Wendish goods

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Wendish goods
City of Goldberg
Coordinates: 53 ° 34 '26 "  N , 12 ° 7' 46"  E
Height : 51 m
Area : 14.03 km²
Residents : 384  (December 31, 2009)
Population density : 27 inhabitants / km²
Incorporation : January 1, 2012
Postal code : 19399
Area code : 038736
Wendisch Waren (Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania)
Wendish goods

Location of Wendisch Waren in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania

Wendisch Waren is a district of the town of Goldberg in the Ludwigslust-Parchim district in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (Germany).

Geography and traffic

The place is about three kilometers east of Goldberg on the south bank of the Goldberger See and on the south edge of the nature park Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide . The largest lake in the area is the Woostener See . In the south there are three larger wetlands, the Wulfenmoor , the Braschmoor and the wetland in the Rabenhorst .

On the national road 192 to reach Goldberg from the federal highway 19 after about twelve kilometers at the junction Malchow . Between 1887 and 1996 there was also a breakpoint on the Wismar – Karow railway line . Today the route is used for trolley rides.

The districts of Wendisch Waren, Woosten , Finkenwerder, Neu Woosten and Ziegelei belonged to the former municipality of Wendisch Waren .

history

Wendisch Waren was first mentioned in a document as Wendeschen Warne in 1296. The name is derived from vranŭ for crow or raven , the first part of the name refers to the Wends .

In the course of the National Socialist Germanization of place names, the place was renamed "Finkenwerder" on September 9, 1938. In 1947 it got its original name back.

The formerly independent municipality of Wendisch Waren, in which 374 people lived at the end of 2010, was incorporated into the town of Goldberg on January 1, 2012.

Attractions

  • Brick church on field stone plinth from the 13th century in Woosten
  • Nossentiner / Schwinzer Heide nature park

literature

  • Ralf Berg: Between Stegbach and Serrahn. A chronicle of the Wendisch Waren community. Goldberg 2014.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Paul Kühnel: The Slavic place names in Meklenburg. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology. Vol. 46, 1881, ISSN  0259-7772 , pp. 3-168, here p. 155.
  2. ^ Gero Lietz: On dealing with the National Socialist place-name legacy in the Soviet Zone / GDR. Leipzig 2005, p. 200
  3. Changes in the municipalities of Germany, see 2012 StBA