Lastrup

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

Coordinates: 52 ° 48 '  N , 7 ° 52'  E

Basic data
State : Lower Saxony
County : Cloppenburg
Height : 45 m above sea level NHN
Area : 85.31 km 2
Residents: 6955 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 82 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 49688
Primaries : 04472, 04477Template: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / area code contains text
License plate : CLP
Community key : 03 4 53 009
Community structure: 14 districts
Address of the
municipal administration:
Am Marktplatz 1
49688 Lastrup
Website : www.lastrup.de
Mayor : Michael Kramer ( CDU )
Location of the municipality of Lastrup in the district of Cloppenburg
Landkreis Ammerland Landkreis Diepholz Landkreis Emsland Landkreis Leer Landkreis Oldenburg Landkreis Osnabrück Landkreis Osnabrück Landkreis Vechta Landkreis Wesermarsch Oldenburg (Oldenburg) Barßel Bösel Cappeln (Oldenburg) Cloppenburg Emstek Essen/Oldenburg Friesoythe Garrel Lastrup Lindern (Oldenburg) Löningen Molbergen Saterlandmap
About this picture
One of the newer signs at the entrance to the village

Lastrup is a municipality in the district of Cloppenburg in Lower Saxony .

Geographical location

The municipality of Lastrup is located in the Oldenburger Münsterland region in the district of Cloppenburg in the middle of a depression of the ridge between Südradde and Löninger Mühlenbach . Lastrup has always been well connected to the surrounding area through the old country road, then “Staatschaussee Bremen - Wildeshausen - Cloppenburg - Löningen”, then called “Flämische Heerstraße”, today's federal highway B 213 .

Community structure

The community consists of the center of Lastrup and 14 smaller villages and farmers. These are:

climate

There is a moderate maritime climate influenced by wet north-westerly winds from the North Sea. On a long-term average, the air temperature in Lastrup reaches 8.5–9.0 ° C and around 700 mm of precipitation falls. Between May and August, an average of 20-25 summer days (climatological term for days on which the maximum temperature exceeds 25 ° C) can be expected.

history

The first mention concerns the village of Suhle, which was first mentioned in 890 as Sula . Suhle celebrated its 1100th anniversary in 1990. In 947 the community itself was first mentioned as "Lasdorpe". Around 1050 "Lasdorph" is mentioned, in 1150 "Lasdorft" and around 1600 "Lasdorft". From 1651 the name “Lastrupff” is found, which eventually developed into today's spelling, “Lastrup”, when the “f” was omitted. About the prefix of the place name it is assumed that it could go back to the Old High German word " Loh " for forest. The designation "forest village" is not absurd, as this designation could correspond to the landscape at that time, but cannot be proven. The over 1,000-year history of the place Lastrup and 14 associated farming communities is closely linked to the Church's history, as the municipality of the parish emerged Lastrup.

Lastruper parish

The first church was a boulder building , which came from the 12th or early 13th century and was demolished in 1856. Since the entire area of ​​the old office of Cloppenburg was on average rather sparsely populated in the Middle Ages and the parish of Lastrup never exceeded the number of 500 inhabitants at that time, this first church most likely only served as a chapel at first . Nevertheless, it is assumed that the parishes of Lastrup and Lindern were parish off by the Löningen mother parish around 1000. Around 1223 the parochia Lastrope is explicitly mentioned under the patronage of St. Pertrus. The second church was thoroughly renovated in 1505, as evidenced by an inscription that is now in the sacristy of the new church. The same inscription also names the oldest known pastor of the Lastruper Church: Balthasar Monnid. This is confirmed by the inscription of two church bells from 1513 and 1518. Pastors with the same surname are named as successors: Heinrich Monnid, Hermann Monnid, Balthasar Monnid. It can be assumed that these were the descendants of the first pastor, because during this time the Protestant ideas also spread in this area, so that also church people married, fathered children and inherited their position. It is also recorded that the Monnids were descendants of the monks of the Lune monastery.

Originally, the property of the Lastruper Church belonged to Corvey's property, as evidenced by a document from 1107/1113 with a list of goods. The right of patronage over the church in Lastrup then passed to the Diocese of Osnabrück and from 1203 to the Counts of Oldenburg . In 1551 Count Anton von Oldenburg transferred this right to the Junker Wilhelm von Bodroden from Ahlhorn, who sold this right to the respective pastor for an annual amount of ten Reichstalers . Many church leaders were unable to raise this amount, which was high for the time. Balthasar Monnid the Younger's successor was Bernhard Zurhorst, who was the last Protestant pastor in the community for a long time. This could not meet the payments, so that a garnishment was even carried out.

The economic situation initially improved with the reintroduction of Catholicism and the appointment of chaplain Johann Gudemann as pastor in 1619, who headed the parish until 1670. He had lost his property several times during the Thirty Years War and had to flee several times. Nevertheless, he did not complain about economic grievances, but above all about the behavior of the villagers at the time, who "[...] seek help from fortune-tellers and magicians [...]" and "[...] organize drinking bouts according to old, bad habit", even "beer hosts." Selling beer unabashedly during the service […] “Gudemann's successors were Johann Wenneker (1672 to 1703), Johann Rudolph Deeken (1703 to 1720), Berlach Riemann from Löningen (1720 to 1763), and Johann Hermann Plagge from Dahlum (1763 to 1774) and Franz Münzebrod from Löningen (1774–1793). The latter went mad and had to be taken to a monastery in Münster . The community was now administered for ten years by a curate clergyman who, like his predecessors, complained about the poor economic conditions.

The economic situation improved steadily under his successors Gerhands Heinrich Bartels from Löningen (1783 to 1798), Johann Heinrich Anton Bederung from Sögel (1798 to 1852), Franz Willenborg from Lohne (1852 to 1866), Engelbert Wulff from Essen / Oldenburg (1866 until 1892) and their successors. Franz Willenborg had the new, today's church built between 1859 and 1861.

School history

The first school was set up shortly after the Thirty Years' War, whereby lessons were not held in a separate building, but initially in the church warehouse. According to reports around 1660, the building was in a disastrous state and far too small. In addition, there were personnel bottlenecks: At first the pastor and sexton shared the lessons. Then it was exclusively the job of the sexton, since the pastor not only had to head the Lastruper, but also the Lindern parish at times. But the sexton neglected his actual sexton and organist service through the school service. As a sexton he was the church play supervisor and as such he had to lead the teams , a kind of vigilante group from the time of the Thirty Years War, namely the teams in Lastrup, Lindern and Essen. From 1752, the first assistant was hired, who was exclusively responsible for teaching. During this time there were around 70 to 80 students from the village of Lastrup as well as from the farmers' groups Oldendorf, Schnelten, Groß- and Klein-Roscharden and Mutton. Since 1865 the school has had two classes.

Engelbert Wulff, the first in Vechta taught at the high school and was built in Vechta with the St. Mary's Hospital in 1851, the first hospital in the Oldenburg Münsterland, was appointed pastor of Lastrup. 1866 This man acted with foresight and set up an industrial school in Lastrup. He also introduced handicraft lessons because he saw poor training as the reason for economic grievances in many households. He also introduced school savings cups to help students achieve long-term prosperity by learning to save.

Development of individual farmers in the municipality of Lastrup

The old parish was created from the amalgamation of several farmers, initially for religious purposes. This ecclesiastical union also gave rise to political rights and obligations for the individual farmers. Their heads, who were called peasant bailiffs, brand bailiffs and later wood counts, jointly represented the parish. Originally, the political weight of the local government lay with the peasantry, which, however, was not further modernized or trained politically in the Münster period until they finally had no political significance at all.

Sniffed

From the market square in the center of the village in a northerly direction, the Schnelten farmers can be reached on foot in around 30 minutes. This was first mentioned in the second half of the 13th century as Sneleten or Snetle . There are assumptions that the final syllable loh stands for forest or ithi for heather, although there are no assumptions about the prefix. The soil here is better than in other farming communities. Around 1931 it is reported that the economically most successful farms in the community are in Schnelten and that the special feature of the farmers is cattle breeding. Various documented inheritance divisions have taken place among the farms there. The largest farm, Hake , mentioned in 1331 as thor hake , was divided into Haker, Wilken, Wolken and Frerker. The Pigge legacy was divided into Pigge-Renschen and Pigge-Talten . In Schnelten on the so-called dog height , there are burial mounds . The Bleiburg was also located here , the remains of which are now hidden under meadows. This castle was part of the fortifications from Wildeshausen via Cloppenburg to Löningen .

Matrum and Timmerlage

In the northernmost part of the municipality of Lastrup are the relatively small farming communities Matrum and Timmerlage. In the 13th and 14th centuries, Matrum appears in the form of Martem , Matren or Matern . The ending came from - heim for house, which suggests that the prefix means a personal name, as can be found in many place names on -heim. At the same time, the village was called Timmerlage Tymberlo , Timmerlo or Tymerlo . Bixlag, which is part of Timmerlage, appears as Bykeslo and Bideslo . Here the connection of the final syllable with - loh for forest is clear. In Timmerlage there was the so-called Heidburg or Heidenburg , a strong earth castle in Timmerlager Bruch .

Around 1890 gold and silver coins were found on a farm in Timmerlage, the few remaining coins are undoubtedly from the Middle Ages. However, due to a lack of knowledge of their historical significance, most of the coins were made into a necklace for the daughter of the court.

Large and small Roscharden

Model airplanes at the Groß-Roscharden airfield

To the northwest, not far from the town center, are the two farmers' groups Groß- and Klein Roscharden, which have only appeared separately since the Oldenburg rule (1803). The final syllable -scharden roughly means divorce , border ; It is assumed that this is supposed to allude to a border line on a hill, which supposedly separates fields from undergrowth there. These two localities as well as Timmerlage and Matrum border in the north on the Dosenmoor , which for the most part belongs to the neighboring municipality of Molbergen . Due to the partly boggy soil, extensive pastures could be created here, which in turn meant that a flourishing cattle and horse breeding could be established. In 1929, at a traveling exhibition in Breslau, a stallion from Hof ​​Klatte from Klein Roscharden was declared the most valuable animal of its kind.

On this farm, today known as Zuchthof Klatte, a treasure was found around 1890 while plowing the garden: an iron pot filled with five different types of coins, silver jewelry and a gold ring. Only three years later, a second, far more valuable treasure was found not far from the first site: coins, a number of silver items, a golden finger ring and much more. As with the first find, the coins came from the period between 919 and 1024 and are now in the Münzkabinett in Berlin. The jewelry from the second find is also in Berlin today, but in the Museum of Ethnology . The jewelry from the first find is in the Museum zu Oldenburg . It is believed that both treasures were buried around 1020.

mutton

From the center of the village in a westerly direction, about three quarters of an hour on foot, lies the Mutton farmers. As is often the case, the final syllable is equated with loh for forest. The meaning of the prefix ham can mean an area of ​​land or go back to a person's name. The importance of the Rosüne farm belonging to Hammel can only be partially explained. The final syllable süne indicates a point. Since the Rosüne farm is located roughly at the intersection of the parishes of Lastrup, Lindern and Löningen, a watchpoint was set up here. Despite the relatively small number of inhabitants (134 people lived in Hammel in 1837), a school was set up as early as 1772.

Oldendorf

Only about two kilometers southwest of Lastrup is the small farming community of Oldendorf, which was first mentioned in 1296 as Oldendorpe . Between this peasantry and the Hammel peasantry lie the Oldendorfer firs , where there are several megalithic graves , including the Oldendorfer Hünensteine .

Hamstrup

The southern part of the municipality of Lastrup is formed by the hamstrup farmers, which are separated from the other parts of the municipality by the lowland of the Löninger Mühlenbach. The large area of ​​this peasantry is divided into the Frochts , a family name still widespread in this area today, Hammesdamm , later its own peasantry, Knokerei , Norway , also its own peasantry today, and the Heidhäuser . Hamestrope was first mentioned in 1350. As with Hammel and Hammesdamm, the prefix ham could indicate either a person's name or an enclosed area. There are speculations that the meaning of the names of the farmers Hamstrup, Hammel, Hammesdamm and Hemmelte is related due to their similarity. Hamstrup could have been the village, Mutton the associated forest and Hemmelte the associated heather. Hammesdamm was the name for an important bridge. Hamstrup already had 300 inhabitants in 1837. An own school can be proven since 1783.

wallow

Approximately in the middle between the center of Lastrup and the Hemmelte farming community, the Suhle farming community is in an easterly direction. The farmers were first mentioned in 970 as Sula in the register of the Werden monastery, although the meaning of the name has not yet been clarified. The Suhler Moor extends south of this part of the community between Suhle, Hemmelte, Bartmannsholte, Herbergen and Hamstrup . On the so-called Buschfelde north of Hammesdamm and south of Suhle there are various barrows. There is evidence of a school for the Suhle farmers since 1732, but no longer exists today.

In the municipality of Lastrup there are several different chronicles about the municipality, localities, parishes and associations.

Population development

In the past two decades, the municipality of Lastrup had a significantly higher natural population development than 425 other municipalities in Lower Saxony. This means that Lastrup's age structure is significantly younger than in Lower Saxony. In 1990, 5852 people lived in Lastrup, compared to 6815 in 2000. In mid-2011 the community had over 7000 inhabitants, of whom around 3300 are married, around 3000 are single, 450 are widowed and less than 300 are divorced or separated. Over 20% of Lastrupers are under 18 years old, just under 30% are 25 years or younger. The unemployment rate in December 2010 was 4.9%.

Religions

Lastrup is influenced by Catholicism : around 75% of Lastruper are Catholic. Around 12.6% of the population are Protestant, another 12.5% ​​of Lastruper belong to other denominations or are non-denominational. Up until February 2010 there were three independent Catholic parishes: St. Petrus Lastrup , Herz-Jesu Hemmelte and St. Michael Kneheim . In the course of a reform of the Catholic Church in the Oldenburger Land, these three were united at that time to form one parish under the name of St. Petrus Lastrup. The St. Petrus Church in the center of Lastrup was designated as the main church , while the Sacred Heart Church in Hemmelte and the St. Michael Church in Kneheim serve as subsidiary churches.

In 1859/62 the parish church of St. Peter was built as a three-aisled neo-Gothic hall church made of brick. The Lastruper church was expanded in 1970 with a modern extension, so that today there is space for 900 worshipers. The parish is responsible for the St. Agnes kindergarten. Church associations in Lastrup are the Kolping Family with the Kolping Youth, the Frauen-MC, the Rural Youth, the Male Choir Cäcilia and the Kreuzbund.

Lastrup is probably a daughter church of Löningen. The first reference to an independent parish of Lastrup is a document from 1223. As early as the 13th century, Lindern was parish of Lastrup. After the Hemmelter parish became independent in 1952, the parish of Lastrup consisted from then on of the village of Lastrup and the farmers' groups Groß- und Klein-Roscharden, Timmerlage, Matrum, Schnelten, Suhle, Hammesdamm, Hamstrup, Norway, Oldendorf and Hammel.

There is also an Evangelical Lutheran parish. The Christ Church was built in 1956. The responsible pastor is Jürgen Schwartz.

politics

Municipal council

The council of the municipality of Lastrup consists of 18 councilwomen and councilors. This is the specified number for a municipality with a population between 6,001 and 7,000. The 18 council members are elected by local elections for five years each. The current term of office began on November 1, 2016 and ends on October 31, 2021.

The full-time mayor Michael Kramer (CDU) is also entitled to vote in the municipal council.

The last local election on September 11, 2016 resulted in the following:

Political party Sept 11, 2016 Sept 11, 2011
CDU 85.05% 8,241 15 seats 82.92% 7,338 15 seats
SPD 10.63% 1,030 2 seats 10.49% 928 2 seats
The left 2.17% 210 1 seat -% - -
FDP 2.16% 209 - 0.90% 80 -
Green - - - 5.69% 504 1 seat
voter turnout 56.21%

mayor

Mayor of the municipality of Lastrup is Michael Kramer. He was elected on September 5, 2010 and confirmed in office on April 29, 2018 with 84.39% of the votes cast; there were no opposing candidates. The electoral term ends in 2026. In 2010, Kramer succeeded Jürgen Focke, who had been the first full-time mayor of the municipality of Lastrup since May 1, 2003 as the previous honorary mayor (most recently Josef Lübke) and the full-time municipal director (most recently Heinz Möller) had taken over.

The mayor is at the head of the administration and is responsible for preparing and implementing the decisions of the council. At the same time he is also the first representative of the community.

coat of arms

The coat of arms of the municipality of Lastrup shows a court sword in silver on blue shields, on the right a coat of arms in silver with three red sea leaves, on the left a coat of arms in gold with two red bars.

flag

The flag of the municipality shows the municipality's coat of arms in the middle on a blue / white background.

Culture and sights

Lastrup village park

Parks

Lastrup village park was inaugurated on September 13, 2004. A park landscape with a large pond was created on the site behind the St. Elisabeth monastery. Works of art line the path around the pond.

Great stone graves

In the immediate vicinity of Lastrup there are a total of six large stone graves: North of Lastrup on the B213 there is the large stone grave on the Sonderling and right next to it the large stone grave Dwerschsonderling, which originally came from another location and has been freely reconstructed here . The Oldendorf Hünensteine and the three large stone graves in Fuhrenkamp are located in a wooded area southwest of the Oldendorf district .

Music clubs

The Schnelten Music Association (MVS), founded in 1923 in the Schnelten district, is the only music association based in Lastrup. The MVS is characterized by traditional brass music and big band style. There are also several choirs and choirs in the community, e.g. B. the church chapel St. Petrus, the men's choir "Cäcilia" Lastrup and the choir community "Chorios".

sports clubs

The municipality of Lastrup has numerous facilities that can be used for sporting events and are also used by the many local clubs. These include the outdoor pool, which was converted into a natural adventure pool in 2009/2010, and an indoor pool. The gym of the district sports school is available for schools as well as for private use. There is an indoor tennis center and an outdoor tennis facility, as well as several sports fields.

Events

Carnival parade 2015 in Lastrup

From 1975 to 2017, a carnival parade with more than 20,000 spectators took place every year on the Sunday before Shrove Monday in Lastrup. The Lastrup Carnival Association has decided to only celebrate in the marquee from 2018.

Several times a year the Modellbauclub Cloppenburg e. V. model flying days on his club area in Groß-Roscharden.

In 2015, the municipality was the venue for the KLJB national meeting of KLJB Deutschlands e. V. Around 1000 young people from all over Germany came to Lastrup to celebrate and discuss content in workshops, excursions and events. The KLJB national meeting with the slogan "Plattacke - with us the world sees land again!" ensured that Lastrup was widely recognized by the public.

Economy and Infrastructure

traffic

The community is located on federal road 213 (E 233) and federal road 68 . Via the B 213 you have a fast connection to the Netherlands and (via the A 31 ) to western Münsterland , but also to Bremen (via the A 1 ) and to Oldenburg (via the A 29 ). Since December 5, 2009, traffic has been routed via the new bypass road that bypasses the town center to the north, which relieves the town center of many thousands of vehicles per day. Completion was originally planned for March 2010. Since the completion of the bypass road, long-distance traffic no longer runs on Flämische Strasse , an old road whose route in the Lastrups area still exists today and which connected the Hanseatic cities of Bruges and Lübeck in the Middle Ages . In the center of Lastrup the street is called "Vlämische Straße".

The next train station was in the Hemmelte district, but there is no longer a stop there. The nearest train stations are now in Cloppenburg and Essen (Oldb). From there you can drive north to Oldenburg and south to Osnabrück.

Established businesses

The municipality of Lastrup is strongly influenced by agriculture : Of the approximately 8,500 hectares of municipal area, over 77% of the area is used for agriculture. Corn, starch potatoes as well as cereals such as barley, rye and wheat are grown. There are numerous large farms in Lastrup that breed and keep cattle and pigs in large facilities. Nevertheless, only 3% of the employees subject to social security contributions can be assigned to the branches of agriculture, forestry or fishing [as of June 2010]. For decades, Lastrup has been known for equestrian centers and penal farms, which are a strong economic factor in the municipality of Lastrup.

But there are also industrial companies in the community. The majority of employees subject to social security contributions, 54%, work in the manufacturing industry. One of the largest employers in the area is Böckmann Fahrzeugwerke , which specializes in the construction of car trailers. In the field of horse trailers , it is the market leader by its own account. Another large employer is Werner Schulte GmbH & Co. KG , known nationwide under the name Schulte ® Lastruper Wurstwaren . The Awila ® plant construction company offers additional jobs. The municipality's trade tax multiplier is 340% and thus well below the national average of around 400%.

The company of the poultry trader, who was arrested on September 12, 2006 and sentenced to four years and three months in prison on June 7, 2007, is also located in Lastrup, which became known in the rotten meat scandal .

education

There are five kindergartens in Lastrup and the associated localities, including a special educational kindergarten. There is also a day nursery. The municipality of Lastrup has two primary schools: The Astrid Lindgren School in Lastrup is a three-class, reliable primary school with a Catholic faith. The Hemmelte elementary school is also a reliable half-day elementary school. In addition, the Lastrup school center offers a special educational facility and a high school . The closest high schools are the Copernicus-Gymnasium Löningen and the Clemens-August-Gymnasium or the Liebfrauenschule in Cloppenburg .

Personalities

  • Heinrich Fröhle (* 1879; † June 20, 1966 in Hammel / Lastrup), farmer in Hammel and politician (center), member of the Oldenburg state parliament
  • Heinrich Grafenhorst (born March 2, 1906 in Kneheim / Lastrup, † July 12, 1970 in Vechta), Roman Catholic priest and officiall in Vechta
  • Josef Stuke (* 1918 in Lastrup; † March 25, 2010 in Marburg), experimental solid-state physicist
  • Bernard Fathmann (* 1948), qualified pedagogue and Low German author
  • Ludger Gerdes (* 1954 in Lastrup; † October 17, 2008 near Dülmen), a visual artist and art professor
  • Gilbert Böckmann (* 1960), show jumper
  • Simone Böckmann (* 1963 in Düsseldorf, née Richter), former German eventing rider
  • Frank Henry Horn (* 1966 in Bremen), lawyer and politician (SPD)
  • Andreas Schnieders (* 1966 in Lastrup), former German amateur heavyweight boxer
  • Joseph Schweer (* 1933 in Lastrup), former district president of the Weser-Ems administrative district
  • Maria Anna Zumholz (* 1950), historian at the University of Vechta

literature

  • Mamoun Fansa: The megalithic graves in the municipality of Lastrup . In: Oldenburg Yearbook . Vol. 96 (1996), pp. 211-218 ( online )
  • Georg Reinke: Hikes through the Oldenburger Münsterland. 7th issue, Vechta printing and publishing house, Vechta 1931.
  • Claus Lanfermann: Lastrup - A community in the Oldenburger Münsterland. Lastrup municipality (ed.), 2005.

Web links

Commons : Lastrup  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. State Office for Statistics Lower Saxony, LSN-Online regional database, Table 12411: Update of the population, as of December 31, 2019  ( help ).
  2. Municipality of Lastrup, municipality director: Information brochure Municipality of Lastrup. 1992, p. 3.
  3. ^ Georg Reinke: Walks through the Oldenburger Münsterland. 7th issue, Vechtaer Druckerei und Verlag, Vechta 1931, p. 186.
  4. ^ Georg Reinke: Walks through the Oldenburger Münsterland. 7. Issue, Vechtaer Druckerei und Verlag, Vechta 1931, p. 187.
  5. ^ A b Georg Reinke: Walks through the Oldenburger Münsterland. 7th issue, Vechtaer Druckerei und Verlag, Vechta 1931, p. 189.
  6.  ( page no longer available , search in web archives ) (PDF; 181 kB), Lower Saxony Institute for Economic Development, NIW demographic test Lower Saxony.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.niw.de
  7. a b Info sheet: Figures 2011 , published by the municipality of Lastrup.
  8. ^ Lower Saxony Municipal Constitutional Law (NKomVG) in the version of December 17, 2010; Section 46 - Number of MPs , accessed on January 29, 2017.
  9. ^ Election results for the municipality of Lastrup , accessed on January 29, 2017
  10. Confirmed in office: Michael Kramer remains Mayor of Lastrup. NWZ website, accessed June 8, 2018 .
  11. a b Main statutes of the municipality of Lastrup ( Memento of the original from October 15, 2014 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. , accessed October 11, 2014 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.lastrup.de
  12. Lastruper Carnival Association v. 1969 e. V .: Pageant 2018 canceled
  13. ^ Modellbauclub Cloppenburg e. V .: Our airfield
  14. platack! KLJB National Meeting 2015 Climate Alliance Germany . In: Climate Alliance Germany . ( die-klima-allianz.de [accessed on April 10, 2017]).
  15. Plattacke | KLJB-Bundestreffen 2015. Retrieved on April 10, 2017 .
  16. BauernZeitung - German farmers publishing house : Large KLJB national meeting in Lastrup - rural youth & leisure - young country - Bauernzeitung.de. Retrieved April 10, 2017 .
  17. a b c Website of the municipality of Lastrup , accessed on November 18, 2011.
  18. IHK Oldenburg ( Memento of the original from February 24, 2014 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. , Overview of the assessment rates for municipal taxes in the municipalities in the district of the Oldenburg Chamber of Commerce and Industry. 2013 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.ihk-oldenburg.de
  19. Federal Statistical Office of Germany , 2010 trade tax rates.
  20. Rotten meat also in large kitchens  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , stern.de, accessed on November 18, 2011.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.stern.de  
  21. ^ Official website of the Astrid Lindgren Primary School , accessed on November 14, 2011.
  22. ^ Official website of the Hemmelte primary school , accessed on November 14, 2011.