Boiling stoves

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boiling herd was a village in the Altmark and was already in the Middle Ages to the deserted village .

location

The village office was located near the village of Hohen-Heerde , which had also become desolate , south of the small elevation Hohes Feld between Breitenfeld (Gardelegen) , Jeggau and Quarnebeck .

history

The place was first mentioned in a document in 1472, but at that time it was already desolate. Sieden-Heerde was probably abandoned as early as the 14th century. Based on the name, it is assumed that the village was a German settlement. Probably in the middle of the 15th century, Ludolf von Alvensleben acquired the desolate district. For 70 Rhenish guilders and three bison rye, von Alvensleben resold Sieden-Heerde and the neighboring Hohen-Heerde to Ludolf von dem Knesenbneck and his sons Werner and Meinhard with the certificate of January 1, 1472 . Later, the place was again owned by the von Alvensleben family , possibly the right of repurchase had been exercised. On March 31, 1521, knight Ludolf von Alvensleben , Busses son, sold hoegen und sieden Heeren, documented are between Bredefeld and Jeggau for 400 Salzwedler marks to Dambeck Monastery .

Today there are no more traces of the former settlement to be seen on site.

literature

  • Wilhelm Zahn : Die Wüstungen der Altmark , printing and publishing by Otto Hendel Halle (Saale) 1909, p. 83f.

Coordinates: 52 ° 33 '32.4 "  N , 11 ° 12' 36"  E