Linstow (Dobbin-Linstow)

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Linstow
Dobbin-Linstow municipality
Coordinates: 53 ° 36 ′ 30 ″  N , 12 ° 23 ′ 7 ″  E
Incorporation : January 1, 2002
Postal code : 18292
Area code : 038457
Linstow Manor

Linstow is a district of the municipality Dobbin-Linstow in the Rostock district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania .

Geographical location

Linstow is in the east of the district and borders in the east on the community of Hohen Wangelin . The communities Nossentiner Hütte , Alt Schwerin , Dorf Mecklenburg , Neu Poserin , Dobbin, Krakow am See and Kuchelmiß follow in clockwise order . The fog flows from the west in a south-easterly direction into the village and drains into the Linstower See lake to the south-east . It is part of the Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide nature park . The highest point is the Petersberg in the northwest of Linstow at 64 m.

History and etymology

The place was first mentioned in 1236 in connection with a village church in Kieth. Originally it was an independent village that was separated from Linstow by the fog and merged with each other at a later date. The names are derived from Slavic : Linstav means something like tench pond and Kyta means twigs , wickerwork . Linstow came with the knight Gheradus de Linstowe with effect from July 22, 1281 in the possession of the noble family of Linstow founded by him . Little is known about the centuries that followed. The Linstower suffered great hardship during the Thirty Years' War . Numerous structures, including the church, were severely damaged in some cases. It was not until the middle of the 19th century that the parish had the necessary financial means to repair the building in 1871. Adam von Linstow, the last owner of the noble family, was handed down from 1735 . Then numerous, changing landowners ruled over the place. From 1827 to 1945 Linstow was a domain of the Grand Ducal Chamber. The last tenant was Christian Benckendorff .

After the end of the Second World War , the von Linstow were expropriated without compensation. The lands belonging to the manor house went to 73 families who came to the Soviet occupation zone from Volhynia between 1946 and 1949 . They were each given around 10 hectares of land, which they cultivated from then on. At a later date, they founded an LPG , which was integrated into a larger LPG in 1974. The resettled museum reports that from then on, economically difficult times began, which did not improve significantly even with the opening of the nearby federal highway 19 .

In 1981 an aftercare facility for addicts opened in the former rectory . In 1993 the Volhynier Resettlers Museum opened at Hofstrasse 5 . With effect from January 1, 2002, Dobbin and Linstow united to form the double municipality Dobbin-Linstow.

Culture and sights

Linstow Church

Economy and Infrastructure

economy

There are several larger employers in the village. On the one hand, there is a police station of the motorway police , an aftercare facility of the Diakonie as well as an agricultural business and a cattle breeding business. There are also some craft businesses and service companies. The manor house is operated as a hotel and restaurant. The resort's largest employer in Linstow is the Van der Valk hotel group . There are also other overnight accommodations for tourists.

traffic

The Krakower Chaussee runs from the north-west in a south-easterly direction as a central connection axis to the junction of the BAB 19 of the same name. It leads west towards Hohen Wangelin. There is a connection to Bornkrug via Hofstraße which branches off to the south.

Line 250 of a regional transport company connects the place with Güstrow and Krakow am See. The Berlin – Copenhagen cycle route runs through the town .

Web links

Commons : Linstow  - collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Dobbin-Linstow , website of the Krakow am See office, accessed on June 14, 2019.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Information board Linstow / Kieth - home for Wolhyniendeutsche , set up south of the volunteer fire brigade, June 2019.
  2. Das Dorf Linstow , website of the Volhynier Resettled Museum, accessed on June 16, 2019.