Preten (Neuhaus Office)

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Pretends
Unified municipality of Neuhaus
Coordinates: 53 ° 19 ′ 19 ″  N , 10 ° 54 ′ 34 ″  E
Height : approx. 12 m
Residents : 104
Incorporation : 1st January 1974
Incorporated into: Dellien
Postal code : 19273
Area code : 038841
former Preten train station (2011)
former Preten train station (2011)

Preten is a district of the municipality of Amt Neuhaus east of the Elbe and belongs to the village of Dellien in Lower Saxony .

geography

Preten lies between the Krainke and Sude rivers . The Krainke flows northwest of Preten into the Sude. The brew flows into the Elbe at Boizenburg / Gothmann . The state border with Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania runs one and a half kilometers north and east of the town .

Surname

That the name is of Slavic origin is undisputed in the literature. For the concrete meaning, however, two different derivations are mainly used:

In 1901 Paul Kühnel added the name Preten to altsl. prêtŭ (threat) or prêtonŭ (Aushau), while Jürgen Udolph 1998 interprets Preten as a fisherman's field name (deepening, shoal in the lake).

history

In the 11th and 12th centuries settled in the area Pretener Slavic polabians . Hence the word preten is of Slavic origin.

In 1328 Heinrich von Mecklenburg granted permission to build a new castle at the Herzogsfurt "unde scolen en buwen en hus to des Hertogenvorde up use kost".

After the end of the Second World War, Preten came to the Soviet occupation zone and thus to the GDR since 1949. On January 1, 1974, Preten lost its independence as part of the area changes in the Schwerin district and was incorporated into Dellien . The Neuhaus office became part of Lower Saxony in 1993 through a state treaty .

Web links

Commons : Preten  - collection of images, videos and audio files

swell

  • Werner Hüls, From Darzing to the community of Amt Neuhaus. Lüneburg (approx. 1996)
  • Sabine Wittkopf, Preten Herrenhaus - History. (Neuhaus) (approx. 2000) - unprinted [1]
  • The Slavic place and field names in Lüneburg. Collected and explained by senior teacher P. Kühnel. (Reprint from the journal of the Historiſchen Verein für Niedersachsen. Born in 1901.) Reprint Leipzig 1982
  • Jürgen Udolph, German and Slavic in the toponymy of northern Lower Saxony. In: Onomastica Slavogermanica XXIII. (Saxon Academy of Sciences) Leipzig (© 1998)