Neuenkirchen (Hadeln)

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the community of Neuenkirchen
Neuenkirchen (Hadeln)
Map of Germany, position of the municipality Neuenkirchen highlighted

Coordinates: 53 ° 47 '  N , 8 ° 54'  E

Basic data
State : Lower Saxony
County : Cuxhaven
Joint municipality : Land Hadeln
Height : 0 m above sea level NHN
Area : 19.65 km 2
Residents: 1303 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 66 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 21763
Primaries : 04751, 04755, 04758
License plate : CUX
Community key : 03 3 52 038
Community structure: 7 districts
Address of the
municipal administration:
Dorfstrasse 47
21763 Neuenkirchen
Website : Joint municipality of Land Hadeln - municipality of Neuenkirchen
Mayor : Ingo Tietje ( SPD )
Location of the community of Neuenkirchen in the district of Cuxhaven
Nordsee Schleswig-Holstein Bremerhaven Landkreis Osterholz Landkreis Rotenburg (Wümme) Landkreis Stade Landkreis Wesermarsch Armstorf Armstorf Belum Beverstedt Bülkau Cadenberge Cuxhaven Geestland Hagen im Bremischen Hechthausen Hemmoor Hollnseth Ihlienworth Lamstedt Loxstedt Mittelstenahe Neuenkirchen (Land Hadeln) Neuhaus (Oste) Nordleda Oberndorf (Oste) Odisheim Osten (Oste) Osterbruch Otterndorf Schiffdorf Steinau (Niedersachsen) Stinstedt Stinstedt Wanna Wingst Wurster Nordseeküstemap
About this picture

Neuenkirchen ( Neenkarken in Low German ) is a municipality in the combined municipality of Land Hadeln in the Lower Saxony district of Cuxhaven .

geography

Affected area during a "small" storm surge of only 4.50 m when a dike breached at Glameyer Stack, Otterndorf

location

Neuenkirchen, also known as Neuenkirchen / Niederelbe due to its location in the area of ​​the Niederelbe , lies on the Medem and Wilster rivers . Due to the proximity to the Elbe estuary and thus to the North Sea and the low elevation of no more than m above sea level. NHN , the community is located in an area at risk of storm floods , should a dike break.

Neuenkirchen is in the march .

Community structure

View over the open field to the Katthusen district

Neuenkirchen is a clustered village with line and scattered settlements . The following districts belong to the municipality :

  • Brüninghemm (Niederdt. Brüninghemm )
  • Dörringworth (Lower German Dellnwort )
  • Höteil (Niederdt. Höördeel ) with its districts:
    • Höden (Niederdt. Höden )
    • Hörfelde (Lower German Höörfelln )
  • Katthusen (Lower German Katthusen )
  • Neuenkirchen (main town)
  • Pedingworth (Lower German Jerusalem and Pemwoort )
  • Süderende (Niederdt. Süderinn'n )

Neighboring communities

Cuxhaven - Ludingworth Otterndorf Easter break
North Leda Neighboring communities Easter break
North Leda Ihlienworth Ihlienworth

history

Neuenkirchen was first mentioned in a document as Nigenkerken in 1342. Other documented forms of the name are Nyenkerken (1406) and Nienkerken (1515). Dörringworth was mentioned as early as 1139 as the seat of a knight by Turneworthe and was considered Koornkamer van Land Hadeln .

The saying goes down about Pedingworth (also called “Jerusalem”): Geiß you sensible dör Jerusalem, offer the Lüüs', geiß du hatt dör, offer the de Hunn'n .

Incorporations

Brüninghemm , Pedingworth and part of Scholien were incorporated into Neuenkirchen in 1929. Until then they belonged to the then Osterende-Otterndorf community . In church terms, however, these parts still belong to Otterndorf.

Population development

Neuenkirchen seen from the northeast, the church tower in the middle
date Residents source
1824 0185
1848 0339
1871 0329 ( Kirchdorf )
1038 ( municipality )
1459 (approx., Including the districts incorporated in 1929)


1910 0834
1925 0819
1933 1140
1939 1304
1950 2017
date Residents source
1961 1562
1970 1618
1987 1336
1990 1343
1995 1401
2000 1529
2005 1500
2010 1425
2019 1303

religion

A large part of the population belongs to the Evangelical Lutheran St. Marien parish or the Evangelical Lutheran St. Severi parish Otterndorf, as the districts of Brüninghemm and Pedingworth also traditionally belong to their parish . The Neuenkirchen parish is responsible for the local cemetery and maintained a children's play area until 2008.

In 1347 the first pastor for Nigenkerken was mentioned. The community belonged to the Archdeaconate Hadeln-Wursten until the Reformation was introduced in 1527. At times she had up to three pastoral positions.

politics

The municipal administration and the former branch of the Kreissparkasse are located in the center of town

Municipal council

The council of the Neuenkirchen community consists of ten councilors and councilors. This is the specified number for the member municipality of an integrated municipality with a population between 1001 and 2000 inhabitants. The council members are elected for a five-year term by local elections. The current term of office began on November 1, 2016 and ends on October 31, 2021.

The honorary mayor is also entitled to vote and sit on the municipal council.

The last local election on September 11, 2016 resulted in the following:

Political party Proportional votes Number of seats
SPD 66.88% 7th
CDU 33.11% 4th

The turnout in the 2016 local elections was 62.93%, above the Lower Saxony average of 55.5%.

mayor

The council elected council member Ingo Tietje (SPD) as honorary mayor for the current electoral term. His deputies are Dagmar Diers (SPD) and Jürgen Poppe (CDU).

Chronicle of the mayor

  • (1991-present): Ingo Tietje (SPD)
  • ( still open ): Gustav Dittmer (CDU)
  • ( still open ): Ernst-August Eckhoff (BGN)
  • (August 3, 1945 - still open ): Wilhelm Meyer-Buhr, installed by the British military government

coat of arms

Coat of arms of Neuenkirchen
Blazon : Split ; front:two silver wavy bars in green ; behind: a red fire broom in silver. "
Justification of the coat of arms: The corrugated beams symbolize the rivers Medem and Wilster flowing through the local area. The fire broom, also called thunder broom or Donarsbesen or witch's broom, is borrowed from the coat of arms of the noble family von der Medem , who once lived here .

Community partnerships

Monument stone community partnership between Neuenkirchen and St. Broladre
At the beginning of May ( Whitsun weekend ), mutual visits by larger delegations take place: If a Neuenkirchen delegation goes to St. Broladre one year, a delegation from St. Broladre comes to Neuenkirchen the following year.

Culture and sights

Buildings

St. Mary's Church from the southwest
St. Mary's Church from the southeast
Houses in Neuenkirchen. On the left a restaurant, on the right the listed building Dorfstrasse 38
  • St. Mary's Church
This brick church from the 14th century only got the choir at the beginning of the 16th century. The nave measures 18.70 × 9.60 m and is 5.90 m high, while the choir, separated from it by an approximately semicircular arch, measures 8.50 × 6.20 m and 4.70 m high is. The walls are 1.10 m thick. The massive west tower is 35 m high and was last restored in 1990–1992. There are still two bells in it after a third, cast in 1670, had to be delivered during the First World War. The large bell with a diameter of 1.36 m was cast in 1741, the small one with a diameter of 0.54 m in 1475.
A mechanical clockwork from JF Weule ( Bockenem ) from 1896 is still there, the tower clock is now running on electricity. The wooden crucifixion group , last restored in 1987, dates from the 16th century and has been located above the altar on the east wall of the choir since 1967. It was previously set up north of the choir arch. The pulpit dates from the 17th century. The brick altar has replaced a wooden altar since 1967, the altarpiece of which has been hanging on the south side of the choir since 1994/95. The altar lights date from 1630.
The oldest object of the church is the baptismal font from the first years of construction of the church. The baptismal font is carried by three figures. Its wall shows 18 relief pictures. A carved stone next to the baptismal font was found near the church. It may be a piscine with which baptismal water could have been conveyed out of the church. Peasant coats of arms from 1618 are painted on the ceiling , the names of which can be read in mirror image.
A small baroque organ completes the inventory of the church. It was built between 1660 and 1661 by the organ builder Christoph Donat in Leipzig and brought to Neuenkirchen by water, where it was erected in 1662. It has 18 stops on two manuals and a pedal . In 1738 Dietrich Christoph Gloger changed the disposition and in 1835 Johann Georg Wilhelm Wilhelmy created today's prospectus . The last restoration was carried out in 2012 by Rowan West from Ahrweiler . The lively and colorful sound of the organ is supported by the wind supply through a wedge bellows and the "unevenly floating", well-tempered mood .
  • At Dorfstrasse 38 and 48 you can find house types that were built in the often usual way of construction until the 19th century.
  • At Dorfstraße 69 there is a thatched brick house from the beginning of the 19th century, which was later changed.
  • A former bakery in Katthusen No. 20 has been preserved from the second half of the 19th century .
  • In Pedingworth there is a brick vault bridge built in 1875 over the weather, shortly before its confluence with the Medem, a testimony to a technical cultural monument.

Sports

In the gymnastics and sports club ( TSV ) Neuenkirchen, founded in 1922 , different types of sport are practiced.

Before the establishment of the shooting club Neuenkirchen Nee V. 1950 were shooting festivals celebrated. The sports department of the club was founded in 1967, and its members have participated in several regional and German championships in Lower Saxony. The association has 177 members (as of 2008).

societies

Regular events

  • Fire Brigade Ball (first Saturday in February)
  • Raising the maypole on April 30th
  • Shooting festival in July
  • Children's festival in August / September that is organized by local associations, the parish, innkeepers and private individuals
  • Children's excursion on a weekend before the summer holidays to one of the family amusement parks (e.g. sports and play park in Wingst or Magic Park in Verden )
  • Christmas Market

music

In 1902 the mixed choir was founded by the then cantor , but the association was active until 1932. A new company was founded in the 1980s. A church choir was active within the parish. The church organ is suitable for organ concerts because of its special sound.

Economy and Infrastructure

The place is still dominated by agriculture, traditionally with large, but relatively few farms. Tourism is not pronounced.

Companies

The largest employer in town is the Dinter company now Döhler Neuenkirchen GmbH with around 170 employees in Neuenkirchen. Concentrates and flavors are manufactured for fruit juices, fruit spritzers and fruit juice drinks that are supplied to the beverage industry worldwide. The Dinter company has been part of the Darmstadt-based Döhler Group since 2001 .

The company Albert Cordts Fleischgroßhandel operates a cutting plant in New Churches at its headquarters. In the 1990s, the Cordts company took over the municipal slaughterhouse in Bremerhaven, which is now being operated as an EG slaughterhouse and cutting company .

There are also a number of handicraft businesses, some small shops in the community and the Weser-Elbe-Sparkasse mobile (Friday 9:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. in front of the village community center, Dorfstrasse 57), which ensure basic supplies on site.

education

In Neuenkirchen there is the Hinrich-Wilhelm-Kopf School as a primary school with a new building from 1931. Due to the declining number of pupils, the schools in Neuenkirchen and Nordleda were merged into one school district in 2009. The 1st and 2nd grades are taught in Nordleda, the 3rd and 4th grades in Neuenkirchen.

Personalities

Monument to Hinrich Wilhelm Kopf by the sculptor Frijo Müller-Belecke in the park in front of the St. Marien Church

Sons and daughters of the church

  • Albert Lüders, alias Albertus Luderus (around 1627–1675), priest, he ended up at the stake in Schwerin after a death sentence
  • Martin Kröncke (1705–1774), mint master and Prussian general mint director, the Marten-Kröncke-Weg is named after him
  • Friedrich Adolf Mehrtens (1840–1899), classical pianist, conductor and music teacher
  • Hinrich Wilhelm Kopf (1893–1961), politician (SPD) and first Prime Minister of Lower Saxony
  • Werner Tietje (1924–1984), Low German writer, home curator and painter

People connected to the community

literature

  • Doris Böker (arrangement): District of Cuxhaven (=  monument topography Federal Republic of Germany. Architectural monuments in Lower Saxony . Volume 19 ). CW Niemeyer Verlag, Hameln 1997, ISBN 3-8271-8259-X , p. 250-252 .
  • Ernst-August Eckhoff: The cooperation with the clubs and organizations in Neuenkirchen . In: DRK local association Neuenkirchen Land Hadeln (ed.): Festschrift - 50 years DRK local association Neuenkirchen Land Hadeln . Neuenkirchen October 5, 1996.
  • Mixed choir Neuenkirchen . In: Neuenkirchener Vereine (ed.): "WIR". The club in Neuenkirchen Land Hadeln. Yesterday, today and tomorrow. , 1997.
  • Hermann Rodegerdts: The field names of the Hadler parish Neuenkirchen . Edited by Ludwig Badenius, Bremerhaven 2002 (Volume 1 of the field names series of the Heimatbund der Männer vom Morgenstern ), ISBN 3-931771-60-1 .
  • The St. Marienkirche in Neuenkirchen / Land Hadeln , undated church leader.
  • Ernst-August Eckhoff: The sports department of SV Neuenkirchen . In: SV Neuenkirchen N. E. e. V. (Hrsg.): Festschrift - 50 years SV Neuenkirchen N. E. e. V. Neuenkirchen 2000.
  • Heinrich Teut: Hadel dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 1-4 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959.
  • TSV Neuenkirchen. In: Neuenkirchener Vereine (ed.): "WIR". The club in Neuenkirchen Land Hadeln. Yesterday, today and tomorrow. [Lt. Imprint: Quarterly magazine, Christmas edition] 1997.

Web links

Commons : Neuenkirchen (Land Hadeln)  - Collection of images

Individual evidence

  1. State Office for Statistics Lower Saxony, LSN-Online regional database, Table 12411: Update of the population, as of December 31, 2019  ( help ).
  2. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 1 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 290 (Other known forms of name: Brunighemm and Brunehemm (1355), ibid).
  3. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 1 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 429 (Occupies the name forms Dörrnwoort , Döllnwoort , Delmwoort . Other name forms mentioned there: Turneworthe (1139), Thorneworth (1203), Dornworth (1509–1525), Dorrenwort (1484), later Dürrenworth ).
  4. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 2 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 223 (masculine).
  5. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 2 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 202 (feminine. Also a group of houses in Altenbruch -Osterende).
  6. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 2 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 223 (There Höörfeld and Höfelln (emphasis on the last syllable) are also mentioned as name forms).
  7. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 2 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 399 (The form (s) Katthüs [er] deel is / are documented for Katthusen in 1733. - Katthusen also exists in the Hadel dictionary , but is a farm in (not too far away!) Westerende Otterndorf: “1717 manorial farm (Erbzinshof ), named after the personal name Katte, which appears in Neuenkirchen as early as 1513. “- While the street clearly seems to be called Katthusen , the spelling Kathusen is noted with a 't' for the district or as a field name , cf. Katasteramt Otterndorf) .
  8. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 3 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 308 (Heinrich Teut still records the spelling Pädingworth , for 1482 Peddingworth , furthermore Pendusen and Jerusalem . He remarks on Jerusalem that this name stands for "Pädingworth and group of houses in Ihlienworth [!]"). see: Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape
     2 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 296 .
  9. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 4 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 281 (Ibid. Also: Süderinn'nweg : Süderenderweg).
  10. ^ Heinrich Rüther: Document book of the Neuenwalde monastery . Books on Demand Verlag, Norderstedt 2002, ISBN 3-8311-3167-8 (Unchanged reprint of the 1905 edition [Hanover / Leipzig, Hahn]). after: Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape
     3 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 202 .
  11. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 3 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 202 .
  12. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 1 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 429 .
  13. ^ Heinrich Teut: Hadeler dictionary. The Low German vocabulary of the country Hadeln (Lower Elbe) . tape 2 . Karl Wachholtz Verlag, Neumünster 1959, p. 296 .
  14. Ludwig Badenius (arrangement), u. a .: Hadeln field names collection. The field names of the property tax cadastre from 1876 for the Prussian offices of Neuhaus a. d. Oste, Osten and Otterndorf as well as the city of Otterndorf, and the field names of the Hamburg land registry for the Ritzebüttel office . Ed .: Men from Morgenstern, Heimatbund at the mouths of the Elbe and Weser (=  special publications of the Heimatbund der Männer vom Morgenstern . Volume 30 ). Self-published, Bremerhaven 1998, ISBN 3-931771-30-X , p. 127 .
  15. CHCF Jansen: Statistical Manual for the Kingdom of Hanover . Helwing'sche Hofbuchhandlung, Hanover 1824 ( limited preview in the Google book search [accessed on July 21, 2019] The number only refers to the parish of that time).
  16. ^ Doris Böker (arrangement): District of Cuxhaven (=  monument topography Federal Republic of Germany. Architectural monuments in Lower Saxony . Volume 19 ). CW Niemeyer Verlag, Hameln 1997, ISBN 3-8271-8259-X , p. 251 (The number only refers to the "church location" at that time).
  17. a b Ludwig Badenius (arrangement), u. a .: Hadeln field names collection. The field names of the property tax cadastre from 1876 for the Prussian offices of Neuhaus a. d. Oste, Osten and Otterndorf as well as the city of Otterndorf, and the field names of the Hamburg land registry for the Ritzebüttel office . Ed .: Men from Morgenstern, Heimatbund at the mouths of the Elbe and Weser (=  special publications of the Heimatbund of the men from Morgenstern . Volume 30 ). Self-published, Bremerhaven 1998, ISBN 3-931771-30-X , p. 127 (according to the census ).
  18. Ludwig Badenius (arrangement), u. a .: Hadeln field names collection. The field names of the property tax cadastre from 1876 for the Prussian offices of Neuhaus a. d. Oste, Osten and Otterndorf as well as the city of Otterndorf, and the field names of the Hamburg land registry for the Ritzebüttel office . Ed .: Men from Morgenstern, Heimatbund at the mouths of the Elbe and Weser (=  special publications of the Heimatbund der Männer vom Morgenstern . Volume 30 ). Self-published, Bremerhaven 1998, ISBN 3-931771-30-X , p. 152 ff . (According to the census ).
  19. ^ Ulrich Schubert: Register of local authorities in Germany 1900 - Hadeln district. Information from December 1, 1910. In: gemeindeververzeichnis.de. January 5, 2020, accessed July 7, 2020 .
  20. ^ A b c Michael Rademacher: German administrative history from the unification of the empire in 1871 to the reunification in 1990. Landkreis Land Hadeln ( see under: No. 36 ). (Online material for the dissertation, Osnabrück 2006).
  21. a b c d e f g h i Population development in the municipality of Hadeln. (No longer available online.) In: otterndorf.de. Archived from the original on September 5, 2012 ; accessed on July 21, 2019 .
  22. Population figures . In: Website of the State Office for Statistics Lower Saxony (LSN). Retrieved May 9, 2019 .
  23. St. Mary's Church. P. 1.
  24. ^ Lower Saxony Municipal Constitutional Law (NKomVG); Section 46 - Number of Deputies. In: Lower Saxony Regulations Information System (NI-VORIS). December 17, 2010, accessed July 20, 2019 .
  25. a b Municipality of Neuenkirchen - overall result of the 2016 municipal council election. In: Website Zweckverband Kommunale Datenverarbeitung Oldenburg (KDO). September 11, 2016, accessed July 20, 2019 .
  26. The CDU gets the most votes nationwide. In: Website Norddeutscher Rundfunk . September 12, 2016. Retrieved February 14, 2017 .
  27. Neuenkirchen City Council. In: Website of the municipality of Land Hadeln. Retrieved April 28, 2018 .
  28. Ingo Tietje: “Neuenkirchen is well positioned overall”. In: Website Cuxhavener Nachrichten / Niederelbe-Zeitung. February 9, 2019, accessed July 21, 2019 .
  29. ^ Rudolf Lembcke: Land Hadeln district. Past and present . Ed .: District of Hadeln. Buchdruckerei Günter Hottendorff, Otterndorf 1976, p. 48 (part of the coat of arms).
  30. ^ Partnership with St. Broladre. (No longer available online.) In: ott-forum.de. Archived from the original on July 22, 2009 ; accessed on July 20, 2019 .
  31. ^ Neuenkirchen, St. Marien, organ by Christoph Donat (1661/62) and Georg Wilhelmy (1835/36). In: Website Nomine. Retrieved July 21, 2019 .
  32. ^ TSV Neuenkirchen. Pp. 13-15.
  33. ^ Ernst-August Eckhoff: The history of the association . In: SV Neuenkirchen N. E. e. V. (Hrsg.): Festschrift - 50 years SV Neuenkirchen N. E. e. V. Neuenkirchen 2000, p. 11 .
  34. ^ Ernst-August Eckhoff: The sports department of SV Neuenkirchen . In: SV Neuenkirchen N. E. e. V. (Hrsg.): Festschrift - 50 years SV Neuenkirchen N. E. e. V. Neuenkirchen 2000, p. 23-25 .
  35. ↑ Number of members. (No longer available online.) In: bezirksschuetzen-elbe-weser.de. May 2019, formerly in the original ; Retrieved August 13, 2008 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archives ) In 2000 there were 236 members, see: Ernst-August Eckhoff: The development of membership numbers . In: SV Neuenkirchen N. E. e. V. (Hrsg.): Festschrift - 50 years SV Neuenkirchen N. E. e. V. Neuenkirchen 2000, p. @1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.bezirksschuetzen-elbe-weser.de

     21 .
  36. Voluntary fire brigades & local youth fire brigades. In: Website of the municipality of Land Hadeln. Retrieved July 21, 2019 .
  37. ^ Ernst-August Eckhoff: The cooperation with the clubs and organizations in Neuenkirchen . In: DRK local association Neuenkirchen Land Hadeln (ed.): Festschrift - 50 years DRK local association Neuenkirchen Land Hadeln . Neuenkirchen October 5, 1996, p. 42 ff .
  38. Mixed Choir Neuenkirchen. P. 11.
  39. ^ Ernst-August Eckhoff: The cooperation with the clubs and organizations in Neuenkirchen . In: DRK local association Neuenkirchen Land Hadeln (ed.): Festschrift - 50 years DRK local association Neuenkirchen Land Hadeln . Neuenkirchen October 5, 1996, p. 42 .
  40. Transitional rules apply until the 2009/2010 school year . In: Niederelbe-Zeitung . May 30, 2007 ( digitized in: www.schule-neuenkirchen.de [accessed on April 28, 2018] see under: Year 2007).
  41. Heiko Völker: Hadler priest ends up at the stake. Albertus Luderus' death sentence was carried out in Schwerin . In: Men from Morgenstern, Heimatbund an Elbe and Weser estuary e. V. (Ed.): Niederdeutsches Heimatblatt . No. 803 . Nordsee-Zeitung GmbH, Bremerhaven November 2016, p. 2–3 ( digitized version [PDF; 5.7 MB ; accessed on July 20, 2019]).