Kablow

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Kablow
Coordinates: 52 ° 17 ′ 36 ″  N , 13 ° 43 ′ 12 ″  E
Height : 35 m
Residents : 893  (2016)
Incorporation : October 26, 2003
Postal code : 15712
Area code : 03375

Kablow ( Kobłow in Lower Sorbian ) is a district of Königs Wusterhausen and lies between Zernsdorf in the west, Dannenreich in the north and Bindow in the east. It has around 900 inhabitants. Until 2003, Kablow was an independent municipality in the Dahme-Spreewald district in the state of Brandenburg in the Federal Republic of Germany . The place name is of Sorbian origin.

Geography and localization

View of Kablow from the Krüpelsee
The village church
The breakpoint

Kablow is located southeast of Berlin , on a peninsula on the north bank of the Krüpelsee , through which the Dahme flows. The old town center is laid out as an anger village. The nature reserve Skabyer Torfgraben is located between Bindow and Kablow . In the course of the territorial reform , Kablow became a district of Königs Wusterhausen on October 26, 2003. In order to be able to address the often identical street names in the districts individually, but nevertheless under the city name "Königs Wusterhausen", some districts of Königs Wusterhausen became 2009 new postcodes assigned. Streets were renamed beforehand. The district of Kablow-Ziegelei has belonged to the neighboring village of Zernsdorf since April 1, 1965, although it is on the Kablower side of the Lankensee.

history

The date of establishment is not known. Kablow has been inhabited for at least 3000 years (archaeological finds from the late Mesolithic and Neolithic ). Until about 50 BC The Semnones settled in BC, and Slavic Germans around 300 AD. Excavations were also carried out on this. The place is a fishing village, surrounded by water.

Since 1518 Kablow was in knightly possession. After 1555, Margrave Johann von Küstrin acquired the village from Hans von Schlieben for the Storkow office . In 1717 Kablow came into the possession of Friedrich Wilhelm I.

politics

The mayor is Martin Meinert (CDU).

Culture and sights

  • The Kablow village church is a neo-Gothic hall church from 1869/1870. Inside there is a late Gothic carved altar by Hermen Herwich from 1516.
  • An important part of village coexistence is the village festival; in August 2019 it was held for the 38th time under the motto "Kablower Musikantenscheune". This festival did not exist before the reunification. The parish hall on the square of the former school has been accessible since May 2019. The primary school is now in Zernsdorf, as is the fire department depot. There are no longer any shopping opportunities, but there is a small pension. Several companies have closed, including the machine tool factory in Wildau and the concrete-cement factory in Zernsdorf. Other companies expanded, such as the FSG remote control devices. The number of refugees living here is extremely small. There is hardly any emigration.

traffic

Kablow is on the district road 6137 from Königs Wusterhausen to Friedersdorf . The closest junctions to the motorway passing in the north are Niederlehme on the A 10 (Berliner Ring) and Friedersdorf on the A 12 to Frankfurt (Oder) . Numerous streets were partly rebuilt and partly renovated after reunification .

The place has a stop on the Grunow – Königs Wusterhausen railway , on which the Niederbarnimer Railway diesel multiple units provide hourly connections between Frankfurt (Oder) and Königs Wusterhausen .

societies

  • SG Askania Kablow 1916 e. V. (football, bowling and dance clubs; there are eight dance groups)
  • Mixed Choir Kablow eV
  • Fire Brigade Association Kablow e. V.
  • Kulturverein Kablow 05 eV
  • Anglerverein Ortsgemeinschaft Kablow e. V.

Individual evidence

  1. place names Niederlausitz ; ISBN 3-515-08664-1 The place names of the Beeskow-Storkow district; Pages 226 to 228 → Kablow / Kobłow
  2. Heavy influx to Königs Wusterhausen MAZ , May 6, 2016, accessed on March 7, 2019.
  3. ^ StBA: Changes in the municipalities in Germany, see 2003
  4. Municipalities 1994 and their changes since January 1, 1948 in the new federal states , Metzler-Poeschel publishing house, Stuttgart, 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 , publisher: Federal Statistical Office
  5. Maxi Leinkauf: Our village is alive. Kablow has lost a lot since the fall of the Wall, but people stick together. Some complain when strangers appear in town. In: Friday of August 29, 2019, p. 31
  6. Mayor. City of Königs Wusterhausen, February 14, 2019, accessed on March 13, 2019 .
  7. Maxi Leinkauf: Our village is alive. Kablow has lost a lot since the fall of the Wall, but people stick together. Some complain when strangers appear in town. In: Friday of August 29, 2019, p. 31

Web links

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