Lindenberg (Ahrensfelde)

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Lindenberg
Community Ahrensfelde
Lindenberg coat of arms
Coordinates: 52 ° 36 ′ 9 ″  N , 13 ° 31 ′ 20 ″  E
Height : 57  (55-71)  m
Area : 10.6 km²
Residents : 2500  (Dec. 31, 2006)
Population density : 236 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : October 26, 2003
Incorporated into: Ahrensfelde-Blumberg
Postal code : 16356
Area code : 030

Lindenberg is a district of the municipality of Ahrensfelde in the Barnim district in Brandenburg . It emerged from the medieval village of the same name.

geography

The village , located northeast of Berlin , consists of the eponymous village of Lindenberg, the municipality of Neu-Lindenberg and the settlement of Klarahöh . Until October 26, 2003, Lindenberg was an independent municipality in the Ahrensfelde / Blumberg district.

The actual village of Lindenberg is an anger village .

Important bodies of water are the Laake river ditch, a right tributary of the Panke , and the Rohrpfuhl south of the church in the village center.

history

Lindenberg village church in the village center

Lindenberg was first mentioned in a document in 1327. The village church in its original form as a field stone church was completed in 1270 according to documents found. In 1450 Lindenberg was bought up by the Zehdenick Jungfrauenkloster. At that time it comprised 84 medieval hooves . The parish owned 4 hooves, the church occupied an area of ​​one hoof, and the remaining 79 hooves were leased.

Around 1550 Lindenberg was owned by the Spandau monastery . In 1590 the so-called "Lindenberg mutton dispute" broke out between the Lindenberg farmers and the lords of Röbel . The Röbels claimed to have received shepherd justice on the community pasture from the margrave , but could not prove this with documents. The farmers, on the other hand, made use of their cattle lien and kept mutton from Röbel's cattle every time . The long-term process was only decided in the 17th century in favor of the Lindenbergers.

In 1652 there were 13 farmers and 6 cossets in the village. In 1697 the first windmill was built on the orders of the margrave . Before that, the farmers had to have their grain ground in remote, sovereign mills. In 1722 Lindenberg had a blacksmith's shop , a yarn weaver and two tailors as craftsmen . In 1740 the village belonged to the Biesenthal office .

In 1801 only slightly more residents were counted than 150 years earlier: 19 farmers, 8 kossas and 12 families, a total of 258 people. The village of Lindenberg belonged to the Niederbarnim district in 1830 . A major fire caused by arson in 1848 destroyed many of the simple settlement houses. At the beginning of the 20th century (1908) Lindenberg got its own power station, which was shut down in 1938. In 1912 the settlers founded the volunteer fire department .

The Neu-Lindenberg settlement was established in 1927, followed by the Klarahöh settlement in 1931. The name was taken from the former manor house. The first street in the settlement was named Eckeltallee after its owner at the time. Later the street in Stresemannstrasse was renamed Thälmannstrasse in honor of Reich Chancellor Gustav Stresemann in the GDR . The oldest house in the settlement is said to be at number 8.

During the Second World War , in January 1944, bombs dropped destroyed one residential building, six stables and eight barns. The fire brigade was only able to get the fires and structures in danger of collapsing under control after eight days of work.

After the war, the large agricultural areas were divided up by the land reform and given to 52 new farmer families. With the collectivization of agriculture in 1954 the LPGn peace and friendship came into being . In 1960 both merged to form the LPG unit .

With the increasing traffic on what was then trunk road 2, the GDR had a bypass built. Only one feeder road to the East Berlin development areas Neu-Hohenschönhausen and Marzahn still runs directly through the center.

Since the German reunification , all parts of the community have grown significantly due to densification and the designation of new building areas.

On October 26, 2003, Lindenberg was incorporated into the new municipality of Ahrensfelde-Blumberg, which was renamed Ahrensfelde on October 1, 2004 . The postal code 16356 of Ahrensfelde is now valid in the entire municipality.

Population numbers

year Residents
1624 211
1801 258
1856 517
1867 640
1871 701
1925 856
1933 1462
1939 1881

economy

HeidelbergCement AG concrete plant

Lindenberg's economy is partly determined by the location of the village in the suburb of Berlin. From the dominant agriculture and the existing handicrafts went the development after the turn to the car trade, gas station trade, settlement of various transport and trading companies in a specially newly created industrial area . A windmill north of the village center, which probably existed in past centuries , was preserved in the name of the building later built there: Lindenberger Mühle . The GDR operated a gravel plant here, which was taken over by Heidelberg Cement after 1990 . The large silos and the administration buildings have been renovated and are still in use. In the 2010s, several wind turbines were built in the Lindenberg area.

There are also many companies that have settled in Lindenberg. In the Lindenberg business park there is a large DHL delivery base , as well as a large location for the self-service wholesale company SELGROS , and a location for the Globus DIY chain .

traffic

The village of Lindenberg is located on Bundesstraße 2 between Berlin-Malchow and the Barnim motorway triangle , where there is a junction for the A10 and the A11 . The settlements Klarahöh and Neu-Lindenberg are located off the main road and can only be reached via country roads.

The bus traffic is moderately developed. There are connections to most of the neighboring towns, including Berlin-Malchow, Berlin-Buch , Schwanebeck , Ahrensfelde, Berlin-Marzahn and Berlin-Wartenberg . The two settlements Klarahöh and Neu-Lindenberg are also connected to the bus network. There are three bus routes, including the BVG bus route 259 in Berlin . The Hohenschönhausen train station in Berlin with a transition to the S-Bahn and regional transport can be reached via line 893 of the Barnimer bus company .

The village has a bike path along the main road.

Web links

Commons : Lindenberg (Barnim)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Fotowiesel.de: Lindenberg Fließgraben Laake. Retrieved July 21, 2020 .
  2. Rohrpfuhl 16356 Ahrensfelde. Pharus-Plan GmbH iG, accessed on July 21, 2020 .
  3. a b c Ahrensfelde community (ed.): Chronicle of the Ahrensfelde community and its districts . Ahrensfelde 2006 ( Online [PDF; 1.8 MB ]).
  4. StBA: Changes in the municipalities in Germany, see 2003 and 2004
  5. ^ E. Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg . tape 1 . J. Guttentag, Berlin 1857, p. 132 .
  6. ^ The municipalities and manor districts of the Prussian State and their population . tape  2 . Royal Statistical Bureau, Berlin 1873, p. 32 .
  7. Berlin in numbers . The New Berlin, Berlin 1947, p.  29 .
  8. DHL delivery base Ahrensfelde / Lindenberg - DHL package center. Accessed on July 21, 2020 : “This DHL delivery base is located just outside the city limits of Berlin, in Brandenburg. The location is in the village of Lindenberg in the municipality of Ahrensfelde. "
  9. Ahrensfelde-Lindenberg - Markets - SELGROS Cash & Carry. Accessed on July 21, 2020 : "On this page you will find all information - contact persons, events, special features relating to your Selgros Cash & Carry Ahrensfelde-Lindenberg."
  10. Welcome to the Globus DIY store in Lindenberg. In: GLOBE BAUMARKT. Retrieved on July 21, 2020 : "Globus Baumarkt Lindenberg, Rudolf-Diesel-Strasse 6, 16356 Ahrensfelde-Lindenberg"
  11. Line 893: Timetables, Stops & Maps - Prerower Platz. Retrieved July 21, 2020 .