Lutense

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Lutense , also Lutenze , Liutenza or Lutenza , was the name for the Peenestrom west of Zecherin in the Middle Ages . To the west are the confluence of the Peene into the Peene River and the island of Schadefähre . In the north the area could have extended to about Klotzow , in a southeast direction to Mönchow. The name is probably derived from the Slavic word ljutъ , which means "grim" or "wild".

The Lutenze was first mentioned in 1184 in a document from Duke Bogislaw I of Pomerania , in which he gave the Grobe Monastery, among other things, permission to fish with nets in the Lutense.

In 1242 Duke Barnim I gave the monastery his share of the two bays or lakes of the Liutenza ( Latin de duobus stagnis in liutenza ) named in the document . It also mentions the name Monketoch ( monk train ). The island ferry (now the Anklamer ferry ) was possibly considered to be a subdivision of the two waters .

As a result of a dispute with the city of Anklam , the monastery had to cede the Lutense and the area of ​​the village Mönchow to the city in 1337. The legal basis on which the city was able to enforce its claims is not known. An attempt by Abbot Hermann in 1360 to regain the water failed. The mayor of Lübeck , Tidemann Warendorp , who was appointed as arbitrator, declared the earlier decision in favor of Anklams to be legal.

At the last known mention of the Lutense ( Latin stagna quondam vocata Lutenza ) in 1421, the water again belonged to the monastery. It is not known when and how the monastery came back into possession.

literature

  • Hermann Hoogeweg : The founders and monasteries of the province of Pomerania. Vol. 2, Leon Saunier, Stettin 1925, p. 352.

Individual evidence

  1. R. Trautmann: The Elbe and Baltic Sea Slavic place names. Part II, Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1949.
  2. In Hoogeweg, vol. 2, p. 352, the year 1187 is given. The document PUB No. 96 mentioned in the footnote is dated to 1184 in the Pomeranian Document Book.
  3. ^ Robert Klempin : Pomeranian document book . Vol. 1, Part 1, PUB No. 96 (Codex Pomeraniae diplomaticus No. 56)
  4. ^ Karl Friedrich Wilhelm Hasselbach , Johann Gottfried Ludwig Kosegarten , Friedrich Ludwig von Medem : Codex Pomeraniae diplomaticus. Volume 1. Koch, Greifswald 1843, No. 306, pp. 652-654.
  5. ^ Robert Klempin : Pomeranian document book . Vol. 1, Part 1, PUB No. 401.
  6. ^ Friedrich von Dreger : Codex diplomaticus. Spiegel, Stettin 1748, No. CXLIV, pp. 223-224.
  7. ^ A b Hermann Hoogeweg : The founders and monasteries of the province of Pomerania. Vol. 2, Leon Saunier, Stettin 1925, pp. 284-285.

Coordinates: 53 ° 51 ′ 18 "  N , 13 ° 49 ′ 11"  E