Hof Hagen

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The village of Hof Hagen , together with Below, Techentin , Augzin , Mühlenhof , Zidderich and Langenhagen, has been part of the Techentin municipality, which belongs to the Goldberg-Mildenitz district in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania , since June 7, 2009 . Hof Hagen previously belonged to the municipality of Langenhagen.

Geography and traffic

Hof Hagen is four kilometers southwest of Goldberg and one kilometer southeast of Langenhagen with the Langenhägener Seewiesen . To the east is the Medower Herrenholz forest area belonging to Hof Hagen . Smaller elevations around Hof Hagen are the Kreienberg, also called the Krähenberg, the Warricksberg from which one looked out for enemies, the Klaberberg as a mountain with the clover growth and the Kiebitzberg, where the lapwing occurs.

There are no national roads in the locality.

history

Hof Hagen was built on the then too large cleared area of ​​the Langhagener Feldmark east of the Langenhägener Seewiesen. In 1319, a Hagendorf with 16 hooves, the Techentiner Hagen, today's Langenhagen was built around the Langenhägener See. One of the hooves was half free and served the Sonnenkamp monastery as horse service by nobles. Members of the von Bülow families received these free hooves, also known as Bülow's lease , for their service in supervising the farmers across from the monastery . The farmers still paid these taxes in 1657, but then to the Goldberg office. The monastery's own possessions were accurately managed in 1319 in the lifting role of the Sonnenkamp monastery. Hof Hagen was first mentioned there in 1345. Not until 1506 was a tenant named because he had to hand over a knight's horse. After that, little is known about Hof Hagen until the middle of the 17th century. Around 1726 a von Twestreng bought the farm for 2,100 Reichstaler and had an hereditary burial laid out in the Techentine church. In the confessional register of 1751 Dietrich von Scheel with his wife, maid and child are named as owners.

In 1790 Hof Hagen was a domain estate and chief forester. According to the 1876 census, Hof Hagen had 60 inhabitants.

Estate

Hof Hagen was a medium-sized estate with stables, barns and a number of half-timbered cottages for the farm workers. The former farm building with half-timbering on the upper floor was built in 1904.

The manor house, an eight-axle single-storey brick building with a half-hip roof , was built around 1850. The veranda on the garden side had been torn down, and the small park is no longer recognizable. A brick porch with a cardboard roof was placed in front of the ornate three-axis central projectile with buttresses and a gable roof on the courtyard side.

In 1916, as the owner of Hof Hagen, Mr. Grube bought the leasehold in Klein Medow. The seven farm buildings that burned down in 1930 were rebuilt. They were demolished after the land reform as part of the LPG formation . According to the measuring table from 1882, the original estate in his buildings is hardly recognizable. The horse stable built in 1904 was converted into apartments with a forge and wheelwright after 1945 .

Around 1930 Hof Hagen received electricity and after 1945 the water supply consisted of two pumps.

Ownership successes

  • 1726 by Twestreng
  • 1751 Dietrich von Scheel
  • 1790 Chief Forester Hoeppner and heirs
  • 1802 Head forester Drepper
  • 1824 Chief Forester Bartels
  • 1843 by Müller
  • 1853 Ludwig Günther
  • 1863 H. Prestin
  • 1885 Höse and Hoffmann
  • 1893 Carl Engelhardt
  • 1898 lawyer Dr. August Witt from Wismar
  • 1910 pit with son
  • 1927 Pit with son, plus Klein Medow
  • 1945 expropriation

Further use

The manor house at Dorfstrasse 3 has been used as a residential building, consumer goods point of sale and as a meeting room in recent decades . After 1998 it belonged to the housing cooperative in Lübz . Unused for a few years, from 2005 a painter turned it into a cultural center.

particularities

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Unprinted sources

  • State Main Archive Schwerin (LHAS)
    • LHAS 1.5-4 / 3 documents Dobbertin monastery. No. 197.
    • LHAS 5.12-3 / 1 Mecklenburg-Schwerin Ministry of the Interior. No. 1612 Langenhagen village, Hagen farm 1871–1942.
  • District archive Northwest Mecklenburg
    • N 20 manor houses and mansions in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania

literature

  • Klaus-Dieter Gralow: Hof Hagen, Krs. Lübz . In: Ground monument maintenance in Mecklenburg. Vol. 30 / b 1982 (1983) p. 310.
  • Hof Hagen, place of Langenhagen: Roman finds. In: Corpus bariecum. Vol. 3 (1998) p. 88.
  • Fred Ruchhöft: The development of the cultural landscape in the Plau-Goldberg area in the Middle Ages. Edited by Kersten Krüger, Stegfan Kroll, In: Rostocker Studies on Regional History . Volume V. Rostock 2001 ISBN 3-935319-17-7 .
  • The nature reserve Langenhagener Seewiesen with Langenhagen and Hof Hagen. In: Bull and Griffin. Schwerin 2004, Vol. 14 ISBN 3-933781-39-6 pp. 180-182.
  • Fred Beckendorff: Hof Hagen. In: The manor villages, manor complexes and parks in the nature park and its surroundings. Ed. (From culture and science, volume 5.) Karow 2007 pp. 80–81.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. MUB VI. (1870) No. 4040
  2. ^ Fred Beckendorff: Hof Hagen . 2007 p. 80.
  3. Bull and Griffin. 14, 2004 p. 182.
  4. Fred Beckendorff: The von Twestrengsche choir. 2014, pp. 29–30.
  5. Bull and Griffin. 14, 2004 p. 182.
  6. District Archives NWM: N 20 manor houses in MV. N20-0281 N20-0262.
  7. Fred Beckemdorff: Hof Hagen. 2007 p. 80.

cards

  • Topographical economic and military chart of the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and the Duchy of Ratzeburg by Count Schmettau in 1758.
  • Wiebeking map of Mecklenburg 1786.

Coordinates: 53 ° 34 '  N , 12 ° 2'  E