Boilerbollentin

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coat of arms Germany map
The municipality of Siedenbollentin does not have a coat of arms
Boilerbollentin
Germany map, position of the municipality Siedenbollentin highlighted

Coordinates: 53 ° 44 '  N , 13 ° 23'  E

Basic data
State : Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
County : Mecklenburg Lake District
Office : Treptower Tollensewinkel
Height : 29 m above sea level NHN
Area : 18.82 km 2
Residents: 552 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 29 inhabitants per km 2
Postal code : 17089
Area code : 03969
License plate : MSE, AT, DM, MC, MST, MÜR, NZ, RM, WRN
Community key : 13 0 71 135
Office administration address: Rathausstrasse 1
17087 Altentreptow
Website : siedenbollentin.de
Mayor : Thorsten Haker
Location of the community Siedenbollentin in the Mecklenburg Lake District
Brandenburg Landkreis Rostock Landkreis Vorpommern-Rügen Landkreis Vorpommern-Greifswald Landkreis Vorpommern-Greifswald Landkreis Ludwigslust-Parchim Beggerow Borrentin Hohenbollentin Hohenmocker Kentzlin Kletzin Lindenberg (Vorpommern) Meesiger Nossendorf Sarow Schönfeld (bei Demmin) Siedenbrünzow Sommersdorf (Landkreis Mecklenburgische Seenplatte) Utzedel Verchen Warrenzin Datzetal Friedland Galenbeck Basedow (Mecklenburg) Basedow (Mecklenburg) Faulenrost Gielow Kummerow (am See) Malchin Neukalen Alt Schwerin Fünfseen Göhren-Lebbin Malchow (Mecklenburg) Nossentiner Hütte Penkow Silz (Mecklenburg) Walow Zislow Mirow Priepert Peenehagen Wesenberg (Mecklenburg) Wustrow (Mecklenburgische Seenplatte) Blankensee (Mecklenburg) Blumenholz Carpin Godendorf Grünow (Mecklenburg) Hohenzieritz Klein Vielen Kratzeburg Möllenbeck (bei Neustrelitz) Schloen-Dratow Schloen-Dratow Userin Wokuhl-Dabelow Beseritz Blankenhof Brunn (Mecklenburg) Neddemin Neuenkirchen (bei Neubrandenburg) Neverin Sponholz Staven Trollenhagen Woggersin Wulkenzin Zirzow Ankershagen Kuckssee Penzlin Möllenhagen Altenhof (Mecklenburg) Bollewick Buchholz (bei Röbel) Bütow Eldetal Fincken Gotthun Groß Kelle Kieve Lärz Leizen Melz Priborn Rechlin Röbel/Müritz Schwarz (Mecklenburg) Sietow Stuer Südmüritz Grabowhöfe Groß Plasten Hohen Wangelin Jabel Kargow Klink Klocksin Moltzow Moltzow Torgelow am See Vollrathsruhe Burg Stargard Burg Stargard Cölpin Groß Nemerow Holldorf Lindetal Pragsdorf Bredenfelde Briggow Grammentin Gülzow (bei Stavenhagen) Ivenack Jürgenstorf Kittendorf Knorrendorf Mölln (Mecklenburg) Ritzerow Rosenow Stavenhagen Zettemin Altenhagen (Landkreis Mecklenburgische Seenplatte) Altentreptow Bartow (Vorpommern) Breesen Breest Burow Gnevkow Golchen Grapzow Grischow Groß Teetzleben Gültz Kriesow Pripsleben Röckwitz Siedenbollentin Tützpatz Werder (bei Altentreptow) Wildberg (Vorpommern) Wolde Groß Miltzow Kublank Neetzka Schönbeck Schönhausen (Mecklenburg) Voigtsdorf Voigtsdorf Woldegk Dargun Demmin Feldberger Seenlandschaft Neubrandenburg Neustrelitz Waren (Müritz)map
About this picture

Siedenbollentin is a municipality in the northeast of the Mecklenburg Lake District in the historical part of Western Pomerania . The community is located about 20 km north of Neubrandenburg . Until January 1, 2004, it was part of the Tollensetal office and has been part of the Treptower Tollensewinkel office since then, based in Altentreptow .

Geography and traffic

Siedenbollentin is about ten kilometers northeast of Altentreptow and about 13 kilometers northwest of Friedland . The closest train station is in Altentreptow on the Stralsund – Berlin route . The Autobahn 20 runs west of the municipality, which can be reached via junction 30 Altentreptow . The former federal highway 96 (today: L 35) crosses Altentreptow west of the A 20 . The state road L 273 , which passes south, connects Siedenbollentin to the west with Werder and to the east with the Schwanbeck district of the city of Friedland . Kölln and Wodarg , districts of the Werder municipality, have been connected to the northwest since 1992.

The community includes the town of Siedenbollentin and the Röpenack , Schönkamp and Silbermoor extensions . The place Siedenbollentin comprises five streets and one square: Schulstraße , Am See , Lange Straße , Poststraße , Fritz-Peters-Straße and Lindenplatz . The historic border between the province of Pomerania and Mecklenburg-Strelitz runs along the eastern Vorwerk Röpenack, a former border pass, and south along the Kleiner Landgraben .

As a border municipality of the Treptower Tollensewinkel office and the Mecklenburg Lake District district , the municipality borders the Anklam-Land office in the north and thus the Vorpommern-Greifswald district , the Friedland office in the east and the Neverin office in the south .

Just like Siedenbollentin on the Treptower Werder are the municipalities of Werder , Grischow and Grapzow , the part of the town of Altentreptow east of the Tollense and the district of Bittersberg of the municipality of Breest . At the end of 2017, 1,738 residents lived on Treptower Werder (excluding the respective districts of Altentreptow and Breest). As a natural river island, the Treptower Werder is only accessible via bridges: from the west over two bridges over the Tollense in Altentreptow, in the south over the bridges of the L 35 and A 20 over the Kleiner Landgraben , in the east over the bridge of the L 273 over the Kleine Landgraben near Schwanbeck and in the north over the bridge over the Großer Landgraben near Klempenow .

Natural space

The community is located on the Treptower Werder , an approx. 90 km 2 large depression between Tollense , Großem Landgraben and Kleinem Landgraben , in the large landscape of the Upper Tollensegebiet in the back country of the Mecklenburg Lake District . Large parts of Siedenbollentin are today characterized by agriculture and forestry.

To the west of Siedenbollentin lies the Großer Siedenbollentiner See , to the south the nature reserve Hangquellmoor Binsenberg borders on the district of Schönkamp . In the northeast, the community is bordered by one of the largest contiguous forests in the district with an area of ​​more than 7.5 km 2 . To the north of the village lies the Osterberg at 35 m above sea level. NHN highest elevation in the community.

history

1289-1799

Siedenbollentin was first mentioned in a document in 1289 in a deed of donation from the Pomeranian Duke Bogislaw IV . In this the donation of the place to the monastery Reinfeld near Lübeck was confirmed. The place name is of Slavic origin and could have been derived from bolot - swamp or swamp meadow . The part of the word sieden for low or low came in later. In some historical sources, the prefixes south and south and the presumably Slavic name Solentyn can be found less often . On the maps of the 17th century, such as B. in the Atlas Blaeul (1665), the name Bol (d) ennin is regularly found. During the German colonization in the east , the village was rebuilt as a street village. The late Gothic Siedenbollentin church dates back to around 1400. In the context of the Seven Years' War , a battle between Prussian troops under Belling and Swedish troops under Wrangel took place near the village in 1761 , which left about three hundred dead southeast of the Röpenack suburb . A hill on the other side of the Kleiner Landgraben has since been called the Schwedenschanze.

1800-1989

Around 1817 the Pomeranian village still had 327 inhabitants, around 1835 648 and 1862 already 668 inhabitants. The adjacent manor Bollentin was acquired by Fritz Peters , a close friend of the Low German writer Fritz Reuter , from Ludwig Heydemann around 1859 . In 1897 he sold it to the Royal Prussian Monastery Chamber of Hanover . The manor house was built in the middle to the end of the 19th century by converting an older building. After 1945 the restaurant, the youth, culture and village center was here; later it was used as a school building and library. Between 1897 and 1945 Siedenbollentin was connected to the passenger rail network via the eastern line of the Demminer Bahnen between Demmin and Altentreptow . In 1945 the railroad tracks were dismantled as part of the reparations payments to the Soviet Union.

In 1969 a connection to Schwanbeck suitable for car traffic was established with the state road L 273 . In 1989 Siedenbollentin celebrated its 700th anniversary.

Since 1990

After the reunification , the community experienced a major upheaval, which u. a. demographic impact. Between 1990 and 2018, the population of the municipality fell by around 28% from 797 to 572. At the same time, due to the falling number of pupils, the municipality had to accept the gradual closure of the Fritz Reuter School, which was built in 1956 and existed as a secondary school until 2003 , around 2006 to be finally closed. A day-care center will continue to exist. The former school grounds are now used as a community center, training facility for SV Siedenbollentin e. V. as well as to host a children's soccer school that takes place every summer.

Today the fourth largest community in terms of population of the Treptower Tollensewinkel office is characterized by an active club life - u. a. are a fishing club, youth club, theater group and football club based in the village - from. The local soccer club SV Siedenbollentin has been playing in the Landesliga Ost since the 2017/18 season . On October 1, 2017, the community hosted the 27th Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania harvest thanksgiving festival.

politics

Coat of arms, flag, official seal

The municipality has no officially approved national emblem, neither a coat of arms nor a flag . The official seal is the small state seal with the coat of arms of the region of Western Pomerania . It shows an upright griffin with a raised tail and the inscription "GEMEINDE SIEDENBOLLENTIN • LANDKREIS MECKLENBURGISCHE SEENPLATTE".

Social and infrastructure

Siedenbollentin has a day-care center, a social welfare station, a general medical practice, a dental practice and a local grocery retailer that also provides postal services.

The community has been connected to Telekom's LTE network since July 2017 .

Attractions

Church of Siedenbollentin

See also the list of architectural monuments in Siedenbollentin

Others

Siedenbollentin became known through the landowner Fritz Peters and his friend Fritz Reuter , who often stayed with him on the estate.

Web links

Commons : Siedenbollentin  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Statistisches Amt MV - population status of the districts, offices and municipalities 2019 (XLS file) (official population figures in the update of the 2011 census) ( help ).
  2. Effenbart: Detailed description of the current state of the royal. Prussian Duchy of Vor and Hinter Pomerania. In: Description of the Prussian West Pomerania. Ludewig Wilhelm Brüggemann, 1779, accessed on August 1, 2017 .
  3. Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania's natural spatial structure. In: Map portal environment Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. State Office for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Geology Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, accessed on January 27, 2019 .
  4. NSG Hangquellmoor Binsenberg. Foundation for Environment and Nature Conservation Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, 2017, accessed on July 31, 2017 .
  5. Stenographic reports on the negotiations of the assembly called for the agreement of the Prussian state constitution . tape 1 . Berlin 1848, p. 121, 637 .
  6. ^ Klaus Conrad; Rodgero Prümers; Georg Winte: Pomeranian document book: 1326-1335 . tape 2 , no. 7 , 1958.
  7. Atlas Blaeul Pomerania. 1655, accessed August 1, 2017 .
  8. ^ Wilhelm von Knobelsdorff: On the history of the von Knobelsdorff family . tape 3 . Berlin 1857, p. 127 .
  9. ^ JC Müller: Handbook for the Atlas of Prussia in 27 maps. 1835, Retrieved August 1, 2017 .
  10. Local directory of the government district of Stettin according to the new district division from 1817. Carl Wilhelm Struck, 1817, accessed on August 1, 2017 .
  11. ^ Heinrich Berghaus: Land book of the Duchy of Pomerania and the Principality of Rügen. In: Volume 1. W. Dietze, 1865, accessed on August 1, 2017 .
  12. ^ Klempin, Robert, & Kratz, Gustab: Matriculations and directories of the Pomeranian knighthood from the XIV to the XIX century. 1863, Retrieved August 1, 2017 .
  13. ^ City of Friedland. (No longer available online.) 2007, archived from the original on March 13, 2012 ; accessed on August 1, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.friedland-mecklenburg.de
  14. Population of the districts, offices and communities in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania June 30, 2018. State Office for Internal Administration Statistical Office Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, December 10, 2018, accessed on January 4, 2019 .
  15. About Siedenbollentin's History and Other Facts. Municipality of Siedenbollentin, accessed on August 1, 2017 .
  16. ^ Siedenbollentiner football school "Goli". (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on August 1, 2017 ; accessed on August 1, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.sfsgoli-fussballschule.com
  17. NDR: Siedenbollentin celebrates harvest festival in MV. Retrieved October 20, 2017 .
  18. Main Statute, Section 1, Paragraph 2 (PDF).
  19. Telekom Netz: #Siedenbollentin now has access to the mobile. July 27, 2017, accessed August 1, 2017 .