Possible

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Possible
Community Lenzerwische
Coordinates: 53 ° 4 ′ 42 "  N , 11 ° 23 ′ 37"  E
Height : 16 m above sea level NHN
Area : 9.19 km²
Residents : 108  (16 Aug 2018)
Population density : 12 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : September 1, 1973
Incorporated into: Wootz
Postal code : 19309
Area code : 038792
Eastern entrance to the village
Eastern entrance to the village

Mödlich is an inhabited community part of the municipality Lenzerwische the Office Lenzen-Elbe Valley in Prignitz in Brandenburg .

geography

The place is four kilometers northeast of Wootz , the seat of the municipality of Lenzerwische and five kilometers west-southwest of Lenzen (Elbe) , the seat of the Lenzen-Elbtalaue office. The typical Marschhufendorf is located in the sparsely populated wetland Lenzer Wische , a lowland area of ​​the Elbe in the Westprignitz and extends along the federal highway 195 and the Elbe dike to the south.

Neighboring towns are Breetz in the north, Seedorf , Bäckern , Ziegelhof and Lenzen in the northeast, Gandow in the east, Vietze and Meetschow in the south, Gorleben , Klein Wootz and Wootz in the southwest, and Rosendorf in the west.

history

The place was first mentioned in a document in 1375. At that time it was to be found under the names Motelik, Muteik and Muterlik. In the 17th century the village was expanded by Dutch people who were knowledgeable about dyke building and took on its present form.

Around 1800 the place belonged to the Lenzen district in the province of Prignitz ; part of the Kurmark of the Mark Brandenburg . In a description of this landscape from 1804 the village Mödlich was given with a total of 451 inhabitants and the domain Amt Eldenburg and the dike captain von Jagow were named as owners . At the time, 29 full-time farmers and nine half-farmers, a kossate, 30 residents and a forester worked at the place with good soil. In addition, there were 69 fireplaces here and the village church was a so-called mother church in the Lenzen Inspection. The address was also Lenzen.

Mödlich has been an inhabited part of the municipality of Lenzerwische since October 26, 2003.

Attractions

Mödlich village church, south side

The village church Mödlich is located on Lenzener Straße and was included in the list of monuments of the state of Brandenburg.

Bernd Seiter created the sculpture Charon , which stands on the dike at the eastern exit of the town.

Personalities

literature

  • Historical Gazetteer Brandenburg - Part 1 - Prignitz - A-M . Modifications made by Lieselott Enders . In: Klaus Neitmann (Ed.): Publications of the Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv (State Archive Potsdam) - Volume 3 . Founded by Friedrich Beck . Publishing house Klaus-D. Becker, Potsdam 2012, ISBN 978-3-88372-032-6 , pp. 580 ff .

Web links

Commons : Possible  - collection of images, videos, and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Office Lenzen-Elbtalaue - Inhabitants and Registration (Ed.): Population figures of the Office Lenzen-Elbtalaue. Deadline: 08/16/2018 . Lenzen (Elbe) August 16, 2018.
  2. a b Lenzerwische community - inhabited parts of the community - residential areas. Ministry of the Interior and Local Affairs of the State of Brandenburg, accessed on February 13, 2016 .
  3. a b Ulrike Schwarz: Expert opinion on the monument value - designation: Low German hall house with ancillary building, Lenzener Strasse 12, 19309 Mödlich, Wootz community, Prignitz district . Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation. Waldstadt June 22, 1998, p. 2 ( landkreis-prignitz.de [PDF; 182 kB ; accessed on February 13, 2016]).
  4. a b Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation ( information )
  5. Friedrich Wilhelm August Bratring: Statistical-topographical description of the entire Mark Brandenburg: For statisticians, businessmen, especially for camera operators . First volume. The general introduction to the Kurmark, containing the Altmark and Prignitz. Friedrich Maurer, Berlin 1804, Part Four. Special country description. Second part. The Prignitz. Second chapter. The Lenzensche Kreis, p. 437 ( full text in Google Book Search [accessed February 14, 2016]).
  6. State Office for Data Processing and Statistics State of Brandenburg (Ed.): Contribution to statistics - Historical municipality register of the State of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 - Prignitz district . tape 19.12 . Potsdam 2006, p. 22nd ff . ( statistik-berlin-brandenburg.de [PDF; 397 kB ; accessed on December 28, 2018]).
  7. ^ Brandenburg State Office for the Preservation of Monuments and the State Archaeological Museum (ed.): List of monuments of the State of Brandenburg - Prignitz district . D) Monuments of other genres, ID number 09160671, December 31, 2018, p. 37 ( bldam-brandenburg.de [PDF; 404 kB ; accessed on May 13, 2019]).