Lamsfeld (Schwielochsee)

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Lamsfeld
municipality Schwielochsee
Coordinates: 51 ° 59 ′ 0 ″  N , 14 ° 13 ′ 10 ″  E
Height : 48 m
Area : 8.35 km²
Incorporation : 1st January 1974
Incorporated into: Lamsfeld-Groß Liebitz
Postal code : 15913
Area code : 035478
Lamsfelder Dorfstrasse

Lamsfeld ( Lower Sorbian Njagluz ) is an inhabited part of the municipality in the Lamsfeld-Groß Liebitz district of the Schwielochsee municipality ( Dahme-Spreewald district , Brandenburg ). The municipality of Schwielochsee is administered by the Lieberose / Oberspreewald office. In the early modern period, Lamsfeld was the namesake and capital of the so-called Lamsfeldschen Güter , a non-contiguous property complex of four villages (Lamsfeld, Jessern , Jamlitz and Staakow ), which today not only cover three communities, but even two districts, the Dahme- Spreewald and the district of Spree-Neisse are distributed. Lamsfeld was an independent community until the merger with Groß Liebitz in 1974.

geography

Lamsfeld is located around 5.5 km west of Lieberose , almost 14 km southwest of Friedland and around 23 km east-northeast of Lübben (Spreewald) . The district of Lamsfeld borders in the north on Jessern (district of the Schwielochsee municipality), in the northeast on Doberburg (district of the city of Lieberose), in the east on the district of the core town Lieberose, in the south on the district of Groß Liebitz and in the west on Mochow ( both places mentioned are districts of the community Schwielochsee).

Baroldfließ near Lamsfeld

The highest point is a mountain in the northeastern part of the district with 97.7 m, the lowest point is the Mochowsee with 44.9 m. To the northwest of the center of Lamsfeld, the Kesselberge reach a height of almost 70 m. The only noteworthy flowing water is the Barolder Mühlenfließ coming from the Groß Liebitz district (or the former district of Klein Liebitz), which joins a river from the Großer Mochowsee north of Lamsfeld and flows into the Lieberoser (or Doberburger) Mühlenfließ near Doberburg . The large and small Mochowsee lakes belong to the Lamsfeld district .

history

Lamsfeld appears for the first time in 1449 as Lamßfeldt in a document. The name is probably derived from a personal name * Lamm, a nickname for names like Lambert, Lambhart and Lambrecht. A derivation from lamb = sheep is less likely. It was a knight's seat and from the middle of the 16th century the main town of a small, non-contiguous rule consisting of four villages: Lamsfeld, Jamlitz , Jessern and Staakow . Usually this property complex was referred to as the Lamsfeld property or the Zauch property , only very rarely is there talk of a rulership. It never had a seat in the gentleman's curia of the Lower Lusatian Estates Assembly and does not otherwise meet the criteria of rule.

According to Rudolf Lehmann , Lamsfeld is said to have been a dead end village according to its structure . This is not true. The road (today's B 320 ) from Lübben to Lieberose , which was also important in the Middle Ages, ran through Lamsfeld . It was a street village .

Lamsfeld on the original table sheet 4051 Lieberose from 1846; with brickworks, sheep farm near the village, Lamsfelder Mühle and sheep farm at Barolder Mühlenfließ

In 1708 eleven Kossaten and one Büdner lived in Lamsfeld, ten years later there were ten Kossaten and one Büdner. The village had a estimate of 1100 guilders , a high value compared to neighboring villages. In 1723 eleven subjects (and their families) are named.

During the Seven Years' War the Austrian General Hadick set up camp near Lamsfeld on August 30, 1759. A few kilometers west of it in Waldow had Frederick II. His headquarters. There was no significant fighting during this time.

The Schmettausche map series from 1767/87 shows the old brick barn roughly in the middle between Lamsfeld and Groß Liebitz, but still in the Lamsfeld district . The watermill near the town on the Baroldfließ is already noted, as is the sheep farm on the Baroldfließ, but a few hundred meters north of the town center; but the sheep farm east of the town center is (still) missing. In 1795 three Freihäusler also lived in the village. In 1803, eleven whole cottagers and five cottagers or Büdner lived in the village. According to the topographical-statistical survey of the administrative district of Frankfurth ad O. from 1820 (data from 1818), Lamsfeld consisted of 16 houses in which 144 people lived. The watermill is not mentioned. Schumann, on the other hand, describes a small grinding and sawmill and the sheep farm with 800 animals for 1830 , which was combined with the sheep farm in Klein Liebitz . Both together were leased for 1,400 thalers. The watermill is again not mentioned in the topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Frankfurth from 1844. The village had 24 houses in which 225 people lived. In contrast, the watermill is drawn in the Urmes table sheet from 1846. Opposite her on the other side of the Barold River there was a brick factory. A sheep farm was set up to the east of the town center and the Barold River, already on the heights. The sheep farm is still there a few hundred meters north of the town center on the Barold river.

Former watermill on the Baroldfließ

In 1860 the water mill was owned by a certain Kohl. In 1864 Lamsfeld is described as a village with an expanded homestead, a water mill, a brick factory and a sheep farm. 268 people lived in 29 houses.

Population development from 1818 to 1971
year 1818 1846 1871 1890 1910 1925 1939 1946 1950 1964 1971
Residents 144 220 282 272 198 200 199 298 267 173 159

After the Second World War , nine new farmer positions were created in Lamsfeld . In 1960 the Agricultural Production Cooperative Type I "Möllengrund" was founded in Lamsfeld . In 1951 the Goyatz-Zaue-Lamsfeld school combination was set up.

Early ownership history

1449 Erhart Morring zcu Lamßfelt is named as the owner of the village in a list of the Erbarmannschaft in Lausitz . After that it must have been sold to the von Beuden family, because on December 4, 1484 Hans von Chlum and his sons Hans, Georg and Siegmund sold the village of Gawentz ( Goyatz ) on Neu Zauche to the brothers Bernt, Hans and Erasmus Bewdin zcu Lamesfelt . At that time the village of Jessern probably did not belong to Gut Lamsfeld, because in 1470 it was (already) owned by a Hans von der Zauche who had his knight's seat there.

The Lamsfeld goods come to the von der Zauche family

After the death of King Vladislav II , the governor Heinrich Tunkel von Bernitzko enfeoffed the three brothers Christoph, Friedrich and Georg von der Zauche with their feudal goods, namely “ Lambsfeldt, Gemnitz, Stacken, Geßern, the interest for the amber break Mills, vineyards, that flow to the Geßern, from the Doberbuschen border to the judge's were to the Geßern, which roar in the Zwielo and surround the Splaw and are located between the old Geßern and Milow in the Zwilo and in the Zwielo and Wobinow with four canoes and all witnesses how they can use it or like to fish together and especially unhindered, and called the good Gros-Lein and the pusch die Nackopenge, like the one in its pure borders, located between Leipchol and Glietz, and also the nawe mill between Golin and Brisck, which Gurge Zauche bought rightly and honestly from Hans Lukawen and brought it for himself. “Since it was a loan after a change to manu dominante , ie not a new loan after acquisition, the three von der Zauche brothers should have owned the goods described a few years earlier. In 1504/06, Heinrich von der Zauche sat on Jamlitz, who was then accused of harboring the aristocratic mugger Andreas von Bomsdorf and his comrades. In 1505, he stole 141 guilders from the Leibchel vineyard in a spectacular attack on Georg Kune, the son of Niclas Kune, mayor of Frankfurt (Oder). He had deposited 20 gulden with Friedrich von der Zauche. It is not known how these Heinrich, Friedrich and Hans named in 1470 were related to the three brothers named above. The village of Groß Leine , which Georg von der Zauche had bought from Hans Luckawen (Hans von Luckowin), was only recently added to the Lamsfeld estate . After the death of the Bohemian-Hungarian King Ludwig II in the Battle of Mohács in 1526 , Friedrich and Georg received a new feudal letter for the goods mentioned above. Christoph had probably passed away in the meantime. Compared to the loan from 1517, only oat interest had been added in the village of Skuhlen ( Schuhlen ), which Georg von der Zauche had bought from Hans von Luckowin. After the death of Friedrich Georg finally inherited his part and reunited the Zauchean property in one hand. He bought from his brothers-in-law, the brothers Jacob and Dietrich von Köckeritz, a Calauer Freihaus with a vineyard in front of the city, the village of Göritz (now part of the city of Vetschau / Spreewald ) and half the village of Bolschwitz (now part of the city of Calau), which however, he soon had to sell again (1542/43). A little later he also sold the village of Groß Leine to Friedrich the Elder. Ä. of litter. The son Friedrich d. J. von Streumen inherited his father, who apparently died soon after the sale, and on July 14, 1538 received the loan letter from Groß Leine. On November 6, 1543, Georg acquired the villages of Plattkow (part of the Märkische Heide community ) and Wiese (part of the Schuhlen-Wiese community of the Märkische Heide community). The latter places were not connected to the Lamsfeld estate, but were administered by their own bailiff. Georg von der Zauche must have acquired the Leeskow and Syckadel (= Siegadel ) towns around the same time . For the inspection of knight horses and men of Niederlausitz on April 19, 1520 in Guben, the von der Zauche with a horse and a foot servant without armor appeared. At the 1528 draft, Friedrich and Georg von der Zauche offered a rifle horse and two foot servants "with hand frozen". Possibly they also owned a share in Gut Leibchel, because Georg von der Zauche, together with Valten Streumen and Arnt Robell, sent a rifle horse and a foot servant with "handrur" to be drafted in 1528. Valten Streumen and Arnt Robell sent another one because of the Gut Leibchel Another foot servant who was armed only with a side knife. In 1538 he bought half of the village of Bolschwitz from the brothers Jakob and Dietrich von Kötteritz and on July 14, 1538 he received the feudal letter about it. Before 1543, however, he sold half of the village of Bolschwitz to Heinrich von Zabeltitz on Reuden. Georg von der Zauche was married to a von Kötteritz whose first name is not known. With her he had seven daughters and a son Christoph, who inherited his father's property.

Christoph was married to an Anna von Wulfen; The marriage resulted in the two sons Hans and Abraham and four daughters. In 1546 Christoph von der Zauche became the guardian of the Walpurgis von Löser, the wife of Friedrich von Streumen on Pretschen . In the document dated September 8, 1546, it appears with the addition "zum Jessern". It had bought into a lot of trouble with the villages of Plattkow and Wiese acquired by its father. There were constant border disputes with the neighbors of the villages of Werder / Spree and Kossenblatt , who were to the north of it and belonged to the Beeskow rule , which finally ended in fights and "skirmishes". Christoph von der Zauche died on November 4, 1575, and on September 15, 1576 his sons Hans and Abraham von der Zauche, who was still a minor at the time, were enfeoffed with their father's property. On March 11, 1582, they sold Plattkow and Wiese to the Brandenburg treasurer Georg von Oppen, who was then the owner of Werder / Spree and Kossenblatt. On the one hand, the von der Zauche brothers got rid of the constant trouble with their northern neighbors, on the other hand they were also able to reduce the debt burden a little. The purchase price was 9,250 guilders. The sale of the two villages included all accessories, lakes and fisheries, the "Enttenschlag" and "Finckengertten", the mills and windmill justice, the highest and lowest dishes "at hand, and Halß, body and life". The buyer Georg von Oppen was exempted from knight services, which took over from the Zauche on Lamsfeld. In 1590 Abraham von der Zauche died and Hans was enfeoffed with his brother's share. Hans was married twice. The name of his first wife is not known. His second marriage was to Anna von Löben. She received in 1605 because her husband money amounting to 1,000 thalers as jointure villages Jessern and Jamlitz what the then Governor Anshelm Freiherr von Promnitz confirmed on 1 April 1605th Hans von der Zauche died on April 22nd, 1622 without a fiefdom and the fiefdom reverted to the sovereign. On June 1, 1622, therefore, instructions were issued by the Bohemian King Matthias , the aperte fief of the widow of the Kurbrandenburg secret councilor Reichard III. von der Schulenburg, Marianne Hedwig geb. Countess von Dohna and her second husband David Heinrich Freiherr von Tschirnhaus.

This was preceded by the fact that the father of the deceased Richard had already received the right to Lamsfeld property from Emperor Rudolf II in return for a loan of 10,000 thalers. In retrospect, however, it turned out that Lamsfeld's goods were worth more than 10,000 thalers, and so Richard undertook to take over the 2000 thalers in grace money granted to the Bohemian Chamber Councilor Niclas von Nostitz . In case Hans von der Zauche left unequipped sisters behind, he should give Richard the appropriate furnishing. On May 2, 1595, the payment of 10,000 thalers was received by the Imperial Court Paymaster's Office and acknowledged. At that time Richard von der Schulenburg owned the Lieberose , Lübbenau , Zauche and Straupitz estates . On January 25, 1621 Richard died before the Lamsfeld estates fell.

Both Anna born Löben, Hans von der Zauche's widow, and her son-in-law, Abraham von Mielen auf Weißack (part of the Märkische Heide community), appealed against the decision to transfer the Lamsfeld property to Richard III von der Schulenburg's widow . Anna submitted that Jessern and Jamlitz had been bequeathed to her as a treasure, Abraham von Mielen objected that his wife, Dorothea nee. I did not receive any equipment from the Zauche from the fief. The answer to this objection has unfortunately not been received. In any case, the governor of the bailiff at that time was instructed to introduce Marianne Hedwig Countess von Dohna and her husband David Heinrich Freiherr von Tschirnhaus. Although the guardians of Anna geb. von Löben, on the other hand, again, but here too the answer is not known.

Marianne Hedwig Burggräfin von Dohna ceded the Lieberose rule and the Lamsfeld estates to her son Heinrich Joachim von der Schulenburg on October 1, 1643 . On January 21, 1649, the Saxon Elector Johann Georg I approved the conversion of the Lamsfeld man fief into allod and hereditary property, so that inheritance and enfeoffment to the female gender was also possible. Since then, the Lamsfeld estates have remained associated with the Lieberose rulership. In the 19th century in particular, the term (class) rule Lieberose-Lamsfeld is often used. Heinrich Joachim became bailiff of Lower Lusatia in 1654, an office that he held until this office was dissolved in 1665.

In 1665 Heinrich Joachim von der Schulenburg determined the dominion of Lieberose and the allod goods Lamsfeld, Siegadel , Trebitz and the so-called Zickoschen goods ( Niewisch , Pieskow and Speichrow ) as majorate . Heinrich Joachim's second wife, Eleonore Magdalene Countess zu Solms-Münzenberg, received the Lieberose rule, the Lamsfeld estates, Syckadel, Trebitz and the so-called Zickos estates as a Leibgeding as long as she did not remarry. Heinrich Joachim von der Schulenburg died on October 2, 1665 without a physical heir. He was followed by his cousin Achaz (II.) Von der Schulenburg, who took the feudal oath on October 8, 1666 because of the goods located in Niederlausitz. Achaz was also wealthy in the Altmark (including Beetzendorf ) and was the Kurbrandenburg secret council and hereditary chef as well as governor of the Altmark. He was raised to the imperial baron status in 1667. Achaz (II.) Died on June 25, 1680 in Beetzendorf.

On January 31, 1681, his son Levin Joachim paid hereditary homage for the estates inherited in Niederlausitz, including the Lamsfeld estates. Due to fiefdoms, he had to apply to the Sternberg'schen Lehnskurie in Prague again for the fief and received the goods back in 1688 "ex nova gratia". Levin Joachim died on February 17, 1697 in Lieberose. Heir was his brother Hans Georg II von der Schulenburg, a lieutenant general in the Danish service . He died in 1715 and left the property, including the Lamsfeld property, to his son Georg Anton. This increased his property in Lower Lusatia. His marriage to the Marquise le Roy de Valanglart remained childless.

After the death of Georg Anton in 1778 there was an inheritance dispute. Georg Anton had bequeathed the allodial goods to the children of his sister Sofie Henriette Countess von Podewils . The dispute revolved around the question of what allod and what belonged to the Lieberose rule or to the majorate. The dispute finally ended in a settlement in 1781. The rule of Groß Leuthen went to the family of the Counts von Podewils, while the rule of Lieberose remained with the von der Schulenburg family. The von der Schulenburg family also retained the Lamsfeld estates. This was followed by a new legal dispute among the cousins ​​of the von der Schulenburg who were entitled to inheritance, which was finally decided in favor of the eldest of the cousins ​​Johann Heinrich from the Tuchheim line in 1787. Johann Heinrich von der Schulenburg was a Danish lieutenant general. He took possession of the Lieberose estate in 1787. His marriage to Friederike Luise Countess Knut remained childless and after his death in 1791 the son of his youngest brother Achaz Albrecht Ludwig, Dietrich Ernst Otto Albrecht, inherited the Lamsfeld property (together with the Lieberose reign and the other goods connected with it).

Dietrich Ernst Otto Albrecht von der Schulenburg (1756–1831) had major financial problems and therefore sold the rule to his younger brother Friedrich Ferdinand Bernhard Achaz (1772–1747) in 1806. This was raised to the hereditary Prussian count status in 1816. After his death, his son Friedrich Albrecht (1801–1869) followed. In 1849 civil jurisdiction passed over the rural communities to the Lieberose district court. The patrimonial jurisdiction in the manor district, which was created from the castle and its outbuildings , was retained. In 1853 the manor district still included the castle and five Vorwerk (Vorwerk am Schloss, Damme, Hollbrunn, Jamlitz and Klein Liebitz), the severance land, the lakes and ponds, the forests (over 40,000 acres alone ) and the combined manors Lamsfeld and Trebitz from a total of 55,598 Tomorrow land. Interestingly, the topographic-statistical handbook of the government district of Frankfurt a. O. from 1864 on Lamsfeld as a manor, of course owned by the Count von der Schulenburg. In contrast, Jamlitz, Jessern and Staakow are subsumed under the Lieberose class. Friedrich Albrecht von der Schulenburg died in 1869. He was followed by his son Dietrich Friedrich Joachim Graf von der Schulenburg (1849–1911). According to the general address book of 1879, the Lamsfeld manor was administered by the senior bailiff and chief officer Püschel. In 1910, 11,610 hectares of land belonged to the Lieberose lordship or the manor district, including 9,221 hectares of forest alone. The historical local dictionary gives the size of the Lamsfeld manor district for 1900 as 436 hectares. Dietrich von der Schulenburg died in 1911. His younger brother Otto (1857–1945) became heir. In 1929 the Lamsfeld estate was merged with the Lamsfeld community. The further history of the manor is not yet known.

Kaiser Wilhelm Oak in Lamsfeld
Plaque

Political Affiliation

Lamsfeld is located in Lower Lusatia and has remained with the very different tailored districts called Lübben since the Saxon period and through all the district reforms until the turn of 1990 . On January 1, 1974, the municipalities of Lamsfeld and Groß Liebitz merged to form the new municipality of Lamsfeld-Groß Liebitz. 1990 was county Lubben still in the district of Lübben renamed. In 1992 Lamsfeld-Groß Liebitz formed the Lieberose office together with 13 other communities and the city of Lieberose . In 1993 the district of Dahme-Spreewald was formed from the district of Lübben and the districts of Luckau and Königs Wusterhausen. On October 26, 2003 Lamsfeld-Groß Liebitz was merged with the previously independent communities Goyatz, Jessern, Mochow, Ressen-Zaue and Speichrow to form the community Schwielochsee. The Lieberose office was merged with the Oberspreewald office and the municipalities were transferred to the new Lieberose / Oberspreewald office .

Church affiliation

Lamsfeld has no church and, as far as is known, was always parish of the Wendish church in Lieberose. Today Lamsfeld belongs to the Evangelical Church Community of Lieberose and Land in the Evangelical Church District Oderland-Spree.

Leisure and Tourism

Lamsfeld has a campsite on the Großer Mochowsee and a sports field. To the west of the Kesselberge, a larger weekend settlement has developed on the Großer Mochowsee, a second smaller settlement is located south of it (also on the Großer Mochowsee). Several pensions offer rooms and apartments.

supporting documents

literature

  • Heinrich Berghaus : Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz. Volume 3, Adolph Müller, Brandenburg 1855 ( online at Google Books ) (hereinafter abbreviated to Berghaus, Landbuch, 3 with the corresponding page number)
  • Johann Friedrich Danneil : The gender of the Schulenburg. Volume 2, Commissioned by JD Schmidt, Salzwedel 1847, online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated to Danneil, gender of von der Schulenburg, 2, with corresponding page number)
  • Götz Freiherr von Houwald : The Niederlausitz manors and their owners. Volume III: District of Lübben. Verlag Degener & Co., owner Gerhard Gessner, Neustadt an der Aisch 1984, ISBN 3-7686-4109-0
  • Rudolf Lehmann : Historical local lexicon of Niederlausitz. Volume 1, Hessisches Landesamt für Geschichtliche Landeskunde, Marburg 1979, ISBN 3-921-254-96-5 (hereinafter abbreviated Historisches Ortlexikon Niederlausitz, 1 with corresponding page number).
  • Woldemar Lippert : Document book of the city of Lübben. III. Volume: The documents of the city and the office of Lübben, the gentlemen Zauche, Pretschen and Leuthen. Publisher of the Wilhelm and Bertha von Baensch Foundation, Dresden 1933 (hereinafter abbreviated to Lippert, Urkundenbuch, III, with the corresponding page number).

Individual evidence

  1. Place names Niederlausitz
  2. Main statutes of the community of Schwielochsee from December 14, 2009, PDF ( Memento of the original from December 5, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.amt-lieberose-oberspreewald.de
  3. Ernst Eichler : The place names of Niederlausitz. VEB Domowina publishing house, Bautzen 1975, p. 71.
  4. a b c Historisches Ortslexikon Niederlausitz, 1, p. 228.
  5. ^ Henry Lloyd, Georg Friedrich von Tempelhoff: History of the Seven Years' War in Germany between the King of Prussia and the Empress Queen with her allies. Volume 3: Campaign of 1759. Unger, Berlin 1787, online at Google Books , p. 270
  6. Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Frankfurth ad O. G. Hayn, Berlin 1820, p. 209.
  7. ^ August Schumann (continued by Albert Schiffner): Complete State, Post and Newspaper Lexicon of Saxony. Volume 17: Supplements Hornbude to Lüttnitz. Gebr. Schumann, Zwickau 1830, online at Google Books , p. 701.
  8. Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Frankfurt ad O. Gustav Harnecker's bookstore, Frankfurt a. Cit. 1844, online at Google Books , p. 170.
  9. ^ Berghaus, Landbuch 3, p. 667.
  10. ^ Wilhelm Heinrich Riehl, J. Scheu: Berlin and the Mark Brandenburg with the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz in their history and in their present existence. J. Scheu, Berlin 1861, online at Google Books , p. 636.
  11. a b c Topographical-statistical manual of the government district of Frankfurt a. O. Verlag von Gustav Harnecker u. Co., Frankfurt / Oder 1867, online at Google Books , p. 198.
  12. Contribution to the statistics of the State Office for Data Processing and Statistics, Historical Community Directory of the State of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 19.3 District Dahme-Spreewald, PDF
  13. ^ Friedrich Redlich : Social development and names of the agricultural production cooperatives with special consideration of Niederlausitz. In: The name in language and society. German-Slavic research on namology and settlement history. Volume 27, Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1973, pp. 203-219, especially p. 206
  14. History ( Memento of the original from January 16, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. on leichhardt-oberschule.de @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.leichhardt-oberschule.de
  15. ^ Lippert, Urkundenbuch, III, p. 111.
  16. ^ Lippert, Urkundenbuch, III, p. 236.
  17. ^ Lippert, Urkundenbuch, III, p. 304.
  18. ötz Freiherr von Houwald: The Niederlausitzer manors and their owners. Volume IV District Calau Part I. 653 p., Neustadt an der Aisch 1988, Verlag Degener & Co. ISBN 3-7686-4120-1 (p. 122)
  19. Götz Freiherr von Houwald: The Niederlausitzer manors and their owners. Volume IV Calau District Part I. 653 p., Neustadt an der Aisch 1988, Verlag Degener & Co. ISBN 3-7686-4120-1 (p. 310)
  20. ^ Christian Gottfried Daniel Stein, Ferdinand Hörschelmann (editor): Handbook of geography and statistics for the educated classes. Volume 2, 6th increased and improved edition, Verlag der Hinrichsschen Buchhandlung, Leipzig 1834, online at Google Books , p. 229
  21. Leopold von Zedlitz-Neukirch : Guide through the Prussian state, to the neighboring countries and the capitals of Europe. A geographical and statistical paperback for businessmen and travelers. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1831, online at Google Books , p. 348
  22. Friedrich von Cölln: List of gentlemen in the Kingdom of Prussia. In: Freimüthige Blätter für Germans, in relation to war, politics and economics. Volume 4, Issue 16, Maurersche Buchhandlung, Berlin, 1817, online at Google Books , pp. 835–838, especially p. 836
  23. ^ Paul Ellerholz, H. Lodemann, H. von Wedell: General address book of the manor and estate owners in the German Empire. I. Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery to the province of Brandenburg. Nicalaische Verlag-Buchhandlung R. Stricker, Berlin 1879, PDF , pp. 236–237
  24. Evangelical Church Community Lieberose and Land

Web links

Commons : Lamsfeld  - Collection of images, videos and audio files