Dobbin Castle

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Dobbin Castle

The Dobbin Castle was a noble residence in today Dobbin-Linstow , district Rostock . The Zietlitz farm belonged to the estate .

history

Ancestors of the Barolds came to the country in the wake of Heinrich Borwin II . The Barolds are an ancient, evidently Wendish family and are documented as early as 1226. On a peninsula in the Krakow Obersee was a well-protected low castle . To the east of it settled Slavs , who named the place after a prince - place of doba . The large Dobbin estate on the east bank of Krakow Lake was an ancient fief of the Wendish Barold family, which died out in 1746. On this estate, which with its accessories is about three quarters of a square mile, there were several castle sites. The old castle Dobbin, north of the new court and old Dobbin, was a small medieval castle. Several legends tell about this castle, also in connection with the name Niklot .

In a document in 1347 a Rudolph Barold, the elder as Rudolphus Barold, Senior, morans was mentioned in Dobbin . The same Barold was Voigt in Güstrow and enjoyed a position of trust with Borwin's sons as a feudal man. The Barolds were already sitting on Dobbin at that time. In 1350 they were named as the owners of Thürkow and Rotspalk . It was not until 1415 that Rulef (Roloff) Barold auf Dobbin was named as a witness in Teschow when his cousin Henning pledged himself to the city of Rostock . Also in 1429 and 1456 Roloff Barold witnessed the sale of the village of Glave to Provost Nikolaus Behringer and Prioress Ermegard Oldenburg from the convent of the Dobbertin monastery . The Dobbin estate with 2,500 hectares of land, including 400 hectares of forest, was part of the Krakow Bailiwick at the time . In addition to Zietlitz, it was not mentioned again until 1445 in the Bederegister, the tax lists, of the Vogtei. The village mayor Herman Kreymann already mentioned a village mug in Dobbin. In 1481 the brothers Hennecke and Roloff von Barold sit on Dobbin. But from 1525 to 1544, the property came to Reimer von Passow in someone else's lien . In 1557 Hans Barold and his brother Karsten are sitting on Dobbin again. Until 1570, they quarreled with the Dobbertin monastery over two Hufen and two lakes on the Glaver Feldmark. After that, Henning and Hans Barold were in great financial embarrassment, so that the Dobbiner estate was pledged to Moritz von Walsleben in 1627 according to the sovereign consensus.

17th century

During the Thirty Years' War the place became deserted. The six farmers still alive had fled to Krakow with their families in 1637 . In 1647, when Curd von Restorff zu Lindenbeck was arson, the manor house of Johann von Walsleben burned down in Dobbin. In 1672 Hans Rudolf von Grabow bought Dobbin with the estate on Woosten . In 1675 Swedish troops marched through the country, imperial and Danish troops moved into quarters in the vicinity of Dobbin and in 1676 a large fire destroyed the whole village except for two houses. From 1694 Dietrich Wilhelm von Witzendorff took over the estate from the brothers Moritz and Johann Otto von Grabow. He did not live in Dobbin, but in Groß Zecher and was district administrator in Lauenburg and cathedral dean in Lübeck . The estate was rented to the widow of the bailiff Aepinius and in the first year the house, a barn and the gate and cattle house burned down. At the end of 1699, Hermann von Wickede took over the estate and began rebuilding the farm.

18th century

But in 1700 Dobbin came back into the possession of the von Barold family . On September 21, 1701 Lieutenant Jürgen Ernst von Barold received the feudal letter from Duke Friedrich Wilhelm . He lived with his sister Hyppolyta Margaretha in a former bakery. They had two servants, four male servants, two old people, a cook and four maids.

According to Pastor Johannes Ahrendt's list of confessors, in 1703 a miller, a blacksmith and a hunter lived next to the sexton and the village mayor. In addition to the estate, which was in very poor condition, there were only three farms left in Dobbin. When Jürgen Ernst von Barold died on January 30, 1727, the estate and the entire village passed to his only son, the Royal Danish Major Christoph August. Since he remained without descendants, the himself wealthy Royal Danish Major General Hans Adolf von Lepel (1697–1770) inherited the estate on Radegast and Rosenhagen. His son Chamberlain Friedrich Diederich Joachim von Lepel, who succeeded him, died childless on March 3, 1805. His brother Christoph August von Lepel (1748–1830) laid the Zietlitz farmers as co-administrators and settled them further north on poorer soil. This is how the village of Neu Zietlitz came into being. In addition to Zietlitz and Groß Bäbelin, there were also smaller pertinances such as Augustenfelde, Hütten and Steinbeck belonging to Gut Dobbin. From 1805 to 1813 the other brother, the Royal Danish Major General Karl Hellmut von Lepel (1742–1813) took over co-ownership. The last owner from the Lepel family was the aforementioned Christoph August, who sold the property shortly before his death, as there were no descendants from this Lepel line and it thus died out.

19th century

In 1829, the estate was sold to Oberhofmeister Carl August Jasmund, who leased it with the hut and Zielitz from 1836 to 1853 to Joachim Kayatz from Zahren .

1853 sold Carl August von Jasmund Dobbin to the domain councilor Georg Philipp von Brocken Hohen Luckow . The von Brocken owned Dobbin for three generations and with a happy hand and social thinking gave the village and the estate a new character, which can still be seen in buildings today. With the gardens, the park and the avenues he created a uniform transition from the arable land to the pastures, the lakes and the forests. After the death of Georg Philipp von Brocken in 1878, Carl Adolf Georg moved from Hohen Luckow to the property in Dobbin. His son Anton took over the Dobbiner estate in 1891.

20th century

Gradual withdrawal of the OKW northwards via Dobbin and finally to Mürwik (1945)

Due to financial problems, the descendants of the von Brocken family sold the estate on July 12, 1901 to Heinrich zu Mecklenburg , who had married Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands on February 7, 1901 and became the prince consort . The estate received its own train station and was administered by Colonel von Bülow Stolle.

The after the Great Depression debt Ritterschaftliche Good Dobbin was after the death of Prince Henry in 1934 for sale. Probably the Mecklenburg governor and Gauleiter Friedrich Hildebrandt had through his confidante, the Justizrat Dr. Rudolph Blaubart from Güstrow, knowledge of this. Because on May 24, 1935, Friedrich Hildebrandt and Sir Henri Deterding , who was the main shareholder of the Royal Dutch Shell together with the Dutch royal family , met at the Eden Hotel in Berlin. It was not until March 17, 1936, that the public auction took place in the Hotel Erbgroßherzog in Güstrow. Colonel a. D. Hofmarschall Gottlieb von Bülow Stolle had the power of attorney to sell the Dobbin property to the public from Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands. The Gauleiter personally offered and bought the Dobbin estate for 1,050,000 Reichsmarks for Sir Henry Deterding from the Netherlands. On July 8, 1936, both founded the Friedrich-Heinrich-Landstiftung in Schwerin , which was supposed to relocate the property. The model was another good Deterdings in Gößlow . Dobbin with 1391 hectares and Zietlitz with 755 hectares belonged to the foundation. Zietlitz had a brick factory . The second part, the Dobbin forest estate, remained in the possession of the Deterding family. In addition to the 51 hectares, Deterding bought around 900 hectares from Glave in 1938 . After Deterding's death in 1939, Gauleiter Friedrich Hildebrandt did not have the economic property settled in a rather strange legal process, but simply sold it. With the proceeds he bought his secretary a small estate in Hohen Viecheln and an hereditary farm for each of his district leaders. Mediated by Justice Council Dr. In 1939, Eduard Winter , a wholesale merchant and general director of the Opel works in Rostock and military economic leader in Belgium, who lived in Berlin, acquired the part of the knightly property earmarked for settlement. In the village only called Auto-Winter , guarded in the castle by two SS men as personal protection, cars from all countries were stored and serviced as booty in his stables .

Shortly before the end of the war, unnoticed by many, Dobbin moved into military and political focus in 1945. On his retreat from Rheinsberg to Plön , the Wehrmacht High Command made a stop in Dobbin on April 29, 1945 with Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel as Chief of the Wehrmacht High Command, Alfred Jodl and Reichsführer of the SS, Heinrich Himmler . The SS escort unit was housed in the Dobbin forester's house. A makeshift airfield for the Fieseler stork was set up next to the sports field . It is unclear why the OKW moved into quarters in Dobbin when it withdrew. Perhaps the Wehrwirtschaftsführer Winter had made his Dobbin estate available in the remote area. On May 1, 1945, the Red Army was in Dobbin.

Real estate

Zietlitz farm

Around 1610, Henning von Barold Zietlitz pledged 700 guilders to the Dobbertin monastery. Carl Adolf v. Brocken built a manor house for Hof Zietlitz in 1862 and moved into it in 1878. The house was later expanded into a widow's residence. The two-story brick building stands above a high cellar with a masonry made of field stones . Both fronts have central projections.

In 1890 the Zietlitz farm was leased to August Nölting from Hof ​​Hagen, but as early as 1900 Anton von Brocken leased the farm to the pensioner G. Schmidt. He built a new cattle house and a horse stable.

Glassworks, fulling mills and water mills

The merchant and master glassmaker Franz Christian Müller from Hamburg came from a family of master glassmakers in Holstein . Jürgen Ernst von Barold signed a glassworks contract with him on January 28, 1714 to operate a glassworks north of the Nebel for 15 years. For the new glassworks to be built, von Barold ceded the KrugHauß, located at Hohen Holtze, to the glass master Müller from Gammelin in the Ludwigslust district , along with the farm, in order to be able to enjoy the same in the hut to the apartment ... The second glassworks was built in 1731 by the glassworks master Johann Detlev Müller in Hohen Holz, southwest of the Gülz Lake. In 1751, the Dobbiner church book recorded the vicemeister Joachim Mohr, 13 glassmakers, a carpenter, two carters and an ash driver as the smelters. The hut developed into an independent subsidiary estate that was in operation until 1764. In 1768 there were still three farm buildings and two cathedrals, the last two of which were dismantled in 1857 and re-erected on the Dobbiner Hof. The subsidiary property was officially called a hut , but the then owner Major General Friedrich von Lepel named it Augustenfeld in honor of his wife . His wife Auguste Caroline was a daughter of Joachim von Plessen on Cambs . However, this name could not prevail, because the directorial survey map from the same year only noted the name hut for this place. The district of Hütten or Augustenfeld has disappeared from the map except for the remaining field names.

In Dobbin there were water mills at the same time and one after the other, all of which were driven by the fog flowing into the Krakow Lake . The first fulling mill is said to have been set up in 1572, about which the Dobbinner pastor Mathias Sydow complained in 1574: Did the Junker build a fulling mill on church property and had the church chopped down, since the walkers also burn off and burn what is in it. Field has been taken from the parish and come to the mill, before that the miller gives the pastor 9 Witten, which used to be 4 bushels of wheat; that is now called Mühlenkamp. A second fulling mill, and paper mill called, must soon have been applied to it, because in 1613 Claus asked of Barold as Dobbiner landowner the sovereign consent to pledge its water mill was first mentioned here, and the two fulling mills to Riemer of Pressentin to Prestin : . ..not just my water mills and two fulling mills with all their in and outflows, the mill guests belonging to them also hums, which have been ground from ancient times ... This was no longer mentioned after 1714. In the list of confessors from 1703, the miller named Hans Spangenberg, who ran a fulling mill in addition to the grain mill.

The mill was moved to the road from Dobbin to Glave south of the Nebel in 1830 and consisted of the large mill house, a stable and a barn. In 1855 the barn was enlarged and a second cattle shed was built. Instead of the water wheel, turbine operation was used and water power was used until 1949. The farm buildings in Hütte were demolished in 1830 due to the poor productivity of the arable land and then the arable land was reforested.

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Dobbin Castle on an old postcard

The manor house was built in 1730 in the baroque style by Christoph August von Barold. The large house is said to have been a spacious building, two floors high, of half-timbered construction, with cellars and a double stone roof. In 1746 Dobbin was allodified and Hans Adolf von Lepel, royal Danish major general, was appointed universal heir.

When Domain Councilor Philipp von Brocken took over the estate from Carl August von Jasmund in 1854, the manor house had already been provided with a solid west wall and the rather small windows were provided with larger ones. Von Brocken gave it its castle-like appearance. The two-storey plastered building had 13 symmetrical axes with a mansard roof . The three-axis center of the front was emphasized by a flight of stairs and an attic with three female figures. The coat of arms of the Dutch royal family was later included in the central projection on the park side. When Carl Adolf von Brocken moved into the palace in 1878, further renovations were carried out with a new covering of the mansard roof .

At the beginning of the 20th century, the castle underwent some structural changes. The lower rooms were still used in 1936; but the decline was evident. Still inhabited during World War II, the castle was used for events on the lower floor in 1949/50. As part of the SMAD order No. 209 (new farmer program), it was removed for the extraction of building material. In the almost overgrown area you can still find a remnant of the cellar wall two meters high and long.

Houses in Dobbin

Inspector's House (2015)
Marstall (2015)

In 1864 Philipp v. Brocken clinker brick Inste on Kirchenstrasse. They are still inhabited today. Their ornaments were walled over. The Schnitterkaserne was converted several times after 1939. Krone Netherlands had the cavalier's house built for guests . Henri Deterding lived there after the purchase. Later it took in refugees from the eastern regions of the German Reich . In the German Democratic Republic it served as a school, tourist station and school camp (until 1999).

Wilhelmina and Heinrich stayed in Dobbin twice with a large court . Queen Wilhelmina loved Dobbin, so she went there incognito . From there they visited the Dobbertin Monastery on October 13, 1904 . The memorial stone commemorates the birth of Juliana , who was often in Dobbin as a child with her father. Her last visit there was in 1938 with her eldest daughter Beatrix . The coat of arms of Prince Heinrich of the Netherlands has been preserved. It hangs as a wrought-iron ornate H under a prince's crown on the gable of the inspector's house, which, like the stables, was built by Wilhelmina and Heinrich. A coat of arms of the Orange carved out of wood can be found in the village church of Dobbin .

Henri Deterding , chairman of the Royal Dutch Shell since 1907, based in The Hague and London, set up an administrative branch in the castle in 1936. A self-dialing exchange was set up in Krakow so that calls could be made anywhere in the world. Buried on a boulder , Deterding was exhumed in 1968 at the request of his family and reburied in Liechtenstein .

Land reform

In 1945 land reform land was handed over to 46 applicants. In 1953, farmers founded an agricultural production cooperative type I. Eight farms were still managed as individual farms. In 1955 373 hectares were farmed cooperatively and 103 hectares individually. As in all villages, development in Dobbin continued through the formation of large units, for example with Alt Sammit in animal production and VEG Krakow am See in plant production. After 1990 a large private company developed that uses a large part of the land and farm buildings in Dobbin and Zietlitz. The expropriation of the forest property was challenged by the descendants of the Deterding family after the political reunification and peaceful revolution in the GDR . In 2005 they got their former property back.

Owner of the Dobbin and Zietlitz estates

Crown Princess of the Netherlands
Only remnants of Dobbin Castle (2015)

Names and years of successes in ownership according to the verifiable mention.

  • 1275 - 0000Johannes de Barold
  • 1340-1368 Rudolph Barold
  • 1368–1393 Henning (Hans) von Barold, 1393 mayor of Güstrow
  • 1415-1435 Rulef (Roloff) by Barold
  • 1415–1471 Henning von Barold
  • 1461–1481 Roloff von Barold, councilor of Güstrow
  • 1506–1532 Reimar von Passow, pledgee
  • 1550–1576 Detlof von Barold
  • 1576–1626 Hans and Karsten von Barold
  • 1626–1627 Claus von Barold
  • 1627–1662 Moritz and Ulrich, then Johann von Walsleben
  • 1662–1672 Suderow retired
  • 1672–1693 Hans Rudolph von Grabow
  • 1693–1697 Hermann von Wickede
  • 1697–1699 Dietrich Wilhelm von Witzendorff
  • 1701–1727 Lieutenant Jürgen Ernst von Barold from the Duke of Lüneburg
  • 1727–1746 Royal Danish Major Christoph August von Barold
  • 1746–1770 Royal Danish Major General Hans Adolf von Lepel on Radegast
  • 1770–1805 Royal Danish court junker chamberlain Joachim Friedrich Diederich von Lepel
  • 1805–1813 Royal Danish Major General Karl Helmuth von Lepel
  • 1814–1826 inspectors Leer, Nagendank, Miethoff
  • 1813–1829 Danish Chamberlain Christoph August von Lepel
  • 1829–1853 Chief Steward, Royal Prussian Lieutenant Carl August Ludwig von Jasmund.
  • 1836–1853 tenant Joachim Kayatz from Zahren
  • 1853–1878 Domain Councilor Georg Philipp von Brocken
  • 1878–1891 Carl Adolf Georg von Brocken
  • 1891–1900 Anton von Brocken
  • 1901–1934 Prince Heinrich of the Netherlands, Duke of Mecklenburg ( Dutch royal house )
  • 1936–1939 Henri Deterding
  • 1936–1945 Charlotte Deterding (Waldgut)
  • 1939–1945 Eduard Winter (economic property)
  • 1945– 0000public property

literature

  • Count of Oeynhausen: History of the knightly estate Dobbin. Schwerin 1903.
  • Dobbin. In: Helge bei der Wieden , Roderich Schmidt (Hrsg.): Handbook of the historical sites of Germany . Volume 12: Mecklenburg / Pomerania (= Kröner's pocket edition . Volume 315). Kröner, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-520-31501-7 , pp. 19-20.
  • Wilhelm Mastaler: The watermills of the Güstrow district and their history. Güstrow 1991, pp. 193-198.
  • Wolf Lüdeke von Weltzien: Families in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania . Volume 3, Nagold 1992.
  • Georg Dehio : Handbook of the German art monuments, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. Munich, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-422-03081-6 , pp. 118-119.
  • Fred Beckendorff, Reinhard Schaugstat: Dobbin. In: Naturpark Nossentin / Schwinzer Heide (Hg): The village, town and monastery churches in the nature park and its surroundings. (= From culture and science, issue 3/2003) Karow 2003, pp. 28–29.
  • Friedrich Lorenz : The Kavalierhaus in Dobbin. Stier and Greif 2004, ISBN 3-933781-39-6 , pp. 137-141.
  • Friedrich Lorenz: Dobbin with Zietlitz . In: Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide Nature Park (Hg): The manor villages, manor complexes and parks in the nature park and its surroundings. (= From culture and science, issue 5/2007) Karow 2007, pp. 62–65.

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Printed sources

Unprinted sources

  • State Main Archive Schwerin (LHAS)
    • LHAS 1.5-4 / 3 documents Dobbertin monastery.
    • LHAS 5.12-3 / 1 Mecklenburg-Schwerin Ministry of the Interior. No. 5162/1 rural community Dobbin with Zietlitz 1921–1930, No. 23265 construction of a side road from Krakow via Dobbin to Linstow 1884, No. 24376 footpath from Krakower Erddamm via the Dobbiner Feldmark to Zietlitz 1895.
    • LHAS 5.12-4 / 3 Ministry of Agriculture, Domains and Forests, Dept. Settlement Office. District of Güstrow. No. 66 Dobbin, Ritterschaftliches Landgut 1935–1949.
    • LHAS 5.12-7 / 1 Mecklenburg-Schwerin Ministry for Education, Art, Spiritual and Medical Matters. No. 8040 Retirement of the clergy in the Dobbin parish 1907–1919.
    • LHAS 09/10 L / 06 personal estate Lisch, Friedrich (1801–1883). No. 763.
    • LHAS 09/10 H / 08 personal estate Hildebrandt, Friedrich (1898–1948). No. 35 Historical elaborations. Contains: From the chronicle of the village and the Dobbin estate.
  • State Church Archives Schwerin (LKAS)
    • LKAS, OKR Schwerin, 01 parish and village chronicles in Mecklenburg, No. 064a, 064 b
    • LKAS, OKR Schwerin, Specialia Abt. 1. No. 152 Dobbin, Kieth and Serrahn. Church 1765–1921.
    • Mecklenburg-Schwerin Ministry of Finance, Dept. of Building Construction, Patronage Building Files. No. 99 Dobbin, Construction and repairs to the religious buildings in Dobbin. Architectural drawings and plans of church buildings.
  • Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania State Library
    • Carl Wilhelm David Plass: Written works and life descriptions of the pastors and schoolmaster-sexton of Dobbin. (Property of the church in Dobbin 1857, stored in the sexton or church sacristy). Dobbin.
    • Carl Wilhelm David Plass: Description of the life of the pastors and sextons of Dobbin and Zitlitz, where possible by themselves. Dobbin 1857–1935.
    • Bruno Theek: From the chronicle of the village and property Dobbin, according to church and other records. probably 1934, Kieth near Krakow 1960.

Web links

Commons : Dobbin-Linstow  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. MUB I. (1863) No. 323.
  2. ^ Slavic castles in Mecklenburg
  3. ^ Paul Kühne: The Slavic place names. In: MJB 46 (1881) p. 40.
  4. Friedrich Lisch : The medieval castles of Dobbin. In: MJB 24 (1859) pp. 306-307.
  5. MUB X. (1877) No. 6737.
  6. MUB I. (1863) No. 344, 368, 369.
  7. Wolf Lüdeke von Weltzien: Von Barold Volume 3, 1992, p. 25.
  8. MUB XIV. (1886) No. 8431, MUB XV. (1890) no.9046.
  9. MUB X. (1877) No. 7117.
  10. ^ Count of Oeynhausen: Knightly estate Dobbin. 1903, p. 7.
  11. LHAS 1.5-4 / 3 documents Dobbertin monastery. Regesten No. 163, 164.
  12. ^ Church visit protocol Dobbin 1557.
  13. LHAS 1.5-4 / 3 documents Dobbertin monastery. Regesten No. 231.
  14. ^ Count of Oeynhausen: Knightly estate Dobbin. 1903, p. 20.
  15. ^ Count of Oeynhausen: Knightly estate Dobbin. 1903, p. 23.
  16. ^ Count of Oeynhausen: Knightly estate Dobbin. 1903, p. 24.
  17. Curt von Lepel (1908), Hans Körner (1990) and Oskar-Matthias von Lepel (2008), family tree of the von Lepel family, unprinted in the Greifswald State Archives
  18. Friedrich Lorenz: An oil magnate acquires the property. In: Dobbiner village stories. 2004 p. 51.
  19. The Friedrich-Heinrich-Landstiftung, a "model" example of fascist settlement policy in Mecklenburg (Jahrbuch für Regionalgeschichte 4/1972, pp. 97–118)
  20. Chronicle of the City of Krakow (GoogleBooks)
  21. LHAS 09/10. H / 08 personal estate Hildebrandt, Friedrich (1898–1948)
  22. a b c d e f Friedrich Lorenz: Dobbiner village stories. 2004 pp. 9-185.
  23. ^ Friedrich Lorenz: The last years of the knightly property. In: Dobbiner village stories. 2004 p. 76.
  24. War Diary of the High Command of the Wehrmacht, Volume 4, 2. 1961, pp. 1466, 1469.
  25. ^ Count of Oeynhausen: Glassworks in Mecklenburg. MJB 70 (1905) p. 298.
  26. ^ Count of Oeynhausen: Knightly estate Dobbin. 1903, pp. 34-35.
  27. Gerd Sobietzky: glassworks in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. 2006 p. 13.
  28. Traces of the Praetorius family (GoogleBooks)
  29. ^ Wilhelm Mastaler: Submerged villages and districts in the old district of Güstrow. In: Archaeological reports from Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. Supplement 1, 1997 pp. 39-47.
  30. Directory survey map from the nobleman Guthe Dobbin cum Perti. Zitlitz and Hütter Feld. 1768.
  31. ^ Count of Oeynhausen: Knightly estate Dobbin. 1903.
  32. LHAS, Gutsakten Dobbin.
  33. ^ Count of Oeynhausen: Knightly estate Dobbin. 1903, p. 66.
  34. Wolf Lüdeke von Wetzien: von Barold Volume 3, 1992, p. 36.
  35. Inspection on May 6, 2015.
  36. Wilhelmina: Lonely and yet not alone . Evangelisches Verlagswerk, Stuttgart 1961, p. 113.
  37. Wilhelmina: Lonely and yet not alone . Evangelisches Verlagswerk, Stuttgart 1961, p. 196.
  38. ^ Office for the Royal House, Royal House Archives The Hague: Letter from Queen Wilhelmina of October 13, 1904 from Dobbertin to her mother Emma.
  39. Guest book Dobbertin Monastery: Entry Wilhelmine October 13, 1904 .
  40. Kai Roggelin: Royal Roots. Juliana of the Netherlands, Duchess of Mecklenburg has died. SVZ, Mecklenburg-Magazin, No. 5 2004, p. 14.
  41. ^ Carl Wilhelm David Plass: Written works and biography of the pastors and schoolmaster-sexton of Dobbin. Landlords with time of ownership p. 4.
  42. Wolf Lüdeke von Weltzien: Von Barold. Vol. 3, 1992, p. 25.
  43. The von Walsleben brothers also took over the church patronage for the knight's seat.
  44. LHAS 09/10 L / 06 personal estate Lisch, Friedrich. No. 763.

Coordinates: 53 ° 36 ′ 57 ″  N , 12 ° 19 ′ 52 ″  E