Peckatel (Little Thank You)
Peckatel is a part of the small community in the south of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania . It is located two kilometers southwest of Klein Vielener - and Wedensee , on the historic land border, the Iron Gate, called Isen Port .
history
In 1274 the knights Bernhard and Heinrich von Peccatel were enfeoffed with the village, which belonged to the diocese of Havelberg. On January 1, 1325, the mayor Ebelingus scultetus de Peckateele was mentioned in a document . In 1514 a Berend von Maltzan enfeoffed it , in 1652 Adam von Holstein's widow owned several farms, the owners often changed. In 1775 the landlords, those of Peccatel, died out. In 1790, the " peasant laying " took place in the village, a destruction of the peasant existence by the landlord. The life of the village school family Wehden and other families is documented in written discussions with the involvement of the Schwerin Duke. In 1795 the Penzlin barons von Maltzan became owners of the church village.
Attractions
The current church was built in the neo-Gothic style in 1862. In the windows of the choir you can see seven Maltzahn family coats of arms. The historian Friedrich Schlie describes small works of art by the von Plessen, Vick, Algrim, Wäde / Weden, Pragst, Ridden, Hoth and Franck families in the church. On the altar is a late Gothic triptych from the 15th century. At least one church bell was cast by a Friedlander named Bgun.
Stately coats of arms can also be seen in the church stalls.
The landscape monument , the Isern Purt , in High German Iron Gate is located north of the village. Beginning at Klein Vielener See in an easterly continuation with two moats across the Wedensee to the Devil's Bridge and then with three sloping moats into the Kleiner Stadtsee. The trenches in the Zippelower Holz continued behind the Penzliner Kleiner Stadtsee. The Isen Port belonged to the fortifications of the Redarians with their Redarian settlement communities. The Landhemme formed a defensive border between the Redariians and the German invasion population , the Saxons .
traffic
Peckatel is located on the federal road 193 from Penzlin to Neustrelitz and the junction of the state road 34 to Blumenholz . The next train stations are in Kratzeburg and Neustrelitz.
Field names
- Gallows Mountain
- Wedensee: The Wedensee is incorrectly called Wodensee in the literature because archivist Dr. Beyer in his paper on “Die Landwehr u. the border sanctuaries of the Land of the Redarians ”described the lake as Wodensee according to an old map. The land consolidation maps of the 18th century call the lake "Wehdensee". Today the Wedensee is a silted up, boggy Grabensee. It got its name from the Schulzen family Weden / Wehden, which can be traced back to Peckatel in the 14th century . The colonists Weden, probably from the Deutsch Orden Kommende Weddingen in Lower Saxony, also historically called Wedin, were among the early settlers. In the Kaiserbede of 1497 the Vedas were mentioned in the census.
- Isen Port (Iron Gate)
- Christenhof
- Jenny-Hof, the yard was razed during the GDR era.
- Attending church, in 1706 the pastor argued with the mayor and church lawyer Jochen Wede (n) about the boundaries of the priesthood and the Schulzenwörde. Going to church went straight from Klein Many directly from north-north west over the top of the mountain behind the parish property to the church.
literature
- Estates and early activities in Mecklenburg: from the middle of the 12th to the middle of the 15th century, by Uwe Heck, Neuer Hochschulschriftenverlag, 1999 ISBN 3929544873 , 978392544879
- Institute for German Folklore (German Academy of Sciences in Berlin), Akademie-Verlag 1960, notes: v.22 Narrator: Knecht Wehden, Penzlin, Kreis Waren; from Wendorf, district of Waren ...
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Wedensee
- ^ Website of the Verein für Computergenealogie eV (GenWiki) , accessed on December 17, 2017
- ↑ http://www.kleinvielen-ev.de/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Dorfzeitung-Nr-5-2013_ebook.pdf
- ↑ Information from the art and historical monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Volume V. by Prof. Dr Schllie, Verlag Bärensprungsche Hofbuchdruckerei. Schwerin 1902
- ^ Friedrich Schlie: Art and History Monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. 1902, Retrieved March 23, 2020 .
- ^ Website of the Verein für Computergenealogie eV (GenWiki) , accessed on December 17, 2017
- ↑ Wedensee
Web links
Coordinates: 53 ° 27 ' N , 13 ° 3' E