Rädigke

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rädigke
Municipality Rabenstein / Fläming
Coordinates: 52 ° 3 ′ 15 ″  N , 12 ° 37 ′ 28 ″  E
Height : 89  (85-105)  m
Residents : 148  (Jan 1, 2006)
Incorporation : July 1, 2002
Postal code : 14823
Area code : 033843
Rädigke (Brandenburg)
Rädigke

Location of Rädigke in Brandenburg

Rädigke is a district of the municipality Rabenstein / Fläming in the Potsdam-Mittelmark district in the state of Brandenburg .

location

Rädigke is located at an altitude of between 85 and 105 m above sea level north of the federal motorway 9 on the Niemegk - Raben road on the southern bank of the tarpaulin in an undulating landscape shaped by the Saale Ice Age with boulders from the Ice Age in the Hoher Fläming Nature Park . The place borders in the north on Buchholz b. Niemegk , to the east to Neuendorf , to the south to Klein Marzehns and to the west to Raben .

history

Land map from 1804
The village pond 1970

According to tradition, Rädigke is said to be the oldest place founded by Slavs in the High Fläming . The place name is probably derived from Slav Radowe or Rodowe - meeting place or is a derivation of the Slavic personal name "Roderik". On an information board in the place, Rodeko is also given as the origin. Experts suspect that as early as 950 there was a Burgward on the Wachtelberg behind the church, which was still used by the Slavs after 983. The elevation can be reached via a ravine , which at that time could have served as a moat. Rädigke was first mentioned in 1135 and 1136 with Johann Rodeko and had an important position thanks to its strategically favorable location (on the ford over the tarpaulin at the so-called horse bridge and the shortest connection from Wittenberg to Belzig and Brandenburg). After 1200, the autochthonous Slavic rule was ended by Albrecht I of Saxony (1212-1260) with the appointment of the knight Konrad von Rabenstein - called Wolf's Eye - on the newly built Rabenstein Castle . Rädigke is originally a Rundling , which at the time of colonization (after 1170) was first expanded to a dead end village . German settlers built a church in the "Unterdorf". During the late medieval agrarian crisis , the 13 shared Hufner and Kossäten from Rädike the deserted villages of New Niemegk and Wilzhagen 1461 between them. 1591 followed the division of the district deserted village Wulkow between Raben 1/3 and 2/3 Rädigke. As a result, Rädigke had the largest demarcation in the Rabenstein office thanks to the 62 newly added hooves . This year the name Rödigke appears for the first time . In the Thirty Years' War the place was devastated to one hoof . The rebuilding of a watermill has been handed down from 1708. It is located on Mühlenweg north of the town center at the so-called Mühlenhof . Between 1727 and 1783 the son Andreas and the grandson Peter Jun. Of the mercenary Peter Hagendorf are mentioned in a document as the owner of the Dornberger-Hof . In 1804 13 farms were officially named again. In 1815, the district of Zauch-Belzig and thus also Rädigke passed to the Kingdom of Prussia as spoils of war in accordance with the resolutions of the Congress of Vienna . With the settlement of a blacksmith in 1821, the craftsmen's quarter was founded. In 1837 there were 20 houses in the village. After 1945, further settlement courtyards as well as stables and warehouses were built by the LPG in the eastern part of the village . In 1969 Neuendorf was incorporated.

In 1766, the Protestant theologian Friedrich Joseph Grulich was born in Rädigke.

The entire municipality of Rabenstein / Fläming was created on July 1, 2002 from the voluntary amalgamation of the previously independent municipalities of Buchholz near Niemegk, Garrey (with the municipal parts of Zixdorf and Wüstemark), Groß Marzehns, Klein Marzehns, Raben and Rädigke.

Rädigke has a campsite , boarding houses and restaurants , a Fläming library and an agricultural cooperative .

Buildings

  • The village church Rädigke is a stone church , which was probably built at the end of the 12th century or the beginning of the 13th century. In 1858 the interior was renovated; In 1903 the windows on the nave were enlarged. Inside there is an altarpiece from 1690 and a pulpit from 1703.
  • Memorial stone for those who fell in the world wars south of the village church
  • The homestead at Hauptstraße 42 with a residential building, gatehouse and two stable buildings is a listed building.
  • Enclosure with mouflon
  • In the “pigeon house”, agricultural technologies and equipment are shown and demonstrated on certain occasions.

tourism

Due to its proximity to the cities of Potsdam , Treuenbrietzen , Jüterbog , Lutherstadt Wittenberg , Wörlitzer Park , Wiesenburg and the city of Brandenburg on the one hand and its location in the Hoher Fläming Nature Park on the other hand, Rädigke offers itself as a starting point for a wide variety of leisure activities and discovery tours, e.g. B. to the many stone churches from the 13th century, to the water and post mills in the neighboring villages, to the "giant stones" or to the "million bridge" between Raben, Rädigke and Klein Marzehns.

The European cycle route R1 and the European long-distance hiking route E 11 lead through the municipality of Rabenstein / Planetal .

event

  • Readings in the Fläming Library
  • Folk festival Whitsun feast

Individual evidence

  1. Information board about Rädigke, set up south of the village church, as of February 2016
  2. ^ Rädigke , website of the Niemegk District Office, accessed on March 1, 2016.
  3. Bernd Moritz, Gerd-Christian Treutler: The farms of Rädigke, Hoher Fläming . In: Brandenburgisches Genealogisches Jahrbuch . tape 5 , 2011, p. 51 ff . ( bggroteradler.de [PDF]).
  4. StBA: Changes in the municipalities in Germany, see 2002
  5. Christina Matte (text) and Joachim Fieguth (picture): Buddenbrooks and farmer's breakfast. The first and so far only library inn in Germany is located in Rädigke im Fläming. In: Neues Deutschland from 11./12. October 2014, p. 32

Web links

Commons : Rädigke  - collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Rädigke , website of the Niemegk Office, accessed on March 1, 2016.
  • Rädigke on the Internet private homepage
  • Rädigke town portrait from the series Landschleicher on rbb, accessed on March 2, 2016.