Ketzür Manor

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Ketzür Manor
The Ketzür manor

The Ketzür manor

Data
place Ketzür , Beetzseeheide municipality
Architectural style Baroque and Renaissance
Coordinates 52 ° 29 '43.8 "  N , 12 ° 37' 43"  E Coordinates: 52 ° 29 '43.8 "  N , 12 ° 37' 43"  E

The Manor House Ketzür in the municipality Beetzseeheide located in the district Ketzür and is under monument protection standing mansion , which by the family of Broesegke was built and inhabited for several centuries. It belonged to the Ketzür manor .

history

The Broesegke family on Ketzür was first mentioned in the land book of Charles IV . Thile Brösigke was master of the lands and vassal of the Brandenburg margrave. He held the jurisdiction and the church patronage in the place. "Kotzure" or "Kotzüre" had 26 hooves , six of which Brösigke owned or managed. The rest of the hooves were leased. There were also six farms and a windmill . The rent of the mill was three wispel of rye, the fishery brought five schillings and the Schulze had to maintain the feudal horse for Broesegke. Fiefdom in neighboring Butzow was the vassal Heinrich Bröseke, who also came from the Brosegke family and who, with Claus Butzow, held the upper court in the village and owned land.

According to the lap register, the von Broesegke family enlarged their farm in Ketzür to ​​eight Hufen by 1450 and before 1450 Claus Ruck had ceded the eastern village of Gortz to the Broesekes. Claus von Brösike owned a farm with five hooves in Gortz, which was enlarged by another three by 1480, so that the manor was also eight hooves in size. In 1520, Elector Joachim I sold Butzow with all rights and income for 992 guilders and 30 groschen to the cathedral chapter of Brandenburg. The feudal succession also passed from the Brösegke family to the cathedral chapter. From 1541 at the latest, the Brösegkesche Gut in Ketzür was divided within the family. The origins of the manor house in Ketzür are also dated to the 16th century.

In the lap cadastre of 1624 twelve peasant, twelve manorial and two parish hooves were mentioned for Ketzür. In addition to the manorial estates of the von Brösegke family, eleven Hufner 24 Hufen owned rural land in Gortz . There were also six cottages in the village. As a result of the Thirty Years War (1618 to 1648) Gortz was destroyed. It was rebuilt a little off the Beetzsee north of the Flachsberg. Ketzür remained fully owned by the von Brösegke family until the late 17th century. In 1684, however, part of the property in Ketzür went to Joachim von der Hagen . He also received part of the former brösigkeschen estate in Gortz.

In 1752 the manor house was extensively rebuilt and expanded. In 1824 the estate in Ketzür with twelve hooves passed from the Brösegke family to the von Rochow family and in 1836 the estate in Gortz, which ended the family history in the area.

In the course of the land reform in the Soviet occupation zone in 1947 and 1948, 375 hectares of agricultural land around Ketzür were divided among the landless and poor people and the manor house was expropriated. The local council and the community council meet in the manor house.

Building

The old manor house of the von Brösegke family is located opposite the village church of Ketzür . It is a relatively simple two-story baroque plastered building. At a southern bow window one is Renaissance gable receive as the oldest decorative element. The Auslucht is placed on a small monopitch roof . The paint is yellow in color. The rectangular windows of the central building and a five-part basket - arched skylight above the portal are framed by white bottles . The portal has two blind columns on the sides , which hold a canopy that separates the double-leaf door from the skylight. At the back there is a small extension with an entrance to the south and a second, very simple portal with an outside staircase to the garden. The roof is hipped . In the north there is an annex that differs from the main building in two ways. The windows of this part of the building are ogival and it has a mansard roof . To the north, this extension also has a portal with a stone staircase and a skylight.

gallery

Web links

Commons : Gutshaus Ketzür  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Monument List Potsdam-Mittelmark ( Memento of the original from January 6, 2016 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. (PDF; 21 kB). Accessed December 24, 2013.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.bldam-brandenburg.de
  2. a b c Ernst Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg. Volume III, J. Guttentag, Berlin 1860, p. 26.
  3. Ernst Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg. Volume III, J. Guttentag, Berlin 1860, p. 12.
  4. ^ A b S. Children, HT Porada (ed.): Brandenburg an der Havel and surroundings. 2006, p. 142.
  5. Ernst Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg. Volume III, J. Guttentag, Berlin 1860, p. 20.
  6. Ernst Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg. Volume III, J. Guttentag, Berlin 1860, p. 21.
  7. ^ Black Book of Land Reform - Contained Communities and Places ( Memento from January 28, 2011 in the Internet Archive ). Accessed June 27, 2014.
  8. ^ Archives of the municipal council . Accessed June 28, 2014.