Jahnberge (meadow meadow)

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Jahnberge
Local community Wiesenaue
Coordinates: 52 ° 43 ′ 16 ″  N , 12 ° 42 ′ 41 ″  E
Height : 27 m above sea level NHN
Area : 13 km²
Residents : 83  (1995)
Population density : 6 inhabitants / km²
Postal code : 14662
Area code : 033237
map
Location of Jahnberge
Jahnberge coming from Warsow
church

Jahnberge is the smallest part of the municipality Wiesenaue (formerly Jahnberge) in the Brandenburg district of Havelland . The place belonged to Brädikow until 1952 and until 2003 it was a district of Warsow . Jahnberge got its place name in 1937 after the settlement cooperative “Eigen Scholle” had acquired the land.

Neighboring places

  • Betzin - part of the municipality of Fehrbellin
  • Lobeofsund - part of the municipality of Fehrbellin
  • Paulinenaue
  • Brädikow - part of the municipality Wiesenaue
  • Warsow - part of the municipality Wiesenaue
  • Vietznitz - part of the municipality Wiesenaue

Communication and infrastructure

Jahnberge has no direct connection to public transport . The next train station is Paulinenaue on the Berlin – Hamburg line .

history

The history of Jahnberge began in 1937 when the name was given after the settlement cooperative “Eigen Scholle” acquired land that belonged to various surrounding communities. After the Second World War , Jahnberge felt the same way as Brandenburg villages did centuries before after the Thirty Years' War . The village or the rest of it, a few primitive buildings, was deserted.

For Jahnberge, what followed can be described as “3. Settlement of the lynx ”. Refugees from the east came to the “place”.

Jahnberge was only populated by refugees from East Prussia and Volhynia who had once lived in Brädikow. In 1946, the barracks that were brought in were the first dwellings. In the course of the land reform, the land was divided up to 42 settlers of 8–10 hectares each plus 4 hectares of forest, the 3 craft settlements received 1 hectare each. Jahnberge was under the Soviet command of Paulinenaue, and so the immigrants went to work by means of pony teams the Paulinenauer Gut. In 1947 land was ruled as the drainage trenches fell into disrepair during the war. Jahnberge was rebuilt from 1949 to 1953, starting with small houses (3 rooms and a kitchen) without stables. In 1951/52 a shop for daily necessities ( consumer goods ) was opened, a fire station, a church and finally a school were built in 1953. The school, which had 40 students in 1953, was closed in 1966. From then on we went to school by school bus, which was used by 9 students in 1995. In 1958 the LPG "Blühendes Luch" was founded. They lived from dairy farming and hemp cultivation , which was stopped in 1972. With some money in their pockets or on the high edge, the Jahnbergers began in the 1960s to expand and expand their houses. In 1972/73 the dirt roads to Warsow, Brädikow and Paulinenaue were expanded. The only paved way to reach Jahnberge was the asphalt road to Lobeofsund , which was paved in the 1950s .

politics

Elke Bonanaty has been the volunteer mayor since January 18, 2010.

source

  1. ^ Kreil: Friesack district - forays through Ländchen and Luch, Geiger-Verlag (1996), page 136, ISBN 3-89570-131-9
  2. http://www.maerkischeallgemeine.de/cms/beitrag/11708415/61759/Verwaister-Posten-wieder-besetzt-Elke-Bonanaty-ist-jetzt.html  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.maerkischeallgemeine.de  
  • Kreil: Friesack District - Forays through Ländchen and Luch, Geiger Verlag (1996), pages 134-137, ISBN 3-89570-131-9