Rangsdorf

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the municipality of Rangsdorf
Rangsdorf
Map of Germany, position of the municipality Rangsdorf highlighted

Coordinates: 52 ° 17 '  N , 13 ° 26'  E

Basic data
State : Brandenburg
County : Teltow-Fläming
Height : 36 m above sea level NHN
Area : 33.79 km 2
Residents: 11,369 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 336 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 15834
Area code : 033708
License plate : TF
Community key : 12 0 72 340
Community structure: Municipality plus two districts
Address of the
municipal administration:
Seebadallee 30
15834 Rangsdorf
Website : www.rangsdorf.de
Mayor : Klaus Rocher ( FDP )
Location of the municipality of Rangsdorf in the Teltow-Fläming district
Am Mellensee Baruth/Mark Blankenfelde-Mahlow Dahme Dahmetal Großbeeren Ihlow (Fläming) Jüterbog Luckenwalde Ludwigsfelde Niederer Fläming Niedergörsdorf Nuthe-Urstromtal Rangsdorf Trebbin Zossen Brandenburgmap
About this picture
Districts and neighboring communities of Rangsdorf

Rangsdorf is a municipality in the Teltow-Fläming district in Brandenburg .

geography

The place is located on the Teltow plateau on Lake Rangsdorf . Parts of the Rangsdorfer See nature reserve are located in the west of the municipality.

Neighboring communities or towns are Blankenfelde-Mahlow in the north, Mittenwalde in the east and Zossen in the south.

Community structure

The following districts belong to the municipality:

history

The history of today's municipality is the history of the individual villages and residential areas that belong to the (greater) municipality of Rangsdorf until the 20th century. Rangsdorf's ascent to a large community began at the end of the 1920s with the sale and parceling of property in the area of ​​the train station and in 1939 with the incorporation of the Groß Machnow (or Neumachnow ) settlement , which until then belonged to the Groß Machnow community . In 1974 Klein Kienitz was incorporated and in 2003 Groß Machnow was incorporated.

Early history

Finds show that the first settlements on Rangsdorf Lake were around 8000 BC. Existed around 2000 years after the end of the last ice age , whose meltwater formed the lake.

After the departure of the Germanic Semnones , Slavic tribes moved into the largely settlement-free area from the 7th century . A Slavic predecessor settlement to Rangsdorf has not yet been established.

middle Ages

The Slavic period came to an end in 1157 with the final conquest of the Teltow and the founding of the Mark Brandenburg by the Ascan Albrecht the Bear . The western Teltow was one of the core areas of the young market. In the course of the state expansion , new settlements were established in the area of ​​the Rangsdorf lake, in addition to Rangsdorf also Pramsdorf and west of the lake Jühnsdorf , east of the lake Groß Machnow .

The first documented mention of Rangsdorf was in 1375 in the land book of Charles IV as Rangenstorpp (or Rangestorff in one of the three surviving manuscripts in the land book). The name Rangsdorf , first mentioned in 1775 , emerged from Rangersdorff (1544), Rangensdorff (1583) . The name probably goes back to a Middle Low German basic form Rangher (e) sdbod and denotes the village of a Rangher , whereby the proper name Rangher is probably derived from the term Rangen = Zanken , in Old High German then = wrestle or in Old Saxon heri = Army . The original village structure was a dead end village with a (later) manor .

The place with its 25 Hufen and 9 Kossaten was much smaller than today's districts of Groß Machnow and Klein Kienitz. A size comparison: Groß Machnow had 80 hooves and 33 hoofs, Klein Kienitz had 30 hooves and 7 hoofs. Remarkably, no parish hooves are mentioned; a clear indication that there was no church and no pastor in the village at that time. Each hoof had to pay for rent ( pactum ) three bushels of rye and three bushels of oats . An interest two had for each hoof Schillinge ( solidi ) and Bede 16 pennies ( denarii ) to be paid. There were nine cottagers in the village, each of whom had to pay one shilling. The village pitcher had to pay two shillings, the mill half a wispel of rye (twelve bushels). The villagers also had to deliver a total of 24 chickens and 60 eggs. Rights in the village were divided. Jacob Rathenow, a citizen of Rangsdorf, had the high court and he was entitled to the farmers' car services . The lower court , however, owned a certain Dyreke in Rudow . The dues of the farmers and kossäts also went to these two people. Jacob Rathenow was entitled to rent and interest for four hooves as well as the payment of all hooves. The Bede was a hereditary fiefdom of the von Torgau family . He was also entitled to 15 chickens. Dyreke received rent and interest from the remaining 21 hooves as well as the remaining chickens and the delivery of eggs.

According to the lap registers ( tax registers ) of 1451, Rangsdorf with its 26 taxable hooves belonged to Henrick Strobant. Each hoof gave three bushels of rye, three bushels of oats, and four groschen. Four kossaets together gave seven groschen a year. The village jug had to pay an annual fee of 12 groschen. In 1472 Berthold, Thomas and Mr. Hans Strobant (a priest) were enfeoffed with Rangsdorf. The village gave three wispel minus six bushels of rye, two wispel 18 bushels of oats and one shock 54 gr. annual interest.

The lap register from 1480 report Henningk Strobant as the owner. One yard was burned down.

Modern times

In 1536 the Reich family of Berlin appears in the documents as the owners of the village. In 1544 six farmers cultivated three Hufen each (among them the Schulze and the Krüger ), four farmers had two Hufen each. Eight cottages had houses with gardens. Some farmers and cottagers cultivated "new land", presumably dry or drained edge areas of the Rangsdorf lake and cabbage gardens. By 1581 a Zweihüfnergut had been withdrawn from the manor and formed the basis for the later manor . It is called a mill for the first time since 1375. In 1571, the Reiche family initially sold half of the village with all rights to Chamber Councilor Dr. Johann Köppen. In 1586 he bought the other half from Henning Reiche. Another Dreihüfnergut had been drawn in by 1598, and a Dreihüfnerhof was added by 1612, so that the manor had eight "freely approved" hooves, ie. H. these hooves were exempt from rent, interest and property taxes. For this, the manor owner had to perform vassal services for the margrave. In 1598 there is talk of a windmill in the village for the first time . In 1608 there were seven farms, four farms each had three hooves under the plow, three farmers cultivated two hooves each. In the village there was the pitcher and a windmill. There were also nine cottagers and a sexton , d. H. there was sure to be a church.

In 1617 one of Kahlenbergs was given the fiefdom confirmation . The following rights and income are listed: Upper and lower court, street court, church leasehold, leaseholds, services, duties, tithes, hunting, windmill, the great Vehling with the Lanke (= Rangsdorfer See), a farm with eight free hooves (manor) , the income from the Dorfkrug ( Zapfenzins ) and the rents, interest and tithes of five farmers who cultivated 16 Hufen as well as the taxes of the four kossas. Each farm and kossaten farm also had to hand over a smoking hen and an interest hen. The Kossaten also pay Bede and Kahnzins, an indication of the fishing carried out on Lake Rangsdorf. Tithes and interest chickens also had to be paid from the “Wüsten Wubert” and the “new land”. From this time on only 24 hooves are mentioned. 1624 a blacksmith is mentioned in the sources.

In 1650 Rangsdorf came into the possession of the von Pfuel family . The village was severely affected by the Thirty Years War . In 1652 only the Schulze, three farmers and seven Kossäts (each with their families) lived in the village. The peasant and farm positions that had fallen desolate were occupied again. Around 1682, Rangsdorf came into the possession of the von Hake family . The last von Hake died unmarried, and from this the place went to the von Otterstedt family in 1738 . In 1785 Erasmus Dietrich von Redern acquired the village and manor; from his estate it came into the possession of Georg Dietrich von der Groeben . His widow sold it to Budget Minister Heinrich Ludwig von Buchholz in 1801. New owners followed in quick succession: in 1804 Wolf Friedrich Ludwig von Quast , in 1807 Eberhardt August Freiherr von Medem, then Count von Hake, bailiff Bohnstedt and in 1818 bailiff Körner. In 1855 the property was sold and in 1876 it came to Ferdinand Spiekermann after several changes of ownership . However, he died in 1880; his son Richard Spiekermann followed him. At that time the community had 150 inhabitants and the manor district 91 inhabitants. Richard Spiekermann was head of the Groß Machnow office and patron of the village church. He had this rebuilt from 1888 to 1890.

Richard Spiekermann died in 1921. Apparently the estate was heavily in debt, because the son of the same name Richard Spiekermann jun. turned down the inheritance. The owner became the widow of Richard Spiekermann senior, Emilie Spiekermann. She tried to renovate the property by selling parts of it. Ultimately, the estate was sold to the Teltow district for 1,150,000 RM in 1927 . At that time, the estate comprised around 710 hectares. In 1928, the district of Teltow sold the previously closed Rangsdorfer See and a larger forest area north of the town center to the Krummen Lanke to the community (a total of 389 hectares). The remnants with the estate and land south of the village were also sold to a private person in 1928. A smaller part of the forest and the Krumme Lanke remained in the Teltow district. Immediately after the sale, the municipality of Rangsdorf began to develop Lake Rangsdorf into a seaside resort. Land north of Seebadallee was parceled out and sold. In 1930 the owner of the remaining property also sold land south of the village center; the "Little Venice" settlement was created. In 1935, 145 hectares of the remnants were expropriated against compensation and built on the grounds of the Reichssportflughafen Rangsdorf and the Bücker Flugzeugwerke .

In 1946 the remaining 35 hectares of the remaining property were expropriated and z. Partly distributed to new farmers. The estate initially remained in the Rangsdorf community's land fund. The headquarters of the Soviet armed forces was housed in the manor. Later some families lived in the manor. From 1946 the agricultural cooperative Rangsdorf used the manor house, later also the LPG Seeperle and the VEB Getreidewirtschaft. With the turnaround , the manor house came into the possession of the federal government, in 1992 it was sold with a renovation obligation. The renovation was not carried out and the building fell into disrepair. In 2005 the Arbeiter-Samariter-Bund Königs Wusterhausen had the building demolished and from 2006 a two-storey nursing home built. Elements of the old manor house were incorporated into the facade design.

Railway and the ascent to the "Seebad"

In the 1870s a railway connection from Berlin to Dresden was built ( Berlin-Dresdener Eisenbahn ), which touched Rangsdorf on the eastern edge of the district. A train station was built in the district of Rangsdorf; on June 17, 1875, public transport was opened. The Royal Prussian Military Railway to the shooting range in Kummersdorf was built parallel to this line in the 1880s . However, the tracks were dismantled in 1920. In 1928 parts of the manor were parceled out and sold. Rangsdorf made a further leap in the population development in 1939 with the addition of the Groß Machnow (also Neu-Machnow) settlement , which had arisen east of the railway line and southwest of the train station. In 1940 Rangsdorf was connected to the Berlin S-Bahn .

Due to the good transport connections, Rangsdorf became a destination for Berliners in the 1920s. The first sales facilities, seating and changing rooms were built on the beach. A bathhouse is already recorded on the measuring table sheet 1: 25000 Zossen from 1903 (with additions until 1912). Further buildings were erected until 1928, and the bathing area was now called "Seebad". In 1929 the community bought a large glass hall in Berlin, which was originally made in 1896 for the trade exhibition in Berlin-Treptow. It had initially served as a beer hall in Berlin before it found its way to Rangsdorf. It was rebuilt there in 1930 next to the outdoor pool. The "beach casino" offered 1,500 seats and a further 5,000 seats outside. In the 1930 season, Rangsdorf had over 100,000 guests. In 1934 the “Strand Casino” was fundamentally redesigned and renamed the Seebad Casino. After 1945 owner and operator changed several times before it was then taken over by the GDR's consumption and managed until 1991. Right next to it, a campsite and a holiday complex with bungalows were built. In 1991 the site came back to the Rangsdorf community, which initially leased it. In 1996 the Seebad Casino had to be closed. After years of vacancy, it was acquired by the current owner. He built a new building that was opened in 2000, today's hotel and restaurant Seebad-Casino.

Rangsdorf airfield

Remains of an airfield building with tower (2012)

As early as 1935, the Bücker Flugzeugbau company had moved from Berlin-Johannisthal to Rangsdorf. In the same year the Reich Aviation Ministry decided to build a land and water airport in Rangsdorf. The Reichssportflughafen Rangsdorf was opened on July 30, 1936 according to plans by Ernst Sagebiel . It also remained the factory airport of the Bücker works until 1945. This included the aero club house on Rangsdorfer See and an imperial school for powered flight . The runway was just grassy. At the beginning of the Second World War , civil air traffic was relocated from Berlin-Tempelhof to Rangsdorf from October 1939 to March 1940 . Shortly afterwards, the airfield became an air base , where some air force units were stationed.

Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg started on July 20, 1944 at 7:00 a.m. in a Heinkel 111 with his adjutant Oberleutnant Werner von Haeften from there to Wolfsschanze near Rastenburg in East Prussia, where he carried out the assassination attempt on Hitler .

Today, a small part of the former airfield is used by the model assembly group of the Bücker Association as a model aircraft field. The privately run Seeschule (all-day high school with an attached boarding school) is located in the buildings today . The history of the former airport is presented in the Bücker Aviation and European Ice Sails Museum .

In 2018 the site was sold to an investor. From 2020 the site is to be built on and the listed buildings are to be renovated.

Administrative history

Rangsdorf and its current districts belonged to the Teltow district in the Prussian province of Brandenburg since 1817 and to the Zossen district in the GDR district of Potsdam from 1952 . Since 1993 they have been in the Brandenburg district of Teltow-Fläming.

Population development

year Residents
1875 225
1890 244
1910 373
1925 452
1933 1 095
1939 4 120
1946 4 922
1950 5 096
year Residents
1964 5 375
1971 5,965
1981 5 832
1985 5 569
1989 5,342
1990 5 256
1991 5 183
1992 5 212
1993 5 280
1994 5,308
year Residents
1995 5 366
1996 5,474
1997 5,936
1998 6 317
1999 6 763
2000 7 114
2001 7 377
2002 7 619
2003 8 977
2004 9 236
year Residents
2005 9 545
2006 9 745
2007 10 002
2008 10 190
2009 10 372
2010 10 515
2011 10 444
2012 10 498
2013 10 609
2014 10 824
year Residents
2015 10 848
2016 11 163
2017 11 279
2018 11 309
2019 11 369

Territory of the respective year, number of inhabitants: as of December 31 (from 1991), from 2011 based on the 2011 census

politics

Community representation

Election of the municipal council 2019
Turnout 69.3%
 %
30th
20th
10
0
21.0%
16.4%
14.5%
10.7%
9.9%
9.7%
9.3%
8.6%
The Rangsdorf
AfR g
Gains and losses
compared to 2014
 % p
 18th
 16
 14th
 12
 10
   8th
   6th
   4th
   2
   0
  -2
  -4
  -6
  -8th
-10
+ 2.9  % p
+ 16.4  % p
-8.2  % p
-7.9  % p
+ 2.5  % p
+ 2.5  % p
+ 9.3  % p
-7.1  % p
The Rangsdorf
AfR g
Template: election chart / maintenance / notes
Remarks:
g Alliance for Rangsdorf

The community council consists of 22 community representatives and the full-time mayor:

Party / group of voters Seats
FDP 5
The Rangsdorfer - citizens for Rangsdorf 4th
SPD 3
CDU 2
Alliance 90 / The Greens 2
Alternative for Germany 2
Alliance for Rangsdorf 2
The left 2

(Result of the election of the municipal council on May 26, 2019)

The municipal council appoints a voluntary equal opportunities officer, a child and youth officer and an officer for the disabled and senior citizens.

mayor

  • 1998–2003: Peter Gleich (CDU)
  • since 2003: Klaus Rocher (FDP)

Rocher was elected in the mayoral election on September 20, 2019 with 59.9% of the valid votes for a further term of eight years.

Mayor and local council

The local advisory board of the district of Groß Machnow consists of three members (mayor and two councilors). Jan Mühlmann-Skupien was elected mayor in 2019.

In the Klein Kienitz district, only one mayor is elected. Hans-Jürgen Beyrow has held this office since the 2014 local elections.

coat of arms

Blazon : “The coat of arms of the municipality shows, split from blue and silver; in front three silver (white) fish placed on stakes, turned to the left, behind a rooted blue pine. "

Partnerships

A partnership has existed with the city of Lichtenau (Westphalia) since 1993 . Other city and community partners are Pieniężno (Poland) and Fardella (southern Italy).

Sights and culture

Church in Rangsdorf

Buildings

The community has some listed buildings, which are listed in the list of architectural monuments in Rangsdorf .

The village church of Rangsdorf was completely rebuilt from 1888 to 1890 by the then manor owner Richard Spiekermann in a historicizing style on the foundation walls of an older church. It still contains some older pieces of equipment from the previous church.

The village church of Klein Kienitz is an early Gothic stone church that was built around 1300. In 1739 a renovation took place in which, among other things, the windows were enlarged in Baroque style. Inside there is an altar retable from the 17th century and two epitaphs next to a child's grave stone from 1603.

The former clubhouse of the Reichssportflughafen Rangsdorf (“Aeroclub-Haus”) was built in 1935/1936. The building was renovated after 2000 and handed over to the private high school "Seeschule" in 2004. The building houses the school administration, the cafeteria, two classrooms and various specialist rooms. There is also a memorial stone for Colonel Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg on the grounds of the Seeschule .

Museums

In Rangsdorf there was the Bücker Museum, which was reminiscent of the Reichssportflughafen Rangsdorf established in Rangsdorf in 1935 and the Bücker aircraft structures located here , as well as the European Ice Sailing Museum, in which the history of this winter sport was presented. Both museums have been closed since 2016.

nature

The municipality owns some registered natural monuments.

  • Row of linden trees, path between Friedensallee (at the level of Frühlingsstraße) and Römerschanze, because of its age, size and beauty
  • Oak, Alemannenallee, on the northern edge of the property, because of its age and size
  • Lindenallee, Friedensallee between Frühlingsstrasse and Weinbergweg, characterize the townscape
  • Linde, Gartenstr. 5, because of age and size
  • Six English oaks, 0.9 km north of the church and on the vineyard in the area of ​​the Römerschanze, because of their age and size
  • Grove of oak trees, a little east of the Römerschanze, due to age and size
  • Oak, Grenzweg, southern part, because of its age and size as well as its beauty that defines the townscape
  • Pedunculate oak, 1.3 km north-north-west of the church, on the eastern bank of the Krumme Lanke, because of its age and size
  • Lindenallee, Lindenallee, because of the beauty of the town
  • Pedunculate oak, 1.5 km north of the church, on the northeast bank of the Krummen Lanke, because of its age and size

Parts of the Diedersdorfer Heide and Großbeerener Graben protected landscape areas belong to the municipality.

Soil monuments

In the district of Rangsdorf, the following ground monuments are shown in the state monument list:

  • Rest and work area of ​​the Stone Age
  • Prehistory settlement
  • Several settlements from prehistory and early history
  • Bronze Age settlement
  • Several burial grounds from the Bronze Age
  • Iron Age settlement
  • Several settlements from the Roman Empire
  • Desertification of the German Middle Ages (northwest of the Machnower See, also located on the Groß Machnower district)
  • Modern ski jump
  • Village center

Rangsdorfer See

Rangsdorfer See (2012)

The motorboat-free Rangsdorfer See is the core area of ​​the Rangsdorfer See nature reserve . With its protected southern edge areas, it is one of the most important Brandenburg wintering areas for Nordic wild geese . Between 30,000 and 70,000 migratory birds , coming from Siberia, temporarily settle here.

In the winter months, the lake freezes over very quickly due to its shallow depth, making it a traditional ice sailing area in the Berlin area. In recent years, new ice sports such as ice kite sailing with skis , buggies or boards , ice surfing and ice skating have established themselves .

In the summer months mainly are Knickspantjollen type "Pirate" and "OK" and launches to see the class ZK 10 on the lake. The Rangsdorfer Segelgemeinschaft 53 and the Seesportclub Rangsdorf are located at the lake. If the wind increases strongly, numerous surfers ( windsurfers and kite sailors ) populate the lake.

The Rangsdorfer See has a declining water level and threatens to silt up. A non-profit association has been founded to save Lake Rangsdorf. In 2008, the Teltow-Fläming district council unanimously accepted a motion to rehabilitate the five large lakes in the district, the Rangsdorfer See, the Mellensee, the Großer Wünsdorfer See, the Blankensee and the Siethener See over the next 30 years.

The district “Little Venice”, which got its name from the canal system connected to Lake Rangsdorf, is well worth seeing . The Nymphensee is idyllically located in the residential area . Other lakes are the Kiessee in the Pramsdorf area directly on the Berlin-Dresden railway line, and the Machnower See between Pramsdorf and Großmachnow. The Glasow Brook (Krumme Lanke area) flows into the Rangsdorf Lake and leaves the lake as the Zülow Canal in the direction of the Dahme near Königs Wusterhausen.

Economy and Infrastructure

Established businesses

With the Südringcenter, Rangsdorf (on Groß Machnower district) has a large, easily accessible shopping center just a few hundred meters from the Rangsdorf motorway junction .

A larger industrial area has settled in the Theresenhof area , also in the Groß Machnower district. There are numerous smaller businesses in the village itself.

traffic

Rangsdorf station, now demolished (2009)

Rangsdorf is located on the federal highway 96 , which has been expanded to four lanes from the Berlin city limits to Rangsdorf and continues to Zossen . The A 10 motorway (southern Berlin Ring) with the Rangsdorf junction runs through the municipality. The Rangsdorf motorway maintenance facility is located at the junction .

The Rangsdorf station 's support for regional trains on the Berlin-Dresden railway . It is served by the regional express lines RE 5 Rostock / Stralsund- Berlin- Elsterwerda / Wünsdorf-Waldstadt and RE 7 Dessau- Berlin-Wünsdorf-Waldstadt.

The railway line runs almost centrally through the community. On April 9, 2018, the barred level crossing was replaced by a tunnel under the tracks. The listed station building (see illustration) was demolished in the course of this construction work.

A citizens' initiative is committed to restoring the S2 S-Bahn line from Blankenfelde to Rangsdorf (4.7 km), which existed until the Wall was built in 1961. On June 8, 2018, Minister Woidtke announced that the S-Bahn from Blankenfelde via Dahlewitz to Rangsdorf would be restored.

Personalities

Honorary citizen

Sons and daughters of the church

  • Johann Ludwig Coste (1809–1886), Prussian district administrator, born in Groß Machnow
  • Karl Emil Jung (1833–1902), teacher, explorer and geographer, born in Groß Machnow
  • Klaus Bochow (1950–2010), politician ( SPD ), born in Rangsdorf

Personalities associated with Rangsdorf

  • Ferdinand Spiekermann (1812–1880), a Berlin doctor, bought the Rangsdorf manor in 1874, father of the later owner Richard Spiekermann
  • Richard Spiekermann (1853–1921), manor owner, donated the memorial for the fallen in World War I and financed the renovation of the Rangsdorf church from 1888–1890
  • Otto Werner (1885–1954), architect, built numerous public and private buildings in Rangsdorf
  • Carl Clemens Bücker (1895–1976), founder of the Bücker Flugzeugbau -Werke
  • Heinz Rühmann (1902–1994), actor and hobby pilot, started his flights from the Rangsdorf airfield at times
  • Georg Hansen (1904–1944), colonel, resident of Rangsdorf and involved in the assassination attempt on Hitler
  • Jean Weidt (1904–1988), dancer and choreographer, lived in Rangsdorf
  • Elly Beinhorn (1907–2007), aviator in Rangsdorf, wife of Bernd Rosemeyer
  • Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg (1907–1944), flew from Rangsdorf on July 20, 1944 to Rastenburg to assassinate Hitler
  • Erich Rackwitz (1908–1992), author of popular science books for young people, lived in Rangsdorf since 1951
  • Bernd Rosemeyer (1909–1938), racing driver, husband of Elly Beinhorn, avid aviator in Rangsdorf
  • Beate Uhse (1919–2001), entrepreneur, learned to fly at Rangsdorf airfield, flyer in the Bücker aircraft factory and flyer
  • Ursula Wendorff-Weidt (1919–2000), painter and graphic artist, wife of Jean Weidt, lived in Rangsdorf
  • Peter Hacks (1928–2003), poet, lived in the summer months on the Fenne near Groß-Machnow since the mid-1970s
  • Anna Elisabeth Wiede (1928–2009), wife of Peter Hacks, lived on the Fenne near Groß-Machnow
  • Ronald Paris (* 1933), painter, created the ceiling paintings in the Groß Machnow manor.
  • Jacky Gleich (* 1964), illustrator and painter, grew up in Rangsdorf
  • Ulrike Finck (* 1976), TV presenter, grew up in Rangsdorf
  • Jana Schimke (* 1979), politician (CDU), member of the German Bundestag since 2013 , lives in Rangsdorf
  • Ramona Kühne (* 1980), professional boxer, lives in Rangsdorf
  • Christine Beier (* 1983), handball player, played for SV Lok Rangsdorf
  • Tobias Reichmann (* 1988), handball player, played for SV Lok Rangsdorf

literature

  • Gerhard Schlimpert: Brandenburg name book, part 3, The place names of the Teltow . Hermann Böhlaus Nachf., Weimar 1972 (Rangsdorf p. 152)
  • 600 years of Rangsdorf ; Festschrift, prepared on behalf of the Council of the Rangsdorf community by an editorial board under the direction of Siegfried Wietstruk; Rangsdorf: Council of the community, 1974, 101 pp.
  • Siegfried Wietstruk: Rangsdorf airfield near Berlin. From Rühmann to Morosow . Society for Transport Policy and Railways 2001

Web links

Commons : Rangsdorf  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Population in the State of Brandenburg according to municipalities, offices and municipalities not subject to official registration on December 31, 2019 (XLSX file; 223 KB) (updated official population figures) ( help on this ).
  2. ^ Service portal of the state administration Brandenburg. Rangsdorf community
  3. a b c List of monuments of the state of Brandenburg: Teltow-Fläming district (PDF) Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum
  4. a b Siegfried Wietstruk: How the Rangsdorfer manor died. Heimatjahrbuch Teltow-Fläming 2007, Luckenwalde 2007, pp. 28–35
  5. EF von Herzberg: Register of the Lantschoss that we Henrick Schullenholtz Ulrich Kuchemeyster Petrus Pletz calculated by our gracious lord because of Margreve Fridrich der Alde von Brandenborch and have received from the orden, 1451, pp. 301–356, here Rangsdorf p. 310 ( Online at Google Books).
  6. ^ Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel: Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis. Supplement tape. 515 S., Berlin, G. Reimer 1865 Online at Google Books (p. 329)
  7. Ernst Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg: or history of the individual districts, cities, manors, foundations and villages in the same, as a continuation of the Landbuch Kaiser Karl's IV. Berlin, Verlag von J. Guttentag, 1856 online at Google Books (here Eiche P. 259)
  8. ^ Leopold von Ledebur: Adelslexikon der Prussischen Monarchy . Rauh, 1856, pp. 196-197.
  9. ^ Carsten Preuß, Hiltrud Preuß: The manor houses and mansions in the Teltow-Fläming district . Lukas Verlag, 2011, ISBN 978-3-86732-100-6 , p. 232.
  10. ^ Railway lines in the state of Brandenburg: Berlin-Dresden Railway
  11. ^ Günter Hamann: Rangsdorf - then and now. Home calendar of the district of Zossen 1957, Zossen 1957, pp. 55–59
  12. ^ Bücker Museum: Reichssportflughafen
  13. ^ Bücker Museum: From Rangsdorf to Moscow
  14. ^ Seeschule Rangsdorf: School campus for Berlin and Brandenburg. Retrieved September 18, 2018 .
  15. ^ Förderverein Bücker-Museum Rangsdorf eV Accessed on September 18, 2018 .
  16. Terraplan presents the first ideas for the Bücker site. Retrieved October 1, 2018 .
  17. Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. District Teltow-Fläming . Pp. 26-29
  18. Population in the state of Brandenburg from 1991 to 2017 according to independent cities, districts and municipalities , Table 7
  19. ^ Office for Statistics Berlin-Brandenburg (Ed.): Statistical report AI 7, A II 3, A III 3. Population development and population status in the state of Brandenburg (respective editions of the month of December)
  20. Result of the local elections on May 26, 2019. Accessed on July 25, 2019 .
  21. Main statutes of the Rangsdorf community PDF
  22. Results of the local elections in 1998 (mayoral elections) for the Teltow-Fläming district ( Memento of the original from April 9, 2018 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.wahlen.brandenburg.de
  23. Local elections October 26, 2003. Mayoral elections , p. 33
  24. Brandenburg Local Election Act, Section 74
  25. ^ Result of the mayoral election on September 20, 2019
  26. Coat of arms information from the main statute of the municipality
  27. ^ Message from the Mayor of Rangsdorf - Visit to the twin town Fardella / Italy from June 14th to 19th, 2012. July 3rd, 2012.
  28. Exhibits are moving. In: Märkische Allgemeine , January 27, 2016
  29. Natural monuments of the Teltow-Fläming district - Trees PDF ( Memento of the original from December 14, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.teltow-flaeming.de
  30. Rangsdorfer Segelgemeinschaft 53 ( Memento of the original from June 15, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.rangsdorfer-segelgemeinschaft.de
  31. Seesportclub Rangsdorf
  32. ^ Aerial Brandenburg. Retrieved October 1, 2018 .
  33. ^ Rescue of the Rangsdorfer See eV. Retrieved December 28, 2018 .
  34. a b Association wants to save the lake. Retrieved October 1, 2018 .
  35. ^ Association for the rescue of the Rangsdorf lake founded . In: Die Rangsdorfer - Citizens for Rangsdorf eV August 30, 2018 ( die-rangsdorfer.de [accessed October 1, 2018]).
  36. ^ S-Bahn Rangsdorf: The S-Bahn is coming. Retrieved September 18, 2018 .
  37. Dr Ralf von der Bank: ALLIANZ political model for Rangsdorf. Retrieved April 28, 2019 (German).
  38. ^ Topics / election program 2019 of the citizens' initiative “Die Rangsdorfer” for Rangsdorf . In: Die Rangsdorfer - Bürger für Rangsdorf eV ( die-rangsdorfer.de [accessed on October 1, 2018]).