Pechüle (Treuenbrietzen)

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Pechüle
Coordinates: 52 ° 4 ′ 29 ″  N , 12 ° 57 ′ 10 ″  E
Height : 58 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 250  (Dec 31, 2006)
Incorporation : 1st January 1974
Incorporated into: Bardenitz
Postal code : 14929
Area code : 033748
Pechüle village church
Pechüle village church

Besides Klausdorf, Pechüle is one of the two districts of Bardenitz , a district of the town of Treuenbrietzen in the Potsdam-Mittelmark district in Brandenburg .

Geographical location

Pechüle is east of the city center. In the north is the district of Bardenitz, in the east the town of Jüterbog and in the south Klausdorf and the Treuenbrietzen district of Frohnsdorf . The district is only a few square kilometers and extends along the Pechuler Dorfstrasse , which runs through the town in a north-south direction. It is connected to Bardenitz in the north by the Am Birkenweg branching off to the west and in the center of the village by Zingelstraße . Apart from some overland routes, these are the two connections to the neighboring communities.

history

During excavations in the district, both centuries-old shards and a burial ground were uncovered. Archaeologists were able to prove that the region was already inhabited by Slavs in the 7th century . They settled at the foot of the Keilberg , which creates a transition from the Fläming to the Baruther glacial valley east of the district . There was a street village that was first mentioned in 1225 as villa Pechule . The name is said to be derived from a small body of water, as was also the case in neighboring Bardenitz. In 1268 Richard von Zerbst sold the place to the Zinna monastery . Presumably with the help of the Cistercians who worked there, the Pechul residents built a mighty brick church at the beginning of the 13th century, making it one of the oldest sacred buildings of this type in Fläming. After Margrave Johann von Sachsen sold the town to the monastery in 1426, the residents used the neighboring town of Pechüle, which had fallen desolate in the meantime , to graze their cattle there. This condition remained unchanged for centuries until the Reformation led to the closure of the monastery. Pechüle came into the possession of the Archbishop of Magdeburg and from 1566 his administrator. In 1680 the place came to Brandenburg . In 1748 nine families from the Palatinate came to the region. The settlement led to considerable resistance from the Pechül farmers, who fought for the rights to the pasture areas and even led to the deployment of twenty grenadiers from Treuenbrietzen.

1974 was carried incorporation of Klausdorf and Pechüle after Bardenitz. On December 31, 2002 Bardenitz with Pechüle and Klausdorf became part of the city of Treuenbrietzen. In 2010 a support association was founded which has been committed to the renovation of the church since then.

Sightseeing

Economy and Infrastructure

economy

There are several farms, a nature farm, small craft and some service companies in the village.

traffic

The Pechüler Dorfstrasse runs through the village in a north-south direction , which connects Pechüle with the Landstrasse 812 beyond the village via another spur road. It ends in a wooded area to the south. Some country roads lead to the east into the nature reserve up to the Keilberg, which is located in the Jüterbog-Forst Zinna-Keilberg nature reserve.

The 549 bus connects the district with Treuenbrietzen and Jüterbog.

Web links

Commons : Pechüle (Treuenbrietzen)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Community and district directory. In: geobasis-bb.de. Land surveying and geographic base information Brandenburg, accessed on January 3, 2019 .
  2. Information board : City of Treuenbrietzen - Pechüle and his church , on the village green of Bardenitz, May 2017.
  3. Pechüle village church , website of Theo Engeser and Konstanze Stehr, accessed on June 14, 2017.
  4. ^ The village church of Klausdorf (Potsdam-Mittelmark) , website of the support group for old churches Berlin-Brandenburg, accessed on April 9, 2017.