Kiekebusch (Schönefeld)

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Kiekebusch
Community of Schönefeld
Coat of arms of Kiekebusch
Coordinates: 52 ° 20 ′ 43 ″  N , 13 ° 33 ′ 0 ″  E
Height : 39 m
Area : 10.86 km²
Residents : 208  (2015)
Population density : 19 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : October 26, 2003
Postal code : 12529
Area code : 030
Location of the district of Kiekebusch in the community of Schönefeld

Kiekebusch is a district of the municipality of Schönefeld in the Dahme-Spreewald district ( Brandenburg ). Kiekebusch was an independent municipality until 2003.

location

Kiekebusch is located southeast of Berlin in the Dahme-Spreewald district , just under 3 km north of the Schönefeld motorway junction, almost directly on the A 113 . The district of Kiekebusch borders the district of Waltersdorf in the north, Miersdorf in the east and Schulzendorf and Wildau over short distances , Deutsch Wusterhausen and Ragow in the south , and the districts of Brusendorf and Rotberg in the west . The place is 40  m above sea level. NHN and can be reached via the L 402 via Rotberg and a junction from the L 400 east of the village. There are three noteworthy rivers in the district: the Karlshofer Vorfluter, which flows into the Rotberger Flutgraben, and this flows into the Selchower Flutgraben. There is a small pond in the area of ​​the Selchower Flutgraben.

The former municipality and today's district includes the inhabited part of the municipality Karlshof . The settlement (street name also means settlement) is somewhat separated from the closed development of the town center .

Village church

history

The place was first mentioned in a document in 1318. Schlimpert interprets the name as a sentence name, from Kiek (see) into the bush. The imperative form is comparatively common for the designation of locations (cf. also Siehdichum). He interprets Kiekebusch as the original forest name. According to the village form, Kiekebusch was a dead end village that was changed somewhat by a former manor.

14th Century

In 1318 the village lords of Rotzis and Kiekebusch agreed that their farmers should dig trenches together and clear these trenches regularly in order to drain the water from the Luch, "so that the people do not fall into ruin and poverty".

As in many comparable cases, a more detailed documentary mention can only be found in Charles IV's land book from 1375.

“Kikebusch 42 mansi sunt, quorum plebanus has 3 liberos, prefectus has 5 mansos liberos, pro quo tenetur equum pheodalem, 1 talentum. Quilibet dat 9 modios siliginis et 9 modios avene in pactum, in censum et precariam dat quilibet 5 solidos Heynege de Richenbach cum pacto, sed Johannes Litzen, civis in Berlin have in precariam de 3 mansis de quolibet 2½ solidos forte in pignore. 7 sunt curie cossatorum, quelibet dat 1 solidum agricolis. Taberna dat 10 solidos Heynege de Richenbach, qui eciam habet iudicium supremum et infimum cum servicio curruum et habet eandem villam a domino Damis annis plurimis cum iure patronatus et duodecim pullis fumalibus. Dominum marchio nichil habet ibi, eciam non recordantur dominum marchionem ibi aliquid habuisse. Molendinum desertum dat dominum Nicol Lintow, fratri ordinis predicatorum, 1½ chorum siliginis et Richenbach 5 solidos. "

- Schulze, Landbuch, pp. 81,82

At that time the Feldmark von Kiekebusch had 42 hooves , of which five hooves , which were exempt from taxes, belonged to the mayor and three free hooves to the pastor , so 34 peasant hooves had to pay taxes. The mayor had to provide a horse or a talent for his free hooves. Each hoof gave nine bushels of rye and nine bushels of oats in rent, and five shillings in interest and bede . A large part of these taxes went to the local lord Heynege de Richenbach, with the exception of the three Hufen amounting to 2½ shillings, which were in the pledge of the Berlin citizen Johannes Litzen.

The seven cottagers each had to pay one shilling to the farmers. It is not known how many farmers were resident in the village. The upper and lower courts, the church patronage and the carriage services belonged to Heynege von Reichenbach. The jug also had to give him 10 shillings. The (water -?) Mill was deserted at that time. The levies of 1½ Wispel rye went before, when the mill was still in operation, on the one hand to the preacher monk Nicol Lintow, and on the other hand 5 shillings to the local lord Heynege de Richenbach. The margrave owned nothing in Kiekebusch and it was not remembered that he had ever owned anything in the village. Heynege de Richenbach had only bought the village several years ago from a Herr von Damis. Ernst Fidicin assumes that this Damis could be identical to Richard von Dame, who was in the suite of Emperor Charles IV in 1373. Heynege de Richenbach is probably identical to Heinrich de Richenbach, who had his knight's seat with 12 hooves in Schulzendorf.

Interestingly, there is a corridor called Weinberg immediately to the northwest of the settlement , certainly an indication of earlier viticulture in the district. In the late medieval and early modern documents, however, there is no reference to viticulture near Kiekebusch.

15th and 16th centuries

In 1435 Margrave Johann enfeoffed the brothers Otto and Heinrich von Hake, sons of Hans von Hake a. a. also with half the village of Kiekebusch. His court judge, Achim von Hake, was accepted into the entire hand. According to the lap register of 1450, Kiekebusch was half owned by Hake and one Mußlow in Waßmannsdorf. Since the margrave owned nothing in Kiekebusch according to the land register of 1375, the fiefdom must have fallen home, so that the margrave could reassign the fief. The pastor had three free hooves and the landlord or mayor had two free hooves. The other hooves each gave 5 bushels of rye, five bushels of oats and 6 groschen. The jug gave 15 groschen. The three cottages gave 15 groschen. The mill had to raise 16 bushels of rye.

The fief of the von Hake (Hinricke, Asmus, Heynen, Achim, Otten and Hansen brothers and cousins) was renewed by Elector Albrecht in 1475. The latter document even says dat dorp kykebusch . Otto von Hake had meanwhile also acquired the other half and bequeathed it to his two sons Erasmus and Heinrich. In 1495 those from Schlabrendorf zu Großbeuthen received a small interest of 15 groschen from Kiekebusch. In 1496 Erasmus von Hake and his nephew Joachim, the son of his late brother Heinrich, bought a farm with 32 pieces of land on Kleinmachnow from the brothers Achim, Baltzer and Caspar Enderlin between Kiekebusch and Waltersdorf. In 1511, Elector Joachim I renewed the enfeoffment of Erasmus von Hake with Kiekebusch. Erasmus von died after 1524. The Vorwerk is still mentioned in 1542, after which it was probably given up. After the death of his father Erasmus, Christof I. u. a. also Kiekebusch. Around 1535 he married Elisabeth Brand von Lindau, daughter of Friedrich Brand von Lindau auf Wiesenburg, with whom he had five children, three sons and two daughters. It was last mentioned in a document on December 28, 1559. His two sons Erasmus and Friedrich, the third brother had died around 1568, went bankrupt in 1583. Her goods, including Kiekebusch, were bought by her cousin Otto IV von Hake for 17,000 thalers in the foreclosure auction. Otto IV married Margarethe von der Schulenburg adH Altenhausen, daughter of Matthias von der Schulenburg and Anna von Wenckstern around 1560. With her he had five sons and five daughters. Otto died on April 12, 1590 at the age of 69. Margarethe von der Schulenburg is the builder of the village church in Kleinmachnow. In the subsequent separation of property among the five brothers, the share of Erasmus and Friedrich von Hake acquired from their father Otto, including Kiekebusch, fell to Daniel von Hake.

17th and 18th centuries

Daniel von Hake was married twice, his first marriage to Lucretia Maria von Eickstedt, who died in 1625, and his second marriage to Brigitte von der Groeben, daughter of the Brandenburg official and chamber president, chief hunter and governor zu Zossen and Trebbin Ernst von der Groeben Kotzeband, Merwitz, Döberitz, Paaren, Wernitz, Hoppenrade and Schorin, and Klara von Kötschau adH Schafstedt, whom he married in 1629. His bride Brigitte von der Groeben brought him 1,500 guilders in marriage allowance. The couple had seven children; but only the names of three children are known. the son Levin Ernst, and the daughters Elisabeth Sabine and Anna Catharina.

As early as 1608, the von Hake family had built a knight's seat in Kiekebusch, which was then inhabited by Otto's widow, Margarethe von der Schulenburg and Daniel's mother; she died in 1609. This knight's seat was established from two bought-out farms with nine hooves. In 1618 these hooves were freely granted, i. H. has been exempted from the peasant taxes on it.

In a lap register from 1624, 11 Hüfner positions were named that originally had to pay rent and interest. But after two estates with nine hooves had been bought out, nine farms with 31 hooves remained. In addition to the nine farmers, there were five farmers, a miller, a shepherd, a blacksmith and a couple of householders in Kiekebusch.

On August 29, 1625, Dietloff II von Hake on Flatow sold the rye and oat leaseholds, smokers and meat tithes in Kiekebusch for 700 thalers to Daniel and Hans Georg von Hake on Kleinmachnow. On March 14, 1626 they received the loan letter. Daniel von Hake and his nephew Otto, son of his late brother Hans Georg, sold the village of Kiekebusch on January 13, 1645 for 6,600 thalers to Hans Christoph von Beeren , subject to the right of repurchase.

The place was badly devastated during the Thirty Years War . In 1651 only three farmers lived in the village. The reconstruction of Kiekebusch must have proceeded quickly, because already in 1671 nine Hüfner and five Kossäts were resident. The pre-war status was thus achieved again. Hans Christoph von Beeren was the son of Otto von Beeren from Großbeeren, and married to Elisabeth Sophia von Hake adH Kleinmachnow. She was the daughter of Hans Georg von Hake and Hedwig Maria von Schlabrendorf von Kleinmachnow. In 1678 Hans Georg von Beeren, the son of Hans Christoph, received the feudal letter over the Kiekebusch estate. In 1671 Hans Christoph von Beeren's daughter Catharina Elisabeth married Gottfried von Hake from Genshagen . The marriage allowance was set at 1,500 thalers. In 1674 Hans Georg married Ursula von Otterstedt, daughter of Alexander von Otterstedt in Dahlewitz and Jühnsdorf and Agnes von Hake. Ursula received 1200 thalers as marriage allowance. In 1693 and 1694, craftsmen enlarged the church in Kiekebusch to include a patron's box on the south side, and in 1718 a church tower was added.

Around 1711 the social structure in the village was as follows: six farmers, three kossäts, the blacksmith, the shepherd, the shepherd, the servant and a couple of householders. 31 hooves earn interest; nine hooves belonged to the manor.

Hans Georg von Beeren died in 1716. Heir was his son Ernst Ludwig von Beeren, who later rose to the position of Oberstwachtmeister in the Prussian army. In 1716, Ernst Ludwig sued the brothers Friedrich Wilhelm, Friedrich Wilhelm Arnold and Carl Ludwig von Beeren, who were also enlisted, because they refused to allow him to take out a loan of 1,000 thalers. He was the heir to Großbeeren and Kiekebusch. In 1727 he also acquired the Zinnitz manor near Calau. On June 5, 1727, August Wilhelm Prince of Prussia, or in the background the Brandenburg Elector and King in Prussia Friedrich Wilhelm I, bought the village and Vorwerk Kiekebusch for 20,000 thalers from Major Ernst Ludwig von Beeren. Together with the Rotzis village and Vorwerk (later Rotberg) bought in 1729, he formed the Rotzis office , which he assigned to his rule in Königs Wusterhausen .

In 1745 there was a jug again, and a windmill is also mentioned. However, the windmill must have been built much earlier, as a miller is mentioned as early as 1685. In 1771 there were nine gables (= residential houses) in the village. In 1773 the windmill is mentioned as being privately owned.

Kiekebusch and Karlshof on the measuring table sheet 1: 25.000 3647 Zeuthen from 1869

19th to 21st century

In 1801 six farmers, three cottagers, three Büdner and three residents lived in the village. There was a forge, a jug and a windmill. The field mark contained 31 farmer's hooves and 13 tax-free knight's hooves, which belonged to the Vorwerk. There were a total of 22 fire pits (residential houses) in the village. In 1840, however, there were only 18 houses left. On August 31, 1842, the manor and part of the village burned down. While the houses were being rebuilt, the manor and farm buildings fell into disrepair or were not rebuilt. A new estate and tenant house was built in Karlshof in 1843/44.

In 1851/52 the Chaussee from Königs Wusterhausen to Berlin was built, the current L 400. The negotiations mainly concerned the maintenance of the dam and the bridge over the Selchower Flutgraben, most of which were in the Kiekebusch area. The Chaussee forms (e) the eastern boundary of the district over a long distance and only crossed the district at the northeast corner.

In 1858, Kiekebusch was described as a village with seven farm owners and one lessee. These landowners employed 14 servants and maids and eight day laborers. Seven farmers ran their farms as a sideline. A master tailor, a carpenter and a journeyman bricklayer are named as craftsmen. There was also a tavern or jug ​​in the village. But Kiekebusch also had five arms to look after.

In 1860 there were two public buildings in Kiekebusch (excluding Karlshof), 16 residential buildings and 29 farm buildings, including a wind grain mill. In 1873 Kiekebusch had 187 inhabitants who lived in the 21 houses in the village.

In 1900 the village had grown to 22 houses, and in 1931 there were 30 houses. In 1939 there were four agricultural and forestry holdings with a size of 20 to 100 hectares, 33 holdings with 10 to 20 hectares, one business with 5 to 10 hectares and three small businesses with 0.5 to 5 hectares.

After the Second World War, 60 hectares of forest were expropriated, 17 hectares of which were divided among seven old farmers. In 1953 the first LPGs were established in Karlshof and Kiekebusch. The LPG in Kiekebusch dissolved again. In 1958 a new LPG Type I was built in Kiekebusch; In 1960 there were even two LPG type I with a total of 27 members and 277 hectares of agricultural land in Kiekebusch. In 1961 the two LPGs were merged and converted into a Type III LPG in 1971. The LPG Karlshof was already part of the LPG in Rotberg in 1973. In 1975 the merger of the LPG's Kiekebusch, Diepensee and Rotberg with headquarters in Rotberg.

The place is still characterized by agriculture in the 21st century.

Population growth from 1734 to 1997
year 1734 1772 1801 1817 1840 1858 1871 1895 1910 1925 1939 1946 1964 1971 1981 1991 2002 2015
Residents 113 107 139 112 119 136 163 178 253 163 300 377 201 183 169 150 193 208

The Kiekebusch windmill

The Kiekebusch windmill was located almost 100 meters east of the eastern exit of the village on a small hill. Today the A 113 motorway runs there. The mention of the miller Peter Busse in 1685 also proves the existence of the first windmill in Kiekebusch. In 1739 the windmill there and the Waltersdorfer windmill were sold to the miller Johann Christian Dahme. In 1746 Christoph Kegel ran the windmill in Kiekebusch. Unfortunately, the Kiekebusch millers are so far little known.

The Kiekebuscher Müller (overview)

  • 1685 Peter Busse, Müller zu Kiekebusch
  • 1739 Johann Christian Dahme, Müller
  • 1746 (Johann) Christoph Kegel, Müller
  • 1889, 1895 Kirste

The Vorwerk Kiekebusch

The Rotzis office with village and farm in Kiekebusch and the village and farm in Rotzis were given general lease until around 1839, around 1839 the Rotzis office was converted into a rent office, which was administered by a bailiff together with the offices of Königs Wusterhausen and Waltersdorf. The outworks were initially leased together, from 1860 onwards separately.

In 1839 the works in Rotzis and Kiekebusch were leased to the bailiff Karl Friedrich Ackermann. After the fire of 1842, the manor house and farm building of the Vorwerk in Kiekebusch were not rebuilt, but were rebuilt in Karlshof in 1843/44 by the then tenant Karl Friedrich Ackermann. From around 1860 the two outbuildings were leased separately. These tenants can be found under Karlshof.

tenant

  • (1817) to 1831 Johann Friedrich Christian Romanus, civil servant
  • 1832 vacat
  • (1833) 1834 to 1839 Karl Christian Dierke, bailiff
  • 1839 to 1847 Karl Friedrich Ackermann, senior magistrate

Communal history

Kiekebusch is located in the historic landscape of the Teltow . In the 16th century the estates were organized in the Teltowic Circle , which existed until 1816. It went first in the Teltow-Storkow district , which was dissolved again in 1835. The Teltow district was roughly the same size as the Teltow district and lasted until 1952. In the district reform of 1952 in the former GDR , the historical circles were dissolved and divided into smaller circles. Kiekebusch came to the newly created Königs Wusterhausen district in the also newly formed Potsdam district . After the reunification, this district was combined with the districts of Lübben and Luckau to form the district of Dahme-Spreewald.

Kiekebusch formed together with Rotzis the Rotzis office in 1727/29, which was converted into a rent office around 1836. The two outbuildings were initially leased together. It was not until 1860 that the two outworks were leased separately. In Kiekebusch, it appeared that the Karlshof estate was not formed until the offices were dissolved in 1872/74. Before that, Karklshof belonged to the Kiekebusch district. With the formation of districts in 1874 in what was then the province of Brandenburg , the district of Kiekebusch and the manor district of Karlshof came to the district number 32 Groß Kienitz. In 1928, the Karlshof estate was (again) united with the Kiekebusch district to form the Kiekebusch rural community. Karlshof was Kiekebusch's residence in 1932 and 1957, and in 1964 and 1970 Karlshof had district status.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1992, offices were set up to administer the many small communities in the state of Brandenburg. Kiekebusch merged with seven other communities to form the office of Schönefeld . The independent history of Kiekebusch ended with the incorporation into the community of Schönefeld on October 26, 2003. The office of Schönefeld was dissolved again. Since then, Kiekebusch has been part of the community of Schönefeld. The previous district of Karlshof now has the status of a municipality.

In Kiekebusch there is a local advisory board consisting of three people who elect the mayor from among their number. The mayor is currently (2019) Detlef Bertram, his deputy Alfred Schwartze.

Church history

In 1460 the Kiekebusch priest Georrius Keling was mentioned in a document. Until 1900 Kiekebusch was always the mother church with daughter churches in Rotberg, Schulzendorf and Brusendorf. In the Middle Ages, Kiekebusch belonged to the Sedes Mittenwalde of the Diocese of Brandenburg an der Havel , and in 1634 to the Mittenwalde inspection. Around 1800 the parish then belonged to the inspection or to the superintendent of Königs Wusterhausen.

Kiekebusch is currently (2019) part of the Selchow parish in the Neukölln Evangelical Church District in the Berlin district.

coat of arms

Blazon : "In gold a red-bordered silver supporting arch cross, covered with red crosshairs, the lower longitudinal bar covered by a green bush."

While the cross is supposed to symbolize the location of the village at Schönefelder Kreuz, which is one of the most important motorway connections in southeast Berlin, the green bush as a talking element refers to the place name.

The coat of arms was designed by the heraldist Frank Diemar .

Monuments and special features

The list of monuments of the state of Brandenburg for the district of Dahme-Spreewald shows only one monument:

  • No. 09140446 Kiekebusch Schönefeld Am Amtsgarten, Kiekebuscher Dorfstraße Village church with churchyard and churchyard wall. The village church of Kiekebusch was probably built in the 14th century and was expanded to the south in 1693 and 1694 with the addition of a patron's lodge . The west tower dates from 1718. Inside the church there is an altar from the second half of the 17th century.

Another specialty of Kiekebusch is its pet cemetery .

The Flutgrabenaue Waltersdorf nature reserve is located northeast of Kiekebusch .

Economy and Infrastructure

Due to its location near Schönefeld Airport and the 113 federal motorway, the municipality opened the Schönefelder Kreuz industrial park in the early 2010s . Several companies and traders are based there.

literature

  • Lieselott Enders , Margot Beck: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part IV. Teltow. 395 p., Hermann Böhlaus successor Weimar, 1976 (in the following abbreviated to Enders & Beck, historical local dictionary with corresponding page number)
  • Carl von Eickstedt: Contributions to a newer land book of the Brandenburg brands: prelates, knights, cities, fiefdoms, or Roßdienst and fiefdom. XX, 590 p., Creutz, Magdeburg 1840 (in the following abbreviated to Eickstedt, articles with corresponding page number)
  • Dietloff von Hake: History of the Brandenburg family von Hake. First volume. Druck und Verlag CA Starke, Görlitz, 1928 (hereinafter abbreviated to Hake, Geschichte, Vol. 1 with corresponding page number)
  • George Adalbert von Mülverstedt, Ed .: Collection of marriage foundations and personal commemorative letters of the knightly families of the provinces of Saxony, Brandenburg, Pomerania and Prussia . 360 p., Magdeburg 1863 (hereinafter abbreviated to Mülverstedt, collection with corresponding page number)

Source editions

  • Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel : Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis A. First main part, XI. Volume, continuation of the Mittelmark documents. Town and monastery Spandau, town Potsdam, town of Teltow, town of Mittenwalde, Zossen and that of Torgow, mixed documents, namely belonging to the small towns of Teltow and Barnim. 528 S., Berlin, Reimer 1856 Online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated to Riedel, CDB, A8 with the corresponding page number and certificate number)
  • Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel: Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis. Supplement tape. 515 S., Berlin, G. Reimer 1865 Online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated to Riedel CDB, SB with the corresponding page number and certificate number)

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gerhard Schlimpert : Brandenburgisches Namenbuch, Part 3, Die Ortnames des Teltow , Hermann Böhlaus Nachf., Weimar 1972, p. 104/05.
  2. a b c Enders & Beck, Historisches Ortslexikon, pp. 120–121.
  3. a b Ernst Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg or history of the individual districts, cities, manors and villages in the same, as a continuation of the land book of Emperor Charles IV. Volume 1 (contains I. the district of Teltow, II. The district of Nieder-Barnim ). Self-published by the author, Berlin, 1857. Online at Google Books , pp. 94/95.
  4. Johannes Schultze : Das Landbuch der Mark Brandenburg von 1375. Brandenburgische Landbücher Volume 2. Kommissionsverlag von Gsellius, Berlin 1940, p. 79.
  5. Riedel, CDB, A11, p. 339, document number LXXI (= 71) Online at Google Books
  6. ^ Ewald Friedrich von Herzberg: Register of the Lantschoss. In EF Herzberg: Landbuch des Churfürstenthums und der Mark Brandenburg, which Kayser Carl IV. King of Bohemia and Marggraf zu Brandenburg had made in 1375; as well as the register of the Landschosses of some districts of the Churmark from the year 1451. pp. 301–356, George Jacob Decker, Königlicher Hof-Buchdrucker, Berlin & Leipzig, 1781, p. 303.
  7. Riedel, CDB, A11, p. 416, document number CXCI (= 191) Online at Google Books
  8. Riedel, CDB, A11, p. 448, document number CCXXXVIII (= 138) Online at Google Books
  9. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: Elector Joachim [I. , Margrave of Brandenburg, enfeoffed the v. Hake with Kleinmachnow, Stahnsdorf, Sputendorf, Kiekebusch, Geltow, Bornim and Dalgow and goods and income in other villages. 1511 December 6].
  10. Hake, Geschichte, pp. 67–70.
  11. a b Hake, Geschichte, pp. 73–76.
  12. Hake, Geschichte, p. 82.
  13. Hake, Geschichte, p. 90.
  14. ^ Mülverstedt, Collection, p. 52 Online at Google Books
  15. Hake, Geschichte, p. 87.
  16. ^ Eickstedt, Contributions, p. 353 Online at Google Books
  17. Hake, Geschichte, p. 110.
  18. Hake, Geschichte, p. 134.
  19. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: including loan letter for Hans Georg von Beeren about the Kiekebusch estate, 1678 (document) .
  20. ^ Mülverstedt, Sammlung, p. 205 Online at Google Books
  21. Mülverstedt, Collection, pp. 139/40. Online at Google Books
  22. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Lawsuit by Ernst Ludwig von Beer against the brothers Friedrich Wilhelm, Friedrich Wilhelm Arnold and Carl Ludwig von Beer as co-leaners on the estate because of their refused consent to take out a loan of 1,000 thalers. 1727 .
  23. Götz Freiherr von Houwald : The Niederlausitzer manors and their owners. Volume IV Calau District Part II. 728 pp., Neustadt an der Aisch 1992, Verlag Degener & Co. ISBN 3-7686-4130-9 , p. 626.
  24. Francesko Rocca: History and administration of the royal family property: according to the files and documents of the Kgl. Court Chamber in Charlottenburg compiled. 522 pp., Berlin, Rohde, 1913–1914 (p. 4)
  25. ^ Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Purchase contract for the Kiekebusch estate between Ernst Ludwig von Beer and August Wilhelm Prince of Prussia (copy), 1727 .
  26. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm August Bratring: Statistical-topographical description of the entire Mark Brandenburg. Second volume. Containing the Mittelmark and Ukermark. VIII, 583 p., Berlin, Maurer, 1805 Online at Google Books , p. 363
  27. a b Royal Statistical Bureau: The municipalities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population. According to the original materials of the general census of December 1, 1871. II. The Province of Brandenburg. Verlag des Königlich Statistischen Bureau, Berlin 1873 Online at Google Books , p. 47.
  28. Contribution to the statistics of the State Office for Data Processing and Statistics. Historical municipality register of the State of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 19.3 District Dahme-Spreewald PDF
  29. a b Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Sales contracts of May 13, 1739 with the miller Johann Christian Dahme about the two windmills in Waltersdorf and Kiekebusch. 1739 .
  30. Hubert Otto: Brandenburgische Kornmüller and Mühlenmeister before 1800. Archives for Family Research 35/36: 215–222, 293–301, 1969, p. 220.
  31. Hubert Otto: Brandenburgische Kornmüller and Mühlenmeister before 1800. Archive for Family Research, 37: 384–391, 1970, p. 386.
  32. ^ Wilhelm von Bezold: Results of the meteorological observations in 1889. German Meteorological Yearbook, 1889: S.LXV (= 65), Berlin, 1889.
  33. ^ Wilhelm von Bezold: Results of the meteorological observations in 1895. German Meteorological Yearbook, 1895: S.XLIII (= 43), Berlin, 1895.
  34. a b Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Contract of August 9, 1839 with the bailiff Karl Friedrich Ackermann on the leasing of the Rotzis and Kiekebusch works from 1839 to 1847. 1839 .
  35. ↑ Ortschafts = directory of the government = district of Potsdam according to the latest district division from 1817, with a note of the district to which the place previously belonged, the quality, number of people, confession, ecclesiastical circumstances, owner and address, along with an alphabetical register . Georg Decker, Berlin 1817 (without pagination) online at Google Books
  36. Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv: Online research: temporary lease from 1819 with the civil servant Johann Friedrich Christian Romanus on the office of Rotzis and long lease from 1822 with the blacksmith Friedrich Wilhelm Müller in Rotzis over 60 square rods of garden land of the Rotzis Vorwerk. 1819-1823 .
  37. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1824. 498 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1824 Online at Google Books (p. 182)
  38. Official Journal of the Royal Government to Potsdam and the city of Berlin 36th piece of the Official Journal on 5 September 1834 p 249, Live on Google Books
  39. Handbook on the royal Prussian court and state for the year 1839. 651 p., Berlin, Georg Decker, 1839 (p. 262)
  40. Official Journal of the Royal Government to Potsdam and the city of Berlin 39th piece of the Official Journal of 27 September 1839 p 318 Live on Google Books
  41. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin Supplement to the 9th issue of the Official Journal of February 27, 1874, p. 5, online at Google Books
  42. a b main statutes for the community Schönefeldin applicable after entry into force of the third amendment Statutes as amended on March 26, 2015 PDF
  43. Kiekebusch local advisory board , Citizen Information System Schönefeld, accessed on June 27, 2019.
  44. Riedel, CDB, SB, p.313, certificate number CXXVI (= 126) Online at Google Books (p. 465)
  45. Evangelical Church Community Kiekebusch
  46. List of monuments of the state of Brandenburg for the district of Dahme-Spreewald. Status: December 31, 2018 (PDF)
  47. ^ Georg Dehio (arr. Gerhard Vinken et al.): Handbook of German Art Monuments - Brandenburg. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich / Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-422-03123-4 .

annotation

  1. One talent = 20 Schillings ( Johannes Schultze : Das Landbuch der Mark Brandenburg von 1375. Brandenburgische Landbücher Volume 2. Commission publisher von Gsellius, Berlin 1940, DNB  580505456 , p. 462 . ).