Nostorf

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coat of arms Germany map
The municipality of Nostorf does not have a coat of arms
Nostorf
Map of Germany, position of the municipality of Nostorf highlighted

Coordinates: 53 ° 24 '  N , 10 ° 39'  E

Basic data
State : Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
County : Ludwigslust-Parchim
Office : Boizenburg country
Height : 12 m above sea level NHN
Area : 20.08 km 2
Residents: 733 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 36 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 19258
Area code : 038847
License plate : LUP, HGN, LBZ, LWL, PCH, STB
Community key : 13 0 76 106
Community structure: 4 districts
Office administration address: Fritz-Reuter-Str. 3
19258 Boizenburg / Elbe
Website : www.amtboizenburgland.de
Mayor : Heiko Schlemmer
Location of the municipality of Nostorf in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district
Brandenburg Niedersachsen Schleswig-Holstein Schwerin Landkreis Mecklenburgische Seenplatte Landkreis Rostock Landkreis Nordwestmecklenburg Banzkow Plate Plate Sukow Bengerstorf Besitz (Mecklenburg) Brahlstorf Dersenow Gresse Greven (Mecklenburg) Neu Gülze Nostorf Schwanheide Teldau Tessin b. Boizenburg Barnin Bülow (bei Crivitz) Crivitz Crivitz Demen Friedrichsruhe Tramm (Mecklenburg) Zapel Dömitz Grebs-Niendorf Karenz (Mecklenburg) Malk Göhren Malliß Neu Kaliß Vielank Gallin-Kuppentin Gehlsbach (Gemeinde) Gehlsbach (Gemeinde) Granzin Kreien Kritzow Lübz Obere Warnow Passow (Mecklenburg) Ruher Berge Siggelkow Werder (bei Lübz) Goldberg (Mecklenburg) Dobbertin Goldberg (Mecklenburg) Mestlin Neu Poserin Techentin Goldberg (Mecklenburg) Balow Brunow Dambeck Eldena Gorlosen Grabow (Elde) Karstädt (Mecklenburg) Kremmin Milow (bei Grabow) Möllenbeck (Landkreis Ludwigslust-Parchim) Muchow Prislich Grabow (Elde) Zierzow Alt Zachun Bandenitz Belsch Bobzin Bresegard bei Picher Gammelin Groß Krams Hoort Hülseburg Kirch Jesar Kuhstorf Moraas Pätow-Steegen Picher Pritzier Redefin Strohkirchen Toddin Warlitz Alt Krenzlin Bresegard bei Eldena Göhlen Göhlen Groß Laasch Lübesse Lüblow Rastow Sülstorf Uelitz Warlow Wöbbelin Blievenstorf Brenz (Mecklenburg) Neustadt-Glewe Neustadt-Glewe Cambs Dobin am See Gneven Pinnow (bei Schwerin) Langen Brütz Leezen (Mecklenburg) Pinnow (bei Schwerin) Raben Steinfeld Domsühl Domsühl Obere Warnow Groß Godems Zölkow Karrenzin Lewitzrand Rom (Mecklenburg) Spornitz Stolpe (Mecklenburg) Ziegendorf Zölkow Barkhagen Ganzlin Ganzlin Ganzlin Plau am See Blankenberg Borkow Brüel Dabel Hohen Pritz Kobrow Kuhlen-Wendorf Kloster Tempzin Mustin (Mecklenburg) Sternberg Sternberg Weitendorf (bei Brüel) Witzin Dümmer (Gemeinde) Holthusen Klein Rogahn Klein Rogahn Pampow Schossin Stralendorf Warsow Wittenförden Zülow Wittenburg Wittenburg Wittenburg Wittendörp Gallin Kogel Lüttow-Valluhn Vellahn Zarrentin am Schaalsee Boizenburg/Elbe Ludwigslust Lübtheen Parchim Parchim Parchim Hagenowmap
About this picture

Nostorf in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district is a municipality in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany. It is administered by the Boizenburg-Land Office , based in the non-official city of Boizenburg / Elbe .

The community consists of the districts of Nostorf, Bickhusen, Horst and Rensdorf.

geography

Nostorf is the westernmost municipality in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and borders on Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony . Western parts of the municipality belong to the Stecknitz-Delvenau nature reserve , and a southern part of the Elbe-Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania river landscape biosphere reserve . The closest cities are Boizenburg about five kilometers southeast and Lauenburg about seven kilometers southwest. The federal highway 5 , the Mühlenbach and the Elbe and Delvenau at the municipal boundaries run through the municipality .

history

Nostorf

In a Boizenburg church visit protocol from 1444 and in the Landesbederegister from 1453 the village is called Notstorp and retains this name in the following centuries. The meaning of the word is unknown. The village was originally laid out as a dead-end village with the closed side facing the valley of the Mühlenbach and a single access road to the arable land in the north. In the 15th century it belonged to the von Sprengel family, based in Gresse, and then became part of the sovereign domain. In 1825 the village had ten full farmers and five Büdner . The Nostorfer village church goes back to a previous chapel from 1483. The village was always parish in Zweedorf. The remains of the Bannborg , a medieval low castle, can be found in the dolphin valley to the west .

Bickhusen

The German place name first appears in the Landbederegister from 1453 as villa bikhusen . The defining syllable Bick comes from a personal name. At that time the village had ten full-time farmers and bordered the Schwanheider Mühlenbach, which was later diverted to the north, and the Delvenau lowlands to the west. The facility can be built as a line village or as a dead end village. In 1825 there were only four farm positions left. The village has always been a parish in Boizenburg.

horst

Dismantling of the border installations in Horst in 1990

The comparatively young German name refers to the elevated location in the lowlands of the Elbe and Delvenau. In the Boizenburg Bede and Castle registers from 1453 and 1573 the name Awe , Aue and Öwe can still be found . From 1538 to 1599 the place was uninhabited and the Feldmark was cultivated by farmers from Bickhusen, Rensdorf and Gehrum. From 1582 the Feldmark belonged to the noble von Blücher family from Wiebendorf. Later a manor was built here. In 1727, the Hamburg lawyer Johann Baptista Mutzenbecher bought this from the von Bülow family for 27,500 thalers, along with the Gehrum estate. The estate remained knightly until 1818 and was converted into a domanial lease before 1825. The two-storey, classicist mansion on the former border was demolished in 1975.

Horst was incorporated into Bickhusen on July 1, 1990.

Until 1989, the district was a border crossing station for the former inner-German border on federal highway 5 . The M16 branch of the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees , the corresponding state office and a refugee camp with a total of 650 places are located there. The camp is located in the middle of the forest, far away from the necessary infrastructure such as advice centers, lawyers, doctors or pastors. It has been the initial reception facility for Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania since 1995 and has also served as a state community accommodation for refugees who, in the opinion of the authorities, have “no prospect of staying” in Germany and who are accommodated there for up to 12 months, and they expect to be deported every day have to. These often take place in the early morning hours and without notice. There is a branch of the Central Admission Office in the Stern Buchholz district of Schwerin .

Rensdorf

Rensdorf Chapel

Rensdorf is first mentioned in a document in 1297 as Rensedorpe . The same name can also be found in the Landbederegister from 1453. It comes from the Old Slavic resa for pussy willow, so that it was a village in a wooded area. In addition to three Boizenburg parish hooves, three aristocratic hooves were recorded in 1800, which were administered by the estate in the Horst district. In 1825 the knightly courts already belonged to the Domanialamt and there were a total of four full farmers and three Büdner in addition to the three parish hooves.

The chapel is listed in a church visit protocol from 1534 as having existed for a long time and was supplied by Boizenburg. In the course of the Thirty Years' War, Danish soldiers burned the chapel down in 1627, and it was rebuilt in 1650. In 1782 the Horster landlord David Faler was buried to the left of the altar. In 1977 the chapel was extensively renovated by the citizens of Rensdorf.

Rendsdorf was incorporated into Bickhusen on July 1, 1950.

politics

Municipal council and mayor

Local election 2014

  • Mayor: Dirk Spiewok, community of voters of the municipality of Nostorf
  • Voting community of the community of Nostorf: 5 seats
  • Single applicant Harder
  • The left: 1 seat
  • Schumacher single applicant

Coat of arms, flag, official seal

The municipality has no officially approved national emblem, neither a coat of arms nor a flag. The official seal is the small state seal with the coat of arms of the state of Mecklenburg. It shows a looking bull's head with a torn off neck fur and crown and the inscription "GEMEINDE NOSTORF • LANDKREIS LUDWIGSLUST-PARCHIM".

Attractions

See also the list of architectural monuments in Nostorf

Regular events

  • Harvest and potato festival in September (planned by AFM Nostorf & the municipality of Nostorf)
  • Easter fire (planned by the Friends of the Nostorf Fire Department)
  • Lantern or torch parade (planned by the Friends of the Nostorf Fire Department)

literature

  • Dieter Greve: Field name atlas for southern western Mecklenburg , Volume I, City of Boizenburg. Villages of the Boizenburg-Land office. First part, Thomas Helms Verlag, Schwerin 2011, ISBN 978-3-940207-25-8 , pages 133 ff., 142 ff.

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Statistisches Amt MV - population status of the districts, offices and municipalities 2019 (XLS file) (official population figures in the update of the 2011 census) ( help ).
  2. § 1 of the main statute (PDF; 3.2 MB) of the municipality
  3. Internet presence of the state government asylum and refugees ( memento from March 22, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  4. ^ Refugee Council Hamburg: Refugee accommodation in Hamburg 2007 The camp in Nostorf - Horst ( PDF )
  5. Refugee facility in Stern Buchholz opens on June 1, 2015
  6. MUB IV, 2452 [1]
  7. http://www.amtboizenburgland.de/gemeinden-verbaende/gemeinde-nostorf/
  8. Main Statute, Section 2, Paragraph 3