Seeburg (Mittenwalde)

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Seeburg is part of the municipality of Mittenwalde in the Uckermark district ( Brandenburg ). The small settlement was founded in 1825 as a Vorwerk .

Großer Trebowsee and the suburbs Wiedebusch (sold), Sternthal (Boitzenburger Land) and Seeburg, excerpt from the Urmes table sheet 2747 Boitzenburg from 1825

location

The municipality is located two kilometers northwest of the center of Mittenwalde and 2.5 km east-northeast of Herzfelde , a district of the city of Templin . The community part can be reached via a small road that branches off the road to Herzfelde in the western development of Mittenwalde. The settlement is at 75  m above sea level. NHN at the southwest end of the Kuhzer See between Schwalbenlanke and Mittenwaldscher Lanke.

history

The Vorwerk Seeburg was built in 1825 on a 234 acre area of ​​the Mittenwalde field, which Otto von Berg had sold to Friedrich Wilhelm von Arnim zu Kröchlendorf (1746-1825) in 1794. In the same year (1825) it was officially named. He was followed by his son Friedrich Abraham Heinrich von Arnim (1777–1845); he was a royal Prussian judge and cathedral dean , heir to Kröchlendorf. He was married to Caroline Wilhelmine geb. Heim, daughter of the Berlin doctor Ernst Ludwig Heim . In 1850 the son of this couple was Oskar von Arnim-Kröchlendorff (1813–1903), District Administrator a. D. in the district of Angermünde owner of Seeburg. Berghaus gives the following information about Seeburg (for 1850): 1.71 acres of farmyard, 523.10 acres of arable land, 68.45 acres of meadows, 100 acres of Hutung (pastures), 200 acres of forest land and 8.112 acres of land (unproductive land), together 901 , 58 acres.

In the hand registers from 1857 Seeburg is listed under Kröchlendorff , Mittenwalde, and Kuhz with Ruhhof , so at that time it was still an independent manor district. Adolf Frantz also performs Seeburg in the same way. In 1860 the Vorwerk Seeburg comprised 594 acres, of which 5 acres were homesteads, 513 acres and 76 acres were meadow. Seeburg had a house, seven farm buildings (including a brick factory) and 32 residents. In 1871 the Vorwerk had a house and 13 residents. For 1879, the Seeburg manor was given a total area of ​​393.31 hectares, of which 229.6 hectares were water (Kuhzer See), and 135.30 hectares were arable, 24.77 hectares of meadows and 3.64 hectares of Hutung (pastures ). The property tax entry was set at 2087 marks. The leaseholder was an Oberamtmann Goerss. A brick factory also belonged to the estate. It was 250 meters northwest of the estate.

In 1885 Ruhhof and Seeburg were leased together to a Paul Friedrich Cordua (1857–1901), a lieutenant in the reserve. The size of the property is now estimated at 402 hectares, of which 139 hectares are arable, 25 hectares of meadows, 4 hectares of Hutung and 234 hectares of water. In 1903 Hermann Thyen (1865–) was tenant of Ruhhof and Seeburg. Oskar von Arnim-Kröchlendorff had also died in 1903, and the Ruhhof and Seeburg now fell to Hans Detlev Abraham Otto Freiherr von Arnim-Kröchlendorff , the nephew of the previous owner. In 1907 the livestock of Ruhhof and Seeburg was given as 54 horses, 131 head of cattle, including 57 cows, 335 sheep and 50 pigs, Hermann Thyen can be proven as a tenant until 1914. After the First World War, a tenant was not named again until 1923. Tenant Dähn at Ruhhof and Seeburg had an animal population of 41 horses, 129 cattle, of which 70 were cows, 6 sheep and 50 pigs. The property tax net income was set at 2087 marks. In 1925 Seeburg had 31 residents. 1929 is only given for Ruhhof the tenant, Walter Blank, Seeburg is no longer mentioned. Dietlof Graf von Arnim-Boitzenburg died in 1933. His third son Joachim Dietlof (1898–1972), who until 1945 was the heir of Kröchlendorff and owner of Seeburg, followed as owner. Like the other large estates, Seeburg was expropriated and divided up in the land reform of 1946.

Around 1860 Seeburg was still an independent manor district. Later it was united with the manor district of Ruhhof. In 1874 the manor district of Ruhhof with Seeburg was assigned to district 3 Kröchlendorf. Head of office was Landrath a. D. von Arnim, manor owner on Kröchlendorf. The deputy was Administrator Meyer auf Kröchlendorf. In 1928 the Seeburg manor district was combined with the exclaves of the Kröchlendorf, Blankensee, Kienwerder and Mittenwalde manor to form the Mittenwalde community. In 1931 and 1957 Seeburg was a residential area of ​​Mittenwalde. 1964 and 1971 it had the status of a district.

In 1992 Mittenwalde merged with nine other municipalities to form the Gerswalde Office . Today Seeburg has the status of a part of the municipality of Mittenwalde.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, Piece 46, of November 18, 1825, p. 256.
  2. ^ Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus: Land book of the Mark Brandenburg and the Markgrafthum Nieder-Lausitz in the middle of the 19th century; or geographical-historical-statistical description of the Province of Brandenburg, at the instigation of the State Minister and Upper President Flottwell. Second volume. 650 p., Printed and published by Adolph Müller, Brandenburg an der Havel 1855. Online at Google Books , p. 329.
  3. ^ Karl Friedrich Rauer: Hand register of the knight estates represented in all circles of the Prussian state on district and state parliaments. 454 p., Self-published by Rauer, Berlin 1857 Online at the Heinrich Heine University and State Library, Düsseldorf , p. 93.
  4. ^ Adolf Frantz: General register of lordships, knights and other goods of the Prussian monarchy with information on the area, yield, property tax, owner, purchase and tax prices. 117 p., Verlag der Gsellius'schen Buchhandlung, Berlin, 1863, p. 54.
  5. Richard Boeckh: Local statistics of the government district Potsdam with the city of Berlin. 276 p., Published by Dietrich Reimer, Berlin, 1861, p. 28
  6. a b Lieselott Enders : Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part VIII: Uckermark. Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1986, p. 911/12.
  7. ^ The municipalities and manor districts of the Prussian State and their population. According to the original materials of the general census of December 1, 1871. II. Province of Brandenburg. Publishing house of the Royal Statistical Bureau (Dr. Engel), Berlin 1873. Online at Google Books , p. 14/15.
  8. ^ Paul Ellerholz, H. Lodemann, H. von Wedell: General address book of the manor and estate owners in the German Empire. With details of the properties, their size (in Culturart), their net income from property tax, their tenants, branches of industry and post offices. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery The Province of Brandenburg. 311 p., Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung R. Stricker, Berlin 1879, PDF , p. 212-213.
  9. Family tree Cordua (PDF)
  10. ^ Paul Ellerholz: Handbook of real estate in the German Empire. With indication of all goods, their quality, their size (in culture type); your property tax net income; their owners, tenants, administrators etc .; of industries; Postal stations; Breeding of special cattle, exploitation of livestock etc. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery: Province of Brandenburg. 2nd improved edition, 340 p., Berlin, Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1885, p. 280/81.
  11. ^ Ernst Kirstein (editor): Handbook of real estate in the German Empire. With indication of all goods, their quality, their size and type of culture; your property tax net income; their owners, tenants, administrators etc .; of industries; Post, telegraph and railroad stations; Breeding of special breeds of animals; Exploitation of the livestock etc. I. The Kingdom of Prussia. I. Delivery to the province of Brandenburg. 4th improved edition, LXX + 321 p., + 4 p., Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung, Berlin, 1903, p. 266/67.
  12. Ulf Fiedler: Thyens Castle has a legendary reputation Weser Kurier from October 29, 2011
  13. ^ Paul Niekammer (ed.): Goods address book of the province of Brandenburg. List of all goods with details of the property's properties, the net income from property tax, the total area and the area of ​​the individual crops, livestock, all industrial facilities and telephone connections, details of the property, tenants and administrators, the post, telegraph and railway stations and their removal from the estate, the Protestant and Catholic parishes, the registry office districts, the city or administrative districts, the chamber, regional and local courts, the Landwehr districts as well as an alphabetical register of places and persons and a manual of the royal authorities of the province. 271 p., Leipzig, Paul Niekammer, Stettin, 1907, p. 94/95.
  14. ^ Ernst Seyfert (ed.): Goods address book for the province of Brandenburg. List of all manors, estates and larger farms in the province with details of the property properties, the net income from property tax, the total area and area of ​​the individual crops, livestock, all industrial facilities and telephone connections, details of the property, tenants and administrators of the Post, telegraph and railway stations and their distance from the estate, the Protestant and Catholic parishes, the registry office districts, the city and administrative districts, the higher regional, regional and local courts, an alphabetical register of places and persons, the manual of the royal authorities as well a map of the province of Brandenburg at a scale of 1: 1,000,000. XLV, 433 S., Reichenbach'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Leipzig, 1914, 164/65.
  15. ^ Oskar Koehler (arrangement), Kurt Schleising (introduction): Niekammer's agricultural goods address books. Agricultural goods address book of the province of Brandenburg: Directory of all manors, estates and larger farms in the province of approx. 30 hectares upwards with details of property properties, net income from property tax, the total area and the area of ​​the individual crops, livestock, all industrial plants and the telephone connections, details of the owners, tenants and administrators, the post, telegraph and railway stations and their distance from the property, the Protestant and Catholic parishes, the registry office districts, the city and official districts, the higher regional, regional and local courts, one alphabetical place and person registers, the manual of the royal authorities and a map in the scale 1: 175.0000. I-XXXII, 343 pp., Reichenbach'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Leipzig, 1923, p. 95.
  16. Ernst Seyfert, Hans Wehner, Alexander Haußknecht, Ludwig Hogrefe (eds.): Agricultural address book of the manors, estates and farms of the province of Brandenburg: List of all manors, estates and farms from approx. 20 ha upwards with information on the property, the total area and the area of ​​the individual crops, the livestock, the company's own industrial facilities and telephone connections, details of the owners, tenants and administrators, the post, telegraph and railway stations and their distance from the property, the regional and local courts, an alphabetical register of places and persons , a directory of the most important government agencies and agencies, agricultural associations and corporations. 4th increased and improved edition, 464 p., Leipzig, Verlag von Niekammer's address books, Leipzig, 1929 (Niekammer's goods address books Volume VII), p. 128 (under Kuhz)
  17. Official Gazette of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin Extra sheet of June 6, 1874, p. 180 Online at Google Books
  18. ^ Service portal of the state administration of the state of Brandenburg: Mittenwalde community

Coordinates: 53 ° 11 ′ 57 "  N , 13 ° 38 ′ 34"  E