Steinhausen (Templin)

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Steinhausen was a Vorwerk about half way from Klosterwalde to Herzfelde , both places are districts of the city of Templin in the Uckermark district (Brandenburg). The Vorwerk Steinhausen was rebuilt around / before 1852 and officially named in 1852. The manor buildings were demolished at an as yet undetermined point in time after 1960.

Herzfelde with the Vorwerke Annenhof, Uhlenhof and Steinhausen

location

Steinhausen was about halfway along the field path that runs east and almost parallel to the K 7326 from Klosterwalde to Herzfelde, just under 700 meters west of the Großer Dolgensee . The homestead belonged to the district of Herzfelde.

history

In 1852 or shortly before that, the Vorwerk Steinhausen was built and officially named on October 1, 1852. Unfortunately, no owner or lessee is named in the short note. It belonged to the Herzfelde manor district, so it did not form an independent manor district, and therefore the owner of Steinhausen can assume the owner of the manor in Herzfelde. At that time, the Herzfelde manor already belonged to Hermann Hoth from Mecklenburg-Strelitz. At that time the Vorwerk Steinhausen had a fireplace (residential building) and 16 residents. The agricultural area was 878 acres . In 1858 the Herzfelde manor was acquired by Lieutenant Robert August Ferdinand Lindenberg. In 1865 he was an arbitrator in the Templin district.

In 1860 the Vorwerk Steinhausen consisted of a residential building and three farm buildings. In 1867 10 people lived in the Vorwerk. In the handbooks of the property in the German Empire (1885, 1896, 1803, 1910, 1921) and the agricultural address books of the manors, estates and farms of the province of Brandenburg (1907, 1914, 1923, 1929) the Vorwerk Steinhausen is not separate from the manor in Herzfelde listed, but is subsumed under Herzfelde Rittergut . There was also another, larger estate in the village of Herzfelde, which, however, belonged to the municipality. It is referred to in the above works as Herzfelde Gut . Robert August Ferdinand Lindenberg died in 1885 and the widowed Mrs Ernestine Lindenberg is registered as the owner of the Herzfelde manor. The manor had specialized in dairy farming and sheep farming. In 1896 only Lindenberg is recorded as the owner . Presumably it is the son of the above Robert Lindenberg; In 1903 and 1907 he was then called Otto Lindenberg.

On July 1, 1907, the Berlin Commerce Councilor Max Francke (also written Franke) bought the Herzfelde manor. As early as 1908 he began building the palace in Herzfelde, which was completed by 1911. By 1914 he had also bought the two farms Annenhof and Uhlenhof.

With the formation of the districts in 1874, the Herzfelde manor with Steinhausen was assigned to the district no.10 Petznick ( Klosterwalde with Paulinenhof , Rieckshof , Sydowshof , Jakobshagen , Collinshof , Egarsee , Kirchenfelde , Stabeshöhe , Herzfelde, Steinhausen, Kreuzkrug , Petznick , Henkinshain and Wiedebusch ) . The head of office was the district deputy von Arnim auf Petznick, his deputy was the manor owner Lindenberg auf Herzfelde.

In 1928 the Herzfelde manor district was merged with the Herzfelde community. In 1931 and also in 1967 Steinhausen was run by Herzfelde as a residential area. The time at which the courtyard buildings were demolished has not yet been determined.

In the land reform of 1946, all goods were expropriated and divided.

literature

  • Lieselott Enders : Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg. Part VIII: Uckermark. Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1986, pp. 1028/29.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, Item 40, of October 1, 1852, p. 408.
  2. ^ 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.
  3. ^ Official Journal of the Royal Government of Potsdam and the City of Berlin, Item 11 of March 17, 1865, p. 113 Online at Google
  4. ^ 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. Verlag der Königliche Statistischen Bureaus (Dr. Engel), Berlin 1873. Online at Google Books , p. 14.
  5. ^ 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.
  6. Paul Ellerholz, Ernst Kirstein, Traugott Müller, W. Gerland and Georg Volger: Handbuch des Grundbesitz im Deutschen Reiche. 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: Province of Brandenburg. 3rd improved edition, 310 pp., Berlin, Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1896, pp. 264/65.
  7. ^ 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 S., + 4 S., Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung, Berlin, 1903, 264/65.
  8. ^ 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. 92/93.
  9. Helmut Borth: Anti-Terror Training in the Black Mountains: Stories with a History from the Uckermark. BoD, 2016, ISBN 978-3-7431-6855-8 pp.
  10. Reinhold Reichert, Royal Authorities and Chamber of Agriculture for the Province of Brandenburg (Ed.): Handbook of real estate in the German Empire. Brandenburg Province. 5th completely revised edition. I-LXXXVI (1-86), 376 p., + 24 p. (Location register), Nicolaische Verlags-Buchhandlung R. Stricker, Berlin, 1910, p. 358/59.
  11. ^ 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 pp., Reichenbach'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Leipzig, 1914, pp. 164/65.
  12. 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

Coordinates: 53 ° 10 ′ 48.6 "  N , 13 ° 35 ′ 30.5"  E