Warnemünder Vogtei

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Warnemünder Vogtei

The Warnemünder Vogtei is the oldest surviving house in Warnemünde's local history. Even before Rostock bought the village on March 11, 1323, a Vogt of the sovereign Prince Heinrich the Lion resided in Warnemünde . His name was Ludberg Starkader and he lived in Diedrichshagen, then a small farming village 4 km west of Warnemünde.

The Rostock Council also appointed a Vogt. Its residence was also the Vogtei, which was the only dwars house (transept) in Warnemünde. All other houses faced the Warnow with their gables . The house inscription in Anno 1605 was misleading, because the foundations of this house found during the restoration in the 1990s go back to around 1300. Whether this house was already called the Vogtei at that point in time could no longer be clearly established. The huge granite stones that were uncovered during the reconstruction probably came to Warnemünde on ships as early as the 13th century. Restorers found layers of paint in the Bailiwick that are over 300 years old.

Coordinates: 54 ° 10 ′ 36 ″  N , 12 ° 5 ′ 17 ″  E