Lindenfeld (New Zealand)

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New Zealand municipality
Coordinates: 51 ° 34 ′ 44 "  N , 14 ° 7 ′ 38"  E
Height : 114 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 30  (March 28, 2011)
Postal code : 03103
Area code : 035751

Lindenfeld , Lindojske Pólo in Lower Sorbian , is a residential area belonging to the Bahnsdorf district in the municipality of New Zealand in the Oberspreewald-Lausitz district in the south of Brandenburg . The place belongs to the Altdöbern office .

location

The Lindenfeld development is located in Niederlausitz , about nine kilometers east of Großräschen and eleven kilometers as the crow flies northeast of Senftenberg . The place belongs to the official settlement area of ​​the Sorbs / Wends . Surrounding villages are Lindchen in the north, Neupetershain in the northeast, the city of Welzow in the east, Lieske in the south, Sornoer Buden in the southwest, Bahnsdorf in the west and Zollhaus in the northwest.

Welzow airfield is to the east of Lindenfeld . The settlement is one kilometer east of county road 6615 and two kilometers southeast of federal road 169 .

history

Lindenfeld is a very young settlement, the place was only founded at the beginning of the 20th century as an extension of the neighboring railway village. The place was first mentioned in 1906. The place name refers to the location of the place "on a linden field". Until 1952 the place belonged to the district Senftenberg (until 1950 called district Calau ) and then until the reunification to the district Senftenberg in the GDR district Cottbus . Lindenfeld has been in the Oberspreewald-Lausitz district since December 6, 1993 . On February 1, 2002, the community of Bahnsdorf, to which Lindenfeld had belonged since it was founded, was merged with three other communities to form the community of New Zealand .

Since the approval for the opening of the second subfield of the Welzow-Süd open-cast lignite mine in 2013, Lindenfeld has been earmarked for devastation . The demolition of the place is currently planned for the year 2040, the resettlement should be completed half a decade earlier.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Torsten Richter: Open-cast mine swallows Lindenfeld. In: Lausitzer Rundschau , March 28, 2011, accessed on September 9, 2019.
  2. ^ Ernst Eichler , Hans Walther : Ortnamesbuch der Oberlausitz: Studies z. Toponymy d. Districts of Bautzen, Bischofswerda, Görlitz, Hoyerswerda, Kamenz, Löbau, Niesky, Senftenberg, Weisswasser and the like. Zittau, Volume 2. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1975, p. 368.