Reuden (Calau)
Repentance
Rudna City of Calau
Coordinates: 51 ° 45 ′ 17 ″ N , 14 ° 0 ′ 26 ″ E
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Height : | 68 m above sea level NHN |
Residents : | 105 (Jun. 1, 2020) |
Incorporation : | May 1st 1974 |
Incorporated into: | Saßleben |
Postal code : | 03205 |
Area code : | 03541 |
Reuden , Rudna in Lower Sorbian , is a part of the municipality of Saßleben and thus part of the city of Calau in the northern part of the Oberspreewald-Lausitz district in southern Brandenburg .
location
Reuden is located in Niederlausitz, east of the Niederlausitzer Landücken Nature Park .
To the north-west of Reuden is the Kalkwitz district , to the north is Dubrau , which is part of the town of Vetschau / Spreewald , and the Koßwig district of Vetschau . In the east, Reuden borders on Repten , Erlenau and Bolschwitz . Gahlen follows to the south and the city of Calau to the south-east. To the west of Reuden is Saßleben.
history
Local history
In 1975 a burial ground was discovered near Reuden that contained clay vessels from around 1200 BC. Chr. Contained. These are now in the local history museum in Calau.
The first mention was in 1438. The name is derived from the Lower Sorbian word ruda for lawn iron stone . In 1447 the place was named as Rewden , 1448 as Ruden and 1527 as Reuden . The Sorbian variant of the name Rudna was mentioned in 1761 and 1843. Reuden was often mentioned with the place Plieskendorf , both places belonged to the same owners until 1900. From 1447 to 1649 the estate was owned by the Zabeltitz family . Other owners were the von Minckwitz family and the von Liszt family. In 1690, the owner Adam Heinrich von Liszt exchanged Gut Reuden with Ernst Matthias von Borcke for Gut Döberitz . Borcke lived in Dresden in Saxony and, inspired by the building activity there, had the estate expanded in a baroque style. Among other things, he had the manor chapel redesigned.
As a result of the Congress of Vienna , Reuden came to the Kingdom of Prussia and belonged to the district of Calau . During this time the Reuden manor was acquired by Joaquim von Oriola , a Portuguese nobleman and diplomat who was naturalized in Prussia after the Congress of Vienna.
After the Second World War, Reuden belonged to the Calau district, which was newly founded in 1952, and was incorporated into Saßleben on May 1, 1974. In the mid-1980s, Reuden was in the mining reserve and was threatened by the planned Calau-Nordost opencast mine . The place belongs to the church district Niederlausitz . On October 26, 2003, Saßleben was incorporated with Reuden as well as with the places Mlode , Groß Mehßow , Kemmen , Bolschwitz and Werchow in Calau.
Population development
Population development in Reuden from 1875 to 1971 | |||
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year | Residents | year | Residents |
1875 | 234 | 1890 | 246 |
1910 | 206 | 1925 | 226 |
1933 | 192 | 1939 | 170 |
1946 | 252 | 1950 | 261 |
1964 | 200 | 1971 | 160 |
Culture and sights
The Reuden manor chapel is a unique baroque building in the region. It was inaugurated in 1729. Borcke brought Dresden builders to Reuden for the construction. During this time, leading Dresden builders are also mentioned in the church records as godparents of Reuden children. The building was renovated from 1997 to 2003 after it fell into disrepair during the GDR era.
Like the manor house, the chapel is one of the architectural monuments in Calau .
Reuden manor around 1860, Alexander Duncker collection
Economy and Infrastructure
Federal motorway 13 runs west of the village and federal motorway 15 runs north .
Merino sheep and East Frisian cattle have been bred in the village since 1920 .
Individual evidence
- ↑ Information from the residents' registration office of the city of Calau from June 18, 2020.
- ↑ Brandenburg Statistics (PDF)
literature
- Ernst Eichler : The place names of Niederlausitz . VEB Domowina-Verlag, Bautzen 1975.
Web links
- Website of the city of Calau - representation of the district of Saßleben with the municipality of Reuden
- Reuden village
- Portrait of Saßleben in the Lausitzer Rundschau from 30./31. May 2009 (PDF file; 912 kB)
- Material on Rittergut Reuden in the Duncker Collection of the Central and State Library Berlin (PDF; 261 kB)