Lindenberg (Western Pomerania)
coat of arms | Germany map | |
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Coordinates: 53 ° 46 ' N , 13 ° 1' E |
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Basic data | ||
State : | Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania | |
County : | Mecklenburg Lake District | |
Office : | Demmin country | |
Height : | 44 m above sea level NHN | |
Area : | 13.03 km 2 | |
Residents: | 216 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density : | 17 inhabitants per km 2 | |
Postal code : | 17111 | |
Area code : | 039996 | |
License plate : | MSE, AT, DM, MC, MST, MÜR, NZ, RM, WRN | |
Community key : | 13 0 71 089 | |
Community structure: | 3 districts | |
Office administration address: | Goethestrasse 43 17109 Demmin |
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Website : | ||
Mayoress : | Sabine Carl | |
Location of the community Lindenberg in the Mecklenburg Lake District | ||
Lindenberg is a municipality in the Mecklenburg Lake District . The community is located southwest of Demmin in the Western Pomerania part of the district. It belongs to the Demmin-Land office , which has its administrative headquarters in Demmin . Until July 1, 2004 Lindenberg belonged to the Borrentin office .
Geography and traffic
Lindenberg is about ten kilometers northeast of Stavenhagen and 17 km southeast of Demmin. The federal highway 194 runs west of the community. The district of Lindenberg, which is located in the middle of the municipal territory, is located directly on Landstrasse 272 and Kreisstrasse 297. The Augraben flows through Lindenberg .
Districts
- Lindenberg
- Hasseldorf
- Krusemarkshagen
history
Lindenberg (Rellin) arose from a Slavic castle from the 8/9. Century. The community was first mentioned as Rellin on January 31, 1283 as the property of Bishop Herman zu Cammin .
The current place Lindenberg used to consist of two field marks, the originally Slavic Rellin and the German settlement Lindenberg, which was added in the course of the German colonization in the east . The boundary between the two places was the excavation, as shown on the map of the Swedish survey of 1698. The village church, which is now part of Lindenberg, originally belonged to Rellin, as documented by documents from the 16th century that are now kept in the Greifswald State Archives. It was the actual village, while Lindenberg basically only consisted of the two ramparts east of the Augraben.
Until the death of Hans Voss in 1535, Lindenberg was the center of the manorial power of this noble family. As early as 1366, the Princes of Werle gave them the right to build a fortification in Lindenberg. Therefore, after the death of Hans Voss, a dispute broke out between the dukes of Mecklenburg and those of Pomerania over the inheritance, but the Pomerania won it. They formed a ducal office of Lindenberg from the possessions of the von Voss, to which (old) Kentzlin belonged as a second estate, but which was administered by an official or governor together with the possessions of the secularized Verchen monastery .
The Dukes of Pomerania-Wolgast , to whose territory Lindenberg belonged, rebuilt the old castle of those of Voss into a hunting lodge at the end of the 16th century, of which a contemporary description is available in the Voivodeship Archives in Szczecin . But only a little later, Duke Philipp Julius had to pledge the Lindenberg office to pay off the enormous debt to his court marshal Hans von Neuenkirchen . After his death it was taken over by his brother Christoph von Neuenkirchen and after his death it was divided among his heirs. At the time of the Swedish land survey in 1698, the ownership of the office was shared by the District Administrator Warnstett and a Mr. von Rieben . Smaller parts of the office had already gone to other pledge holders.
Only with the takeover of the area by Prussia in 1713 did this change and most of the office came back into royal possession. An overview of its holdings can be found in Brüggemann's description of the Duchy of Western Pomerania with the Prussian share of 1779.
The two districts of Hasseldorf and Krusemarkshagen have belonged to Lindenberg since around 1945. Lindenberg was on the border between the Prussian province of Pomerania and Mecklenburg-Schwerin .
politics
Coat of arms, flag, official seal
The municipality has no officially approved national emblem, neither a coat of arms nor a flag . The official seal is the small state seal with the coat of arms of the region of Western Pomerania . It shows an upright griffin with a raised tail and the inscription "GEMEINDE LINDENBERG * LANDKREIS MECKLENBURGISCHE SEENPLATTE".
Attractions
→ See also the list of architectural monuments in Lindenberg (Western Pomerania)
- Lindenberg village church , field stone church from the 16th century. The church tower, which was destroyed in a fire in 1920, was rebuilt in 2012. The renaissance style altarpiece and altar frames, as well as the pulpit and parish stalls, date from the 17th century. Wall paintings are inscribed and dated to 1597. The church's Grüneberg organ was built in Stettin in 1867.
Personalities
Wilhelm Karl Stolle (1704–1779), pastor and chronicler of the city of Demmin , was born in Lindenberg .
literature
- Dirk Schleinert : The ducal-Pomeranian office of Lindenberg in the 16th and 17th centuries . In: Heimathefte für Mecklenburg und Vorpommern , 9th year (1999), issue 1, pp. 19-23.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Statistisches Amt MV - population status of the districts, offices and municipalities 2019 (XLS file) (official population figures in the update of the 2011 census) ( help ).
- ^ Illustration of the copy in the Reichsarchiv Copenhagen in: Pommern. Journal of Culture and History . Volume 42 (2004), Issue 2, p. 21
- ↑ Main Statute, Section 1, Paragraph 2 (PDF).