Oegeln (Beeskow)

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Oegel
City of Beeskow
Coordinates: 52 ° 10 ′ 49 ″  N , 14 ° 17 ′ 4 ″  E
Height : 44 m
Residents : 200  (December 31, 2014)
Incorporation : December 6, 1993
Postal code : 15848
Area code : 03366
Oegeln (Brandenburg)
Oegel

Location of Oegeln in Brandenburg

Oegeln ( Hugliny in Lower Sorbian ) is a district of the town of Beeskow in the Oder-Spree district (Brandenburg). The formerly independent community was incorporated into the city of Beeskow on December 6, 1993.

geography

Oegeln is just under three kilometers as the crow flies from the old town of Beeskow. It can be reached quickly via Frankfurter Strasse and then on the B 168 , which leads west past the town center. The B 168 ends - already outside the district - at the B 87. This still cuts the northwestern part of the district and crosses the Spree. The center is about 44  m above sea level. NHN .

The Oegeln district borders on Ragow in the north, and Beeskow in the east, south and west. In the west the Spree forms the border. However, the Spree moved its bed to the east, so that the current western border is formed by an oxbow lake of the Spree. In the district, the Spree widens like a lake to the Oegelnischer See . The southern border of the district runs along the former Oelse river, which is now much straightened compared to the previous course. The entire district is very flat and only rises to 45.7  m above sea level. NHN an; The lowest point is the mean level of the Spree at around 42  m above sea level. NHN . The greater part of the district is used for agriculture. Only in the west is a wider strip of forest along the right bank of the Spree. From the Ragower main ditch, which runs north of the district, a ditch runs through the village to the Oelse. There is a small pond northeast of the town center near the marking boundary.

history

The place was first mentioned as Oglow in 1287 . 1344 it is called Ogelyn , 1418 Ougelyn and 1481 Ewgelyn . The name is derived from an old Sorbian basic form * Uglina , a place where charcoal is burned or where charcoal piles are located. According to its local structure, Oegeln was a dead end village with an estate.

Oegeln on the original table sheet 3851 from 1846

Ownership history

The ownership of Oegeln is only known in individual data until the late Middle Ages. In 1287 the nuns of the Benedictine convent Spandau owned two hooves on the Oegeln field. What became of this property could not be determined due to the lack of documents. Belonging to the Beeskow rule is documented at least from the 14th century . According to Töpler, the strip of area between the Spree and Oder originally belonged to the state of Lebus up to around Neuzelle. It was only assigned to the Mark Lausitz around 1230. Old descriptions of the borders of the Lebus diocese and the fact that Merz, Ragow and Oegeln belong to the Lebus diocese are evidence of this.

In 1313 the city of Beeskow had a dispute with Caspar von Köckeritz on Oegeln, which Ulrich von Bieberstein finally decided.

In 1344 the Brandenburg Margrave Ludwig confirmed the boundaries of the city of Beeskow. In this context Oegeln ( Ogelyn ) and the Oelse-Fließ ( daz vliesz zer Olsen ) are also mentioned. A place owner is not named. It was not until 1418 that another local owner appeared, he (y) ntze beynewitz zcu ougelin gesessin . Heintze Bennewitz was a follower of Hans von Bieberstein, the owner of the Beeskow estate . This is the first time that a knight's seat in Oegeln is occupied.

In 1438 the Brandenburg Margrave Friedrich the Younger transferred interest in Oegeln to the Carthusian monastery in Frankfurt (Oder) .

According to the overview of the holdings in the Brandenburg State Main Archives , Ragow and Oegeln are said to have belonged to the von Streumen family from 1461 until 1577. This is certainly inaccurate, as the following leanings from 1481 and 1490 show. The manors of Ragow and Oegeln were only connected to each other later.

On March 19, 1481 Matthias and Jakob von Hake received the feudal letter from Hans V. von Bieberstein about the village of Oegeln with accessories. In 1481 Hans von Bieberstein allowed Matthias / Thews Hacke auf dem Kietz near Beeskow and zu Oegeln to take out a loan from the riflemen in Beeskow. Matthias / Thews Hacke probably died around / before 1490, because on February 28, 1490 a Hans Haken, probably the son of Matthias Haken, and Jacob Haken received a new feudal letter about Oegeln and accessories.

Around the middle of the 16th century, at least a part of the Oegeln tithe belonged to the Lubusz cathedral chapter. The Canon Martin Schulz ( Martini Schulteti ) owned the tithes of 12 hooves in Oegeln. This was probably even the entire tithe, because around 1600 only 11 hooves are mentioned.

According to the succession register of the Beeskow rule from 1514, the judge von Oegeln had to deliver a honey interest of two grosz maasz annually to the rule in Beeskow.

In 1518 a (von) Hacke on Oegeln owned a Dreihufenhof in Glienicke , which was cultivated by Valtinn Weymann. This (von) hoe is only mentioned in the estate register of the Storkow estate because the farmer Valtinn Weymann had to deliver co-owners (rented oats) in the amount of 8 bushels to the Storkow estate. The owner (s) of the Ragow and Oegeln manors, not named, had to serve the rulership with 1½ horses in 1518 (provide horses in case of war).

In 1508 Heinrich von Strümen's widow and Valentin von Strümen owned Ragow with the knight's seat and the Mixdorfer Mühle (today Ragower Mühle ). In 1521 Valte Strewme (Streumen) had his knight's seat on Ragow. He was the son of Heinrich von Streumen, who had died in 1508. The von Streumen family had owned Ragow since 1461. He could have already owned Oegeln at that time or acquired Oegeln in the following years. Before / around 1542 his presumed son Heinrich von Streumen was the owner of Ragow and Oegeln.

Wohlbrück's statement that Oegeln belonged to the von Maltitz family in 1521 and 1548 could not be verified on the basis of documents.

In 1542 Joachim, Melchior and Leonhardt sold the estates they had inherited from their father Georg, the villages of Pretschen and Wittmannsdorf to Friedrich the Younger from Streumen zu Trebatsch ; his brother Heinrich von Streumen on Ragow and Oegeln was also enfeoffed. Heinrich von Streumen died around / before 1553 and left two underage sons Friedrich and Heinrich as well as four unmarried daughters. His brother Friedrich von Streumen on Trebatsch received the two villages Ragow and Oegeln for six years from the bishop on March 22, 1553 ( Wednesday after Judica ) von Lebus Johann VIII. In 1565 the owner of Ragow and Oegeln had to provide 1½ knight horses. According to the historical local dictionary, the von Streumen oegels are said to have owned by 1577.

In 1577 there was a trial between a von Rohr auf Ragow, Merz and Oegeln and the council of the city of Beeskow. It is very likely that it was Georg von Rohr, who had settled in Oegeln and Ragow at this time. In 1579 Hans von Streumen finally sold Ragow and Oegeln to Georg von Rohr. The purchase price is said to have been 14,300 thalers. In 1583 Georg von Rohr as the owner of Ragow had to provide a knight's horse. He received half a horse from Abraham von Kracht von Klein Rietz , which of course was only a unit of account. According to the judgment of the draft commission, Georg von Rohr was well- equipped with everything.

In 1623 the city of Beeskow had border disputes with the brothers Hans Adam, Caspar Ernst and Emmrich (recte Ehrenreich) von Rohr auf Oegeln, which Nicolaus von Maltitz auf Giesensdorf arbitrated. The three brothers were the sons of Kersten von Rohr and Eva von Holzendorf. From 1622 to 1626, Georg and Kersten von Rohr jointly administered the two manors of Oegeln and Ragow, the other brothers were in military service. In 1626, Kersten von Rohr's seven sons finally divided up their father's inheritance. The father had made seven lots that were distributed among the sons. Four of the lots consisted of knightly seats or real estate, three of the lots consisted of money. The four sons who received one of the lots with real estate had to settle the other three sons with money, so that each of the seven sons received real estate or money in the amount of 3,500 thalers.

  • 1st lot: half of the village Ragow with the knight's seat and half of all uses and rights, four two-hoofed farmers, four single-hoofed farmers and six kossati. Value: 10,000 thalers. This lot fell to the son Kersten von Rohr (around 1595–1637).
  • 2. Lot: the other half of Ragow with a place to build a new knight's seat, half of all uses and rights, four two-hoofed farmers, four single-hoofed farmers and six kossas. Value: 8,000 thalers. This lot fell to Hans Adam von Rohr (1594–1661). He is said to have sold his share to the brothers Georg and Kersten. The construction of the new knight's seat was delayed, also as a result of the Thirty Years War. This was not yet built in 1661, a modest half-timbered house was not built until 1672, and not quite finished.
  • 3rd lot: the village of Oegeln with a knight's seat and accessories. Value: 6,000 thalers. Georg von Rohr took over this lot
  • 4. Lot: the Freihaus in Beeskow. Value: 500 thalers. The Beeskower Freihaus fell to Wulf von Rohr.
  • 5th-7th Lot: 3,500 thalers in cash. Caspar Ernst, Ehrenreich and Otto were (initially) settled with money.

After the catastrophe of the Thirty Years War , Kersten the Younger von Rohr and his family died of the plague. Georg and Wulff (from Kersten the Elder's first marriage) and Otto (from Kersten the Elder's second marriage) had also died, so that in 1641 a new division of the estate took place. In the (overall) fief of 1644, in addition to the three surviving brothers (Hans Adam, Caspar Ernst and Ehrenreich), the sons of Georg, Christian Ewald and Georg Ernst as well as a son of Wulf, Wolf Joachim are named. Then received:

  • Hans Adam: Ragow A
  • Caspar Ernst: Ragow B
  • Ehrenreich: Oegeln

The three sons of the deceased brothers who were still underage were compensated with money. Georg's sons settled in Wilmersdorf in 1672 and 1676 .

Ehrenreich von Rohr (1619–1676), who had received Oegeln in 1641, was married to Catharina Maria von Rohr, the daughter of Caspar von Rohr von Leddin and an NN von Gühlen adH Barsikow. The marriage produced three children, the daughters Gottliebe Tugendreich (around 1663–1691) and Catharina Maria (around 1665–1730) as well as their son Christian Caspar (around 1665–1713). The daughter Catharina Maria married on April 17, 1689 Kerstin von Rohr (1645–1730), the son of Hans Adam von Rohr and Ursula Catharina von Zabeltitz. The Landreiterbericht of 1652 names him as the sole owner of oegeln.

Heir von Oegeln was the son Christian Caspar, who was married to Dorothea von der Hagen in 1686. He had nine daughters, so that after his death in 1713 Oegeln went to the 70-year-old Kersten von Rohr (1645–1750) in a settlement concluded in 1715. He had already sold his knight seat Ragow A in 1714 to his nephew Adam Ehrenreich, the son of his brother Wolf Ehrenreich von Rohr. Adam Ehrenreich's marriage to Catharina Maria von Rohr (* 1661, April 11, 1730, daughter of Ehrenreich von Rohr and Catharina Maria von Rohr von Leddin) had five children, including the Royal Prussian Major General Kaspar Friedrich von Rohr ( * June 19, 1702; † December 12, 1757). The four older children were: Hans Ehrenreich (* January 26, 1690), Wulf Ernst (* January 3, 1691), Adam Christian (* May 6, 1693) and Catharina Sophie (* December 27, 1695).

After Kersten von Rohr's death in 1730, his son Wulf Ernst von Rohr took over Oegeln. Wulf Ernst von Rohr auf Ragow and Oegeln married Charlotta Sabina von Rohr, the eldest daughter of Ernst Albrecht von Rohr (* 1679–1743) in Ragow B and Merz and Catharina Hedwig von Göllnitz (* 1693–1722) in 1733. Wulf Ernst von Rohr died early on September 6, 1757, leaving four underage sons, Georg Ernst, Christian Friedrich, Carl Wilhelm and Johann Albrecht, whose guardian was Joachim Balthasar von Rohr, a chivalry councilor.

In 1770 Joachim Balthasar finally bought Oegeln from the four brothers, one of whom was unmarried and the other three had settled elsewhere, for 22,000 thalers. In 1798 Joachim Balthasar von Rohr was knighthood councilor of the Lebusian and Beeskow-Storkowic districts on Oegeln. He was the son of Ernst Albrecht von Rohr and Catharina Hedwig von Göllnitz. Joachim Balthasar v. Rohr (* 1722–1800) on Oegeln was married to Louise Maria von Rohr (1737–1776); she was the daughter of Wulf Ernst von Rohr and Charlotte Sabine von Rohr. Oegeln inherited the only son Joachim Ernst, who died in 1822 unmarried and without a physical heir. He had bequeathed the estate to his adoptive son Carl Ferdinand Natus, the son of the postmaster Friedrich Gerhard Natus.

Carl Natus married Henriette von Brünnow in Beeskow in 1819, the only daughter of Rittmeister Heinrich von Brünnow. In 1828 the manor Oegeln belonged to the married postmaster Natus, b. from Brünnow . Carl Ferdinand Natus also owned the Vorwerk in the Fürstenwalder suburb of Beeskow. Berghaus gives for 1850 Henriette Natus, b. von Brünnow as the owner. The estate had a total size of 2751 acres of 30 square rods , of which 972 acres 54 square rods were arable, 114 acres 98 square rods were meadows and 1207 acres 163 square rods were forest. In 1857 Rauer also mentions Postmaster Natus, nee. von Brünnow as the owner of Oegeln. Riehl and Scheu also list them as owners of Oegeln in 1861. It is not yet known when she sold the Oegeln estate.

The general address book of manor and estate owners in the German Empire from 1879 names Hermann Hirsch as the new owner. At that time the estate had a size of 629.96 hectares. of which 285.34 hectares were arable, 25.58 hectares were meadows, 22.41 hectares were Hutung and 296.63 hectares were forest. The property tax net income was 3867 marks property tax net income. A starch factory is noted under the heading industrial plants . The handbook of real estate in the German Empire of 1885 quantifies the total size of the manor Oegeln with 671 hectares, of which 288 hectares are arable, 26 hectares of meadows, 22 hectares of Hutung, 310 hectares of forest, 1 hectare of land and 24 hectares of water. The net income from real estate tax remained almost the same at 3870 marks. In addition to the starch factory, a brick factory is now listed under the industrial plants. The focus of the economy was the dairy industry and the breeding of the Angelner cattle breed , in 1896 the total size of 670 hectares had hardly changed. Only the use of the areas was slightly different with 300 hectares of arable land, 30 hectares of meadows and pastures, 300 hectares of forest and 20 hectares of water. Only the starch factory is mentioned among the industrial plants. Apparently the brick factory had already closed.

From 1903 the son of Hermann Hirsch, Jobst Hirsch (* 1863; † 1944) appears as the owner. Little changed in size. On the other hand, the starch factory was closed and a distillery was set up instead. In 1914 the number of animals on the Oegeln manor, which still belongs to Jobst Hirsch, consisted of 14 horses, 71 cattle, including 51 dairy cows and 43 pigs. Jobst Hirsch was able to maintain the manor Oegeln even after the First World War. In 1921 he was already using a motor plow in his fields. Jobst Hirsch belonged to the educated Jewish bourgeoisie; he was murdered in 1944 together with his wife Toni in the Theresienstadt concentration camp . He had to sell the manor Oegeln in the late 1930s / early 1940s to the mother-in-law of Nazi State Secretary Ludwig Grauert, who acted as Grauert's deputy. The property with a size of 624 hectares was expropriated in 1946. In 1946 the children of Toni and Jobst Hirsch applied for the manor to be returned without success. It was divided into the land reform.

Village history

It can be assumed that Oegeln was a knight's seat as early as 1313, and also in 1418. Oegeln has been a knight's seat more or less continuously since the 16th century. In 1576 there were five farmers and 15 cossets in the village next to the manor. In 1578 there was also a free sheep farm. In 1600 four knight hooves belonged to the estate in Oegeln and Ragow (two each in the two places?). There were also nine farmer's hooves. However, the farmers complained that the Junkers had bought out many of the farmer's hooves. There were also 15 cottages. 1645 should only have been two knight hooves in Oegeln, d. H. tax-exempt hooves. In 1652 four Zweihüfner were desolate, including the Schulze with the Schulzengericht. The farmer had run away. The Lehnmann's yard had long ago been bought as a knight's seat. The farmer of the Einhufenhof stayed in Beeskow. The fields of the desert farms were plowed by the manor. Of the 15 farms, nine were completely desolate and burned down. The shepherd and the Junker's Meier sat on two cottages. The farms were not rebuilt in the further course of the village's history; the farmer's hooves remained with the manor.

In 1692 there were still 7 kossaten farms in addition to the farms. However, they were used by the other residents. 12 bushels of winter seed and 8 bushels of 1 mint of summer seed were sown on the farmer's hoof. On the Kossatenland 3 bushels 2 Metzen winter seeds and 3 bushels 2 Metzen summer seeds were sown per farm. A total of 6 bison 11 bushels and 6 Metzen winter seeds and 5 bisons 3 Metzen summer seeds were sown. There were three large fields. The harvest was the 3rd to 4th grain. 7 loads of hay were brought in for each farmer's hoof, 4 loads of hay and some piping for each kossät. The villagers had makeshift firewood from the Garbage Rose Heath. They didn't keep sheep.

In 1708 nine kossa families lived in Oegeln as well as a shepherd and a shepherd. In 1727 the Feldmark allegedly had 24 hooves. In 1745 the village consisted of the manor, nine farms and a sheep farm.

After the battle of Kunersdorf (August 12, 1759) the Austrian and Russian troops had also moved into the Beeskow-Storkowischen district and plundered the villages. In Oegeln, the Adelshof was almost completely destroyed. All moving parts such as doors, windows and furniture, even stoves, were torn out and hewn to pieces. The residents of Oegeln and the Adelshof were sometimes severely mistreated in order to elicit the hiding places of valuables. All cattle and grain were stolen. The damage suffered by the subjects in Oegeln alone, excluding the noble court, amounted to over 11,000 thalers.

In 1771 a school was set up in Oegeln and a teacher was employed. In 1775 there were 15 campfire sites (houses) in the village , in which nine kossa families and nine Büdner lived; a total of 81 inhabitants. In 1801 the resident population consisted of nine kossa families and ten residents. There was also a mug. There were now a total of 20 residential buildings in Oegeln. There were 160 acres of wood in the district. Bratring indicates the size of the field marrow again with 24 farmer's hooves and two knight's hooves. In 1837 there were already 22 houses. In 1861 the rural community had 105 inhabitants. 17 families lived in 16 residential buildings. There were 24 farm buildings in the municipality. The manor district of Oegeln had 59 inhabitants. Eight families lived in eight houses. There were 10 farm buildings in the manor district, including a distillery

In 1864 there were only seven farms and six semi-cottages. A long time ago, two farms were withdrawn from the manor. In 1871 there were 15 residential buildings in the municipality in which 15 families lived. The district had a total of 90 inhabitants. In 1867 there were still 86 inhabitants in the municipality. In 1888 the section from Grunow to Beeskow on the Grunow – Königs Wusterhausen railway was opened. The railway line only runs a short distance over the southwestern part of the district. Oegeln was given a stop or a small train station. The stop or train station Oegeln is outside the Oegeln district on the Beeskow town mark.

Around 1900 there were 15 houses in the rural community and 12 houses in the manor district. In 1928 the parish and manor district were combined to form the parish of Oegeln. In 1931 Oegeln had 26 houses. In 1939 there was a large farm (the manor), a farm with 20 to 100 hectares, 9 farms with 10 to 20 hectares, one farm with 5 to 10 hectares and four small farms with 0.5 to 5 hectares.

Population growth from 1774 to 1992
year 1774 1801 1818 1837 1858 1875 1890 1910 1925 1939 1946 1950 1964 1971 1981 1992
Residents 81 122 119 149 164 193 175 165 158 150 219 236 205 199 192 169

In 1946 the manor was expropriated. Of the 624 expropriated hectares, 167 hectares were distributed to 13 farm workers and landless farmers, 69 hectares to poor farmers, 2.5 hectares to a small tenant and 160 hectares to resettlers. The municipality of Oegeln received 7 hectares and the provincial administration reserved 200 hectares of forest. Ten old farmers in Oegeln received 20.5 hectares of forest.

The first type I LPG was founded in 1952, and it was converted into a type III LPG in 1954. In 1960 the LPG Type III comprised 10 companies with 32 members and 246 hectares of usable area. A second LPG type I with 12 farms and 18 members cultivated 175 hectares of agricultural land. It was connected to the LPG Type III in 1970. In 1979, VEB Kombinat Industrielle Mast egg packaging and VEB Industrielle Mast duck production Potsdam (Oegeln station operating part) were based at the Oegeln train station. In the village there was the ZBE heifing rearing Schneeberg with the young cattle facility Oegeln.

Communal affiliation

In the late Middle Ages, Oegeln belonged to the Lower Lusatian lordship of Beeskow , which was pledged to the Bishop of Lebus Dietrich von Bülow by Ulrich V. von Bieberstein in 1518, together with the neighboring Storkow lordship to the west . The area between the Spree in the west and the Oder in the east still belonged to the state of Lebus and not to the margraviate of Lausitz around 1200 . The southern border ran roughly south of Neuzelle to Niewisch am Schwielochsee . Around 1250 the area fell to the Lausitz region . The last evidence of this original affiliation to the Lebus region was the church affiliation of the villages Ragow, Merz and Oegeln to the diocese of Lebus in the late Middle Ages.

The Lower Lusatia ( Margraviate Lausitz ) and thus also the Beeskow rule was a fiefdom of the Bohemian crown. After the male line of Bieberstein became extinct in 1551, the fief nominally fell back to the Bohemian crown. The pledge remained unaffected. In 1555/56 the pledge came from the Bishop of Lebus to the Brandenburg Margrave Johann von Küstrin , who ruled Beeskow until his death in 1571. After several increases in the pledge sum, the Brandenburg Elector Johann Georg was enfeoffed with the Beeskow (and Storkow) rule, which now (together with the Storkow rule) became part of the Mark Brandenburg. The Beeskow and Storkow dominions remained nominally a Bohemian fiefdom until 1742.

The Beeskow-Storkowische Kreis gradually emerged from the Beeskow and Storkow dominions in the 17th century . In 1816 the two dominions were separated. The (former) rule of Beeskow was combined with the Krumspree district to form the district of Lübben- (Beeskow), the (former) rule of Storkow was combined with the Teltow district to form the Teltow-Storkow district . The district of Lübben- (Beeskow) was assigned to the administrative district of Frankfurt an der Oder, while the district of Teltow-Storkow remained with the administrative district of Potsdam . In 1835 this separation was reversed and the two previous lords were united to form the Beeskow-Storkow district. From 1950 to 1952 Oegeln belonged to the Fürstenwalde district , which had a completely different layout than the Fürstenwalde district formed in 1952 . From 1952 Oegeln belonged to the newly created Beeskow district . The circle Beeskow was after the turn still in the district Beeskow renamed and went to the 6th December 1993 in the new district Oder-Spree.

In the course of the 19th century, the municipality and the manor district of Oegeln emerged. The municipality covered only 135 ha, the manor 667 ha. When the administrative districts were formed in the Brandenburg province in 1874, Oegeln was assigned to the administrative district 22 Merz, together with the rural communities Merz and Ragow and the manor districts Merz, Oegeln and Ragow. Head of office was Rittmeister a. D. and manor owner Bernhard von der Schulenburg in Ragow, his deputy inspector Baltzer in Ragow. In 1928 the community and manor district of Oegeln were merged to form the rural community of Oegeln.

Oegeln was incorporated into the city of Beeskow on December 6, 1993 and has been part of the city of Beeskow since then. The district is represented by a local advisory board consisting of three people who elect the mayor from among their number. The mayor is currently (2018) Bernd Medejczyk.

Church affiliation

In 1600 Oegeln was a daughter church of Merz (without its own church), in 1625, 1801, 1858 and 1897 Oegeln was churched in Merz. In 1652, 1750 and 1837 the place was churched in Ragow. Merz, Oegeln and Ragow belonged to the diocese of Lebus until the middle of the 16th century.

Atonement Cross

Monuments and sights

The list of monuments of the state of Brandenburg for the Oder-Spree district lists four archaeological monuments in the Oegeln district:

  • No. 90540 Beeskow Flur 3, Oegeln Flur 1: a settlement from the Roman Empire
  • No. 90537 Oegeln Corridor 1: a settlement from the Stone Age
  • No. 90538 Oegeln Corridor 1: a stone cross ( atonement cross ) from the German Middle Ages (52 ° 10.688 ', E 14 ° 16.622')
  • No. 90539 Oegeln Corridors 1 and 2: the village center from the German Middle Ages and modern times

Transport links

Oegeln can be reached via local public transport from Beeskow. The B 87 leads directly to the Frankfurt (Oder) -West motorway junction. The regional train OB 36 of the Beeskow - Frankfurt (Oder) line stops every hour at Oegeln station.

The Oder-Spree-Dahme-Radweg leads from Mixdorf through Oegeln to Beeskow.

Public life

Public life takes place primarily in the clubs. To be mentioned are:

  • Volunteer firefighter
  • Table tennis club Oegeln
  • TSV Oegeln

Special event

Oegeln gained sad notoriety in 2017 through the murder of a 79-year-old woman from Oegeln and two police officers on the outskirts of Oegeln in the direction of Beeskow. During the search for the perpetrator, who had previously killed his grandmother, the two officers wanted to stop his vehicle with a board of nails laid out. However, the perpetrator recognized the nail board and dodged. He ran over the policemen waiting by the street at high speed. Both officers were caught in the perpetrator's vehicle and died instantly. The perpetrator was sentenced to life imprisonment in February 2018 for three murders.

literature

  • Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus : Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz in the middle of the 19th century; or geographical-historical-statistical description of the Province of Brandenburg, at the instigation of the State Minister and Upper President Flottwell. Second volume. 650 p., Printed and published by Adolph Müller, Brandenburg 1855. Online at Google Books (hereinafter abbreviated to Berghaus, Landbuch, Vol. 2 with corresponding page number)
  • Paul Rogalla von Bieberstein (Eds. Albert Hirtz, Julius Helbig): Documentary contributions to the history of the noble lords of Biberstein and their goods. VII, 498 p., Association for local history of the Jeschken-Isergau, Reichenberg in German Bohemia, 1911 Online University of Regensburg (hereinafter abbreviated to Hirtz & Helbig, documentary articles with the corresponding number of pages)
  • Carl von Eickstedt: Contributions to a newer land book of the Brandenburg brands: prelates, knights, cities, fiefdoms, or Roßdienst and fiefdom. 590 p., Creutz, Magdeburg 1840 (hereinafter Eickstedt, Landbuch with corresponding page number)
  • Götz Freiherr von Houwald : The Niederlausitz manors and their owners. Volume III: District of Lübben. 454 p., Neustadt an der Aisch, Verlag Degener & Co., owner Gerhard Gessner, 1984 ISBN 3-7686-4109-0 (hereinafter abbreviated to Houwald, Rittergüter, Volume 3 (Lübben) with the corresponding page number)
  • Carl Petersen (Ed. Wolfgang de Bruyn): The history of the Beeskow-Storkow district. Neuenhagen, Findling, 2002 ISBN 3-933603-19-6 (new edition of the 1922 edition) (hereinafter Petersen, history of the Beeskow-Storkow district with corresponding page number)
  • Joachim Schölzel: Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part IX Beeskow-Storkow. 334 p., Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1989 ISBN 3-7400-0104-6 (hereinafter Schölzel, Historisches Ortslexikon, Beeskow-Storkow, with corresponding page number).
  • Siegmund Wilhelm Wohlbrück : History of the former diocese of Lebus and the country of this taking. Second part. 545 p., Berlin, self-published by the author, 1829 (hereinafter abbreviated to Wohlbrück, Diocese of Lebus, vol. 2 with corresponding page number)
  • Wilhelm Ziethe: Chronicle of the city of Beeskow up to the rule of the Hohenzollern: designed according to the acts of the Beeskow communal archive. 190 p., Stamp, 1884 (hereinafter abbreviated to Zethe, chronicle with corresponding page number)

Source edition

  • Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel : Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis A. First main part or collection of documents on the history of the spiritual foundations, the noble families, as well as the towns and castles of the Mark Brandenburg, volume 20. 508 S., Berlin, Reimer 1862 (hereinafter abbreviated to CDB A 20 with the corresponding page number and certificate number)

Individual evidence

  1. a b Oegeln on the website of the city of Beeskow
  2. ^ Sophie Wauer: The place names of the Beeskow-Storkow district. Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-515-08664-1 , p. 227.
  3. a b c d Schölzel, Historisches Ortslexikon Beeskow-Storkow, pp. 187/88.
  4. ^ Sophie Wauer (after preliminary work by Klaus Müller): Brandenburgisches Namenbuch Part 12 The place names of the Beeskow-Storkow district. 269 ​​pp., Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart 2005, ISBN 3-515-08664-1 , p. 91
  5. a b Winfried Töpler : The Neuzelle Monastery and the secular and spiritual powers 1268-1817. (= Studies on the history, art and culture of the Cistercians. Volume 14). Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-931836-53-3 , p. 557.
  6. ^ Ziethe, Chronik, p. 111.
  7. CDB A 20, p. 346, document no. X (= 10) Online at Google Books
  8. CDB A 20, p. 383, document no.LIX (= 59) Online at Google Books
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  42. ^ Ernst Kirstein (editor): Handbook of real estate in the German Empire. With indication of all goods, their quality, their size and type of culture; your property tax net income; their owners, tenants, administrators etc .; of industries; Post, telegraph and railroad stations; Breeding of special breeds of animals; Exploitation of the livestock etc. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery to the province of Brandenburg. 4th improved edition, LXX + 321 p., + 4 p., Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung, Berlin, 1903, p. 178/79.
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  49. Richard Boeckh: Local statistics of the government district Potsdam with the city of Berlin. 276 p., Verlag von Dietrich Reimer, Berlin, 1861 Online at Google Books , p. 126.
  50. ^ The communities and manor districts of the province of Brandenburg and their population. Edited and compiled by the Royal Statistical Bureau from the original materials of the general census of December 1, 1871. In: Königliches Statistisches Bureau (Hrsg.): The communities and manor districts of the Prussian state and their population. tape II , 1873, ZDB -ID 1467417-8 , p. 52 ( digitized version ).
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  53. Main statute of the city of Beeskow from April 22, 2009 PDF (39 KByte)
  54. ^ Service portal of the state administration of the state of Brandenburg: City of Beeskow
  55. ^ Oegeln local advisory board
  56. List of monuments of the state of Brandenburg: Landkreis Oder-Spree (PDF) Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum
  57. ^ Atonement cross at Oegeln - image
  58. Murder of grandmother and two police officers - triple murderer von Müllrose has to be imprisoned for life - rbb24 from February 2, 2019

annotation

  1. According to the historical local lexicon, von Rohr owned Oegeln only until 1805. In this year Oegeln is said to be owned by an NN. Natus have gone over.