectual history, 2007, ISBN 978-3-86732-004-7 , p.  125 ( limited preview in Google Book Search).
  3. Gerd Heinrich: The Counts of Arnstein , (Central German Research; Volume 21), Cologne / Graz 1961, Part Two: Origin and Formation of the Dominions of the Counts of Arnstein, Counts of Barby and Counts of Lindow , Chapter VIII: The Lords of Lindau and Möckern , pp. 392-412.
  4. Gustav Hey , Karl Schulze: The settlements in Anhalt. Villages and desert areas with an explanation of their names . Orphanage, Halle 1905.
  5. ^ Deutsche Adelsgenossenschaft (Ed.): Yearbook of the German Adels , Volume 2, 1898, published by WT Bruer, pp. 160–165
  6. ^ A b Ferdinand Siebigk: The Duchy of Anhalt: presented historically, geographically and statistically . Desbarats, Dessau 1867, p. 127 ff. u. 676 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  7. ^ Landesarchiv Sachsen: E 191 family archive from Kalitsch . 2012, p. 326 ( sachsen-anhalt.de [PDF]).
  8. ^ Johann Christoph Becmann: History of the Principality of Anhalt . Samuel Tietzen, 1710, p. 232 ff . ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  9. ^ Franz Büttner Pfänner zu Thal: Anhalt's building and art monuments . Dessau 1894, p. 476 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  10. ^ Lebrecht Ludwig Baentsch: Handbook of geography and history of the entire principality of Anhalt . Self-published, 1801, p. 95 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  11. August Friedrich, Wilhelm Crome: Geographical-statistical representation of the state forces of all the countries belonging to the German confederation with a large map of Germany. -Leipzig . Gerhard Fleischer, 1828, p. 185 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  12. ^ A b Heinrich Lindner: History and description of the state of Anhalt . Ackermann, 1833, p. 159 ff. 370 a. 614 .
  13. Directory “Natural Monuments” in the Anhalt-Bitterfeld district . S.  3 ( Anhalt-bitterfeld.de [PDF]).