Sternhagen (Northwestuckermark)

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Sternhagen
Northwestuckermark municipality
Coordinates: 53 ° 14 ′ 29 ″  N , 13 ° 48 ′ 5 ″  E
Height : 42 m above sea level NHN
Area : 2.97 km²
Residents : 74  (Dec 31, 2006)
Population density : 25 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : December 1, 1997
Incorporated into: Röpersdorf / Sternhagen
Postal code : 17291
Area code : 039852
Village church
Village church

Sternhagen is an inhabited part of the municipality of Nordwestuckermark in the district of Uckermark in the northeast of the state of Brandenburg and belongs to the district Röpersdorf / Sternhagen . The place was an independent municipality until December 1, 1997.

location

Sternhagen is nine kilometers as the crow flies southwest of Prenzlau in the Uckermark on Sternhagener See in the past at Ochsenpfuhl, Radessee and three lakes that were known as the Red Sea. Today it's the small lake, the Schulzensee and the big red sea. Surrounding villages are Dollshof in the north, Zollchow in the Northeast, which the municipality Oberuckersee belonging location Strehlow in the southwest, Sternhagen Good in the south, Linde Hagen in the west and large lock forest and Schmachtenhagen in the northwest.

Sternhagen is on the district road 7321. The federal road 109 (Templin – Prenzlau) is about three kilometers away.

history

Around 1248 the spelling Styrenhagen is used for the village and from 1284 Styrnhagen . The name here refers to Styren = bulls and hagen = grove or forest (surrounding the forest for hunting). There is also an Ossenpul (Ochsenpfuhl) in the records for the region in 1375. The type of settlement is seen differently, according to Lieselott Enders Sternhagen was laid out as an anger village and according to Anneliese Krenzlin as a square village. The place Sternhagen was first mentioned in 1372 with the spelling Styrnhagen . There are several possible interpretations of the place name. Presumably the name was chosen to attract potential settlers. The addition of "-hagen" to the name indicates a clearing settlement . In 1375 the manor and village belonged to Seehausen Abbey. In 1410 the village was owned by Gericke von Holtzendorf and in 1416 the Jungfrauenkloster and the magistrate in Prenzlau Sternhagen bought it. The monastery received the village with lease, estate, services and court. The magistrate kept the lake on the castle wall and the right to the limestone quarry in the entire Feldmark. After the church reformation, the Jungfrauenkloster sold the village to Count von Hohenstein Schwedt. Due to disputes with the magistrate, the count ceded the property to the von Arnim family in 1650. Sternhagen used to be on a trade route between Prenzlau and Templin and was the location of a customs house . In the 18th century a manor was built , which, like the surrounding towns, was owned by the local aristocratic family zu Arnim . In 1834 the family sold their property to the landowner Collin.

On September 30, 1928, the disbanded manor district Schmachtenhagen was incorporated into the municipality of Sternhagen. Until 1952, Sternhagen belonged to the Prenzlau district in the Prussian province of Brandenburg . After the GDR district reform, the community finally belonged to the reduced Prenzlau district in the Neubrandenburg district . On July 1, 1961, Lindenhagen was incorporated into Sternhagen. Since the turnaround and the Brandenburg district reform in 1993, Sternhagen has been in the Uckermark district . On December 1, 1997, Sternhagen merged with the municipality of Röpersdorf to form the municipality of Röpersdorf / Sternhagen . On November 1, 2001, this merged with nine other municipalities to form what is now the greater municipality of Nordwestuckermark .

In 2005 the tourist project Wallpfad was created . 70 kilometers of hiking or biking trails lead past historical monuments and sites in the Uckermark and also open up Sternhagen to visitors.

Attractions

Population development

year Residents
1284 304
1774 212
1803 252
year Residents
1816 218
1840 288
1861 310
year Residents
1875 412
1890 345
1925 357
year Residents
1933 337
1939 303
1946 588
year Residents
1950 549
1964 579
1971 481
year Residents
1981 335
1989 277
1996 276

Territory of the respective year

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Community and district directory. In: geobasis-bb.de. Land surveying and geographic base information Brandenburg, accessed on February 28, 2019 .
  2. Place names of the province of Brandenburg by Wilhelm Hammer 2016 Reprint of the original from 1895 p. 14
  3. Slavs and Germans in the Uckermark: comparative studies on settlement development from the 11th to the 14th century by Kerstin Kirsch Franz Steinerverlag Stuttgart 2004 p. 135
  4. Reinhard E. Fischer : The place names of the states of Brandenburg and Berlin. Age - origin - meaning . be.bra Wissenschaft, Berlin 2005, p. 164 .
  5. The territories of the Mark Brandenburg or history of the individual districts, cities, manors, foundations and villages in the same, Volume 3 by Ernst Fidicin Berlin 1860 pp. 88-89
  6. Districts - Röpersdorf / Sternhagen. Municipality of Nordwestuckermark, accessed on February 28, 2019 .
  7. Inventory of architectural and art monuments in the province of Brandenburg Volume 2 Places from JZ by Friedrich Rudolf Bergau Berlin 1885 Vossische Buchhandlung p. 738
  8. ^ Georg Dehio : Handbook of the German art monuments : Brandenburg. Edited by Gerhard Vinken and others, reviewed by Barbara Rimpel. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Munich / Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-422-03123-4 , pp. 1075f.
  9. ^ Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. (PDF; 331 KB) District Uckermark. State Office for Data Processing and Statistics State of Brandenburg, December 2006, accessed on February 28, 2019 .
  10. Local statistics of the administrative district Potsdam with the city of Berlin with the addition of a historical geographic statistical overview by Richard Boeckh Berlin 1861 publisher by Dietrich Reimer p. 14
  11. ^ The territories of the Mark Brandenburg or history of the individual districts, cities, manors, foundations and villages in the same, Volume 3 by Ernst Fidicin Berlin 1860 p. 89