Plaice (Luckau)

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Clods
City of Luckau
Coordinates: 51 ° 52 ′ 48 ″  N , 13 ° 43 ′ 3 ″  E
Height : 60 m above sea level NHN
Residents : 53
Incorporation : July 1, 1950
Incorporated into: Karche
Postal code : 15926
Area code : 03544
Clods
Clods

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
year Residents year Residents year Residents
1875 87 1925 88 1946 121
1890 93 1933 82
1910 88 1939 67

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Reinhard E. Fischer : The place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin: age - origin - meaning . be.bra Wissenschaft, 2005, p. 153 .
  2. Arnost Muka: Serbski zemjepisny słowničk. Budyšin, 1927, p. 83 ( digitized version ).
  3. Manfred Starosta, Erwin Hannusch, Hauke ​​Bartels: Dolnoserbski-nimske słowniki. German-Lower Sorbian dictionary, accessed on April 14, 2018 .
  4. Topographical-statistical overview of the administrative district of Frankfurt ad O. 1844, p. 162 ( bsb-muenchen.de ).
  5. Schollen in the historical index of places. Retrieved April 14, 2018 .
  6. 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 .