Karbow-Vietlübbe
Karbow-Vietlübbe was a municipality in the east of the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (Germany). It was administered by the Eldenburg Lübz Office , based in the city of Lübz , and merged with Wahlstorf on January 1, 2014 in the newly formed Gehlsbach municipality .
On December 31, 2013, 342 inhabitants lived on a community area of 20.66 km².
Geography and traffic
The community was about eight kilometers southeast of Lübz . It lay along a swampy lowland. The surrounding heights reached 95.3 m. In the north of the community was the Vietlübber Tannen forest , the south was cut by the course of the Gehlsbach . Federal road 103 ran east of the municipality .
The districts of Hof Karbow, Karbow and Vietlübbe as well as the residential area Sandkrug belonged to the community.
history
The villages themselves were first mentioned in a deed of sale in 1274. This documents the sale of the villages by Prince Nicolaus von Werle to the Marienfließ monastery . The place name Karbow is derived from the Slavic of hribu and means as much as hill town .
The name Vietlübbe, in 1288 Vitelubbe , comes from Old Slavonic and means something like place of the Vitolub family or place of Vitolub , the profit-loving.
The Cesemowe desert is mentioned as early as 1178 .
On January 1, 2014, the merger of the municipalities Karbow-Vietlübbe and Wahlstorf created the new municipality of Gehlsbach .
Attractions
- Karbow village church , built from field stone and half-timbering
- Neo-Gothic village church in Vietlübbe
Personalities
- Johann Ritter (1799–1880), from 1843 pastor in Vietlübbe, 1848 member of the Mecklenburg Assembly of Representatives
Individual evidence
- ↑ § 2 of the main statute (PDF; 19 kB) of the municipality
- ^ The Slavic place names in Meklenburg in the year books of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology . - Vol. 46 (1881), p. 65
- ^ The Slavic place names in Meklenburg in the year books of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology . - Vol. 46 (1881), p. 151
- ↑ StBA: Area changes from January 1st to December 31st, 2014