Kleptow

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kleptow
Community of Schenkenberg
Coordinates: 53 ° 21 ′ 57 ″  N , 14 ° 0 ′ 2 ″  E
Height : 37 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 156  (Jan 1, 2018)
Incorporation : July 1, 1961
Incorporated into: Ludwigsburg
Postal code : 17291
Area code : 039854
Village church
Village church

Kleptow is an inhabited part of the municipality of Schenkenberg in the district of Uckermark in the extreme northeast of the state of Brandenburg and belongs to the district of Ludwigsburg . Until July 1, 1961, the place was an independent municipality.

location

Kleptow is located in the north of the Uckermark on a ground moraine spreading in the valley between the rivers Ucker and Randow . The place is eleven kilometers northeast of Prenzlau and 14 kilometers south of Pasewalk . Surrounding villages of the municipality Schönfeld belonging place Klockow the north, the municipality Carmzow-Wallmow belonging districts Carmzow in the Northeast and Cremzow in the southeast, Ludwigsburg in southwest, Dauerthal in the west and the Göritzer district Tornow in the northwest.

The state roads 26 and 252 run through Kleptow. The federal motorway 20 with the junction Prenzlau-Ost is about two kilometers away. The Great Lake is south of Kleptow .

history

Like most of the villages in the area, Kleptow emerged as a street village with a manor and its own village church in the course of eastern colonization during the 12th or 13th century . For the first time officially the place appears in the Landbuch der Mark Brandenburg from 1375 with the spelling Cleptow . The place name comes from Old Polish, Reinhard E. Fischer interprets the place name with "place where knocking / hammering". When it was first mentioned, there was a windmill in the village.

In the course of the dissolution of the manor districts in the Kingdom of Prussia , the manor district of Kleptow was merged with the manor district of Ludwigsburg to form the new municipality of Kleptow. Until July 25, 1952, Kleptow belonged to the Prenzlau district in the Prussian province of Brandenburg , during the GDR district reform, the place was assigned to the reduced Prenzlau district in the Neubrandenburg district . On July 1, 1961, Kleptow was merged with the neighboring community of Baumgarten to form a new community that was named Ludwigsburg . Since the fall of the Wall and the Brandenburg district reform in 1993, Kleptow has been in the Uckermark district .

On December 31, 2001, the community of Ludwigsburg was incorporated into Schenkenberg . Kleptow received the status as an inhabited part of the municipality . The place is administered by the office Brüssow .

Attractions

  • The Protestant village church in Kleptow is a field stone hall building with a wide west tower, which was built in the second half of the 13th century when the village was founded. The boarded square tower tower with lantern and hood was added in the middle of the 18th century. On the west wall and on the south wall the church has stepped pointed arch portals, the windows are lancet windows and there is a group of three windows on the east wall. The church is equipped with a wooden altarpiece from the early 17th century and an organ front from 1820. In the churchyard wall there is a brick portal with a wide arched opening.
  • The Kleptow Inn , a single-storey, six - axis half-timbered building with a half- hipped roof from 1786, is also a listed building.

Population development

year Residents
1875 289
1890 303
1910 463
year Residents
1925 492
1933 447
1939 435
year Residents
1946 564
1950 598

Territory of the respective year, all population figures together with Ludwigsburg

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Our locations - Kleptow. In: amt-bruessow.de. Office Brüssow, accessed on March 13, 2019 .
  2. Reinhard E. Fischer : The place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin. Age - origin - meaning . be.bra Wissenschaft, Berlin 2005, p. 91 .
  3. ^ Kleptow - Schenkenberg community. In: uckermark-region.de. Retrieved March 13, 2019 .
  4. ^ Georg Dehio : Handbook of the German art monuments : Brandenburg. Edited by Gerhard Vinken and others, reviewed by Barbara Rimpel. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich / Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-422-03123-4 , pp. 546f.
  5. ^ Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. (PDF; 331 KB) District Uckermark. State Office for Data Processing and Statistics State of Brandenburg, December 2006, accessed on March 13, 2019 .