Year village

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coat of arms Germany map
The community of Jahrsdorf does not have a coat of arms
Year village
Map of Germany, position of the municipality of Jahrsdorf highlighted

Coordinates: 54 ° 4 ′  N , 9 ° 38 ′  E

Basic data
State : Schleswig-Holstein
Circle : Rendsburg-Eckernförde
Office : Mittelholstein
Height : 46 m above sea level NHN
Area : 8.77 km 2
Residents: 217 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 25 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 24594
Area code : 04871
License plate : RD, ECK
Community key : 01 0 58 085
Office administration address: Am Markt 15
24594 Hohenwestedt
Website : www.amt-mittelholstein.de
Mayor : Klaus Bruhn (KWG)
Location of the community of Jahrsdorf in the Rendsburg-Eckernförde district
map

Jahrsdorf (Low German: Jårsdorp) is a municipality in the district of Rendsburg-Eckernförde in Schleswig-Holstein . Nienjahn is in the municipality.

Geography, transport and tourism

Jahrsdorf is about 26 km west of Neumünster , 30 km south of Rendsburg and 20 km north of Itzehoe on the edge of the Aukrug Nature Park . The federal highway 77 from Rendsburg to Itzehoe, which crosses the municipality, and the federal highway 430 from Neumünster in the direction of Heide intersect directly north of Jahrsdorf . The historic Ochsenweg, which was the central artery through Schleswig-Holstein until the 19th century, runs through the Jahrsdorfer Balken, the village and the Jahrsdorf district to Peissen. A few meters of the old hawthorn hedge that once ran through the village have been preserved so far. Oaks have stood at the memorial since 1870/71; isolated oaks and beeches that are over 100 years old can be found in the meadow of the source base. Of the 212 apple trees, 94 pear trees, 60 sweet cherries, 27 sour cherries, 71 plum trees, seven walnut trees and one peach tree, which are documented to exist in the village in 1934, only a small apple orchard on the village street behind the memorial and individual orchards remain.

There are several water sources in Jahrsdorf:

  • The source of the "Buckener Au" lies on the "Jettmoor" near Nienjahn.
  • An original source of the "Wapelfelder Au" rises on the "Hälln" on the main road towards Itzehoe; two more on the "Burdiek" and the "Teichwiese" between Jahrsdorf and Hohenwestedt.

In 1964 a teacher from Hohenwestedter wrote: "Jahrsdorf has a natural resource that has so far received little attention. It is the groundwater."

history

Early to World War I

In 1149, Jahrsdorf is mentioned as Geresthorp , which is said to be traced back to a nobleman Gottschalk von Geresthorp. The barrows in the area indicate a prehistoric settlement. In 1975 a large stone grave was found in the district of Jahrsdorf while excavating gravel.

The Jahrsdorfer Feldmark and especially its highest elevation the Jarschenberg (52 meters), also known as the Jahrsche Barken as a ridge , is of particular importance for the local history of the Holsten . A high thing court , the goding, was held here. It is said to have taken place there for the whole of Holstengau by 1560 .

In the second half of the 18th century, the Jahrsdorfer beam belonged to the church in Hohenwestedt and was called "church wood". Only then did the forest area come into the possession of the long-established Jahrsdorf farming families, who, as Geest farmers, were free and not subject to serfdom, just like the wealthier marsh farmers. However, they did not have an agricultural self-government like the Eiderstedter or Dithmarscher. They were directly subject to the sovereign and had to provide services and taxes until the peasants were liberated.

In the 19th century, the district of Jahrsdorf was predominantly forested. As late as 1870, pigs from Denmark were demonstrably fattened in the forest until spring (acorn fattening). The main source of income for the residents of Jahrsdorf was agriculture. The long-established farmers operated half arable and half pasture. Rye, oats, buckwheat, potatoes, beets and cabbage were grown on the farms of the village.

In the 18th century the village still had a “shepherd's cottage”, which belonged to the village community and was held in the winter school by a hired teacher. This shepherd's cottage, which stood in the "Eekhof", was torn down in the 1880s because the village shepherd service was discontinued. The village school is built in 1856 (see section village school ). With the teacher Matthießen, who has been working in the village since 1848, the records of the Jahrsdorf school chronicle, written in Sütterlin script, began in 1881, which was continued in the following years by the teachers working in Jahrsdorf. In 1873 there were two full-hoofed, four half-hoofed, six quarter-hoofed and four kätner in the village.

In 1895 rye cost only 11 to 12 marks per 200 pounds, barley was even cheaper, while buckwheat was a bit more expensive. The cattle were however "at high prices": cows were sold for 400 marks and more.

In 1906 the Jahrsdorfer founded a water cooperative association and put the management from "Burdiek" in the direction of the school.

Foot and mouth disease ruled in 1911. Although the cattle recovered, the peasants suffered considerable damage due to the reduced milk yield and the closure of the farm. Pigs could not be sold.

On March 10, 1913, a celebration was held in the village school to commemorate the uprising of the German people against French "foreign rule" (1813). Teacher Lindschau gave a speech. In it he described the uprising of the German people in the spring of 1813 and emphasized the importance of the day as the "day of the century" of the Iron Cross Foundation and the birthday of the Prussian Queen Luise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz .

In 1913 there was also a celebration of the "reign of the emperor".

In 1914 teacher Behrens came to Jahrsdorf. After the mobilization, the young soldiers "happily went into the field" with great confidence and trust in God. There were billeting in the village: a company of reserve infantry and volunteers. After several weeks they had to go to the front in Belgium. In 1916 there was "Food and Soap Cards". There was 250 g on meat menus. The pig feed was scarce and expensive. 1 hundredweight of barley meal cost 98 marks, bran 50 marks, sow meal (straw meal, heather meal , chestnuts, weed seeds) 36 marks. Potatoes and beets were not allowed to be fed to cattle during the war. The so-called " beet winter " prevailed . The Jahrsdorfer received 250 g potatoes and 500 g beets per person. In view of the shortage of feed in the winter of 1917/18, the milk yield was so low that farmers with twelve cows could not even cook soup for their household. This year the school holidays were scheduled to include grain or potatoes so that the students could participate. After the end of World War I, the situation did not get much better. In 1920 the grain became scarce. 400 marks were asked for a quintal of buckwheat. A pound of oats cost 1.50 marks. Clothing was almost unaffordable, a roll of sewing thread cost 18 marks.

The inflation had also arrived in Jahrsdorf. In 1927 the village's grain was paid very poorly; the feed was expensive. Slaughter cattle and frozen meat came to the markets from abroad. The local pig fattening was no longer profitable. Cash was added to each pig when it was sold. The resentment of the rural population grew. (For information on the rural people movement in Schleswig-Holstein, see Land people movement (Schleswig-Holstein) .)

In January 1928 there was a demonstration in front of the tax offices. No farmer could pay because the taxes were too high. There was too little money for potatoes, so they were "rented". In the harsh winter of 1928/29, which lasted until May, the potatoes froze to death in their "heaps". On September 4, 1929, the airship designed by Graf Zeppelin completed the first sightseeing flight around the world, so the Jahrsdorf elementary school students had no school.

On July 1, 1930, all schoolchildren had no school when the Rhineland was evacuated.

On July 9th, the flags were raised to half-mast because the liberation ceremony in Koblenz in the presence of the Reich President von Hindenburg had torn 34 people to their deaths from "loud cheers" when a bridge collapsed .

1930 was very unfavorable for agriculture. The grain had to be "stolen" from the field between the rains; the oats were "burnt" by the heat. The rye was brought in completely grown.

On March 21, 1931, "Winterhilfe" was launched; There were bankruptcies and foreclosures everywhere. Salaries fell and taxes could not be paid. Grain and potatoes were still well paid for (rye 10–11 marks). Cattle and pigs received 30–33 marks and 35–37 marks, respectively.

In 1932 the flags at the school were waving at half-mast again: The training ship Niobe of the Reichsmarine had sunk off Fehmarn with a crew of 69.

National Socialism

In the night after the Reichstag election, radical SS troops u. a. An explosives attack with three hand grenades on the house of an SPD member on the Glüsinger Berg in neighboring Hohenwestedt, as noted by the Jahrsdorf teacher Steen in the school chronicle. As early as November 1925, a local branch of the NSDAP was founded in Hohenwestedt. Hohenwestedt and the surrounding rural communities had already turned towards the "Völkisch-Nationalen" in 1924. " In a very short time in April 1924 local groups in Hohenwestedt, Nindorf, Osterstedt, Wapelfeld and Tappendorf with up to forty founding members," Germans who think in terms of nationality, "as it was called "Nordmarkthings" organized in April 1925 with thousands of uniformed men who marched past former high-ranking soldiers. "

On the occasion of the seizure of power of Hitler 30 January 1933 blew throughout the swastika flags. The new school year began in the village on May 1st with the celebration of " National Labor Day ". In 1936 the Reich Labor Service was on duty from spring to autumn . The warehouse was built under the large oak trees next to the inn. Extinguishing water ponds were built from the old swampy water hollows. When the war against Poland began in 1939, the temperature in the village was −20 ° C, so that the numerous fruit trees and vines in the village froze to death.

In 1940 the teacher Steen was called up to serve in the army. By January 1941, another five Jahrsdorf men had been called up for service at the front. One of them took part in the attack on Poland as far as Lemberg. A Jahrsdorfer had to go to the Siegfried Line , another to occupied Belgium and to the construction company of an air force department.

Belgian and French prisoners of war as well as Polish "civilian workers" helped on the farms of the village, whose men had been drafted. The local farmer's leader employed a Ukrainian woman, two French prisoners of war (brothers), a Polish girl and a German from the Carpathians on his farm. Germans from the Banat were on the Nienjahner Höfe, while a Polish couple, a Frenchman, a Pole, a Ukrainian and a Russian were on duty on another farm. The prisoners were housed in the furnished stables of the widow Fock. They were able to move around freely, but were locked in at night and guarded by a guard. They left a hand-painted map of the world on the wall of their accommodation. The Polish prisoners were subordinate to a "civilian army" and had to be in their accommodation at 9 pm. The Jahrsdorfer and the "strangers" ate at separate tables. The "darkening of the windows" is said to have worked well in those years; only a few Allied leaflets were found. The harvest was poor and the cattle count showed that there were 444 pigs, 13 sheep and 337 cattle left in the village. Because of the poor harvest, the area was declared an "emergency area".

In 1942 food was rationed. Special cards were issued for Christmas in 1943. In 1943 the first Jahrsdorfer died on the Eastern Front.

On October 18, 1943, there were 222 people in the village, including 11 prisoners of war and 32 foreign workers and their children. The Hamburg evacuees were included.

On Whit Monday 1943, an American air raid against Hamburg led to an "aerial battle over the year village". The debris of an aircraft shot down over the village, along with ten bombs, fell into the pastures and a plow on the Vierth. Four members of the aircraft crew saved themselves by parachuting, six members of the crew were killed. Aircraft parts also burned down in Stiesch and near Nienjahn-Silzen. A few days later a squad of twelve police officers with ten "prisoners" came to the village to look for the bombs under the guidance of two naval fireworkers. A few days later a 500 kg bomb was found on the Vierth and defused. The other bombs remained in the ground as they were not found with the search poles at a depth of 10 meters.

In the last days of July, air raids were carried out on Hamburg day and night . The Jahrsdorfer could see the headlights of the ground batteries and the flak fire. According to the chronicle, the ground is said to have vibrated in the face of the heavy bombing. Mayor Schröder and the teacher Steen had to organize the accommodation of the evacuees from Hamburg in the village. In the summer of 1943, 47 people came within a few days. Some of them were soon taken in by relatives. In January 44 there were still 15 evacuees in the village.

As in the previous year, there were special rations at Christmas 1943. The "Winterhilfswerk" of the NSDAP (WHW) organized stew Sundays and house collections for needy families. Fur and woolen items, canned goods, rye, potatoes, fruit and vegetables and books were also donated. The children of the village helped with the collection. They also collected medicinal herbs and helped peat peat. The peat was cut by prisoners of war under the guidance of a specialist. Teacher Steen and his schoolchildren took on the further processing up to the finished "peat thim" in scorching heat and in pouring rain in the moor. 20 loads of peat were brought in annually after the harvest. The school room was heated with it.

Since the bombing of Kiel and Neumünster, the number of students had risen to 42 because of the evacuated children in December 1944. Jahrsdorf had taken in a total of 72 evacuees. For three days the classroom was accommodation for a family from Neumünster with ten children. For the nights there was a pile of straw. Later, an elderly woman from the village had to leave her home and make room for the family. In 1944, two Jahrsdorfer were also reported missing.

In 1944, Hitler called on all men between the ages of 16 and 60 to form the Volkssturm . In Jahrsdorf 22 men started their training service on Sundays under the direction of platoon leaders W. Frixen and H. Butenschön.

In 1945 the first 18 refugees came from East Prussia, ten more followed on March 1st. New treks from East Prussia, West Prussia and Pomerania reached Jahrsdorf. The villagers moved closer and closer together to make room for the refugees, the number of whom kept increasing. In addition, there were the soldiers who "flooded back", as the front moved up to Hamburg in 1945. The Jahrsdorfer School was the accommodation, but also the office and accommodation for teams.

Everyone in the village had to take cover when the low-flying aircraft came. On the "Reichsstraße" (today's B 77) they are said to have had plenty of targets and victims. On the night of May 4, 1945, year village was illuminated by light bombs . Two bombs exploded on Warnken's paddock. The houses in Warnken, Rohweder, Thun and Frixen were damaged. A total of 17 bombs fell in the district by 1945: ten near the Vierths, five on the Amtsmannsteich and two in the village.

Development after the end of the war in 1945

After the surrender in 1945, the village was occupied by the British. The population of the village continued to increase due to the refugees still arriving.

In 1945 the village had 483 inhabitants, of which 187 were Jahrsdorfer and 296 were refugees. The refugee families were quartered on the farms. At the Boye-Hof z. B. five families with children, a total of 21 people, accommodated. The reception capacities were based on the size of the farmhouses and houses.

The old "school shotgun" had to be handed over to the British. The so-called " denazification " now began nationwide in Schleswig-Holstein, including in Jahrsdorf. Usually it took place at the place of residence. The fact that individual guilt or innocence was recorded via questionnaires was heavily criticized. In the end, even the former NSDAP Gauleiter of Schleswig-Holstein, Hinrich Lohse , got away relatively unscathed.

1947 was a hot summer with little rain and a good harvest. After the famine years, the Jahrsdorfer were anxious to build up supplies. In autumn, people moved to the harvested potato fields in order to "stubble" the potatoes that were left behind. The entire field was hacked to find the remaining potatoes. Potatoes were in great demand on the "black market". 1 pound of potatoes cost 100 marks. In the post-war years, a lot of cattle were stolen in Jahrsdorf as well. Three large pigs that had been broken into on site were stolen from farmer Möller in winter. A normal consumer was entitled to the following food ration between November 8 and December 7, 1947: 400 g meat, 150 g fat, including 50 g butter, 10,000 g bread, 1250 g nutrients, 500 g sugar, 62.5 g cheese, 500 g fish, 125 coffee substitutes and 2 liters of skimmed milk. In 1947, 500 g meat cost 1.20 to 1.40 RM, 500 g butter 1.80 RM, 3 kilos of bread 1.03 RM, 500 g sugar 0.40 RM, 1 liter of skimmed milk 0.08 RM. The black market flourished: 500 g of meat cost 120 RM, 1 quintal of potatoes 150 to 180 RM, 1500 g of bread 50 to 80 RM. Coffee beans were available for RM 500, fat for RM 240 and sugar (500 g) for RM 120. White pepper (500 g) cost RM 240–280. and a cigarette was available for 7–8 RM.

Since 1945 there have been no cleaning products for the school. Ms. Schröder, Nienjahn, had "her refugees" tie two room brooms, which she made available to the village school. There was only one bucket available for 70 girls in the girls' bathroom. At that time it was not possible to get a zinc bucket with a handle from the economic office.

On June 20, 1948, the currency reform was carried out. Each villager received 40 Deutsche Mark for 60 Reichsmarks. The economy recovered and there was a lot to buy in the shops.

Jahrsdorfer village school

The former village school, which is now used as a residential building, was built in 1856 on common land.

The handwritten "Chronicle of the School of the Year Village " has been preserved in the village . The first records from 1881 come from the teacher Matthießen. In 1881 he reported that he had heard from residents of the local school community who had already died that in the previous century a teacher "held school" in the past century in the village shepherd's apartment, which belonged to the village. It is said to have been a teacher Martens who was also the owner of the Katenstelle on Nienjahn. After the shepherd's cottage in the village was torn down, the construction of the village school in 1856 cost a total of 4,200 marks. The school community supplied the thatch itself.

The school district consisted of the villages of Nienjahn and Altenjahn. Jahrsdorf and Nienjahn formed the community of Jahrsdorf, Altenjahn belonged to the community of Grauel. The second teacher mentioned in the school chronicle was called Groth. He too held "school" in winter and earned his living by day labor in summer.

CC Rathmann from the Duchy of Schleswig from the "Hüttener Parcels" replaced teacher Groth. He died in Jahrsdorf in 1848. His youngest son became an "elementary teacher" in Jevenstedt.

On May 15, 1848, teacher Matthießen began teaching. Coming from Stafstedt, he was introduced to the office by senior pastor Nissen.

The annual school inspection was carried out by the chief pastor or the deacons. 50 to 60 pupils attended the village school in those years. In the village census of 1880, 183 Jahrsdorfer and 25 Altenjahner were recorded. The real loads had to be carried out according to the number of hooves until 1878. Later this happened after the net yield of the lands. There were 5.5 hooves in the entire school district by 1873.

On April 5, 1871, on the occasion of the founding of the empire, with the participation of the village students , Jahrsdorf planted nine peace oaks on the "Toonbrei". In the middle under the double oaks a marble slab was erected on a memorial stone with the following text: “ To the prince, the leaders, the army of 1870 a. 71 to honor. "

In 1882 the Jahrsdorf elementary school received a picture as a gift from the German emperor: “ Dr. Martin Luther explaining the Holy Scriptures in the midst of his colleagues ”. The original came from the German painter Leonhard Gey (1838–1894) and hung in the Berlin National Gallery. On the occasion of Martin Luther's 400th birthday, the German Kaiser had given all Protestant school children a lithograph of the painting. From the provincial governments, the imperial gift was sent to all elementary, civic, city and girls' schools.

In 1890 teacher Matthießen retired.

On September 2, 1890, Lehrer Treu was elected as his successor. He noted: "My choice was confirmed by the royal government under the direction of the school inspector, Pastor Schröder." The salary of the teacher Treu was increased from 900 to 1000 marks. He was also given an apartment in the school, a fireplace and a garden.

Structural changes in the school took place in 1891/92. The east side was re-covered with thatch. Since cholera broke out in Hamburg in the hot summer of 1892 , collections were made everywhere, including in Jahrsdorf, for the needy population in Hamburg (Altona and Wandsbek). A wagon with 60 tons of potatoes went from Hohenwestedt to Hamburg; Jahrsdorf sent 8 tons of potatoes and 28 marks.

In 1895 the school received the last three new desks. The "school room" was now equipped with ten tables. 43 children had to find their place there.

The Kaiser Wilhelm Canal was inaugurated on June 20, 1895 . The chronicler notes that although he did not go to the canal with the Jahrsdorf children, he went to Hochdonn himself when the Kaiser passed by ship at 5.30 a.m. The emperor and the warships that followed him were greeted by around 2000 people with loud "hurras". Teacher Treu noted that there were 23 ships whose crews answered the "Hurray" by waving flags and cloths. All the seafaring nations of Europe and the United States of North America were each represented by a warship. Only the French would have stood "stiff and stubborn" on deck; Hardly anyone, according to teacher Treu, waved and noted: "O, the grande nation!"

In 1906 the water pipe was moved from the "Burdieck" to the school.

On September 18, 1908, Teacher Treu was bid farewell to Pastor Dörnte and many parishioners in the presence of his students. As a farewell, after eighteen years of activity, the district school inspector gave him the "Eagle of the Hohenzollers House Order."

Nis Heinrich Lindschau (born 1885, Alsen Island) moved from Holstee to Jahrsdorf as a teacher in 1908. With the establishment of the Rentengüter on the part of the Nienjahn farm belonging to the Grauler Feldmark, the number of Altenjahn schoolchildren who went to school as a guest increased. The new pastor Etzdorf, who had come from Hallig Hooge to Hohenwestedt, was appointed high school inspector of the Jahrsdorf school.

In 1914, the teacher left Lindschau Jahrsdorf to take up a teaching position at the middle school in Burg auf Fehmarn.

On April 1, 1914, the teacher Klaus Hinrich Behrens (born 1864 in Peissen) started work; on September 26, 1929, teacher Behrens was retired.

On October 1st, Hans Steen (born 1899 in Rendsburg) began his service as a teacher in Jahrsdorf. He remained the main teacher at the one-class village school in Jahrsdorf for 35 years. The extensive records in the school chronicle after 1929 (see section on National Socialism) go back to the teacher Steen. Based on the entries it can be deduced that Steen must have been convinced of National Socialism. Born in Rendsburg, he had the private school of "Fräulein Wittmaack" in Hohenwestedt and then the "Bruhnsche Knabeninstitut" there. After teaching activities in Drelsdorf (Husum) and Bohnstedt, teacher Steen in Jahrsdorf was appointed by the Schleswig government as successor to teacher Behrens. For 35 years he remained the "main teacher" of the village school. Steen, who kept the school chronicle very conscientiously, was called up for army service on April 19, 1940. The village school was then closed.

After the summer vacation, teacher Landt from Meezen took over the administration of the local school. He gathered the Jahrsdorfer school youth around him three times a week until teacher Steen was dismissed from the troops at the request of the community and authorities in November 1940 and resumed his duties in Jahrsdorf.

On March 15, 1943, teacher Steen was entrusted with the administration of the Meezen school. The teacher Landt who worked there had been called up to serve in the army. After Germany surrendered in 1945, teacher Steen was probably also subjected to "denazification". In any case, the village school was closed from May to September 1945. After that, from May 1, 1946, a woman took over teaching in Jahrsdorf for the first time: Thea Möller from Wapelfeld took over the lower level, which was taught in the afternoon from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. The upper school had classes from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m.

In November 1946 school meals were served for 81 school children. After the meal was cooked in the schoolhouse's wash kettle, it was taken in the schoolhouse. For each child, 15 pfennigs were collected for each meal.

Hunting community

In 1856 Paul Boye, Friedrich Möller (owner of the Popp farm) and Hans Thun (innkeeper) founded the Jagdverband Jahrsdorf.

Until 1848 the royal. Hegemeister exercised the hunting rights in Barlohe in Jahrsdorf. Until the revolution of 1848 the ban law had applied. Only the king or his guardian was allowed to hunt in his "ban forests". Jahrsdorf farmers had to pick up the hunting guests from Barlohe and bring them back again. They were free Geest farmers, but until 1848 had to provide "manual and tensioning services" to the sovereign. During the hunt, they were only allowed to perform driver services. It was not until 1848 that hunting was tied to the possession of land, which the farmers in Jahrsdorf used to found their hunting community.

In 1896 the hunting community celebrated their 40th anniversary. The three founding members Hans Thun, Paul Boye and the senior citizen Friedrich Möller were also there.

For the 100th anniversary of the hunt, on December 15, 1953, an all-day driven hunt was organized. In addition to the five hunters from Jahrsdorf, 25 hunters from the surrounding area (Hohenwestedt, Glüsing, Altenjahn, Wapelfeld, Silzen, Böternhöfen, Grevensberg, Meezen, Vaasbüttel, Lerchenfeld) were invited. 27 hares, a rabbit, three snipes and a pine marten were shot while driving. All women and men from Jahrsdorf were invited to the big banquet. The district hunter master, Hans Voss from Heinkenborstel, emphasized in his address that it is unique in the district, perhaps even beyond, that farmers in a village have a 100-year hunting tradition. The celebration took place in the festively decorated hall of the then still existing Jahrsdorfer inn with 100 guests. The senior man of the Jahrsdorfer hunting community and board member Hermann Möller gave the speech. He thanked the old hunters and board members Paul Boye, Friedrich Möller, Hans Thun and Hans Ratjen.

The Jahrsdorfer hunters have been active as a village hunting community since they were founded in 1856.

Local politics

As community leader and mayor (after 1945) were elected:

  • 1869 Hans Thun
  • 1875 Johann Diercks
  • 1881 Johann Diercks
  • 1887 Johann Diercks
  • 1893 Jasper Boye
  • 1899 Jasper Boye
  • 1905 Jasper Boye
  • 1911 Jasper Boye
  • 1917 Jasper Boye
  • 1919 Hans Diercks
  • 1924 Claus Groth
  • 1929 Jacob Groth
  • 1934 Wilhelm Schröder (Nienjahn)
  • 1938 Hans Jansen-Groth
  • 1942 Wilhelm Schröder
  • 1948 Johannes Diercks
  • 1963 Hans Röpcke
  • 1990 Hans Röper
  • 1998 Klaus Bruhn

Of the nine seats in the municipal council, the KWG has had all seats since the 2013 local elections.

economy

Farms are characteristic of the village in Jahrsdorf. The oldest archived evidence of a farm comes from 1540. The farms of the village are still managed on the original settlement sites. There is a carpentry, roofer, joiner's shop and a farm in the village. The Nienjahn equestrian center is active in horse rearing and horse training . Three dairy farms and three beef cattle farms of the races DN Red Holstein, Limousin and Galloway are active in the village. Another farm grows potatoes and sells them from the farm.

Cultural monuments

The cobblestone street "Quellengrund" and the entire courtyard complex with the old parter's house (Quellengr. 2 and 3) are classified as small cultural monuments according to the monument list of the Rendsburg-Eckernförde district. The farmhouse, built in 1921, was designed by the Protestant church builder u. imperial building officer Jürgen Kröger planned and built. The thatched house (Dorfstrasse 10), the former village school, also has the status of a small cultural monument.

One of the oak beams with Christian sayings embedded in the farmhouses in the 18th century has been preserved and walled in in 2006 in the "Ochsenstall" of the Quellenhof: "Sielke Boyen - I'm looking for Jesus and his light, everything else does not help me. Anno 1778 April 8th. "(Text of all former sayings in)

Individual evidence

  1. North Statistics Office - Population of the municipalities in Schleswig-Holstein 4th quarter 2019 (XLSX file) (update based on the 2011 census) ( help on this ).
  2. Schleswig-Holstein topography. Vol. 5: Holt - Krokau . 1st edition Flying-Kiwi-Verl. Junge, Flensburg 2005, ISBN 978-3-926055-79-8 , pp. 102 ( dnb.de [accessed July 19, 2020]).
  3. Archive link ( Memento of the original from July 23, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.geschichte-sh.de
  4. Archive link ( Memento of the original from June 30, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.wanderbaren-schleswig-holstein.de
  5. http://bekau-verband.de/cms/front_content.php?idcat=78
  6. Lucinde Boye, Chronicle of the community and school in Jahrsdorf, handwritten summary, Jahrsdorf 1999, p. 84.
  7. ^ Hanswilhelm Haefs: Place names and local histories in Schleswig-Holstein
  8. ^ List of surveys in Schleswig-Holstein
  9. http://www.alt-bramstedt.de/der-raum-segeberg-im-zeitalter-der-altsaechsischen-gauverfassungs The Segeberg area in the age of the old Saxon district constitution
  10. Hans Harald Hennings: On the history of Godings on the Jahrschen beam in the journal of the Society for Schleswig-Holstein History , Vol. 87 (1962) pp. 91-124.
  11. Niels Falck, Neues Staatsbürgerliches Magazin, Volume 3, p. 649 ff.
  12. L. Boye, Chronicle, p. 24.
  13. http://www.fes.de/fulltext/historiker/00671003.htm#E9E4
  14. L. Boye, Chronicle, p. 26.
  15. Ibid., P. 27
  16. http://library.fes.de/spdpdalt/19321110.pdf
  17. Felicitas Glade, Ernst Bamberger, Wilhelm Hamkens: a friendship in Mittelholstein, 2000, p. 95 f.
  18. L. Boye, Chronik der Schule zu Jahrsdorf, 1999, p. 32
  19. http://www.akens.org/akens/texte/info/50/50_008.pdf
  20. http://www.akens.org/akens/texte/info/33/333409.html
  21. ^ Ibid.
  22. ^ L. Boye, Chronicle, p. 38.
  23. http://www.shz.de/nachrichten/lokales/landeszeitung/artikeldetails/artikel/spannende-zeitreise-einer-schuelerin.html
  24. http://www.documentarchiv.de/ns/1935/wehrgesetz.html
  25. ^ L. Boye, Chronicle, p. 45.
  26. Idid., P. 46.
  27. http://www.dhm.de/lemo/html/nazi/innenpolitik/winterhilf/index.html
  28. http://www.dhm.de/lemo/html/nazi/innenpolitik/eintopf/index.html
  29. L. Boye, Chronicle, p. 50.
  30. (On the emergence of National Socialism in Schleswig-Holstein e.g. in: Uwe Danker. Astrid Schwabe. Schleswig-Holstein and the National Socialism. Wachholtz, Neumünster 2005, ISBN 3-529-02810-X >.)
  31. and at akens.org http://www.akens.org/
  32. http://www.vimu.info/fb.jsp?id=for_12_5_6_fb_denazificering_dk_doc&lang=de&u=general&flash=true
  33. http://www.vimu.info/fb.jsp?id=for_12_5_6_fb_denazificering_dk_doc&lang=de&u=general&flash=true
  34. L. Boye, Chronicle, p. 52.
  35. Archive link ( Memento of the original dated February 10, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.geschichte-sh.de
  36. Information on denazification in Schleswig-Holstein ( memento of the original from June 29, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.schleswig-holstein.de
  37. http://www.vimu.info/biography.jsp?id=for_9_8_29_bio_lohse_de_doc&lang=de&u=general&flash=true
  38. ^ Ibid.
  39. ^ L. Boye, Chronicle, p. 55.
  40. Chronicle of the school in Jahrsdorf from 1881
  41. http://www.dhm.de/lemo/html/kaiserreich/innenpolitik/reichsgruendung/index.html
  42. Matthießen, Chronicle of the school in Jahrsdorf from 1881
  43. ^ Ibid.
  44. ^ Chronicle of the school in Jahrsdorf, entry Teacher Treu 1890.
  45. https://www.ndr.de/kultur/geschichte/chronologie/Des-Kaisers-neuer-Kanal,nordostseekanal126.html
  46. http://www.ehrenzeichen-orden.de/deutsche-staat/koniglicher-hausorden-adler-der-inhaber-2.html
  47. L. Boye, Chronik, 1999, p. 37.
  48. http://www.jagdnetz.de/jagdpraxis/geschichte
  49. ^ Photo for the 100th anniversary of the hunt in Jahrsdorf, Boye family archive.
  50. Lucinde Boye, Chronicle of the community and school in Jahrsdorf, handwritten summary, Jahrsdorf 1999, p. 61
  51. Lucinde Boye, Chronik, 1999, p. 109
  52. ↑ Allocation of seats after the 2013 municipal elections ( memento of the original from December 20, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.amt-mittelholstein.de
  53. Boye Family Archives
  54. http://www.fleischrinder.de/
  55. http://www.galloway.de/
  56. ^ Archives of the Boye family, parchment drawing by J. Kröger.
  57. Archive link ( Memento of the original from January 23, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.kreis-rendsburg-eckernfoerde.de
  58. Lucinde Boye, Chronik 1999, p. 64

Web links

Commons : Jahrsdorf  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files