Ponnsdorf

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Ponnsdorf
Municipality mass Niederlausitz
Coordinates: 51 ° 39 ′ 43 "  N , 13 ° 41 ′ 0"  E
Height : 101 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 142  (December 31, 2011)
Incorporation : December 31, 2001
Postal code : 03238
Area code : 03531

Ponnsdorf ( Lower Sorbian Bónojce ) is a district of the municipality of Massen-Niederlausitz in the district of Elbe-Elster in Brandenburg . The place belongs to the Amt Kleine Elster (Niederlausitz) and was an independent municipality until December 31, 2001.

location

Ponnsdorf is located in Niederlausitz , about three kilometers north of the city of Finsterwalde and four kilometers southeast of the city of Sonnewalde . Surrounding villages are the Sonnewald districts of Pießig in the north and Möllendorf in the northeast, Gröbitz in the east, Massen in the southeast, the city of Finsterwalde in the south and Münchhausen, which in turn belongs to Sonnewalde, in the west.

Ponnsdorf is at a junction of the county road 6230. From the village a road leads to Münchhausen, where it ends at the federal road 96 ( Luckau –Finsterwalde) 2.5 kilometers away . The Kleine Elster flows north of Ponnsdorf .

history

Ponnsdorf was first mentioned in 1383 as "Pfundesdorf". The village structure is an anger village . The place name is derived from a Low German personal name "Pfund" or "Pund"; the name Ponsdorf can be traced back to 1541.

Ponnsdorf was formerly a Vasallengut the deposit rule Dobrilugk and belonged along with six other villages for sun Walder share of rule. The place has had the same ownership history together with Gröbitz for a long time. 1537 Caspar received from Minckwitz the two villages for the payment of a loan to the abbot and the convent to Dobrilugk, by the secularization of the monastery in 1541 Minckwitz came to the village in the full possession and got in 1557 by Emperor Ferdinand I the fief . In August 1629 the villages of Ponnsdorf and Gröbitz were bought by Johann Georg I for 13,000 guilders and incorporated into the Finsterwalde office. Before the Congress of Vienna and the cession of territory by the Kingdom of Saxony to the Kingdom of Prussia , Ponnsdorf belonged to Saxony. From 1816 the village belonged to the Luckau district of the Prussian province of Brandenburg .

In 1840, according to the topographical-statistical overview of the administrative district of Frankfurt adO, Ponnsdorf had 24 residential buildings with 121 inhabitants and belonged to the Dobrilugk Rent Office . Two windmills belonged to Ponnsdorf . Ecclesiastically the village belonged to the masses . By 1864 the number of inhabitants in Ponnsdorf rose to 176, the place was then part of the Finsterwalde office in the Dobrilugk registry. A brick factory is also mentioned for this year .

Until 1815, Ponnsdorf belonged to the Luckau district , which was converted into the Luckau district after the changes in territory at the Congress of Vienna. After the Second World War , the community was initially in the Soviet occupation zone and then in the GDR . During the district reform carried out in the GDR on July 25, 1952, the community was incorporated into the Finsterwalde district in the Cottbus district. After the reunification , the Finsterwalde district was renamed the Finsterwalde district and finally dissolved, the Ponnsdorf community was assigned to the Elbe-Elster district and joined the Kleine Elster (Niederlausitz) office . On December 31, 2001, Ponnsdorf was incorporated into the municipality of Massen-Niederlausitz , which was formed in 1997 .

Population development

Population development in Ponnsdorf from 1875 to 2000
year Residents year Residents year Residents
1875 186 1939 176 1981 142
1890 151 1946 291 1985 147
1910 171 1950 270 1989 143
1925 157 1964 177 1995 134
1933 170 1971 168 2000 143

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Müller's Large German Local Book 2012: Complete local dictionary. 33. revised and exp. Ed., Walter de Gruyter, Berlin and Boston 2012, ISBN 978-3-11-027420-2 , online at Google Books , p. 1097
  2. Reinhard E. Fischer : The place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin: age - origin - meaning . be.bra Wissenschaft, 2005, p. 132 .
  3. August Schumann: Complete state, post and newspaper encyclopedia from Saxony, vol. 8. Ortmannsdorf to Rehbach. Gebr. Schumann, Zwickau 1821 Online , p. 505
  4. Topographical-statistical overview of the government district of Frankfurt ad O. Gustav Harnecker's bookstore, Frankfurt a. O. 1844 Online at Google Books , p. 160.
  5. Topographical-statistical manual of the government district of Frankfurt a. O. Verlag von Gustav Harnecker u. Co., 1867 Online at Google Books , p. 183.
  6. ^ Historical register of the state of Brandenburg from 1875 to 2005. (PDF; 331 KB) Elbe-Elster district. State Office for Data Processing and Statistics State of Brandenburg, December 2006, accessed on August 22, 2018 .