Storbeck

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Storbeck
Hanseatic City of Osterburg (Altmark)
Coordinates: 52 ° 46 ′ 4 "  N , 11 ° 41 ′ 14"  E
Height : 27 m above sea level NHN
Area : 6.5 km²
Residents : 981  (Dec. 31, 2007)
Population density : 151 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : June 1, 1973
Incorporated into: Flessau
Postal code : 39606
Area code : 03937
Storbeck (Saxony-Anhalt)
Storbeck

Location in Saxony-Anhalt

Storbeck belongs to the village of Flessau and is part of the Hanseatic city of Osterburg (Altmark) in the district of Stendal in Saxony-Anhalt .

geography

Storbeck, a street village with a church, is 1½ kilometers northeast of Flessau and 5 kilometers southwest of Osterburg in the Altmark . Northeast of the village is the bepflaznte pine woodland citizens firs , southeast of about 33 meters high Steinberg. The undulating area around Storbeck is criss-crossed by numerous ditches that drain to the north to the piping .

Neighboring towns are Flessau in the west, Klein Rossau and Groß Rossau in the northwest, Schliecksdorf in the north, Zedau and Osterburg in the northeast and Klein Ballerstedt in the southeast.

history

In 1215 Reinoldus de Storebeke and Henricus de Storebeke were listed as witnesses in a document.

The place Storbeck is mentioned for the first time in 1238 in a document under Nunitz juxta Storboden (forte Storbecke) and as Sturbecke totum , as Count Siegfried von Osterburg villages and possessions in the Altmark, with which he had previously been enfeoffed from the St. Ludgerikloster Helmstedt , the abbot Gerhard von Werden and Helmstedt overwritten. In 1343 the Krevese Monastery acquired 5 Hufen in Villa Sterbeck from Margrave Ludwig . In the Landbuch der Mark Brandenburg from 1375 the village is listed as Storbeke . From before 1375 to 1562 part of the village belonged to the Krevese monastery, since 1562 that of Bismarck zu Krevese and that of Bismarck zu Döbbelin . The village was called Storbeck in 1687 and later only .

During the land reform in 1945, the following were determined: 26 properties under 100 hectares had a total of 461 hectares, two church properties had a total of 30 hectares, two parish meetings had a total of 1.7 hectares. An arable farm with 58.8 hectares was expropriated, as its owners managed another farm with around 44 hectares in neighboring Schliecksdorf, they counted as large farmers. In 1948, 5 full settlers each over 5 hectares and 13 small settlers each less than 5 hectares acquired from the land reform. In 1954 the first type III agricultural production cooperative, the LPG “IV. Party Congress ”, which in 1957 was called“ Happy Future ”.

Origin of the place name

The name is derived from Old High German stubborn or Old Norse stor for big and wide , as well as German beeke for Bach .

Incorporations

On 25 July 1952, the municipality Storbeck was from the district Osterburg in the district Osterburg reclassified. On June 1, 1973 the municipality of Storbeck was incorporated into the municipality of Flessau.

On July 1, 2009, the municipality of Flessau merged with other municipalities to form the new unified municipality of the Hanseatic City of Osterburg (Altmark). The district of Storbeck became part of the new village of Flessau and the Hanseatic city of Osterburg (Altmark).

Population development

year Residents
1734 109
1772 115
1789 124
1798 119
1801 140
year Residents
1818 128
1840 144
1864 187
1871 213
1880 [00]181
year Residents
1885 181
1895 200
1900 [00]190
1905 188
1910 [00]182
year Residents
1925 193
1939 161
1946 250
1964 200
1971 194
year Residents
2011 148
2012 145
2018 154
2019 143

Source if not stated:

religion

The Evangelical parish of Storbeck used to belong to the parish of Storbeck near Osterburg. Today the parish of Späningen is looked after by the parish area Bismark in the parish of Stendal in the Provostspengel Stendal-Magdeburg of the Evangelical Church in Central Germany .

Ernst Machholz said in 1925 that the oldest surviving church records for Späningen date from 1710. It was not until 1938 that Haetge gave 1699 as the year of the first tradition. Registers are available from 1827.

Culture and sights

  • The Evangelical village church of Storbeck dates from the 12th century. It was started as a Romanesque field stone building and completed in brick.
  • The local cemetery is in the churchyard.
  • A signpost, several late baroque half-timbered buildings with inscriptions and farms are listed as historical monuments.
  • The Reit- und Fahrverein Flessau e. V. has its seat in Storbeck. In 1972 he built a riding arena on the grounds of a former LPG chicken farm and converted the barn accordingly. This continued the tradition of horse breeding in Storbeck.

Economy and Infrastructure

For Storbeck, a priority area for wind turbines with an area of ​​72 hectares has been designated, which is fully occupied with 9 turbines and an output of 22.8 megawatts. There is a community center in the village. An extension is planned.

traffic

Storbeck is located on state road 13 from Bismark (Altmark) to Osterburg. In the city of Osterburg, 4 km away, there is a connection to the federal highway 189 , in Osterburg there is also the next train station on the Magdeburg – Wittenberge line .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Peter P. Rohrlach: Historical local lexicon for the Altmark (Historical local lexicon for Brandenburg, Part XII) . Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-8305-2235-5 , pp. 2175-2179 .
  2. Hansestadt Osterburg (Altmark): Main Statute Hansestadt Osterburg (Altmark), § 15 Local Constitution of July 3, 2019. July 5, 2019, accessed on April 10, 2020 .
  3. a b Saxony-Anhalt viewer of the State Office for Surveying and Geoinformation ( notes )
  4. ^ Adolph Friedrich Riedel : Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis : Collection of documents, chronicles and other source documents . Main part 1st volume 16 . Berlin 1859, p. 315 ( digitized version ).
  5. ^ Peter Wilhelm Behrens: Count Siegfried von Osterburg and Altenhausen resigned many villages and properties in the Altmark in 1238 . In: Annual reports of the Altmark Association for Patriotic History . 4th Annual Report, 1841, p. 48, 51 ( altmark-geschichte.de [PDF]).
  6. ^ Adolph Friedrich Riedel : Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis : Collection of documents, chronicles and other source documents . Main part 1st volume 16 . Berlin 1859, p. 324 ( digitized version ).
  7. Johannes Schultze : The land book of the Mark Brandenburg from 1375 (=  Brandenburg land books . Volume 2 ). Commission publisher von Gsellius, Berlin 1940, p. 325 ( uni-potsdam.de ).
  8. ^ A b Corrie Leitz: The Storbeck district introduces itself. In: osterburg.eu. 2017, accessed May 1, 2020 .
  9. a b Ernst Haetge: The circle Osterburg (=  The art monuments of the Province of Saxony . Band 4 ). Hopfer, Burg near Magdeburg 1938, DNB  361451652 , p. 319-321 .
  10. Federal Statistical Office (Ed.): Municipalities 1994 and their changes since 01.01.1948 in the new federal states . Metzler-Poeschel, Stuttgart 1995, ISBN 3-8246-0321-7 , pp. 342, 346 .
  11. Landkreis Stendal: Territorial change agreement for the formation of the new municipality of Hanseatic City of Osterburg (Altmark) . In: Official Journal for the district of Stendal . 19th year, no. 2 , January 28, 2009, ZDB -ID 2665593-7 , p. 13–19 ( landkreis-stendal.de [PDF; 512 kB ; accessed on April 18, 2020]).
  12. ^ A b c Wilhelm Zahn : Local history of the Altmark. Edited by Martin Ehlies based on the bequests of the author. 2nd Edition. Verlag Salzwedeler Wochenblatt, Graphische Anstalt, Salzwedel 1928, DNB  578458357 , OCLC 614308966 , p. 186 .
  13. a b How many inhabitants count the individual places . In: Volksstimme Magdeburg, local edition Osterburg . January 12, 2013 ( volksstimme.de [accessed April 11, 2020]).
  14. a b Nico Maß: Only four digits left . In: Osterburger Volksstimme . January 21, 2020, DNB  1047269554 , p. 13 .
  15. Parish Almanac or the Protestant clergy and churches of the Province of Saxony in the counties of Wernigerode, Rossla and Stolberg . 19th year, 1903, ZDB -ID 551010-7 , p. 88 ( wiki-de.genealogy.net [accessed May 1, 2020]).
  16. Bismark parish area. Retrieved April 11, 2020 .
  17. Ernst Machholz: The church books of the Protestant churches in the province of Saxony (=  communications from the Central Office for German Personal and Family History . 30th issue). Leipzig 1925, p. 12 ( wiki-de.genealogy.net [accessed May 1, 2020]).
  18. Thomas Hartwig: All Altmark churches from A to Z . Elbe-Havel-Verlag, Havelberg 2012, ISBN 978-3-9814039-5-4 , p. 479 .
  19. Landkreis Stendal - The District Administrator: District Development Concept Landkreis Stendal 2025. October 30, 2015, pp. 237, 277, 286 , accessed on August 3, 2019 .