Wegendorf

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Wegendorf
community Altlandsberg
Coordinates: 52 ° 36 ′ 4 ″  N , 13 ° 45 ′ 24 ″  E
Height : 70 m
Residents : 1000  (Dec. 31, 2006)
Incorporation : December 31, 1997
Incorporated into: Altlandsberg
Postal code : 15345
Area code : 033438
Wegendorf (Brandenburg)
Wegendorf

Location of Wegendorf in Brandenburg

Village center (2007)
Village center (2007)

Wegendorf is a district of the town of Altlandsberg in the Märkisch-Oderland district ( Brandenburg ). Wegendorf was an independent municipality until it was incorporated into the town of Altlandsberg in 1997.

geography

Landscape near Wegendorf

The place Wegendorf is east to northeast of Berlin in the so-called "narrower entanglement area" of the federal capital, which is popularly referred to as the bacon belt. Geographically, Wegendorf belongs to the Barnim plateau formed during the Ice Age , which is part of the young moraine land with typical ground moraine areas . The height varies between 65 and 75 meters above sea level, depending on the location. The Steinau residential area belongs to the district. A neighboring residential area also called Steinau belongs to Werneuchen and thus to the Barnim district.

Wegendorf on the Prussian map from 1839 (Urmes table sheet) from 1839

history

Wegendorf was first mentioned in a document from 1345 as Wedegendorph . The name is derived from a German personal name Wedego / Widugo and can be interpreted as the village of a Wedego. Until around 1850 the place name was written as Wedegendorf (e.g. Fidicin). The name suggests that it was founded in the course of the German East Settlement . The name Wedego was in use in the late Middle Ages, albeit very rarely, as the name Wedigen / Wedig von Holzendorf shows in a document from 1493. According to the village structure, it is a Winkelanger village.

Wegendorf on the measuring table sheet 3348 Werneuchen from 1870/1

The village has probably replaced a Slavic settlement, because in 1880 Slavic vessel remains were found in a garden in the central village.

“Wedegendorf sunt 66 mansi, quorum plebanus habet 4. Ad pactum quilibet mansus solvit 3 modios siliginis, 3 ordei et 10 avene et quartale pisorum; ad censum quilibet mansus 26 denarios; ad precariam dimidietatem ut in pacto et in censu et ultra 1 12  modium siliginis. Cossati sunt 11, solvunt in universo 8 solidos mansionariis. Taberna dat 1 talentum. Petze Jacobes, civis in Berlin have super 9 mansos pactum et censum a Hen. Coarse; item relicta Permynters has super 4 mansos censum et pactum a Hen. Coarse; Henning Růtcher, civis, had super 4 pactum et censum a marchione; Lůbbesack cum fratre suo habet 3 12  frusta a Hen. Coarse; Busse de Britzik has pactum et censum super 7 mansos a marchione. Claus de Grobin has 7 12  mansos pactum et censum. Ad altare 8 frusta, Flůgge, civis in Berlin, have 6 frusta in precaria a marchione. Precariam et servicium curuum have Tyle Brůgge from antiquo. Supremum iudicium et ius patronatus has Henning de Groben from antiquo. "

According to the land book of Emperor Charles IV of 1375, the field mark of the place was divided into 66  Hufen . Them went 4 Freienhufen from that had the priest, 62 hooves were therefore interest - and lease charge, from each hoof 3 had  bushels of rye, three measures of barley, 10 bushels of oats to 1  quarter note to be paid to peas. The interest per hoof was 26  pfennigs . For Bede half had as lease and interest plus 1 1 / 2  bushels of rye to be paid. There were 11 kossas living in the village,  each of whom had to pay 8  shillings to the full farmers . The pitcher had a charge of £ 1  . The lower court and the right of patronage were immemorial owned by Henning of Groeben that Bede went for ages to Tyle Brugge, who is also the car service of the farmers could avail. The peasant taxes on rent and interest, on the other hand, went to various bourgeois and noble beneficiaries. The citizen Petze Jacob from Berlin was allowed to collect the rent and interest of 9 Hufen, which he had as a fiefdom from Henning von Groeben . The widow Permynter had rent and interest of 4 Hufen, which she also had as a fief from Henning von Gröben. Also a citizen named Lubbesack moved 3 1 / 2  Zählstücke from Wegendorf he had by Henning von Groeben fief. The citizen Henning Rutcher had the lease and interest income from 4 Hufen, however, as a direct fiefdom from the Margrave , as well as buses from Britzik via lease and interest from 7 Hufen. Claus von Groeben was in possession of the lease and interest income of 7 12  Hufen; there is no note here whether it was a direct margravial fiefdom or a fiefdom of the local lord Henning von Groeben. An unspecified altar or its benefice were entitled to 8 counting pieces. It could only be the altar of the apostle Andrew in St. Mary's Church, who was gifted in 1345 by Ludwig the Elder , Margrave of Brandenburg, with 8 pounds of Brandenburg pfennig. 6 pounds was due on Michaelis (September 29th), 2 pounds on Nicolai (6th December). In the land register it was not noted from whom these 8 counted pieces were fiefdom, according to the document from 1345 the 8 counted pieces were also margravial fiefdoms. The citizen Flügge in Berlin had 6 counts from the Bede as a fiefdom from the margrave.

By 1412 two parts of the court (upper and lower court), the patronage and interest of 16  pieces of money had come to Betk / Beteke von Bredow. A citizen of Heckelberg also had income from Wegendorf.

In 1433 Thomas von Wins received from Margrave Friedrich I the enfeoffment with a pension of five and a half shock and eleven groschen in money, which he bought from Jasper and Arnd von Bredow, sons of the late Claus von Bredow and Jasper von Bredow, son of Beteke von Bredow would have.

In 1434 Margrave Johann enfeoffed the brothers Jasper and Arnd von Bredow, sons of the deceased Claus von Bredow and Jasper von Bredow, sons of Beteke von Bredow with two parts of the upper and lower court, eleven shocks of money, five and a half bushels of peas ( prove ) and twelve chickens .

In 1437 Margrave Johann enfeoffed the Berlin citizen and electoral councilor Heinz Donner with upper and lower court, patronage (the other parts of the court?) And the larger part of the Bede (from this 30 12  bushels, two and a half wispel and a bushel of oats, six shillings Groschen and three and a half pfennigs) in Wegendorf.

In 1441 Thomas Wins received from Margrave Friedrich II. The enfeoffment of eight and a half pieces of money and interest and the smoking hens from two hooves in Wegendorf.

In 1444 the village changed hands again. The Brandenburg Margrave Friedrich II enfeoffed the Berlin citizen Hans Markow with the upper and lower courts and the patronage, and the income from Bede and interest of 19 Hufen.

“Wedighendorf has Kasper von Breydow von myn hern lehne. Uff the feltmark be LVI huben: the pastor has IIII, the gotzhuss I, the others only give XXII gr., Sunder I huben, gives XX gr .; the Cruck gives XX gr., VIII Coseten, II syn wust, the others give zcusamen XX gr. Everything calculated on XXXV stuck; give V shock V gr. "

- Fidicin, Landbuch, p. 296

The lap register from 1450 gives 56 peasant hooves on the field, of which the pastor had four hooves and the church one hoof. Each hoof paid 22 groschen except for one hoof which only had to give 20 groschen in interest. There were eight cottages in the village, but two of them were vacant. There was a jug in the village that paid 20 groschen. The courts belonged to Kasper von Bredow (all parts?).

In 1472 Heinrich, Ebel, Hans, Matthias and Henning von Krummensee, brothers and cousins, were enfeoffed with the town and castle Altlandsberg and their possessions by Margrave Albrecht. This also included the courts and the patronage over Dorf Wegendorf, but without the interest that the v. Bredow and Claus Wins were due.

“Wedigendorp lift the Crummensee. Up the feltmark sint LVI huffen: heth der perrer IIII, dat gotzhuss I and eat I wuste; dy other LX huffen, geffen LIX igliche XXII gr. and I huffe gefft XX gr. "

- Fidicin, Landbuch, p. 296

In the lap register from 1480, 56 peasant hooves are again named, to which the four parish hooves came and one church hoof. A yard with one hoof was desolate, 60 hooves were subject to interest, 59 hooves gave 22 groschen interest each , one hoof 20 groschen. The / a pitcher is not mentioned (any more). The village owned by the v. Krummensee. In 1527 the field marrow was divided into 62 Hufen.

In 1541 Ebel, Hans, Caspar, George, Joachim and Wilhelm von Krummensee, brothers and cousins ​​from Altlandsberg, Krummensee and Wegendorf, received confirmation of their fiefdoms. According to the visitation protocol of 1541, Georg von Krummensee was patron saint in Wegendorf and held the knight's seat in Wegendorf. At that time, a Stroband family also had interest from Wegendorf. In 1586 a citizen of Grieben had raised three farmers in Wegendorf. Already 1375 seems to have held its share until 1586. The vd Gröben family on Bornstedt and Golm also raised three farmers in Wegendorf in 1586 and then in 1644.

In 1586, eight Hufen land, a sheep farm with 500 sheep and farmhand cattle, a country garden, a meadow behind the Hufschlag and a meadow on the Steinitz (Altlandsberger Mühlenfließ) belonged to this knight seat . A meadow had been cavorting with the farmers. In the summer there was also fishing. The Schulze had a yard with four hooves. In addition to the Schulzenhof, there were 15 other farms, including seven Vierhufenhof, six Dreihufenhof (one of which was Erbkrüger), one Dreihufenhof was made into a Kossatenhof, a Zweihufenhof and a Einhufenhof, on which, however, a Kossätte sat. Of the six kossaets resident in the village, one ran a single-hoofed farm and one was the village herdsman. In 1624 the population of Wegendorf consisted of 15 hoof farmers, six cossets, a shepherd and a shepherd servant. Eight Hufen belonged to the manorial Vorwerk. Four hooves belonged to the rectory and one hoof to the church pillar. The v. Röbel bought out and made the Kossatenhof. One farm was not managed. There is no direct news from the Thirty Years War . But the condition of the village in 1652 suggests the catastrophe that hit the village at that time. In 1652 the place had just two rural residents, a househusband and three servants. During this time a number of peasant hooves were pulled by the lordship to their knight's seat. In 1680 almost all hooves were back in cultivation. However, the number of farms had dropped to ten. The ten hoof farmers cultivated four hooves each. A Dreihufenhof and five other Bauernhufen had come to the knight's seat. The manor had a total of 16 hooves. However, only 11 of them were free hooves, five hooves interest like farmers' hooves. Two of the original eight Kossaten posts were vacant. Five cossets each had a peasant's hoof and the shepherd sat on one cossette. In 1685, at least 50 hooves were taxed ( shotable ), eight hooves were knight hooves, three hooves exempt from taxes, four parish hooves and one church hoof; the shootable hooves were assessed at seven groschen. After the rulership of Alt-Landsberg passed and the Alt-Landsberg office was established in 1709, eight wispel, five bushel and four metzel rye, three wispel barley, two wispel oats, six bushel peas, one bushel flaxseed and two bushels were sown on the Vorwerkland Bread rye. Four horses, 28 cattle, 15 pigs and various poultry stood in the stables of the Vorwerk. In 1745, ten farmers (families), six kossaeans (families) and one shepherd lived in the village itself, the number of inhabitants in the farm is not given. In 1734 the population was 148 people. In 1755, one of the five farms was not occupied and was used by another farm. In the meantime, two Büdner, a blacksmith and three residents had also settled. The Vorwerk included 36 Hufen Landes, one acre of garden and 23 acres of meadow. Thereupon 12 cows, six head cattle, 400 sheep, pigs and poultry were kept. In 1764 the Vorwerk was dissolved and occupied with colonists. In 1772, 171 people lived in Wegendorf. The population structure was given as 14 farmers and half-farmers, six Kossät and Büdner and a blacksmith. In 1801 the population had dropped to 147 people. There were 13 whole farmers, four whole farmers, two Büdner, two residents, a blacksmith and a Kruger who lived at 27 fire places (houses). The Urmes table sheet from 1839 now also lists a windmill south of the village. The windmill stood on a plot of land that is still recognizable today, which is located behind the plot of Altlandsberg Weg 5, slightly to the east. How long it existed is not known exactly. It is still shown on sheet 3348 Werneuchen (edition from 1903), while it is no longer recorded on sheet 3348 Werneuchen (edition from 1919). In 1840 there were 22 houses in the village. In 1850 the Vorwerk Steinau was established. Without Steinau, the following were counted in the village in 1860: four public buildings, 24 residential buildings and 57 farm buildings (including a wind grain mill). In 1900 35 (residential) houses were counted. In the First World War were seven young men from the village. In 1931 there were already 39 houses in the village. In 1939 there were 15 agricultural and forestry holdings between 20 and 100 hectares in size. 15 farms were 10 to 20 ha in size, 13 farms were 5 to 10 ha in size. 23 small farms were only 0.5 to 5 ha in size.

During the Second World War , Wegendorf was largely spared from war damage.

During the land reform after the Second World War, 135 hectares were expropriated and divided. 30 hectares were distributed to three farm workers and landless farmers. 81 hectares went to nine poor farmers and 24 hectares to four resettlers. In 1953 an LPG type I was founded with 15 members and 350 hectares of agricultural land. In 1960 a second LPG (Type III) was created, which had 96 members and 831 hectares of agricultural land. The LPG Type I now had 19 members and 180 hectares of agricultural land. In 1968, the Wegendorf and Buchholz LPGs merged to form the Wegendorf-Buchholz LPG. The LPG Type I Wegendorf was deleted in 1973. In 1975 the second LPG in Buchholz joined the LPG Wegendorf-Buchholz.

After the fall of the Wall , two new residential areas, the City-Haus-Siedlung and the Buchholzer Siedlung, tripled the population. Some entrepreneurs settled here.

Population growth from 1734 to 1996
year 1734 1772 1801 1817 1840 1858 1875 1895 1910 1925 1939 1946 1950 1964 1971 1981 1991 1996
Residents 148 171 147 147 186 225 285 329 314 301 392 553 540 392 384 319 296 352

Rule and political affiliation

Wegendorf is located in the historic landscape of Barnim , from which the 16th and 17th centuries Century formed two circles, the Niederbarnimsche and the Oberbarnimsche circle . Wegendorf belonged to the Oberbarnim district. The village was certainly originally a margrave, but before 1375 it came to the von Gröben, who owned the courts and the patronage. The taxes of the farmers were z. T. also came to other people, z. T. as margravial fief, z. But partly also as a fiefdom of the von Gröben. 1412 Betk / Beteke von Bredow owned the courts and the patronage. In 1434 Margrave Johann enfeoffed the brothers Jasper and Arnd von Bredow, sons of the deceased Claus von Bredow and Jasper von Bredow, sons of Beteke von Bredow with two parts of the upper and lower courts. Presumably the other parts of the courts were owned by the Berlin citizen and electoral councilor Heinz Donner, who was enfeoffed with them in 1437. In 1444, the Brandenburg Margrave Friedrich II enfeoffed the Berlin citizen Hans Markow with the upper and lower court and patronage (only with a part?). According to the lap register, Wegendorf belonged to Kasper von Bredow in 1450 (or only a part?). In 1472 Heinrich, Ebel, Hans, Matthias and Henning von Krummensee , brothers and cousins, were enfeoffed with Wegendorf. As a result of inheritance divisions, a line of the v. Krummensee in Wegendorf a knight's seat. In 1541 the village and knight seat Wegendorf belonged to Georg von Krummensee. He was followed by his son Otto (around 1570), who died in 1584. The estate was heavily in debt and Otto's three sons entitled to inherit, Caspar, Albrecht and Jacob, had to sell Krummensee, Wegendorf and Hirschfelde to Johann von Roebel for 30,000 thalers in 1586. In the fraternal division, Wegendorf came for 14 036 Tlr. to Hans Diedrich von Roebel, because Hans Diedrich had Krummensee as pledge for a loan of 30,800 thalers. Hans Diedrich died without a male heir and Wegendorf went to his five brothers. Wegendorf now came to Moritz August von Roebel, who in 1621 sold the village in debt to Joachim von Krummensee zu Altlandsberg. In the time when the v. Roebel were owned by Wegendorf, they bought a Dreihufenhof and managed to free these hooves from loads. Even after the village was sold it remained in the possession of the v. Roebel. In 1631 the estate came to the von Kallenberg family, in 1644 Hans Idell von Heise bought this estate from Melchior von Kallenberg. Soon after, he sold it to Michel Schmidt, a citizen of Berlin, for 500 thalers. In 1656 the "First Minister" Otto von Schwerin bought Krummensee and Wegendorf for 24,000 thalers, a total of 49 Hufen, which he had to pay until 1662. According to the indicated hoof numbers, he could not (yet) acquire Wegendorf completely. Presumably some hooves were lifted to third parties. In any case, the entire village was owned by the von Schwerin family until 1680. In 1708, the Brandenburg elector and king in Prussia, Frederick I, bought the rule of Alt-Landsberg and converted it into an office. Wegendorf became district village. The Alt-Landsberg office existed until the district reform in 1872. Wegendorf became an independent rural community in the Oberbarnim district. In 1932 and 1957 the Vorwerk Steinau was called Vorwerk, from 1964 to 1973 as a district. In 1950 the place changed from the Oberbarnim district to the Niederbarnim district. With the district reform of 1952, Wegendorf became part of the Strausberg district in what was then the Frankfurt district . After the turnaround, offices were formed in 1992/93 as part of an initial administrative reform that took over the administrative business of the predominantly small and smallest communities in Brandenburg. In 1992, the Niederbarnim-Süd office was formed in which eight municipalities had come together, including Wegendorf. It was dissolved again in 1993. In the same year the Altlandsberg office was formed with six municipalities, including Wegendorf. On December 31, 1997, Wegendorf was incorporated into the town of Altlandsberg and has been part of the town of Altlandsberg ever since. The former district of Steinau has since been only a residential area of ​​the town of Altlandsberg. The other communities merged in 2002 to form the new town of Altlandsberg, the Altlandsberg office was dissolved at the end of 2002. According to the main statute of the town of Altlandsberg, the citizens of Wegendorf elect a local advisory board consisting of three members, from whose midst the mayor is elected.

Church affiliation

In 1459 Wegendorf belonged to the Sedes Strausberg of the Brandenburg diocese. According to the visitation protocol from 1541, Peter Blankenburg was pastor in Wegendorf. Four hooves belonged to the rectory, but apparently they were leased because the priest received two wispel, 16 bushels of rye and oats. The rectory also included four meadows near the Hufen. He received 61 bushels of bushel grain and a pound of wax from the Hüfner a year. The sexton lived in a vacant sexton house and received 31 bushels of grain, four loaves of bread, four pfennigs annually from each farm (farmers and farmers), two eggs from each hoof, two groschen from the church (fund of the church pledges) and two groschen from the pastor. For the maintenance of the church a hoof and a meadow or their taxes were intended. Years ago, the local lord Georg von Krummensee had expelled the pastor from the presumably dilapidated rectory and put him on a farm, presumably to save himself the costs of building or repairing the rectory. During the visitation, however, he was instructed to renew the rectory and let the pastor live in the rectory again. The parish of Hirschfelde belonged to the mother church in Wegendorf (1614) as a branch church . In 1674 Wegendorf was cured by the pastor in Altlandsberg. Since 1700 Wegendorf was a daughter church of Altlandsberg. In 1840 and 1900 Altlandsberg and with it Wegendorf belonged to the superintendent of Strausberg.

school

Wegendorf had a school as early as 1683. Schwerin's house book from 1683 notes: The sexton, who also has to be a schoolmaster and therefore has to be particularly satisfied, has a sexton's house and a little garden with him.

The school house was rebuilt and expanded in 1893 and 1904, the number of students was 40 to 50 at that time, later up to 70. The school was later closed and the building was used by the kindergarten, which was closed in 1992. In 1993 a parents' association founded a new kindergarten with initially 15 children. Today it is in a new building on Schulstrasse with around 75 children (as of 2008).

Construction of the flood protection system in 2008

The Buchholz settlement, which was developed in the 1990s, lies in a hollow (low point), which leads to flooding when the ground is frozen, rain and snowmelt. The water catchment ditch with a pond in front of it, which was completed in 2008, serves to catch the water that runs off into the lower Wederfließ by means of a pipeline (diameter 1.60 meters). The Wederfließ crosses under the road in the village and transports the water away. The resulting fear of loss of property and associated security problems could thus come to an end.

New construction of the local thoroughfare in 2010

The heavily worn old village road (state road L235), which serves as a through road and has a decisive influence on the appearance of the old village center, has been completely renovated. In this context, all road guides, such as footpaths, lanterns, etc. were completely renovated.

New construction of the connection road Wegendorf - Altlandsberg via Neuhönow

A new construction of the Wegendorf – Altlandsberg road via Neuhönow is currently being discussed in order to enable an optimal connection to the town of Altlandsberg. This street is already marked in old military maps from the 18th century and is hardly passable for conventional vehicles today. The resulting security advantage for z. B. Rescue services and an infrastructural development between Wegendorf and Altlandsberg are the main reasons for this project. However, it remains to be seen whether this plan will find its way into reality.

Monuments and sights

The list of monuments of the state of Brandenburg for the district of Märkisch-Oderland lists the following architectural and ground monuments:

Soil monuments

  • No. 60313 Corridor 1,4: a settlement from the Bronze Age, the village center from the German Middle Ages, the village center from the modern era
  • No. 60848 Corridor 1: a burial ground from the Bronze Age
  • No. 60849 Corridor 1: a settlement from prehistory

Architectural monuments

Wegendorfer Church

The only registered monument is the village church.

  • Wegendorf village church . Wegendorf's stone church dates from the middle of the 13th century, with the exception of the tower built in 1861 and renewed in 1905. The apse , which was painted in 1907 , adjoins the nave , the Romanesque windows of which were once widened (a Romanesque door is closed) . The originally carved altar from the first half of the 18th century with even older carved center pieces (depicting the Last Supper and Crucifixion groups) is painted over with gray-white whitewash (around 1925). Inside there is a round arched triumphal arch from the original building.

In 1861 the tower was built from scratch. The old broken tower was made of wood and covered with shingles. At the end of the Second World War, the church lost its spire due to an artillery hit and has had a flat tent roof since 1948.

During the Thirty Years' War, the rectory appears to have been completely destroyed, and it has not been rebuilt. Even today there is a wall-like debris in the so-called parish garden to the left of the forge, which also no longer exists today.

Natural monuments

The so-called Schöffenlinde, actually Schöppenlinde in the front garden at Alte Schulstraße 1, was included in the list of natural monuments in the Märkisch-Oderland district, which was heavily revised in 2011, due to its shape that characterizes the townscape and its historical reference.

Pictures from Wegendorf

In the present

From the beginning of the 20th century

literature

  • Lieselott Enders (with the assistance of Margot Beck): Historical local dictionary for Brandenburg, part VI, Barnim . 676 S., Weimar 1980 (in the following abbreviated, Enders, Historisches Ortslexikon, Barnim with corresponding page number).
  • Ernst Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg or history of the individual counties, cities, manors and. History of the district of Ober-Barnim and the towns, manors, villages, etc. occupied in it. XVI, 101 pp., Berlin, 1858 (p. 66).
  • Johannes Schultze (Hrsg.): The land book of the Mark Brandenburg of 1375 (= Brandenburg land books . Volume 2; publications of the historical commission for the province of Brandenburg and the imperial capital Berlin . Volume VIII, 2). Commission publisher von Gsellius, Berlin 1940 ( digitized in Potsdam University Library ).

Web links

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

annotation

  1. In this document the family names and owners of the farms in Wegendorf appear for the first time. Simon Genen earned four shillings, half a bushel of peas, a chicken and the entire tithe from his farm with two hooves. Lencze Murinan pays two shillings on one hoof, a quarter of peas and the whole tithe, the farm of Drews Trampe pays six shillings on three hooves, a shock penny for the leaning horse and a bushel of peas, Czernckow's court pays two shillings and one on one hoof Quarter of peas, the farm of Kersten Besendal earned eight shillings of groschen, a bushel of peas, a chicken and the whole tithe from four hooves, the farm of Jacob Heynemann earned six shillings of groschen, three quarters of peas, a chicken and the whole tithe from three hooves , Hans Wryczen's farm pays two shilling groschen from one hoof, three quarters of peas a chicken and the whole tithe, Ukrow's farm with one hoof pays two shillings, three quarters of peas, a chicken and the whole tithe, Schönenfeld's farm with two hooves pays four shillings of groschen, half a bushel of peas, Claus Kune's farm with one hoof earned 16 groschen and a third of a half bushel of peas, one Hu Hn and the whole tithe, Lyczow's farm with three hooves pays six shillings of groschen, and from a hoof eight groschen and a bushel of peas, a chicken and the whole tenth, Jacob Wriczens farm with four hooves pays eight shillings of groschen, a bushel of peas Chicken and the whole tithe, Jacob Trampes Hof with two hooves paid four shillings, three quarters of peas, a chicken and the whole tithe, Schellenhofe was two hooves and paid four shillings groschen, eight shillings, three quarters of peas, a chicken and the whole Tithes, Vibeke pays half a bushel of peas on a chicken and the whole tithe, Pilgrim pays three quarters of peas, a chicken and the whole tithe, Tews Bernow pays a chicken and the whole tithe, Yden's court pays 18 pfennigs, a chicken and the whole tithe . Beteke's court paid 18 pfennigs, two chickens and the whole tithe, the shepherd gave six pfennigs and the whole tithe, the blacksmith gave the whole tithe, the schoolgirl, three groschen, one chicken and the whole tithe, the Tydekenynn three groschen, one chicken and the whole tithe. Out of 61 hooves, the respective owners gave two groschen per hoof, half a quarter of rye, a bushel of oats and half a bushel of barley.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gerd Schlimpert: Brandenburg name book. Part 5. The place names of Barnim. 455 pp., Weimar 1984 ISBN 3-7400-0602-1 .
  2. a b Johannes Schultze (ed.): The land book of the Mark Brandenburg from 1375 . Commission publisher von Gsellius, Berlin 1940, Barnym. Districtus Berlin. Wedegendorf, S. 111 .
  3. ^ Adolph Friedrich Riedel: Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis: Collection of documents, chronicles and other source documents. Part 3 Vol. 1, 548 pp., Berlin, G. Reimer, 1859 Online at Google Books (p. 59)
  4. ^ Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel: Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis. A. First main part or collection of documents on the history of the spiritual foundations, the noble families, as well as the towns and castles of the Mark Brandenburg, XII. Volume, continuation of the Mittelmark documents. Castle and town of Plaue. Castle, town and monastery Ziesar, Leitzkau monastery. Golzow Castle and the von Rochow family. Lehnin Monastery. Mixed documents. 516 p., Berlin, Reimer 1856 Online at Google Books (p. 51)
  5. Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel : Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis A. First main part or collection of documents on the history of spiritual foundations, the noble families, as well as the towns and castles of the Mark Brandenburg, Volume VII, continuation of the documents from the Middle Mark. The Mittelmark. First sequel. 502 p., Berlin, Reimer 1847 Online at Google Books (p. 149)
  6. ^ Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel: odex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis. A. First main part, XI. Volume, continuation of the Mittelmark documents. Town and monastery Spandau, town Potsdam, town Teltow, town Mittenwalde, Zossen and that of Torgow, mixed documents, namely belonging to the small towns of Teltow and Barnim. 528 p., Berlin, Reimer 1856 Online at Google Books (p. 340)
  7. ^ Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel: Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis. A. First main part or collection of documents on the history of the spiritual foundations, the noble families, as well as the towns and castles of the Mark Brandenburg, XII. Volume, continuation of the Mittelmark documents. Castle and town of Plaue. Castle, town and monastery Ziesar, Leitzkau monastery. Golzow Castle and the von Rochow family. Lehnin Monastery. Mixed documents. 516 pp., Berlin, Reimer 1856 Online at Google Books (p. 52)
  8. ^ Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel: Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis. A. First main part, XI. Volume, continuation of the Mittelmark documents. Town and monastery Spandau, town Potsdam, town Teltow, town Mittenwalde, Zossen and that of Torgow, mixed documents, namely belonging to the small towns of Teltow and Barnim. 528 p., Berlin, Reimer 1856 Online at Google Books (p. 361)
  9. ^ A b Ernst Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg: or history of the individual districts, cities, manors, foundations and villages in the same, as a continuation of the Landbuch Kaiser Karl's IV. Berlin, published by J. Guttentag, 1856 online at Google Books ( P. 296)
  10. a b Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel: Codex diplomaticus Brandenburgensis. A. First main part or collection of documents on the history of the spiritual foundations, the noble families, as well as the towns and castles of the Mark Brandenburg, XII. Volume, continuation of the Mittelmark documents. Castle and town of Plaue. Castle, town and monastery Ziesar, Leitzkau monastery. Golzow Castle and the von Rochow family. Lehnin Monastery. Mixed documents. 516 p., Berlin, Reimer 1856 Online at Google Books (p. 54)
  11. a b Adolph Friedrich Johann Riedel : Codex Diplomaticus Brandenburgensis A. First main part, XI. Volume, continuation of the Mittelmark documents. Town and monastery Spandau, town Potsdam, town of Teltow, town of Mittenwalde, Zossen and that of Torgow, mixed documents, namely belonging to the small towns of Teltow and Barnim. 528 S., Berlin, Reimer 1856 Online at Google Books (p. 485)
  12. ^ Anton Friedrich Büsching: Complete topography of the Mark Brandenburg. 348 p., Berlin, publ. Of Buchh. der Realschule, 1775 Online at Google Books (p. 301)
  13. Fallen memorials - website of Thilo Aghte
  14. Enders, Historisches Ortslexikon, Barnim, pp. 602–604.
  15. Contribution to the statistics of the State Office for Data Processing and Statistics. Historical municipality register of the State of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005 19.6. District of Märkisch-Oderland PDF
  16. Max Hein: Otto von Schwerin. The High President of the Great Elector. 405 p., Graefe & Unzer, Königsberg in Prussia 1929 (p. 151).
  17. Incorporation of the community Wegendorf into the town of Altlandsberg. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of October 20, 1997. Official Gazette for Brandenburg Common Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 8, Number 45, November 14, 1997, p. 926.
  18. Main statute of the town of Altlandsberg from April 25, 2013  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF)@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / ratsinfo-online.net  
  19. List of monuments of the state of Brandenburg: Landkreis Märkisch-Oderland (PDF) Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum
  20. First ordinance on natural monuments in the district of Märkisch-Oderland (1st NDVO MOL) from May 4, 2011 Annex 1 to § 1 of the 1st NDVO MOL Determination of natural monuments PDF ( Memento of the original from December 8, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / maerkisch-oderland.de