Kladen (Dobbertin)

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Kladen is a district of the municipality Dobbertin in the Goldberg-Mildenitz district in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania on the northwestern edge of the Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide nature reserve .

Coordinates: 53 ° 39 '  N , 12 ° 3'  E

Map: Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
marker
Dumplings
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Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
View of Kläden von der Klädener Plage

geography

The village of Kläden is three kilometers north of the monastery village of Dobbertin . To the southwest of the village is the Klädener Plage, a drained lake that is part of the Klädener Plage and Mildenitz breakthrough valley nature reserve . The former lake area is drained via ditches into the Mildenitz, which flows on the western edge . On the banks of the Woseriner See , two kilometers northwest of the village, is the Kläden nature reserve .

The local development is at a terrain height of about 45 to 50 m. ü. NHN . The Klädener Berg east of the village reaches a height of 63 meters.

Important long-distance trails that crossed each other once led from Sternberg to Goldberg and from Parchim to Güstrow with a crossing over the Mildenitz through Kläden. To the north-east of the village today the federal highway 192 runs between Sternberg and Goldberg .

history

In the vicinity of the place there are rich prehistoric and prehistoric sites, including a group of Bronze Age barrows in the Klädener forest.

Slavic shards were found up de Dbodstädt (on the village center) on the Mildenitz. The field name Dorfstätte is mentioned in the surveying register from 1728 . The settlement was 700 meters west of today's place Kläden on a spur-like ridge in the Mildenitzbogen. Also in 1275, when Prince Nicolaus von Werle sold the village of Dobbin with the adjoining village of Devstorp, which later became desolate, to Provost Volrad of the Dobbertin monastery , the Acker dei Dorfstahr was mentioned on the Belower border between Jawir See ( Dobbertiner See ) and the road to Dobbertin . It has not yet been clarified whether Kläden was created by German settlers during the expansion of the northern monastery area at the present-day location or on said Dorfstädt .

The name Clodene is Old Slavonic. Klada stands for tree trunk or (wooden) block, so it can be interpreted as a tree and clearing location. He thus indicates that the Slavs had already cleared the area. In 1237 Nikolaus , Prince of Rostock, registered the boundaries of the Dobbertiner monastery area, which also included Clodene with his divorced (boundaries) . The creek Milnitz (Mildenitz) and the Wotrowitz lake already belonged to the monastery properties . This stretched south of Kläden and was called Klädener See (north basin) or Dobbiner See (south basin) until it was drained. The importance of these waters for fishing is shown by the settlement of a dispute between the Dobbertin monastery and Conrad and Hermann von Cramon over eel fishing in the Mildenitz near Kläden on July 19, 1313.

Kladen as a strategically important place was already part of the parish of Dobbertin Monastery with Dobbin.

In 1402, Balthasar zu Werle sold all princely rights to the villages of Kleesten , Oldenstorf and Kläden to the provost Nicolaus, the prioress Ludgard von Preen and the entire convent of the Dobbertin monastery with the consent of his wife Euphemia .

In 1540 there were five Hufen and six Kossaten posts in Kläden , all of which were occupied. As a result of the poor soil, which is not very suitable for growing grain, the desolation of the villages in the Schwinzer Heidegebiet also affected Kläden. It was aggravated by the total devastation in the Thirty Years War , so that the previous arable land was mostly overgrown with fir trees. The northern part of the Feldmark was cut off and a sheep farm called de nie Hoff was built on it; this later became the town of Neuhof .

In the complaint book of the Dobbertiner monastery district court in 1591 it can be read that the Klädener Kossaten, as small farmers with a small share of land, had a dispute over the inequality of arable land . They vowed to share equally afterwards. After fornication with the Kruger Marcus Gluder and Claw Stockflet, the maid Grete Hanne came before the monastery court in 1592 and in 1597 the village mayor Jürgen Frohkost and his brother Chim insulted the maid Diennes Dolge.

In 1652, after the Thirty Years' War, the Kossaten Jürgen Duncker, Jacob Schmidt and Jacob Wendt, who had remained in Kläden, wanted to give up their field in Kläder Holtz because they could barely live on it. In 1662 eight of eleven earlier farms are said to have been in desolation. In 1674 Jacob Wendt was still present, but in 1699 the last small farmers left the village with builder Cheel Duncker. On November 26, 1699, the Landtag commission with the present monastery provisional Philipp Cuno von Bassewitz and Magnus Friedrich von Barner was able to convince itself of the poor condition on the farms, in the cottages and in the stables. The grain was used up, new seeds were not bought and a horse even died. The rest of the cattle had been sold to the Klädener miller. Until 1700, the Kossats from Kläden could struggle to maintain their positions.

Village

barn
Katen

After 1700 a distinction was made only between Kläden Schäferei and Kläden Mühle. Four residents and a journeyman Rademacher were registered in the register of confessors from 1704 . But there was still an independent Klädener Feldmark . In 1718 the judgment against Esther Sophia von Wrangel and the wood bailiff Joachim Neelsen zu Kläden for fornication was confirmed in the monastery district court. Regarding the forest stock, the surveying register of 1728 says: “The wood is in Dannen. The rest of the wood, where cattle pasture is, belongs to the monastery office. ” With the shepherd Coord Bohnhoff, the miller Helmuth Plahn, the hunter Jochen Jacobs, the wheel maker Caspar Havemann, the Schulzen Hanß Duncker, Reiner Klevenow, Jochen Wendt and Hinrich Dantzer Kladen in 1751 a total of 24 residents. In 1786 Prussia became the shepherd.

In addition to the Klädener, the Klädener fishermen fished the Dobbiner , the Nienhäger , the black and parts of the Woseriner See , as the lease contracts of 1737 and 1774 prove. In 1791 the provisional monasteries von Blücher and von Meerheimb had signed a new lease contract with the fisherman Christopher Buck. With the lowering of the Klädener See lake, which began after 1798, the yields from fishing fell considerably.

After 1790 the place was then divided into three parts. At the Mildenitz stood the water mill with a barn and the horse stable. The old forester's house with the jug stood on the intersecting country lanes from Parchim to Güstrow and from Sternberg to Dobbertin. The shepherd's farm with the shepherd's house for two shepherds, the barn and the sheepfold was located towards the Klädener See, today's Klädener Plage. In 1804 there were already five cottages for forest workers in Kläden.

Since the fisherman Jantzen had lease debts in 1834, the fishery was leased to Fischer Fründ until 1881. In 1883 the fisherman Engel from Kläden also took over the reed harvest on the waters. At Nienhäger See, he asked for a place for cut pipes and for drying the nets. In 1901 he handed over the fishery to his son-in-law Schultz. After the last subsidence in 1840 and the drainage of the Dobbiner and Klädener lakes until 1871 for the purpose of reclaiming grassland, fishing in Kläden became less important.

According to the census of December 1, 1876, Kläden had 105 inhabitants, in 1939 there were only 99 inhabitants.

In 1904 a new Katen with three full and two senior citizens' apartments for 8,245.53 Marks was completed after the old dilapidated Katen was demolished. In 1905 a stable building was added for two apartments. In 1921 the well system got a second pump and in 1927 there were still 60 people living in Kläden.

In 1952 the village was connected to the energy network and in 1971 to the central water supply. In 1984 Kläden still had 15 residents.

Incorporation

Since April 1, 1921, Kläden, which previously belonged to the Dobbertin monastery office, has been part of the political municipality of Dobbertin. On August 30, 1921, the local council for Kläden-Neuhof issued a local charter. From October 1, 1922, Spendin was separated from Dobbertin and merged with the rural community of Kläden-Neuhof.

Forsthof

Forsthof

Already in 1728 the Dobbertiner monastery administration had a forester's yard built in Kläden. This was conveniently located in terms of traffic on the intersecting long-distance routes. There was also a jug there . With the establishment of the first forest yard in the monastery area and the use of the forest areas to the northwest, a secure source of income for the monastery resulted. The Dobbertiner provisional and monastery captain Jobst Hinrich von Bülow from Woserin had ordered not only the construction of a glassworks but also the forestry use of the sandy heather.

In the register of confessors from 1751, the Dobbertiner pastor Christian Hintzmann names the hunter and forester Jochen Jacobs with his wife Marie Liese and son Rudolf in the village of Cläden .

In 1773, son Rudolf worked as a forester with his wife as an innkeeper. On January 2, 1773, Jacobs was summoned to the office of the new office building in Dobbertin for questioning before the cloister court for failure to report . The tailor Guthmei, who had broken out of the Goldberg city prison, would have stayed with him in the jug. Since he had not escaped from the monastery prison, the monastery captain August Friedrich von Strahlendorff stopped the proceedings. In 1784 there was another court case against the Dobbertiner monastery baker Podolph, who had stolen the Klädener forester car.

In 1770 the Klädener forest had 610 hectares of forest. In 1777, the bricks from the monastery's own brickworks in Lähnwitz were used to build the Jägerhaus . The stable on the Forsthof was completed in 1852, the new barn in 1865.

As a result, foresters were:

  • 1751 Jochen Jacobsen
  • 1773 Rudolf Jacobsen
  • 1813-1826 Jacobs
  • 1830–1877 C. Wendland
  • 1857–1871 Zebuhr, moved to Sietow
  • 1871–1909 Ludwig Kobow, official hunter
  • 1910–1937 Robert Mahncke, station hunter, forester, district forester, chief forester
  • 1939–1945 Karl Konrad Ernst Evers, district forester, head forester (afterwards in the Fünfeichen camp )
  • 1946–1950 Hans Spillert
  • 1951–1953 Hans Möller
  • 1953–1955 Walter Götz, previously an area forester in Sandhof
  • 1956–1968 Herbert Krull, replaced because of comments on the Prague Spring
  • 1968–1969 Hubertus Richter
  • 1969–2006 Holger Westphal, previously a district forester in Kleesten.

In the years 1902 and 1903, the Klädener forest district had a high number of red deer and wild boar, which resulted in considerable expenses for game damage and gamekeeping. In 1912 a new cattle house was built on the forester's farm for 6,373 marks, the pigsty was given an extension and the jug was given a new stable. As a result of the war, there was also a shortage of workers in the Klädener forest since 1914. After building a three-legged Katens (house with 3 apartments) in Neuhof, the forest workers only had two kilometers to the Klädener Forsthof.

In 1929, 1228 hectares of forest belonged to the forest district, 160 hectares of which were hardwood, 856.5 hectares of coniferous wood, 24.8 hectares of coppice forest and 141 hectares of secondary use areas. The forester Mahncke had 34.2 hectares of service land, of which 14.2 hectares were arable, 6 hectares of meadow, 12.3 hectares of pasture and 0.41 hectares of gardens with 54 fruit trees. He had three horses, 12 cows, 12 pigs and 12 young cattle. In the forest area there was a good population of red deer and wild boar and little hunting crime.

In the post-war years, 84.9 hectares of clear-cutting areas were reported in the district forester's office in 1951.

In 1965 the old forest barn was demolished. Some of the historically valuable wooden beams were used in the construction of the half-timbered shed in 1980, including a lintel bar with the inscription: ACH HERR BEI GÄDIG LAS DISEM HAUSE HEIL WIDERFAHREN; ANNO 1748. When the shed was demolished in 1996, the last witnesses of a 200 year old village jug disappeared.

In 1982, 0.5 hectares of forest burned in the Kläden district. On January 1, 2007, the forestry farm in Kläden was closed.

Buildings in the village

school

It is not known when Kladen had his own classroom. Around 1848 the massive school master's house with two senior citizens' apartments and a stable was built at the entrance to the village. Lüthges was already working as a village school teacher in 1845. From 1866 to 1886, Köhn was a particularly capable teacher in Kläden. Since 1890 he was terminally ill and died in Kläden in 1893.

For the schools in the monastery area, the provisional monastery Josias von Plüskow, Diederich von Mecklenburg and the monastery captain Wilhelm von Oertzen issued new school regulations on August 13, 1886.

Teacher Wendt came to Kläden in 1886 and in 1888, in addition to free accommodation and salary with an old age allowance, he also had a garden, arable and potato land, a meadow and a pasture for two cows, three sheep and two geese, as well as rye, barley and fir-firing. and beech wood, as well as peat and free visit to the doctor.

Since no unmarried teacher wanted to teach at the Klädener school and the position remained vacant, from November 1901 the children from Kläden, Alte Mühle and Mildenitz-Katen had to walk the three or five kilometers to school in any weather, sometimes in wooden slippers, to Dobbertin do. The children from Neuhof went to Altenhagen. Up to four children of some day laborers went to school. It was not until 1903 that the monastery captain Carl Friedrich von Lützow ordered: Since the second Dobbertiner teacher Popp had a bicycle, he could make the way to Kläden more quickly in the afternoon and teach there. This solved the problem of teacher shortages at the half-day school. After completion of a new Kathen and evacuation of a forest workers apartment in the local schoolhouse there, with the start of the winter school on October 27, 1904, the new teacher Buchholz from Kurzen Trechow moved into the converted teacher's apartment.

In 1920 all monastic school teachers were appointed state officials by the Mecklenburg-Schwerin Ministry of Education. Physical education, which was introduced in 1920, took place on the gymnasium in Dobbertin, and it wasn't until 1928 that a gymnastics and playground was set up on the teacher's paddock in Kläden. Due to the lack of teaching aids and school desks, lessons had already become unacceptable for the teacher Bernitt, who came from Jellen in 1921, and there was no separate toilet for boys and girls .

The teacher Evert taught in Kläden until the end of the war and moved to Dobbertin in 1946. From December 1945 there was again a one-class school with a teacher in Kläden. In 1953 the school was closed and the children went to school in Zidderich and Dobbertin.

Cemetery with chapel

Former chapel

The cemetery was already in 1804 as a burial place in the middle of the village between the forester's yard and the sheep farm. As early as 1859, a cemetery chapel was wanted to be built on the Klädener Gottesacker. But it was not until 1866 that the Dobbertiner pastor Friedrich Pleßmann asked the monastery head to “build a morgue in the churchyard to Kläden to hold the funeral service without great harm in bad weather.” Due to the lack of bricks, the building was not completed until 1869.

In 1921 the cemetery with its heated chapel was in poor condition. The stone wall and the entrance gate had to be renewed. Since the Dobbertiner parish lacked money, the Klädener helped themselves. In 1950, 400 bricks were missing to repair the chimney and boards for a new floor. After the repairs, the chapel was used as a community room from 1950 to 1973. In 1974 the property was rented to a veterinarian due to the lack of church use. In 1975 the Winkelmann-Gesellschaft from Stendal took over the property and since 1996 it has been used privately for the weekend by a Berlin family.

Mill

Bridge over the Mildenitz at the former mill

It is not known exactly when a watermill was built on the Mildenitz, west of Kläden. Assumptions go back to the Dobbertiner mill builder Hinrik Glove, who built the mill on Jawir See, today's Dobbertiner See, and whose grave slab is in the cloister of the Dobbertiner monastery. The brother Hinrichs as Mollenmeister donated his house in Dobbertin to the monastery nuns in 1371.

The watermill was already in place in 1593 when the miller Achim Hasse was taken away from his oath when he was hired. He leased the Wademeister Kamp near Schlove and a meadow near Barckwerder on Lake Dobbiner from the monastery. In 1598 Peter Jentz was named as Müller in Kläden.

In 1652 the monastery district court investigated the shepherd servant Henning Brest for attempted murder of the miller Hans Saßen from Kladen. The monastery captain Paschen von der Lühe even asked the dean of the law faculty of the University of Rostock for help, the result is not known.

In 1649 the village of Kläden with its mill in the Dobbertiner parish was mentioned as a parish. From August 26, 1675, the Dobbertiner carpenters had worked for four days at the mill house at the mill house from Klädener Jacob Dome, and in the process also renewed the barn door that had been smashed by imperial riders. In 1682 the mill was leased again.

On the map of Hoinckhusen in 1700 the Cläder Möll is located west of the village on the Mildenitz between the Dobbiner and Black Lakes . Around 1700 Dobbertin has the parish: the monastery with the office and the Dobbertiner mill, the two farms Spendin and Neuhof, the village of Dobbertin, the village of Dobbin and the village of Kläden with the mill. In 1730 it was leased. In 1742 a miller was named Rosin with his servants Haas and Schumacher. In 1748 the provisional monasteries von Hobe and von Thomstorff as well as the monastery captain von Bülow from Woserin concluded a contract with the mill master Helmut Joachim Friedrich Plahn to use the mill. During an examination of the buildings in the Hoch-Adelichen Closters Dobbertin in 1737, the log noted that the Klähder mill is still somewhat in good condition, but it will soon need repairs.

According to the register of confessors from 1751, the miller Helmuth Plahn and his wife Gret Dorthie as well as three servants and a girl lived on the mill farm. In addition to catching eel, the miller also had the freedom to make jugs , that is, to pour beer. In an advertisement dated August 28, 1751 in the Mecklenburgische Nachrichten, questions and advertisements can be read: After the Kläder Wasser- and Mastlower Wind-Mühle, Kloster-Amts Dobbertin document on the upcoming Trinity 1752, and on the next September 15th both of them a man to be leased back to the highest bidder. So this is made known to the lovers. At the water mill there is a good stamp mill as well as pearl barley, as well as a good catch for eel. So there is also quite a bit of both winter and summer sowing, good hay adverts and some book fattening here. The miller also has the freedom to make jars, and especially these mills have many meal guests. In the main register of the virgin monastery office Dobbertin 1754 reads: “Clädener Mühle is newly built.” 3,600 bricks came from the convent's own brick factory in Lähnwitz and 3,800 bricks from the Mestlin monastery brick. After a contract with the master carpenter Grohnwaldt, the miller's stable and barn had to be enlarged. The New Mill House was only built in Dobbertin in 1755. Plahn was still the mill master at the old mill in 1757 and took over the desolate arable land of the Kossaten. In 1772 it was leased. On the plan of the knightly fire insurance from 1790 on the Mildenitz and the land route from Parchim to Güstrow the house with the mill, the barn and a horse stable are recorded. In 1786 Bleck was the new mill master. In 1809, Sophie Artner from Sternberg sued Christian Lübcke, a miller from Kläden, for impregnation before the monastery district court in Dobbertin.

It has not yet been clarified when the mill was no longer in operation.

In 1804 the former mill house was expanded into two apartments for tenant Carl Leopold Stammer zu Neuhof. The wooden bridge was still marked next to the barn. According to the census of 1850, 20 people lived in the old mill, which had been converted into four apartments. In 1862 the old dilapidated wooden bridge over the Mildenitz had to be replaced by a massive one. The technical supervision lay with the Parchim hydraulic engineer Garthe. In 1869 there was only a cottage and a stable on the mill farm. The last cottage with three apartments was demolished before 1975 and the adjacent areas were reforested. At the confluence of the Bresenitz near the Black Lake, the Mildenitzkaten of the Dobbertiner monastery office was already standing in 1902.

Today's house on the south side of the Mildenitz was built in 1914. Used as a weekend property in 1973, there have been holiday apartments since 1990.

Monuments

Architectural monuments

The forester's yard with the forester's house, the barn and the stable as well as the cemetery with its heated chapel are under monument protection .

Soil monuments

In the Klädener forest , stones were broken in 1850 to build the road from Sternberg to Dabel, today's B 192. Several Bronze Age barrows with broken urns as well as various rings and needles were found under the small elevations. They are among the protected ground monuments in Mecklenburg.

Natural monuments

Listed pedunculate oak on the way to the old mill

North-east of the village of Kläden, in front of the Klädener Berg in the forest of Kläden, Dept. 1380, there is a pedunculate oak (Quercus robur) with a trunk circumference of 7.30 meters (natural monument no. 33). It is one of the oldest trees in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district. The age of the Guardian Oak is estimated to be around 700 years.

On the way to the old mill there are three pedunculate oaks in the forest of Kläden, section 1383 north of the Mildenitz, which are also listed as natural monuments with the numbers 27, 28 and 29.

Nature reserve

The nature reserve Klädener Plage and Mildenitz-Durchbruchstal is located southwest of Kläden. The Mildenitz breakthrough valley between the Alte Mühle and the Black Lake is one of the three Mecklenburg breakthrough valleys, a tourist attraction in the nature park and can be hiked through on an educational trail.

swell

Printed sources

Unprinted sources

  • State Main Archive Schwerin (LHAS)
    • LHAS 1.5-4 / 3 documents Dobbertin Monastery , Regesten.
    • LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Provincial Monastery / Monastery Office Dobbertin
    • LHAS 3.2-4 Knightly fire insurance
    • LHAS 5.11-2 Landtag negotiations , Landtag assemblies , Landtag minutes and Landtag committee
    • LHAS 5.12-4 / 2 Mecklenburg Ministry of Agriculture, Domains and Forests
    • LHAS 10.63-1 Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology
  • State Church Archive Schwerin
    • Specialia, Dept. 1 Dobbertin, No. 037 Burial place at Kläden 1858–1870.

literature

  • Franz Engel: German and Slavic influences in the Dobbertiner cultural landscape. Settlement geography and economic development of a Mecklenburg sand area (= publications of the Geographical Institute of the University of Kiel. Vol. 2, Issue 3, ISSN  0344-6476 ). Geographical Institute of the University of Kiel, Kiel 1934 (also: Kiel, University, dissertation, 1934).
  • Dobbertin monastery office. In: Ducal Mecklenburg-Schwerin State Calendar. 1776-1815, ZDB ID 1093405-4 .
  • Dobbertin monastery office. In: Grand Ducal Mecklenburg-Schwerin State Calendar. 1816-1918, ZDB ID 514730-x .
  • Ralf Koch: Securing natural monuments in the Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide nature park. Woosten 2010 (unpublished), Appendix C.
  • Georg Christian Friedrich Lisch : The former slavery of the Baltic Sea countries belonging to Germany. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology. Vol. 6, 1841, pp. 1-50, here p. 47.
  • Georg Christian Friedrich Lisch: Cone graves from Kläden. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology. Vol. 16, 1851, pp. 258-259.
  • Georg Christian Friedrich Lisch: Cone graves from Kläden. Addendum. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology. Vol. 20, 1885, p. 289.
  • Georg Christian Friedrich Lisch: Cone graves from Kläden. Addendum. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology. Vol. 38, 1873, pp. 140-143.
  • Sebastian Lorenz: Dobbertiner lake area and Mildenitz breakthrough valley. In: Sebastian Lorenz: The late Pleistocene and Holocene water network development in the area of ​​the Pomeranian main ice edge of Mecklenburg. Greifswald 2007, pp. 55–80 (Greifswald, Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-Universität, dissertation, 2007), online (PDF; 70 MB) .
  • Fred Ruchhöft: The development of the cultural landscape in the Plau-Goldberg area in the Middle Ages (= Rostock studies on regional history. 5). Neuer Hochschulschriftenverlag, Rostock 2001, ISBN 3-935319-17-7 , pp. 150, 310.
  • Klaus Weidermann: On the history of forests, forests and settlements. (= From culture and science. Issue 1, ZDB -ID 2420682-9 ). Friends of the Nossentiner Nature Park - Schwinzer Heide, Karow 1999, pp. 35–52.
  • Horst Alsleben : Kläden . In: The farmers and forest workers' villages in the nature park and its surroundings. Ed .: Naturpark Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide, Karow 2012. (From Culture and Science, Issue 7) ISBN 978-3-941971-07-3 , pp. 88–89.

cards

  • Bertram Christian von Hoinckhusen: Mecklenburg Atlas around 1700 with description of the offices, sheet 61 description of the monastery office Dobbertin.
  • Topographical, economic and military chart of the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin 1758 Dobbertin monastery office with the Sandpropstei of Count Schmettau.
  • Directional survey map from the noble Dobbertin monastery office, 1759.
  • Wiebeking map of Mecklenburg 1786.
  • Prussian state recording 1880, Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin 1882, Dobbertin No. 846.
  • Brouillion from the village field Dobbertin to the high nobility monastery Dobbertin on regulation Community Directorial Commission measured from 1771 by F. von See, reticified and drawn in 1824 by CA Stüdemann.
  • Chart of the possessions of the Dobbertin Monastery, Section I. 1822, contains Kläden, made by SH Zebuhr based on existing estate maps from 1822.
  • Chart of the Dorffeldmark Dobbertin measured by F. von See, set and charted in 1842/43 by HC Stüdemann, copied in 1868 by SH Zebuhr.
  • Economic map of the Dobbertin Forestry Office 1927/1928.
  • Official cycling and hiking map of the Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide Nature Park, 2010.

Web links

Commons : Kläden  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. MUB II. (1864) No. 1368.
  2. ^ Paul Kühnel: The Slavic place names in Meklenburg. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology. Vol. 46, 1881, ISSN  0259-7772 , pp. 3-168, here p. 68.
  3. MUB II. (1864) No. 469.
  4. MUB VI. (1870) No. 3632
  5. LHAS 1.5-4 / 3 documents Dobbertin monastery . Regesten No. 81.
  6. LHAS 10.63-1 Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology . No. 275.
  7. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 3286.
  8. LHAS 2.12-3 / 2 Monasteries and orders of knights. # 176
  9. Franz Schubert: Mecklenburgische Beichtkinderverzeichnis from the year 1751. P. 57.
  10. LHAS 5.11-2 Protocols of the Landtag. 1901.
  11. ^ Kläden in the Genealogical Place Directory
  12. LHAS 5.12-4 / 3 MfLDF No. 6788/1
  13. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 3211.
  14. Horst Alsleben: Escape from the Goldberg prison. SVZ Lübz - Goldberg - Plau, January 15, 2007.
  15. LHAS 5.11-2 Minutes of the Landtag. November 17, 1864, no.16.
  16. LHAS 5.11-2 Protocols of the Landtag. 1903.
  17. Horst Alsleben: The ruins were once a village inn. SVZ Lübz June 19, 1996.
  18. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 1847.
  19. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. # 400.
  20. LHAS 5.11-2 Minutes of the Landtag. November 14, 1905, No. 13.
  21. LHAS 5.12-4 / 2 MfLFD No. 9406.
  22. LHAS 3.2-4 Knightly fire insurance
  23. LHAS 5.11-2 Minutes of the Landtag. November 28, 1866, No. 19.
  24. LHAS 5.11-2 Minutes of the Landtag. November 10, 1869, no.15.
  25. MUB XXIII. (1897) No. 10142
  26. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 3003.
  27. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 3569.
  28. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 716.
  29. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 1235 Main register of the Jungfreulichen Closter-Ambtes Dobbertin 1754–1755.
  30. Faull: Distribution of the population in the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin according to the individual localities according to the last census from autumn 1850. In: Mecklenburgisches non-profit archive, year 1851, pp. 349–369.
  31. LHAS 5.11-4 / 2 Protocols of the Landtag. 1862.
  32. MJB No. 6, 16, 20, 38.
  33. ND No. 33, Resolution Council of the District of Lübz No. 56-14 / 79 of July 4, 1979
  34. Ralf Koch: Safeguarding natural monuments in the Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide nature park. Woosten 2010 (unpublished), Appendix C.