Maienpfuhl
Maienpfuhl is a residential area in the town of Oderberg in the Barnim district (Brandenburg). The city of Oderberg is part of the Britz-Chorin-Oderberg office . In 1791 a sub- forestry was built at the Maienpfuhl . Today is Revierförsterei Maien Pfuhl housed the country's forest forester Chorin.
location
Maienpfuhl is just under two kilometers north-northwest of the city center of Oderberg. It can be reached via the Maienpfuhl junction at Brodowiner Straße. To the south of the living space is the small Maienpfuhl pond. The living space is about 50 m above sea level. NHN .
history
Already in 1785 there were plans to build a new sub- forestry for the sub-forester Demmert in Oderberg in the Liepischen Forst on the Meyen Pfuhl. In 1790 there was a building plan and in 1791 the forester's house was completed. But it was not until 1817 that the sub-forestry was officially named.
"In the Angermündischer Kreis the ... in the same forest (in the Liepeschen Forst) at the so-called Maienpfluhl (sic!), A 1/4 mile from the town of Oderberg, very close to the Neuendorf office, the royal sub-forestry is named Meienphul ( sic!) ... received. "
The name is of course a body of water, derived from the small lake or pond Maienpfuhl a few meters south of the living space .
In 1817 the Maienpfuhl sub-forestry had seven residents. For 1840 there is no information on the number of inhabitants. In 1858 the residential area consisted of a residential building and four farm buildings; 14 residents lived in the house. In 1871 there was one house and eight residents, Maienpfuhl belonged to the Oberförsterei Chorin of the forest-fiscal district of Liepe. In 1897 the Maienpfuhl forestry department belonged to the Freienwalde manor district (Oberförsterei share), population figures are not given.
In the 1930s, a forest workers' farmstead was built around 500 m southwest of the Maienpfuhl forester's house, which is also part of today's living space (Maienpfuhl 2).
Population development from 1840 to 1925 | ||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
year | 1817 | 1840 | 1858 | 1871 | 1895 | 1925 | ||||||||||||
Residents | 7th | k. A. | 14th | 8th | k. A. | 16 |
Communal history
At the time it was founded and until 1839, the Maienpfuhl forester's house belonged to the Chorin office . The Chorin office was dissolved in 1839. Together with the Grimnitz and Biesenthal offices , it then formed the new Neustadt-Eberswalde office . In 1840 Maienpfuhl belonged to the Liepe forest district of the Neustadt-Eberswalde office. With the formation of the estate districts around 1850, Maienpfuhl was assigned to the Liepe forest estate district. The Neustadt-Eberswalde office was dissolved with the district reform of 1872. With the formation of the administrative districts in 1874, the Liepe forest estate became the administrative district 13 Amt Chorin of the Angermünde district. The head of the office was the forester Bando from the Oberforsterei Amt Chorin, his deputy Oberamtmann Kleinau von Buchholz. In 1897 Maienpfuhl belonged to the Freienwalde manor district (part of the upper forestry department). In 1929 this large forest estate was divided up. Parts were incorporated into the newly created community Neuendorf. The new forest estate district Chorin was formed from a large part. In 1938 the Maienpfuhl-Forst estate was spun off from this forest estate district. Around / before 1950 this forest estate district was dissolved and Maienpfuhl was incorporated into the Neuendorf community. In 1950 and 1957 Maienpfuhl was named as Neuendorf's residential area. On September 17, 1961, Neuendorf was incorporated into the town of Oderberg and has been a district of Oderberg ever since. According to the main statutes of Oderberg, Neuendorf is only a residential space with the name Oderberg-Neuendorf, as is Maienpfuhl.
When it was founded, Maienpfuhl was still part of the Uckermärkische Kreis . With the district reform of 1816/17 Maienpfuhl became part of the Angermünde district . With the district reform of 1950 Oderberg and Neuendorf (with Maienpfuhl) were initially attached to the Oberbarnim district. In the great district reform of 1952, Neuendorf was finally assigned to the Eberswalde district . The Eberswalde district was merged with the Bernau district in 1993 with a few minor border changes to form the Barnim district.
Forester in the Maienpfuhl forest house
(very incomplete)
- 1791 Demmert
- (1815) to 1823 Wolff, Hegemeister
- 1823 Faber
- 1834 to 1860 Faber, master guardian
- 1860 Bock, forester
- 1888 Schilling, chief forester
- 1939 Georg Bergmann, chief forester Maienphuhl
- 2019 Matthias Köller, district manager
literature
- Lieselott Enders: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part VIII Uckermark. Hermann Böhlaus Successor, Weimar, 1986 ISBN 3-7400-0042-2 (in the following abbreviated to Enders Historisches Ortslexikon, Uckermark, with corresponding page number)
Individual evidence
- ^ A b Official Gazette of the Royal Government in Potsdam, year 1817, No. 15, from April 11, 1817 online at Google Books (p. 140).
- ^ Sophie Wauer: Brandenburgisches Namenbuch. Part 9. The place names of the Uckermark. 391 pp., Verlag Hermann Böhlaus Successor, Weimar 1996 ISBN 3-7400-1000-2 (p. 173)
- ↑ Ortschafts = directory of the government = district of Potsdam according to the latest district division from 1817, with a note of the district to which the place previously belonged, the quality, number of people, confession, ecclesiastical circumstances, owner and address, along with an alphabetical register . Georg Decker, Berlin 1817 (without pagination) online at Google Books
- ↑ a b August von Sellentin: Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Potsdam and the city of Berlin: Compiled from official sources. 292 p., Verlag der Sander'schen Buchhandlung, 1841 Central and State Library Berlin: Link to the digitized version (p. 186)
- ^ A b c Richard Boeckh: Local statistics of the government district of Potsdam with the city of Berlin. 276 pp., Verlag von Dietrich Reimer, Berlin, 1861 (based on the 1858 count) Online at Google Books , pp. 42/43.
- ↑ a b Royal Statistical Bureau: The municipalities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population. According to the original materials of the general census of December 1, 1871. II. The Province of Brandenburg. Verlag des Königlich Statistischen Bureau, Berlin 1873 Online at Google Books , p. 22.
- ↑ a b F. Mauer: Alphabetical index of all the localities and districts located in the administrative district of Potsdam, together with a list of the associated chief forester's offices and district commands. 296 pp., A. Stein's Verlagbuchhandlung, Potsdam 1897, p. 160.
- ↑ Topographic map 1: 25,000 sheets No. 3150 Oderberg Deutsche Fotothek
- ↑ BrandenburgViewer: Maienpfuhl 2
- ↑ a b Enders, Historisches Ortslexikon, Uckermark, pp. 634/35.
- ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, supplement to the 28th issue of the Official Journal of June 12, 1874, p. 3. Online at Google Books
- ^ Service portal of the state administration of the state of Brandenburg: City of Oderberg
- ↑ Official Journal of the Royal Chur Märkischen government to Potsdam: Special Edition 23 pieces of the Official Journal of 16 June 1815, without pagination, Live on Google Books
- ↑ a b Official Gazette of the Royal Government in Potsdam and the City of Berlin, 44th piece from October 31, 1823, p. 268 Online at Google Books .
- ^ Carl Friedrich Gumtau: The Jäger und Schützen des Prussian Army: what they were, what they will be, first part. What they were - their story. On commission at ES Mittler, Berlin, 1834. Online at Google Books
- ^ A b Julius Theodor Grunert: The Forest Academy in Neustadt-Eberswalde since arrow. Forstliche Blätter, 13: 1–14, Berlin 1867 Online at Google Books , p. 4
- ^ Yearbook of Prussian Forest and Hunting Legislation and Administration, 20: p. 315, 1888 online at Google Books
- ^ Annual report of the German Forest Association, 1939, p. 59 snippets at Google Books
- ↑ Landeswaldoberforsterei Chorin
Coordinates: 52 ° 53 ′ 0 ″ N , 14 ° 2 ′ 6 ″ E