Kronsfenn

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Arnimswalde , Kronsfenn (= UF), Albertinenhof (submitted), all Gerswalde, and Wilhelmshof (submitted), Milmersdorf, excerpt from the original table sheet 2848 Gerswalde from 1826

Kronsfenn , also Krohnsfenn, was a forester's house and living space in Groß Fredenwalde , today a part of the municipality of Gerswalde in the Uckermark district (Brandenburg). The forester's house was built at the beginning of the 19th century and is no longer available on the TK25 around 1900, probably demolished.

location

Krohnsfenn was about one kilometer south-southwest of Arnimswalde and about two kilometers northwest of Alt Temmen. However, it was not located directly on the Kronsfenn that gave it its name, but about 500 meters west of it. The Kronsfenn is a NE-SW-trending ice age meltwater channel that is filled with peat beds from lakes that have recently silted up. In the topographic map 1: 25,000 No. 2848 Gerswalde from 1900 a small residual lake is drawn. The living space was 80  m above sea level. NHN .

history

The Kronsfenn is mentioned as early as 1765 when the Red Court was divided in Fredenfelde, but there was no house there at that time. The place of residence or the sub-forester's office is recorded for the first time in the original table sheet 2848 Gerswalde drawn in 1826, but without a name ( UF only ). In 1860 the forester's house is named as a dismantling to Willmine .

In 1873 it is called the Leutehaus , whatever that means. At that time nine people lived in Kronsfenn. In 1885 the house is mistakenly called Kronsfelde . In the topographic maps 1: 25,000 after 1900, the house is no longer recorded and has probably been demolished.

The forester's house or Leutehaus Kronsfenn belonged to the Klein-Fredenwalde manor district at least until 1871. In 1874, however, Klein-Fredenwalde already belonged to the Willmine estate, which in 1928 was merged with the municipality to form the rural community of Groß Fredenwalde. Kronsfenn was listed as a residential area of ​​Groß Fredenwalde as late as 1950, although according to the topographic map 1: 25,000 there was no house there.

literature

  • Lieselott Enders : Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part VIII: Uckermark. Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1986 (hereinafter abbreviated to Enders, Historical Ortlexikon für Brandenburg, Uckermark with corresponding page number)

Individual evidence

  1. 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. 12.
  2. Official Gazette of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin Extra sheet of June 6, 1874, p. 180 Online at Google Books
  3. Enders, Historisches Ortslexikon für Brandenburg, Uckermark, p. 540.

Coordinates: 53 ° 6 ′ 29.5 ″  N , 13 ° 44 ′ 1.2 ″  E