Stutentrine and Margrave

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Stutentrine (front) and Margrave (back next to the banister) as bronze statues in front of the Rendsburger Stadtsparkasse

Stutentrine and Margrave are the symbol pair of the city of Rendsburg , which goes back to real people from the history of the city.

Historical people

August Friedrich Markgraf was a local police officer (royal police servant) in Rendsburg for more than 20 years, from 1823 to 1844. Stutentrine was a bread roll (= mares) seller (1865–1908) and a Rendsburg original that belonged to the Rendsburg weekly market. Markgraf's logs on police work and criminal cases involuntarily made him an early chronicler of the city of Rendsburg. Both symbolic figures were brought to mind by a broader public through columns in the state newspaper in the 1960s and 1970s.

Awards

At Röhlingsplatz 1 in front of the Sparkasse Mittelholstein , two bronze statues by Frauke Wehberg (* 1940) commemorate Stutentrine and Margrave.

The two symbolic figures are currently represented by Rita Ihrig and Jürgen Wieben, who voluntarily represent the city of Rendsburg in historical costume at over 20 appointments a year. In 2011 Rita Ihrig took over the role of Inge Fiehmann. Jürgen Wieben took over the role of Erwin Schimmer in November 2018, who embodied the character of the Margrave for many years.

literature

  • Edward Hoop : Margrave Reports. Rendsburg everyday life from 1823 to 1844. A documentation , Schleswiger Druck- und Verlagshaus, ISBN 978-3882421149 , 1994

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c The new mare tank
  2. Andreas Rumler: Schleswig-Holstein , Dumont Verlag, pp. 108-109 [1]
  3. Baedekers Rendsburg [2]
  4. Frauke Wehberg's "Stutentrine" in front of the Sparkasse in Rendsburg. In the immediate vicinity there is a statue of the city's original "Margrave".
  5. Bronze statue of the "Margrave" by Frauke Wehberg in front of the Sparkasse in Rendsburg. The "Stutentrine" sits very close by.