Lindhorst (Colbitz)

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Lindhorst
Colbitz municipality
Lindhorst coat of arms
Coordinates: 52 ° 18 '8 "  N , 11 ° 35' 37"  E
Height : 56 m
Residents : 941  (December 31, 2017)
Incorporation : July 1, 1950
Postal code : 39326
Area code : 039207

Lindhorst is a district of the municipality Colbitz in the Verbandsgemeinde Elbe-Heide (seat: Rogätz ) in the district of Börde in the state Saxony-Anhalt , Germany .

geography

Colbitz / Lindhorst post mill

Geographical location

Lindhorst is located at the southeast end of the Colbitz-Letzlinger Heide . The local recreation areas Balzer Siedlung and Heidberg belong to Lindhorst, as well as Jacobsheim, Chausseehaus and Schneiderdamm, which are designated as residential areas in the Colbitz community. The locality lies geologically on the Calvörder plaice.

history

  • As far as we know today, Lindhorst was first mentioned in a document in 1384. In said document, which is dated November 29 of the year mentioned, the place is returned as an archiepiscopal fief from Heinrich von Eikendorf to the Archbishop of Magdeburg, "So that he would give the Althaldensleben monastery with it". Lindhorst is definitely older than mentioned here.
  • Attack by Gebhard von Alvensleben on April 25, 1412, total damage of 120 shock and regular donations of the harvest to the court
  • in the Thirty Years' War 1618-1648 there was a shortage of teachers, the students had to go to school in Colbitz
  • Until 1631 there was a water mill on Schneiderdamm, where peat was still mined until around 1850
  • In 1686 the pastor of Colbitz held the Lord's Supper every six weeks in Lindhorst
  • from 1680 Lindhorst belonged to Prussia
  • September 9, 1910: Opening of the Wolmirstedt – Colbitz small railway, which runs via Lindhorst and operated until the end of 1965
  • June 1984: 600th anniversary celebration
  • November 2009: 625th anniversary celebration

Incorporations

In 1950, the municipality of Lindhorst was changed by the second ordinance to the law amending the district and municipal boundaries from April 27, 1950 to July 1, 1950 (Law and Official Gazette of the State of Saxony-Anhalt No. 18, pp. August 1950) merged with the former municipality of Colbitz , the name is Colbitz.

Until 1994, Lindhorst was part of the Colbitz community. In 1994 it was decided to introduce the local constitution in accordance with Section 86 of the Saxony-Anhalt municipal code in the Colbitz municipality, combined with the definition of a Lindhorst village in the municipality's main statute. That meant the village of Lindhorst was organizationally, but not legally, an independent part of the Colbitz community. As of January 1, 2010, the local constitution is suspended, as in the Elbe-Heide Association, which was newly formed on the same date, according to the Saxony-Anhalt Association Law, member communities are not allowed to form localities.

On January 11, 2009, a citizens' survey took place in the Colbitz community about the spin-off of the Lindhorst community from the Colbitz community and its integration as the eighth member community into the future Elbe-Heide community. The vote ended with 666 votes in favor of this variant. On January 27, the Colbitz municipal council evaluated the survey. Contrary to the result of the hearing of the population, the municipal council decided not to commission the mayor to apply for the spin-off of the Lindhorst district. As a result, a referendum took place in February and March, with which the municipal council resolution could be overturned and which led to a referendum. This took place on June 7, 2009 parallel to the European Parliament and local council elections, but failed because of the excessive number of no votes in the Colbitz district.

Population development

  • 1522: 16 tenant farmers, 18 leaseholds
  • 1564: 16 families
  • 1584: 16 families
  • 1684: 3 farmers, 3 half-spouses, 12 kossats, 4 houselings
  • 1785: 187 inhabitants (3 farm people, 4 half-spouses, 9 kossats, 4 houselings, 3 farmers )
  • 1820: 212 inhabitants in 30 houses
  • 1842: 291 inhabitants in 52 houses
  • 1864: 414 inhabitants
  • 1901: 428 inhabitants
  • 1919: 445 inhabitants
  • 1984: 466 inhabitants (222 men and boys and 244 women and girls)
  • 1990: approx. 450 inhabitants
  • December 31, 2006: 942 inhabitants (1350 with citizens registered by secondary residence)

Naming

The tree that is widespread here, the linden tree , but also the lindworm (dragon) come into question , but it can no longer be precisely traced. "Horst" indicates settlements on a hill, as is the case with the oldest part of Lindhorst.

politics

Mayor and local council

The last local mayor was Ralf Ganzer, elected by an eight-member local council. Both the mayor and the local council ceased to exist on January 1, 2010.

coat of arms

The coat of arms was approved on March 28, 1995 by the Magdeburg Regional Council. The old official seal of the former Lindhorst community from 1947 served as the basis. The coat of arms was designed by the Colbitz heraldist Günt (h) er Gembalski.

Blazon : "A green linden tree with roots in gold, bordered by a green border."

Culture and sights

The Lindhorst post mill has been restored and is operated by the Mühlenverein Lindhorst eV . The neo-Romanesque St. John's Church was built in 1861.

Regular events

  • annual summer party on the last weekend of the summer holidays on the grounds of the community center

Personalities

Web links