Lassahn

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Lassahn
Coordinates: 53 ° 36 ′ 4 ″  N , 10 ° 57 ′ 17 ″  E
Incorporation : June 13, 2004
Postal code : 19246
Area code : 038858
Lassahn (Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania)
Lassahn

Location of Lassahn in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania

Schaalsee near Lassahn, June 2008
Thatched house, August 2008
Thatched roof barn, July 2011

Lassahn is a district of the town of Zarrentin am Schaalsee in the west of the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania .

geography

location

The village is on the east bank of the Schaalsee . The terrain is wooded and slightly hilly. The highest point is the Stiegstückberg, located northeast of the town, at 72 meters above sea level.

Districts

In addition to the main town of Lassahn, the former community also included the districts of Stintenburg, Stintenburger Hütte, Hakendorf, Bernstorf and Techin.

history

The place is mentioned for the first time in 1230 in the Ratzeburg tithe register , the St. Abundus Church already exists around 1230. The name Lassahn is of Wendish origin and refers to "forest dwellers".

An old land map from 1740 describes the location “on the village towns” on the banks of the Schaalsee between the church and the old forester's house. Settlement fragments are still found in the ground on these properties today. Around 1287 Lassahn seems to have been a knight's seat, around 1345 the owner Carlow is proven.

In 1353 the Lassahner castle was built by Duke Erich III. stormed by Lauenburg and the Lübeckers. In 1400 Reimer von Carlow sold the villages of Techin and Lassahn with all rights for 1000 Lübsche Pfennigs to Duke Erich V. von Lauenburg. This now united Lassahn with Stintenburg and Campenwerder , which he had already acquired through an exchange in February of the same year. Since then, Lassahn has been a Pertinanz von Stintenburg and has been linked to his fate.

Lassahn has always been a farming village. While 28 hooves are reported around 1230, there are only 22 hooves in 1655, 7 were desolate, a sign of the devastation of the Thirty Years' War .

The oldest farming families were Steinfatt (1581), Olrogg (1581), Krack (1619), Körner (1619) and Rump (1627). Around 1900 there was a two-class school, a dairy, a restaurant, seven tradespeople and traders and 20 farmers in Lassahn.

Until 1939 Lassahn could also be reached by boat. You could travel three times a day from the Schaalsee Canal via Salem , Dargow, Seedorf to Lassahn, from there to Groß Zecher and Zarrentin with the MS Lauenburg.

Until November 1945 Lassahn belonged to the "Guts Bezirk Stintenburg", the administration was in the office of Ratzeburg . Since November 26, 1945, Lassahn and its districts have been assigned to the Soviet zone of occupation at that time due to the changes in territory between British and Soviet military authorities stipulated in the Barber-Lyashenko Agreement .

In this context, there was a major resettlement in November 1945 in the course of which hundreds of Lassahners with all their possessions were transported across the Stintenburger Insel to the west bank of the Schaalsee. The records were brought to the west bank of the island after about 800 truck journeys and there were transported across the lake by boats, rafts and ships.

Those who did not want to be evacuated were allowed to keep a maximum of 1 horse, 1 cow, 1 pig, 1 sheep, 1 wagon, 1 harrow, 1 plow and a maximum of food for 30 days. During the time of the division of Germany, Lassahn was strongly influenced by the ever more developed border fortifications. The residents were completely cut off from the lake. Houses and entire districts were demolished in various places in order to expand the border fortifications. Lassahn also housed a large number of border troops and military facilities during this period.

On July 1, 1950, the previously independent communities of Bernsdorf, Hakendorf, Stintenburger Hütte and Techin were incorporated.

On November 12, 1989, the border on federal highway 208 behind Mustin was opened. In 2004 Lassahn was incorporated and has been part of the town of Zarrentin am Schaalsee ever since.

Attractions

Lassahn village church

The St. Abundus Church in Lassahn with its field stone sacristy from the 13th century received in the 17th / 18th century. Century half-timbered buildings and a tower. The furnishings include an altarpiece from 1898. On the top of the tower is a golden cock from 1980. In the tower there is a bell from 1993. Two disused bells are on display in front of the church.

In addition to the St. Abundus Church, the Seeblick inn is important. The inn is mentioned in a document as early as the middle of the 18th century as a Burwiecksch inn, which was also a blacksmith, grocer and post office. In 1910 it was supplemented by a hall, which was destroyed by fire in the winter of 1978 and rebuilt as a multi-purpose hall in 1980. In 1925, the innkeeper Pankow took over the lake view and added a storey to the main building in 1925. In 1967 Gisa and Dieter Redmann took over the restaurant, which it operated initially as a consumer restaurant until 2003, later under the name "Schaalseetreff".

In the list of architectural monuments in Zarrentin am Schaalsee , four architectural monuments are listed for Lassahn .

Web links

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