Little Lübars

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Little Lübars
City of Möckern
Coordinates: 52 ° 10 ′ 13 ″  N , 12 ° 5 ′ 59 ″  E
Height : 80 m above sea level NHN
Area : 29 hectares
Residents : 50  (Dec. 31, 2018)
Population density : 172 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : October 17, 1928
Incorporated into: Klein Lübars-Riesdorf
Postal code : 39291
Area code : 039225
Village church
Village church

Klein Lübars is a district of Möckern in the Jerichower Land district in Saxony-Anhalt .

geography

The village is located 1.5 km west of Lübars in the very wooded and 25,063 hectare protected landscape area Möckern-Magedeburgerforth . The district of the place belongs to the western Fläming plateau , a heather or grassy forest landscape of the north German lowlands. The terrain here reaches heights of around 80 meters.

There are numerous streams and ditches in the village and in the vicinity. The Alte Mühlgraben in the northern part of the village flows, like all other bodies of water here, to the Ihle river on the southern edge of the village . This tributary of the Elbe rises only about three kilometers east of here.

history

In 1842, Klein Lübars is listed as a parish village and a manor suitable for the state assembly . As the owner, the chief forester v. Called Thümen . At that time the village had a Protestant parish church with a pastor, a sexton and school house with a teacher and 22 houses with a total of 155 Protestant and one Catholic residents. In 1782 the place had 144 and in 1818 a total of 183 inhabitants. The pastoral position was alternately filled by the local and the manor owner in Groß Lübars , as there was only one side church there.

The manor included a water mill , a Dutch windmill , 2,161 acres of fields, meadows and gardens, and 1,200 acres of pine trees. Two equally associated outworks were north of here and were Glienicke and Waldrogäsen . Their inhabitants were to Klein Lübars the parish and started school . Otherwise there were only two cottagers here in the village who farmed only a small part with only five acres of 83 rods of rye land and ten residents .

Klein Lübars was originally an estate district in the Jerichow I district of the Prussian province of Saxony and was merged with the Riesdorf estate district on October 17, 1928 to form the rural community of Klein Lübars-Riesdorf . Klein Lübars-Riesdorf, on the other hand, was merged with the community of Groß Lübars to form the community of Lübars on July 1, 1950 . Until it was incorporated on July 1, 2002, the village was part of the community of Lübars, and today it is also part of the city of Möckern.

Attractions

The ruins of the Church of St. Timothei have already been renovated to protect the existing building. The nave, which is still missing large parts of the roof, probably dates from the 13th century and was built mainly from field stones. The tower was added or raised in 1899, as evidenced by an inscription plaque on the west side.

Just one kilometer north of the village in a pine forest is a large boulder, 3.8 m long and 2.5 m wide, almost at ground level. It is called the sacrificial stone here .

The parish is located on the north-western edge of the village . About 800 years old, with a trunk circumference of six meters and a crown diameter of 30 m.

Web links

Commons : Klein Lübars  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. City of Möckern - Main Office (ed.): Development of the inhabitants in the districts and localities of the city of Möckern - Basis: City residents' registration file - as of December 31, 2018 . January 25, 2019.
  2. Main statute of the city of Möckern in the version of September 25, 2014 - including 1st and 2nd amendment . June 1, 2018 ( full text [PDF; 115 kB ; accessed on December 28, 2018]).
  3. Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation ( information )
  4. Location of Klein Lübars according to Geospatial services. In: Protected Areas in Germany. Federal Agency for Nature Conservation, accessed on April 18, 2013 .
  5. Eugen Huhn: Handbook from the administrative districts of Magdeburg . 1842, p. 151 f . ( Text archive - Internet Archive ).
  6. Federal Statistical Office (Ed.): Municipalities 1994 and their changes since 01.01.1948 in the new federal states . Metzler-Poeschel, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 , pp. 329 .
  7. ^ Walter Friedrich: Website of the former Lübars community. Lübars district, accessed on April 18, 2013 .