Skull life
Skull life
City of Zealand
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Coordinates: 51 ° 50 ′ 17 ″ N , 11 ° 21 ′ 42 ″ E | |
Height : | 131 m |
Area : | 16.98 km² |
Residents : | 717 (Dec. 31, 2007) |
Population density : | 42 inhabitants / km² |
Incorporation : | July 15, 2009 |
Postal code : | 06449 |
Area code : | 034741 |
Location of Schadeleben in Zealand
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Schadeleben (Zealand), on the church hill
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Schadeleben is a district of the city of Seeland in Saxony-Anhalt . The place is on Deutsche Alleenstraße about 16 kilometers northwest of the city of Aschersleben .
history
The place name Scadenleve is derived from the personal name Skado. The place name ending -leben is based on a common Germanic word meaning “leftover, legacy, legacy, left”. So it is the legacy of the Skado. The place was first mentioned in 1223 in a document from Burchard von Mansfeld .
In the Middle Ages it was a fishing village on the northern edge of an extensive swamp area in the glacial lowlands that stretched about 20 kilometers from Aschersleben to Gatersleben near Quedlinburg.
As a significantly smaller, but similar project to the drainage of the Oderbruch, extensive reclamation took place in the second half of the 18th century under Friedrich II. By creating a ditch system (introduction to the Selke near Gatersleben). The entire water landscape disappeared and the fishing village became an ordinary agricultural community. In this context, the neighboring communities Friedrichsaue and Königsaue were founded .
1856 began in Nachterstedt / Schadeleben ( Central German lignite mining area ) lignite dismantle (until 1991, now Concordiasee ).
On September 30, 1928, the main part of the manor state domain Schadeleben was united with the rural community Schadeleben. An enclave of the manor district was united with the rural community of Königsaue.
Also on September 30, 1928, the main estate of the manor district of Rittergut Schadeleben was combined with the rural community of Schadeleden. The part of the Gutsacker protruding into the Feldmark Hausneindorf was united with the rural community Hausneindorf and the enclave of the manor district in the district of Cochstedt with the city of Cochstedt.
Today the old “main ditch” can still be seen on the southern outskirts. In its last created form, however, this served in the 20th century for draining the brown coal open-cast mines in the area. The largest open pit stretched between Schadeleben and Nachterstedt (with 70 meters one of the deepest in Germany) and threatened the community immediately at the time of the fall of 1989/90. Seen in this way, today's Schadeleben owes its existence to reunification, even if as a result most jobs in mining and agriculture were lost.
Since 2003, the Concordia Lake (approx. 4 km² in 2006) , which was formed in the old open-cast mine, has been available for public bathing and for sailing and surfing. In the spring of 2005 the passenger ship “Seelandperle” even started operating regularly with one-hour tours. As a result of the devastating landslide in the neighboring community of Nachterstedt, the "Seelandperle" had to cease hauling operations from July 18, 2009. The ship was sold a year later by the City Council of Zealand and transported to Nienburg / Weserland on September 21, 2010.
On July 15, 2009, Schadeleben was incorporated into the new municipality of Zealand . The last mayor was Ernst Sentner.
Personalities
- Fritz Annecke (1818–1872), forty-eight revolutionary, born in Dortmund, but with Schadelebener ancestors (see bibliography) and his brothers Emil Annecke and Carl Annecke, who also emigrated to the USA after 1849
Sons and daughters
- Erich Klapproth (1894–1945), "Feme judgment executor" of the "Black Reichswehr", later NSDAP functionary and landowner in Poland
traffic
The Schadeleben Ort stop was on the Aschersleben – Nienhagen railway line . This route is closed.
literature
- Annecke, Heinrich: The peasant family Annecke from Schadeleben and their lineage. German Family Archives, Volume 13, 1960. pp. 116–140.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Information from the State Main Archives Saxony-Anhalt from December 18, 1992, file number: 8.1.2. pa-eh 6095
- ↑ Administrative region of Magdeburg (Ed.): Official Gazette of the Government of Magdeburg . 1928, ZDB -ID 3766-7 , p. 215 .
- ↑ Administrative region of Magdeburg (Ed.): Official Gazette of the Government of Magdeburg . 1928, ZDB -ID 3766-7 , p. 214 f .
- ↑ StBA: Area changes from January 2nd to December 31st, 2009