Plaice (Luckau)
Clods
City of Luckau
Coordinates: 51 ° 52 ′ 48 ″ N , 13 ° 43 ′ 3 ″ E
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Height : | 60 m above sea level NHN |
Residents : | 53 |
Incorporation : | July 1, 1950 |
Incorporated into: | Karche |
Postal code : | 15926 |
Area code : | 03544 |
Clods
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Schollen ( Lower Sorbian Šawlica ) is part of the municipality of Karche-Zaacko , a district of the city of Luckau in the Dahme-Spreewald district in Brandenburg .
location
Schollen is located in Niederlausitz , about four kilometers north of the city of Luckau. Surrounding villages are Kreblitz in the north, Karche in the south, Wierigsdorf in the south-west, Gießmannsdorf in the west and Rüdingsdorf in the north-west. To the west the burst flows past clods.
Schollen is located on the district road K 6138 and west of the district road K 6137. The federal road 96 runs about one kilometer west of the village and connects the place with Luckau and Golßen .
history
Schollen was first mentioned in a document on April 25, 1299 as a Scholin . The name Schollyn is mentioned in a document from 1529 . The place name comes from the Sorbian language and is interpreted in different ways. One possibility he describes a settlement built from stilts , the other interpretation goes back to the Slavic personal name Skola . Arnošt Muka calls the Sorbian name Šawlica , which roughly means place on the lapwing field .
In the year it was first mentioned, the dead end village was owned by the Ileburg family and came into the possession of the Dobrilugk monastery . In 1529 the village was pledged to the city of Luckau, which acquired the village as property in 1554. In 1708 there were nine farms in Schollen . In 1844 Schollen had 92 residents who lived in 14 buildings. The village was parish after Gießmannsdorf. A windmill was mentioned in the village at that time. Administratively, Schollen belonged to the city of Luckau.
After the Congress of Vienna , the previously Saxon plaice came to the Kingdom of Prussia . There, the village was by no later than 1816 in the district Luckau in the administrative district of Frankfurt . On July 1, 1950, the community was incorporated into the southern Karche . On July 25, 1952, Schollen was assigned to the newly formed Luckau district in the Cottbus district . On January 1, 1957, Karche was incorporated with the district of Schollen into the new municipality of Karche-Zaacko . After the fall of the Wall , Schollen was initially located in the Luckau district and joined the Luckau office on May 25, 1992 . In the course of the Brandenburg district reform of December 6, 1993, the municipality of Karche-Zaakow and its districts were assigned to the district of Dahme-Spreewald . On December 31, 1999 Karche-Zaakow was incorporated into Luckau with the district of Schollen .
Population development
Population development in Schollen from 1875 to 1946 | |||||||||||||
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year | Residents | year | Residents | year | Residents | ||||||||
1875 | 87 | 1925 | 88 | 1946 | 121 | ||||||||
1890 | 93 | 1933 | 82 | ||||||||||
1910 | 88 | 1939 | 67 |
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Reinhard E. Fischer : The place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin: age - origin - meaning . be.bra Wissenschaft, 2005, p. 153 .
- ↑ Arnost Muka: Serbski zemjepisny słowničk. Budyšin, 1927, p. 83 ( digitized version ).
- ↑ Manfred Starosta, Erwin Hannusch, Hauke Bartels: Dolnoserbski-nimske słowniki. German-Lower Sorbian dictionary, accessed on April 14, 2018 .
- ↑ Topographical-statistical overview of the administrative district of Frankfurt ad O. 1844, p. 162 ( bsb-muenchen.de ).
- ↑ Schollen in the historical index of places. Retrieved April 14, 2018 .
- ↑ Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. (PDF; 331 KB) District Dahme-Spreewald. State Office for Data Processing and Statistics State of Brandenburg, December 2006, accessed on April 14, 2018 .