Stolpe (Marienfließ)

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Stumble
Community Marienfließ
Coordinates: 53 ° 19 ′ 5 ″  N , 12 ° 10 ′ 50 ″  E
Height : 72 m above sea level NHN
Postal code : 16945
Area code : 033968

Stolpe is a residential area in the Krempendorf district of the Marienfließ community in the Prignitz district in Brandenburg .

geography

The place is 4 kilometers west of Meyenburg , 12 kilometers northeast of Putlitz and 18 kilometers north of Pritzwalk . The neighboring towns are Retzow in the north, Ganzlin in the northeast, Meyenbug in the east, Bergsoll in the southeast, Frehne in the south, Krempendorf in the southwest, Stepenitz in the west and Klein Dammerow in the northwest.

history

The first written mention of the place comes from the year 1274, in which it was recorded with its current name and the village at that time changed hands as part of a larger donation from the Mecklenburg princes of Werle bei Ludwigslust to the Marienfließ monastery . In the meantime it had fallen desolately and was also recorded in 1458, but the use of the desert field mark by the municipality of Krempendorf is documented for 1593 and 1725. The right to permanent use of the desert field mark Stolpe by the municipality of Krempendorf was initially enforced against the Marienfließ monastery in 1728 ff. The previously rebuilt settlement had a total of 30 inhabitants in 1752 and plans for the construction of a colony with 8 Büdners are documented, which in 1754 led to the addition of 5 families. In 1765 12 Büdner were assigned by the municipality of Krempendorf. In 1772 a total of 47 inhabitants were recorded and in 1791 a total of 40 people. The place was churched after Stepenitz in 1800 and in 1801 37 inhabitants lived here. As in 1791, there were 11 Büdner and 12 campfire sites in the colony in 1801. Before 1816 the place belonged to the Pritzwalkischer Kreis in the Prignitz of the Mark Brandenburg and then came to the district of Ostprignitz in the administrative district of Potsdam in the province of Brandenburg .

In 1817 there were 45 inhabitants and in 1819 a total of 12 Kätner. On the original table sheet “1226 Meyenburg” from 1825, the settlement is shown as a line north of Krempendorf. In addition, east-north-east of Krempendorf and south-south-east of what is now the desolate Waldhof, the field name "auf dem Stolp" can be found, south-west of Waldhof the "Stolper Tannen" and "Stolper Heiden" and north-west of Waldhof the "D Address", a village area protection. In 1837 58 people lived here and in 1846 there were a total of 9 houses in the village. Previously belonging to the Marienfließ Abbey Court, Stolpe was assigned to the Meyenburg Court Commission in 1849. In a description from 1852, the place is listed as a flat and sandy colony, separated from Krempendorf by the Stepenitz. The soil is cold and sandy with a sterile and ocher-like subsoil, the pastures are very poor and mostly heather, which is more suitable for the seeding of pines. A certain type of management was not available, only single meadows and common cattle with 2–3 cows, which are also used as migratory cattle, and 3–5 sheep - “nothing else”.

In 1858 Stolpe had a total of 78 inhabitants and in 1860 Stolpe had a district size of 444  acres , of which 346 acres were arable, 38 acres were forest, 29 acres were pasture, 27 acres were meadow and 4 acres were farms. The colony included 13 residential and 7 farm buildings in that year. In 1871 there were a total of 11 houses in the colony in addition to 75 residents. In 1872 the village became part of the Marienfließ monastery. In 1879 the newly created district court of Meyenburg was responsible for the place. In 1900 the settlement was recorded as a colony of the municipality of Krempendorf, in 1925 with 77 inhabitants and in 1931 a residential area of ​​Krempendorf circled after Stepenitz. From 1952 it belonged to the Pritzwalk district in the Potsdam district and the Pritzwalk district court, and was listed as a district of Krempendorf in 1964 and 1973. In 1993, Stolpe became part of the newly created district of Prignitz and the district court of Perleberg was responsible here.

literature

  • Historical Gazetteer Brandenburg - Part 1 - Prignitz - N-Z . Modifications made by Lieselott Enders . In: Klaus Neitmann (Ed.): Publications of the Brandenburgisches Landeshauptarchiv (State Archive Potsdam) - Volume 3 . Founded by Friedrich Beck . Publishing house Klaus-D. Becker, Potsdam 2012, ISBN 978-3-88372-033-3 , pp. 856 f .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Marienfließ community - districts according to § 45 municipal constitution - inhabited districts - living spaces. In: service.brandenburg.de. Ministry of the Interior and Local Affairs of the State of Brandenburg, accessed on August 22, 2019 .
  2. BrandenburgViewer of the state survey and geographic base information Brandenburg (LGB)
  3. a b c Neitmann (ed.): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg - Part 1 - Prignitz - N – Z. 2012, p. 856 f.