Severin (Domsühl)
Severin
Domsühl municipality
Coordinates: 53 ° 30 ′ 0 ″ N , 11 ° 46 ′ 0 ″ E
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Height : | 59 m above sea level NHN |
Area : | 11.16 km² |
Residents : | 293 (Dec. 31, 2012) |
Population density : | 26 inhabitants / km² |
Incorporation : | May 25, 2014 |
Postal code : | 19374 |
Area code : | 038728 |
Severin is a district of the municipality of Domsühl in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (Germany).
Geography and traffic
Severin lies on a flat plain that rises slightly to the east. Here are also the highest points of the village with almost 76 m above sea level. NHN . There is also a larger forest area in the eastern part. The rest of the district is used for agriculture. Larger rivers and lakes do not exist. In the west there is a large wetland area on the Schwerin-Parchim railway line.
Severin is 17 kilometers northwest of Parchim and 13 kilometers southeast of Crivitz . The federal highway 321 runs through the place. The federal motorway 24 can be reached via the Parchim junction (22 km). Severin is on the Schwerin – Parchim railway line . Schwerin-Parchim Airport is located to the southeast .
history
The place Severin was first mentioned in 1264 as Ceberin . The place name is probably derived from the Old Slavic word sebrŭ for farmer . The place simply means farming village or was named after the locator Sebor Ort des Sebor .
On January 1, 1951, the previously independent municipality Bergrade, Dorf (also Dorf Bergrade) was incorporated.
On May 25, 2014 Severin was incorporated into Domsühl.
Attractions
- Neo-Renaissance palace ( manor house ) from the 1880s. The last owner before 1945 was Günther Quandt . His ex-wife Magda married Joseph Goebbels in the Severin village church in 1931 and then celebrated in the manor house. From 1945 the mansion was first accommodation for refugees, then a residential building and finally an educational institution of the Kulturbund der GDR and, since the 1970s, the Schwerin District Culture Academy . Then from 1991 to 1996 branch of the Academy Schwerin. Private owner since 2002, who extensively renovated it in 2009.
- Neo-Gothic single - nave brick / field stone church with a mighty three-storey tower and transverse structure built by Theodor Krüger from 1869 to 1872 .
- Memorial stone from 1946 for the death march of 6,000 prisoners from Sachsenhausen concentration camp in April 1945; since 1976 information board
Individual evidence
- ↑ MUB II. (1864) No. 1009.
- ^ Paul Kühnel: The Slavic place names in Meklenburg. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology. Vol. 46, 1881, ISSN 0259-7772 , pp. 3-168, here p. 133.
- ^ Statistical Office Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania: Area changes