Karstädt (Prignitz)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the municipality of Karstädt
Karstädt (Prignitz)
Map of Germany, position of the municipality Karstädt highlighted

Coordinates: 53 ° 10 ′  N , 11 ° 45 ′  E

Basic data
State : Brandenburg
County : Prignitz
Height : 34 m above sea level NHN
Area : 253.55 km 2
Residents: 5967 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 24 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 19357
Primaries : 038797, 038783 (Karwe)Template: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / area code contains text
License plate : PR
Community key : 12 0 70 173
Address of the
municipal administration:
Mühlenstrasse 1
19357 Karstädt
Website : gemeinde-karstaedt.de
Mayor : Udo Staeck ( CDU )
Location of the municipality of Karstädt in the Prignitz district
Lenzerwische Lenzen (Elbe) Lanz Cumlosen Groß Pankow (Prignitz) Pritzwalk Gumtow Plattenburg Legde/Quitzöbel Rühstädt Bad Wilsnack Breese Weisen Wittenberge Perleberg Karstädt Gülitz-Reetz Pirow Berge Putlitz Kümmernitztal Gerdshagen Halenbeck-Rohlsdorf Meyenburg Marienfließ Triglitz Landkreis Ostprignitz-Ruppin Putlitz Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Sachsen-Anhalt Sachsen-Anhaltmap
About this picture

Karstädt is a municipality in the Prignitz district in Brandenburg . The municipality area is identical to the administrative area of ​​the Karstädt Office, which existed from 1992 to 2003 .

geography

Karstädt is located in the northwest of the state of Brandenburg. Southwestern parts of the municipality are located within the Elbe-Brandenburg river landscape biosphere reserve . Within the municipality boundaries the Tarnitz , Karwe and other small rivers and ditches flow into the Löcknitz . The Meynbach runs on the border with Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania .

Community structure

The following districts belong to the municipality of Karstädt:

  • Blooms with the inhabited parts of the community Strehlen, Waterloo and Klockow
  • Boberow with Gosedahl
  • Dallmin with Tiefenthal
  • Garlin with the inhabited parts of the municipality Seetz, Sargleben, Dargardt and Bootz
  • Groß Warnow with the inhabited part of the municipality Klein Warnow [until October 27, 1937 "Wendisch Warnow"]
  • Karstädt with the inhabited parts of the municipality Postlin and Stavenow
  • Kribbe with the inhabited parts of the municipality Neuhof, Wittmoor and Karwe
  • Laaslich with the inhabited part of the municipality Lenzersilge
  • Mankmuß with the inhabited parts of the municipality Mesekow and Birkholz
  • Misteline
  • Premslin with the inhabited parts of the municipality Glövzin, Neu-Premslin
  • Pröttlin with the inhabited parts of the municipality Pinnow and Zapel
  • Reckenzin with the inhabited part of the municipality Streesow

There are also the residential areas Forsthof, Gosedahl, Kolonie, Margarethental, Neu Pinnow, Neuhof Aufbau, Neuhof Mollnitz, Semlin, Siedlung an der Bahn, Tiefenthal, Wendisch Warnow and Ziegelei.

history

Karstädt

Church in Karstädt
Bootz Manor

Karstädt was first mentioned in a document in 1271 and is an old village . The place name goes back to the knight Reinhold of the Anhalt noble family Karstedt , who settled here. Already in the 14th century the place had a church, which was largely demolished in 1885 due to lack of space. The replacement building from 1895 was renovated in 1989 . Postlin was incorporated into Karstädt in 1974.

Glövzin and Kaltenhof

The region was already settled in the Neolithic Age . From the Iron Age are urns and grave goods were found.

From the 6th to the 12th century there were several small Slavic settlements. Glövzin was first mentioned in a document in 1252, but the town was founded around 1230 by the von Karstedt family. From the 14th century, the population of Glövzin consisted mainly of subjects of the landlord of Stavenow, and only a few farms in the village belonged to the von Karstedt family. This gave up the knight's seat in Glövzin in the 16th century after building an estate in Kaltenhof in 1540, a place first mentioned in 1542. At that time there were 17 in Glövzin Hufner , six Kossäten and a cutter. The vicarage was desolate , the sexton was not reoccupied until 1558. In the Thirty Years' War the place lost almost all of its inhabitants, in 1686 only eleven male residents were counted.

In 1742 the manor house in Kaltenhof was redesigned. In 1791 there were 240 inhabitants in Glövzin and 43 in Kaltenhof. A major fire in Glövzin in 1809 destroyed 15 farms. In 1822 the Chaussee and from 1846 the railway line between Hamburg and Berlin were built. A fire caused by lightning struck the village church in Glövzin in 1890, and the new building was inaugurated in 1896. Many large farmhouses were built in the 20th century. Electricity was introduced in 1921. In 1923 Kaltenhof was incorporated into Glövzin. After the end of the Second World War , many refugees came to the region, in 1946 there were 453 inhabitants. In 1971 Glövzin was incorporated into Premslin with Kaltenhof.

Administrative history

Karstädt and its current districts belonged to the Westprignitz district in the Prussian province of Brandenburg since 1817 and to the Perleberg district in the GDR district of Schwerin from 1952 . Since 1993 the places have been in the Brandenburg district of Prignitz.

On May 15, 1992, the Minister of the Interior gave his approval for the establishment of the Karstädt Office, based in Karstädt. The formation came about with the publication of the notice on June 15, 1992. At the time it was founded, the office comprised 13 communities in what was then the district of Perleberg , which later became part of the new (large) community of Karstädt.

On December 31, 2001, Blüthen, Dallmin, Groß Warnow, Karstädt, Kribbe, Laaslich, Premslin and Reckenzin initially merged to form a new Karstädt municipality. On December 31, 2002, the municipalities of Garlin, Mankmuß and Pröttlin were incorporated into the municipality of Karstädt. On October 26, 2003, Boberow and Nebelin were finally incorporated into Karstädt. The Karstädt Office was dissolved and the Karstädt community was made vacant. The last official director was Dieter Wetzel.

Former parish date annotation
Flowers December 31, 2001
Boberow October 26, 2003
Dallmin December 31, 2001
Dargardt 1st February 1974 Incorporation after Garlin
Garlin December 31, 2002
Glövzin May 7th 1971 Incorporation to Premslin
Great Warnow December 31, 2001
Klein Warnow 3rd July 1972 Incorporation to Groß Warnow
Kribbe December 31, 2001
Laughing December 31, 2001
Lenzersilge 1st January 1973 Incorporation to Laaslich
Lack must December 31, 2002
Mesekow 3rd July 1972 Incorporation after Mankmuß
Misteline October 26, 2003
Pinnow 1st February 1974 Incorporation to Pröttlin
Postlin 1st February 1974
Premslin December 31, 2001
Pröttlin December 31, 2002
Reckenzin December 31, 2001
Sargleben 1st February 1974 Incorporation after Garlin
Seetz 1st February 1974 Incorporation after Garlin
Streesow 1st October 1973 Incorporation after Reckenzin
Chasing 1st January 1973 Incorporation after Blüthen

Population development

year Residents
1875 619
1890 687
1910 1,063
1925 1,088
1933 1,308
1939 1,426
1946 1,872
1950 1,889
year Residents
1964 2,228
1971 2,650
1981 3,888
1985 3,935
1989 3,893
1990 3,805
1991 3,689
1992 3,627
1993 3,590
1994 3,539
year Residents
1995 3,456
1996 3,377
1997 3,307
1998 3,294
1999 3.126
2000 3,101
2001 5,725
2002 7,026
2003 7,323
2004 7.184
year Residents
2005 7,038
2006 6,872
2007 6,750
2008 6,628
2009 6,512
2010 6.376
2011 6,204
2012 6,149
2013 6,057
2014 5,983
year Residents
2015 5,983
2016 6.013
2017 5,989
2018 5,943
2019 5,967

Territory of the respective year, number of inhabitants: as of December 31 (from 1991), from 2011 based on the 2011 census

politics

Community representation

The municipal council of Karstädt consists of 18 municipal representatives and the full-time mayor as a voting member. The local elections on May 26, 2019 had the following result with a turnout of 60.0%:

CDU SPD AfD Single applicant Nicole Niemann The left Individual applicant Steffen Schmidt FDP
percent 48.9 15.7 10.7 9.3 6.7 4.9 3.8
Seats 9 3 2 1 1 1 1

mayor

  • 1998–2003: Jürgen Ditten (CDU)
  • since 2003: Udo Staeck (CDU)

Staeck was elected in the mayoral election on September 1, 2019 with 57.9% of the valid votes for a further term of eight years.

coat of arms

The coat of arms was approved on November 26, 2003.

Blazon : "Split and everything in confused colors: under a silver-red shield head, covered with a continuous cross, in the red-silver shield on the split line a split hammer, separated on the right by a ploughshare and on the left by a silver cap."

flag

The flag of the municipality of Karstädt is divided into four and has the colors red and white. In the middle is the coat of arms of the municipality.

Parish partnership

Since 1991 there has been a partnership with the municipality of Rommerskirchen in the Rhine district of Neuss .

Attractions

  • Village churches in Karstädt, Glövzin and Premslin
  • Freiherr-vom-Stein memorial in Nebelin by Berlin sculptor Helmuth Schievelkamp , unveiled in 1913
  • Asymmetrical 121 meter high telecommunications tower in the district of Pinnow at 53 ° 12'17 "north latitude and 11 ° 38'35" east longitude
  • Country pastor museum in the former rectory in Blüthen
  • Löwenkopfbrücke in Streesow, one of the oldest bridges over railway lines in Germany.

Economy and Infrastructure

Karstädt is one of the 15 regional growth cores in the state of Brandenburg. This promotes selected future-oriented industries.

traffic
Karstädt train station

Karstädt is on the federal highway 5 between Ludwigslust and Perleberg and the state road L 13 between Lenzen and Putlitz . The A 14 federal motorway between Schwerin and Magdeburg , which is still under construction, with the Groß Warnow and Karstädt junctions , passes immediately to the west of the town. The section between these two junctions was completed in December 2015.

Karstädt station is on the Hamburg – Berlin railway line . It is served by the regional express line RE 2 of the East German Railway Wismar - Berlin - Cottbus .

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the places that make up today's church

Personalities associated with the districts of today's municipality

literature

  • Historical Gazetteer Brandenburg - Part 1 - Prignitz - A-M . Modifications made by Lieselott Enders . In: Klaus Neitmann (Ed.): Publications of the Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv (State Archive Potsdam) - Volume 3 . Founded by Friedrich Beck . Publishing house Klaus-D. Becker, Potsdam 2012, ISBN 978-3-88372-032-6 , pp. 382 ff .

Web links

Commons : Karstädt  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Population in the State of Brandenburg according to municipalities, offices and municipalities not subject to official registration on December 31, 2019 (XLSX file; 223 KB) (updated official population figures) ( help on this ).
  2. Municipality of Karstädt (ed.): Main statute of the municipality of Karstadt from March 26, 2015 . Karstädt March 27, 2015 ( online [accessed January 3, 2016]).
  3. Statistics of the German Reich, Volume 450: Official municipality directory for the German Reich, Part I, Berlin 1939; P. 249.
  4. Municipality of Karstädt on the service portal of the state administration
  5. see Carl Otto Sigismund von Karstedt
  6. ^ Andrea Moser: Imports and contacts. First statements about an Iron Age settlement near Karstädt, district of Prignitz
  7. Andrea Moser, Eric Biermann: "Firebocks" of the pre-Roman Iron Age - a neglected group of artifacts. Finds from Karstädt 12 and Garlin 10, district of Prignitz
  8. Formation of the Karstädt Office. Announcement by the Minister of the Interior of May 13, 1992. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 3, Number 38, June 15, 1992, p. 742.
  9. ^ Formation of a new community in Karstädt. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of December 14, 2001. In: Official Journal for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg , Volume 12, Number 52, December 27, 2001, p. 904, brandenburg.de (PDF)
  10. Incorporation of the Garlin community into the Karstädt community. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of April 24, 2002. In: Official Journal for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg , Volume 13, Number 20, May 15, 2002, p. 518 brandenburg.de (PDF)
  11. Incorporation of the Mankmuß community into the Karstädt community. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of April 24, 2002. In: Official Journal for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg , Volume 13, Number 20, May 15, 2002, p. 518 brandenburg.de (PDF)
  12. Incorporation of the Pröttlin community into the Karstädt community. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of April 24, 2002. In: Official Journal for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg , Volume 13, Number 20, May 15, 2002, p. 518 brandenburg.de (PDF)
  13. Fifth law on state-wide municipal area reform concerning the districts of Barnim, Märkisch-Oderland, Oberhavel, Ostprignitz-Ruppin, Prignitz, Uckermark (5th GemGebRefGBbg) of March 24, 2003 (GVBl.I / 03, No. 05, p. 82), amended by law of July 1, 2003 (GVBl.I / 03, No. 10, p. 187)
  14. Historical municipality directory of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. Prignitz district (PDF) pp. 18–21
  15. Population in the state of Brandenburg from 1991 to 2017 according to independent cities, districts and municipalities , Table 7
  16. ^ Office for Statistics Berlin-Brandenburg (Ed.): Statistical report AI 7, A II 3, A III 3. Population development and population status in the state of Brandenburg (respective editions of the month of December)
  17. ^ Result of the local elections on May 26, 2019
  18. Results of the local elections in 1998 (mayoral elections) for the district of Prignitz ( Memento of the original from April 14, 2018 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.wahlen.brandenburg.de
  19. Local elections October 26, 2003. Mayoral elections (PDF) p. 31
  20. Brandenburg Local Election Act, Section 74
  21. ^ Result of the mayoral election on September 1, 2019
  22. Coat of arms information on the service portal of the state administration of Brandenburg
  23. Karstädt . In: Hans Vollmer (Hrsg.): General lexicon of fine artists from antiquity to the present . Founded by Ulrich Thieme and Felix Becker . tape 30 : Scheffel – Siemerding . EA Seemann, Leipzig 1936, p. 62 .
  24. ↑ The former Blüthen parsonage becomes the country pastor's museum ( memento from June 19, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )