Lindenhagen

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Lindenhagen
Northwestuckermark municipality
Coordinates: 53 ° 14 ′ 50 ″  N , 13 ° 46 ′ 7 ″  E
Height : 48 m above sea level NHN
Area : 5.87 km²
Residents : 146  (Dec 31, 2006)
Population density : 25 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : July 1, 1961
Incorporated into: Sternhagen
Postal code : 17291
Area code : 039852
Village church
Village church

Lindenhagen (until September 30, 1949 Hindenburg ) is an inhabited part of the municipality of Nordwestuckermark in the Uckermark district in Brandenburg, which belongs to the district of Röpersdorf / Sternhagen . Until July 1, 1961, Lindenhagen was an independent municipality.

location

Lindenhagen is located in the Uckermark on the western bank of the Sternhagener See and north of the Sternhagener Forst forest area . The city of Prenzlau is about ten kilometers away as the crow flies. Surrounding villages are Groß Sperrenwalde in the north, Schmachtenhagen in the northeast, Sternhagen in the east, Sternhagen Gut in the southeast, Haßleben (part of the municipality Boitzenburger Land ) in the southwest and Birkenhain and Ferdinandshof in the west. The former municipality of Lindenhagen also had a now unnamed residential area, which was referred to on historical maps as the dismantling of Hindenburg .

Lindenhagen is on the district road 7325. The federal road 109 (Templin – Prenzlau) is about one kilometer away.

history

The original name of the place appeared for the first time in 1269 with the personal name Fredericus von Hyndenborg . The first documentary mention of the place took place in 1321 with the spelling Hindenborch . The Hindenburg manor initially belonged to the Knights of Bentz, after the aristocratic line died out, the place initially fell desolate . In 1465, the city of Prenzlau came into the possession of the Hindenburg desert, and in 1577 it had a Vorwerk built on its territory . From the late 17th century, the population of the place grew due to the settlement of Huguenots from the Palatinate, which resulted in the establishment of the Evangelical Reformed parish of Lindenhagen in 1697. In 1841 the Birkenhain residential area was created, which served as a chausseehaus on the trade route between Templin and Prenzlau.

In 1949, Hindenburg was renamed Lindenhagen due to the same name as Paul von Hindenburg . The ending "-hagen" was chosen due to the similarity of the name to the surrounding villages. Until 1952, the community belonged to the Prenzlau district in the Prussian province of Brandenburg ; after the GDR district reform, Lindenhagen was located in the reduced Prenzlau district in the Neubrandenburg district . On July 1, 1961, Lindenhagen was incorporated into the neighboring community of Sternhagen . After the reunification and the Brandenburg district reform in 1993, Lindenhagen came to the Uckermark district .

On December 1, 1997 the communities Röpersdorf and Sternhagen merged to form the community Röpersdorf / Sternhagen . This has been part of the newly founded municipality of Nordwestuckermark since November 1st, 2001 .

Attractions

Listed half-timbered house in Lindenhagen
  • The Protestant village church of Lindenhagen was built as a stone church in the 13th century. After the French Reformed religious refugees had settled in 1687, the church was fundamentally renovated, including enlarging the windows in 1706. The furnishings of the church also date from this period, the pulpit altar is dated to 1708. In 1793 the village church was expanded to include the square tower tower.
  • In Lindenhagen there is a listed half-timbered house ( Sternhagener Straße 2 ) made of adobe bricks with a gable roof , which was built in 1846. To the west of Lindenhagen there is a post mile pillar, also under monument protection, on federal road 109 .

Population development

year Residents
1875 285
1890 238
1910 234
year Residents
1925 228
1933 201
1939 221
year Residents
1946 310
1950 307

Territory of the respective year

Web links

Commons : Lindenhagen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Community and district directory. In: geobasis-bb.de. Land surveying and geographic base information Brandenburg, accessed on March 1, 2019 .
  2. Reinhard E. Fischer : The place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin. Age - origin - meaning . be.bra Wissenschaft, Berlin 2005, p. 78 .
  3. ^ Lindenhagen - municipality of Northwestuckermark. In: uckermark-region.de. Retrieved March 1, 2019 .
  4. Reinhard E. Fischer : The place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin. Age - origin - meaning . be.bra Wissenschaft, Berlin 2005, p. 106 .
  5. ^ Georg Dehio : Handbook of the German art monuments : Brandenburg. Edited by Gerhard Vinken and others, reviewed by Barbara Rimpel. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich / Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-422-03123-4 , p. 632.
  6. ^ Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. (PDF; 331 KB) District Uckermark. State Office for Data Processing and Statistics State of Brandenburg, December 2006, accessed on March 1, 2019 .