Jagow (Uckerland)

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Jagow
Uckerland municipality
Coordinates: 53 ° 24 ′ 48 ″  N , 13 ° 46 ′ 0 ″  E
Height : 49 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 418  (December 31, 2016)
Incorporation : December 31, 2001
Postal code : 17337
Area code : 039745
Jagow village church

Jagow is a district of the municipality Uckerland in the district of Uckermark in the northeast of the state of Brandenburg . The formerly independent community was created on September 30, 1928 through the amalgamation of the estate districts Jagow, Kutzerow and Taschenberg and was incorporated into Uckerland on December 31, 2001.

location

Jagow is located in the Uckermark , not far from the border with Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania . The district borders in the north on Fahrenholz with the village of Lindhorst and Lübbenow , in the east on Trebenow with Bandelow , in the southeast on Schönwerder , in the south on Dedelow with Steinfurth and Holzendorf with Zernikow , in the southwest on Schapow with Augustfelde and in the west on Hetzdorf with Schlepkow .

In addition to the village of Jagow, the district of Jagow also includes the districts of Dolgen, Karlstein, Kutzerow, Lauenhof, Taschenberg and Uhlenhof as well as the residential areas Schindelmühle and Taschenberg expansion. Jagow is located on the district road 7341 to Bandelow. State road 255 runs through the districts of Kutzerow and Taschenberg, and federal road 198 is south of Kutzerow .

history

Jagow was first mentioned in a document as Jagowe in 1258 . From 1817 the estate belonged to Jagow district Prenzlau in the administrative district of Potsdam the Prussian province of Brandenburg . In the course of the dissolution of the estate districts in Prussia in 1928, the estate districts Jagow, Kutzerow and Taschenberg were combined to form the new rural community Jagow.

After the Second World War Jagow became part of the Soviet occupation zone and belonged to the GDR from 1949. During the district reform on July 25, 1952 Jagow was assigned to the Strasburg district in the Neubrandenburg district . After reunification , the Jagow municipality belonged to the Strasburg district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania , and in 1992 it merged with eleven other municipalities to form the Lübbenow (Uckermark) office . On July 1, 1992, the Jagow community moved from the Strasburg district to the Prenzlau district and thus to Brandenburg .

During the district reform in December 1993 , the Jagow community was assigned to the Uckermark district . On December 31, 2001, the Lübbenow (Uckermark) office was dissolved and the municipalities belonging to the office were merged to form the new municipality of Uckerland . In December 2015 the district of Jagow had a total of 372 inhabitants; 85 of them lived in Jagow, 145 in Kutzerow, 78 in Taschenberg, 29 in Karlstein, 17 in Dolgen, 13 in Uhlenhof and five in Lauenhof.

Population development

year Residents
1875 716
1890 740
1910 671
year Residents
1925 919
1933 780
1939 733
year Residents
1946 1,196
1950 1,381
1964 1,033
year Residents
1971 973
1981 679
1989 626
year Residents
1992 630
1996 570
2000 558

Territorial status of the respective year, with Kutzerow and Taschenberg

Web links

Commons : Jagow  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Reinhard E. Fischer : The place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin. Age - origin - meaning. be.bra, Berlin 2005, p. 82.
  2. Jagow district. Uckerland municipality, accessed on August 11, 2020.
  3. ^ Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. (PDF; 331 KB) District Uckermark. State Office for Data Processing and Statistics State of Brandenburg, December 2006, accessed on August 11, 2020 .