Liesten

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Liesten
City of Salzwedel
Coordinates: 52 ° 47 ′ 18 ″  N , 11 ° 17 ′ 42 ″  E
Height : 40 m above sea level NHN
Area : 9.72 km²
Residents : 219  (Dec. 31, 2015)
Population density : 23 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 2010
Postal code : 29410
Area code : 039032
Church to Liesten (2018)
Church to Liesten (2018)
Liesten (Saxony-Anhalt)
Liesten
Liesten
Location of Liesten in Saxony-Anhalt

Liesten is a village and part of the Hanseatic city of Salzwedel in the Altmarkkreis Salzwedel in Saxony-Anhalt .

geography

The Altmark Reihendorf Liesten located approximately twelve kilometers southeast of Salzwedel and about five kilometers east of Federal Highway 71 at Benken Dorfer Vorfluther (flow ditch). Two kilometers to the south is the small forest, Brautsteinheide. Neighboring towns are Klein Gartz , Rademin , Ladekath , Depekolk , Jeggeleben , Büssen , Benkendorf and Königstedt .

Local division

Depekolk Church

The village of Liesten consists of the districts Liesten and Depekolk .

history

The village of Listen was mentioned in 1312 as villa Lysten , when von Garthow assigned elevations of 5 farms to the Arendsee monastery .

In the Landbuch der Mark Brandenburg from 1375 the place is listed as lists . The Arendsee monastery, the von Wustrow monastery, the altar of the church in Gartow and others had income here.

During the land reform in 1945, the following were determined: A property over 100 hectares, the Tegge property with 160 hectares of land, 29 properties under 100 hectares had a total of 480 hectares. The church owned three acres of land. In 1946, 220 hectares were expropriated, 160.3 hectares of which were divided between 33 settlers. In 1948 there were 42 buyers from the land reform, of which 18 were new settlers. In 1954 the first type III agricultural production cooperative, the LPG “Neue Heimat”, was established.

prehistory

As you can see on the historical table from 1873, the large stone graves at Liesten were located directly northeast on the edge of the village and other graves about 2 kilometers south near today's Brautsteinheide. They had been completely removed in the course of the separation .

About the largest boulder, the capstone of grave 1 is reported in the legend The Bride Stone near Liesten . Johann Friedrich Danneil and Alfred Pohlmann transmitted the legend. Without being asked, a peasant girl from Zethlingen had been promised to wife a rich peasant's son to Liesten by her parents. On leaving her father's court, she said that when she saw the church tower in Liesten, she would go under with the carriage. When the bridal carriage stopped at the border of Liesten, the bridal carriage and its horse sank into the earth, the bride herself became a stone. On the stone you can see the imprint of the chain of wagons that had wrapped around it.

Incorporations

On July 1, 1950, the previously independent municipality of Depekolk was incorporated. On July 25, 1952 Liesten came from the district Salzwedel for Salzwedel .

By the end of 2009, Liesten and its Depekolk district formed an independent municipality and was a member of the Salzwedel-Land administrative association .

By means of an area change agreement, the municipal council of the municipality of Liesten decided on February 6, 2009 that the municipality of Liesten should be incorporated into the Hanseatic city of Salzwedel. This contract was approved by the county as the lower local supervisory authority and came into effect on January 1, 2010.

After incorporation of the previously independent municipality of Liesten, Depekolk and Liesten became districts of the Hanseatic city of Salzwedel. The local constitution was introduced for the incorporated municipality in accordance with §§ 86 ff. Municipality code of Saxony-Anhalt . The incorporated municipality of Liesten and the future districts of Depekolk and Liesten became part of the receiving Hanseatic city of Salzwedel. A local council with five members, including the local mayor, was formed in the incorporated municipality and now the village of Liesten.

Population development

year Residents
1734 95
1774 83
1789 73
1798 92
1801 97
1818 81
year Residents
1840 145
1864 167
1871 171
1885 183
1892 182
1895 202
year Residents
1900 197
1905 214
1910 242
1925 239
1939 234
1946 383
year Residents
1964 446
1971 478
1981 373
1993 300
2006 306
2008 292
year Residents
2010 207
2014 205
2015 219

Swell:

religion

The Protestant church Liesten belonged to the parish Jeggeleben and now belongs to the parish area Apenburg the church district Salzwedel in Propst Sprengel Stendal Magdeburg of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany .

politics

mayor

The last honorary mayor of the community was Rainer Boesenhagen (CDU). He was then local mayor. Ulrich Keitel has been the local mayor since 2016.

Culture and sights

  • The evangelical village church Liesten is a cross-shaped field stone building with a west transverse tower built in several phases . The oldest part was built in the first half of the 13th century.
  • The local cemetery is in the churchyard.
  • On the square in front of the church there is a monument made of piled-up boulders for the fallen of the First and Second World Wars.

Forest pool

The Waldbadverein Liesten e. V. takes care of the forest pool, which was built in 1971 with mostly private funds and renovated in the 1990s. It has been closed since July 2017 due to damage to the tiles.

societies

  • Sports club SV Liesten 22 e. V.
  • Schützenverein "Der Freischütz" Liesten
  • Association of the volunteer fire brigade Liesten e. V.

literature

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Peter P. Rohrlach: Historical local lexicon for the Altmark (Historical local lexicon for Brandenburg, Part XII) . Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-8305-2235-5 , pp. 1351-1355 .
  2. a b Jens Heymann: Core town and villages of the unified municipality of Salzwedel are growing . In: Altmark Zeitung , Salzwedel edition . January 15, 2016 ( az-online.de ).
  3. Saxony-Anhalt viewer of the State Office for Surveying and Geoinformation ( notes )
  4. Top50 -CD Sachsen-Anhalt, 1.50000, State Office for Land Surveying and Geoinformation, Federal Office for Cartography and Geodesy 2003
  5. ^ Adolph Friedrich Riedel : Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis : Collection of documents, chronicles and other source documents . Main part 1st volume 22 . Berlin 1862, p. 22 ( digitized version ).
  6. Johannes Schultze : The land book of the Mark Brandenburg from 1375 (=  Brandenburg land books . Volume 2 ). Commission publisher von Gsellius, Berlin 1940, p. 390-391 ( uni-potsdam.de ).
  7. ↑ Table sheet 1680: Groß Apenburg. Reichsamt für Landesaufnahme, 1873, accessed on April 21, 2019 .
  8. ^ Johann Friedrich Danneil : Special evidence of the barrows in the Altmark . In: Annual reports of the Altmark Association for Patriotic History . 6th Annual Report, 1843, p. 116–117 , no. 134–139 ( altmark-geschichte.de [PDF]).
  9. ^ Alfred Pohlmann : Legends from the cradle of Prussia and the German Empire, the Altmark . Franzen & Große, Stendal 1901, p. 96 .
  10. 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. 359 .
  11. Official Journal of the District No. 5/2009 Pages 124–126 ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  12. ^ Wilhelm Zahn : Heimatkunde der Altmark. Edited by Martin Ehlies based on the bequests of the author. 2nd Edition. Verlag Salzwedeler Wochenblatt, Graphische Anstalt, Salzwedel 1928, DNB  578458357 , OCLC 614308966 , p. 145 .
  13. Hanseatic City of Salzwedel: Integrated Urban Development Concept 2020 . June 2015, p. 67–68 ( salzwedel.de [PDF; accessed May 5, 2019]).
  14. Parish Almanac or the Protestant clergy and churches of the Province of Saxony in the counties of Wernigerode, Rossla and Stolberg . 19th year, 1903, ZDB -ID 551010-7 , p. 51 ( wiki-de.genealogy.net [accessed April 21, 2019]).
  15. ^ Apenburg parish area. Retrieved April 21, 2019 .
  16. State Statistical Office of Saxony-Anhalt, municipality of Liesten - Altmarkkreis Salzwedel, mayoral election on July 6, 2008
  17. Thomas Hartwig: All Altmark churches from A to Z . Elbe-Havel-Verlag, Havelberg 2012, ISBN 978-3-9814039-5-4 , p. 297 .
  18. Online project monuments to the likes. In: Klein Gartz on www.denkmalprojekt.org. April 1, 2018, accessed April 21, 2019 .
  19. Liesten forest pool. Retrieved April 21, 2019 .