Jagetzow

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Jagetzow is a district of the municipality of Völschow in the Vorpommern-Greifswald district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania . Jagetzow is located around 2 km southeast of Völschow and can be reached from there and from the 1.6 km westbound state road 35 via local roads. Federal motorway 20 runs between Jagetzow and Völschow .

history

The place name is of Slavic origin and is also spelled Jagezow , Gametzow , Gavisowe or Gawetzow in older scripts .

In 1249 Gavisowe, along with other villages , was parished by Bishop Wilhelm von Cammin to the St. Johannis Church in Kartlow .

In the 1510s, Duke Bogislaw X enfeoffed the Loitz governor Peter Podewils with lands in Jagetzow. The Maltzahn , Parsenow and Heyden families also owned shares in Jagetzow and the neighboring Kadow until the 18th century .

District Administrator Ernst Sigismund von Walsleben and his brother, Rittmeister Hans Reimer Ehrenreich von Walsleben, were enfeoffed with Jagetzow, Kadow and a share in Gramzow in 1737 after they had bought the goods a few years earlier. They sold the goods to Gustav Sasse, from whom the daughter Sophie Friederike Sigismunda received in 1754 when her sister Jagetzow was compared with her inheritance. Her husband, captain Friedrich Wilhelm von Bomin, was enfeoffed with Jagetzow, Kadow and the Gramzower shares in 1756. In 1765 Jagetzow was all modified.

After von Bomin's death in 1794, the estate was auctioned off to his daughter Adelheid Louise and his son-in-law, Captain Otto Bogislaw von Parsenow. The von Parsenow family died out in the male line in 1830. In 1833 Jagetzow was foreclosed by auction.

In 1834, according to other information, in 1835, the economist Karl Rodbertus acquired the Jagetzow estate, which was around 550 hectares in size at the time and became his permanent residence from 1836 and enabled him to live largely independently as a private scholar.

Around 1865 Jagetzow had 122 inhabitants. In addition to the families of the landlord and the manager, 13 day labor families lived in the village. Mostly sheep were kept.

After the death of Karl Rodbertus, his adopted daughter Anna (1840–1899), widowed von der Osten , married to Friedrich von Lindheim for the second time, inherited the estate. She lived with her husband in Dresden. Jagetzow then came into the possession of her son from his first marriage, Oskar von der Osten-Warnitz (1862–1942). In 1932 the estate was relocated, ie divided up and sold to settler families.

In 1933 Jagetzow had 381 inhabitants, in 1939 there were 394.

Personalities

  • Karl Rodbertus (1805–1875), national economist, landowner of Jagetzow

Attractions

  • Jagetzow chapel , half-timbered building
  • manor
  • Cemetery with the grave of Karl Rodbertus

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Pomeranian document book . Vol. I, PUB No. 493.
  2. ^ Wilhelm Carl Stolle : Description and history of the ancient, formerly solid, large and famous Hanseatic City of Demmin, as well as the attached and famous castle Haus Demmin called. Röse, Demmin 1772, p. 62 ( Google Books ).
  3. ^ Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania and the Principality of Rügen. First volume, W. Dietze, Anklam 1865, p. 63 ( Google Books ).
  4. a b Julius Theodor Bagmihl : Pommersches Wappenbuch. Vol. 3, HG Essenbarts Erbin, Stettin 1847, p. 47. ( Google Books ).
  5. Ludwig Wilhelm Brüggemann : Detailed description of the current state of the Royal Prussian Duchy of Western and Western Pomerania. Part 1: General introduction and description of the Prussian West Pomerania. Szczecin 1779; Pp. 58-59 ( Google Books ).
  6. ^ A b Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania and the Principality of Rügen. Part 2, Volume One, W. Dietze, Anklam 1865, p. 62 ( Google Books ).
  7. ^ Julius Theodor Bagmihl : Pommersches Wappenbuch . Volume 3, Stettin, p. 52 ( Google Books ).
  8. ^ Moritz Wirth:  Rodbertus, Johann Karl . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 28, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1889, p. 740.
  9. Otto Rodbertus:  To the origin of the economist Karl Rodbertus . In: Society for Pomeranian History and Archeology (Hrsg): Baltic studies . New series vol. 61, NG Elwert, Marburg 1975, p. 64 ( digitized version ).
  10. Otto Rodbertus:  To the origin of the economist Karl Rodbertus . In: Society for Pomeranian History and Archeology (Hrsg): Baltic studies . New series vol. 61, NG Elwert, Marburg 1975, p. 73 ( digitized version ).
  11. ^ Community of Völschow. Retrieved January 11, 2015 .
  12. ^ Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Demmin district. (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).

Coordinates: 53 ° 52 '  N , 13 ° 21'  E