Wusterhausen / Dosse

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coat of arms Germany map
Coat of arms of the municipality of Wusterhausen / Dosse
Wusterhausen / Dosse
Map of Germany, position of the municipality Wusterhausen / Dosse highlighted

Coordinates: 52 ° 53 '  N , 12 ° 28'  E

Basic data
State : Brandenburg
County : Ostprignitz-Ruppin
Height : 33 m above sea level NHN
Area : 196.34 km 2
Residents: 5761 (Dec. 31, 2019)
Population density : 29 inhabitants per km 2
Postcodes : 16868 (Bantikow, Wusterhausen) ,
16845 (Barsikow, Blankenberg, Brunn, Bückwitz, Dessow, Ganzer, Gartow, Kantow, Lögow, Nackel, Segeletz, Segeletz Bahnhof, Trieplatz) ,
16866 (Schönberg, Sechzehneichen, Tornow)Template: Infobox municipality in Germany / maintenance / zip code contains text
Primaries : 033979, 033974, 033971, 033978
License plate : OPR, KY, NP, WK
Community key : 12 0 68 477
Address of the
municipal administration:
Am Markt 1
16868 Wusterhausen / Dosse
Website : www.wusterhausen.de
Mayor : Philipp Schulz (independent)
Location of the municipality of Wusterhausen / Dosse in the Ostprignitz-Ruppin district
Wittstock/Dosse Heiligengrabe Rheinsberg Neuruppin Lindow (Mark) Vielitzsee Herzberg (Mark) Rüthnick Fehrbellin Kyritz Breddin Stüdenitz-Schönermark Zernitz-Lohm Neustadt (Dosse) Sieversdorf-Hohenofen Dreetz Walsleben Dabergotz Storbeck-Frankendorf Temnitzquell Temnitztal Märkisch Linden Wusterhausen/Dosse Sachsen-Anhalt Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Mecklenburg-Vorpommernmap
About this picture

Wusterhausen / Dosse is a municipality in the Ostprignitz-Ruppin district in Brandenburg (Germany). Wusterhausen was granted town charter in 1233 and has retained the status of a titular town to this day.

geography

The community is located in the southwest of the Ostprignitz-Ruppin district between the Ruppiner Land in the east and the Prignitz in the west. The Dosse flows through the municipality from the northeast in a southwest direction over the entire length.

The Bückwitz Lake , the Great Blankenberger Lake and a wetland and forest area between Wusterhausen and Plänitz-Leddin have been designated as nature reserves on the municipality area, which is quite large at 195 square kilometers . In addition, the Kyritzer Seenkette landscape protection area with the Untersee (also called Bantikower See ) and a forest south of Segeletz in the Westhavelland Nature Park exist in the district .

Neighboring communities

In the south, Wusterhausen borders on Friesack and Dreetz . To the west lies Neustadt (Dosse) , in the northwest of Kyritz and northeastern Temnitzquell and Walsleben . In the east Märkisch Linden and in the southeast Temnitztal are neighboring.

Community structure

According to its main statute, the municipality of Wusterhausen / Dosse has the following districts:

Living spaces are Bückwitz expansion, Heilbrunn, Klempowsiedlung, Plänitzer settlement and number Reck.

Incorporations
Former parish date annotation
Bantikov December 31, 1997
Barsikov July 1, 2001
Blankenberg December 31, 1997
Well December 31, 1997
Buckwitz July 1, 2001
Dessow July 1, 2001
Whole December 31, 1997
Gartow May 1, 1997
Kantow December 31, 1997
Lasikov August 1, 1954 Incorporation after Nackel
Lögow December 31, 1997
Butcher 1st January 1974 Incorporation to Bückwitz
Nackel July 1, 2001
Schoenberg December 31, 1997
Sixteen-ten July 1, 1973 Incorporation to Bantikow
Sail net September 27, 1998
Tornow 1928 Incorporation after sixteen
Tramnitz January 1, 1957 Incorporation to Schönberg
Trieplatz December 31, 1998
Wulkow January 1, 1957 Incorporation to Schönberg

history

Early days

The oldest settlement in the area of ​​the Horstberg has been proven as early as the Stone Age. Later the Slavic tribe of the Doxanes, who lived on the Dosse , settled there . In the Tornow area, too, some archaeological monuments (burial ground, Slavic settlements) point to a corresponding very early settlement.

In the spring of 2006, parts of a Slavic burial ground were archaeologically examined in the city ​​center of Wusterhausen . A total of almost 70 burials could be completely excavated, including two richly furnished chamber graves with swords. The skeletons were examined by the anthropologist Bettina Jungklaus . The comparatively low child mortality rate and high life expectancy indicate rather favorable living conditions. The diet presumably consisted mainly of cereal products with a significant proportion of animal foods. Traces of chronic respiratory infections, possibly related to the way of living in houses with an open hearth, were more common.

middle Ages

Half-timbered house on the market
Tower of St. Peter and Paul

Wusterhusen was first mentioned in a document in 1232 . The document stated that "an extensive area around Kyritz and Wusterhausen belongs to the noble lords of Plotho ". Presumably around 1250, the Lords of Plotho Wusterhausen granted the Stendal town charter . Due to the archaeological wood finds that were made during the renovation of the church square and the Alte Poststraße in March 2006, the existence of this historical path can be traced back to the year 1245.

In 1250, the first construction phase began to expand the town church into a Romanesque basilica because the prayer room in the Plothoburg on the ramparts became too small. Due to the increasing income from the flourishing salt trade in the city, it was possible to expand the church into a three-aisled Gothic hall church by 1474 . There is a theory that has not yet been confirmed that the tower of the city church was formerly a fortified defense tower of the earlier city complex.

In a document from 1293, the "permanent house" (Castrum) in Wusterhausen was expressly mentioned. This is considered to be evidence that the city was able to protect itself from enemy attacks behind a rampart . Soon afterwards the margrave left the village of Klempow with the associated lake and the Bückwitzsee to the city of Wusterhausen.

The Hospital Zum heiligen Geist (today a senior citizen's home) in Borchertstrasse at the height of the Wildberger Stadttor was first mentioned in 1307. Margrave Waldemar von Brandenburg stayed in the city in 1317 and pledged the city and eight surrounding villages to the Counts of Lindow-Ruppin . In 1325 they transferred upper and lower jurisdiction to the city .

An intensive trade in salt began around 1400, which made the city rich and internationally important. The salt came from Lüneburg in open wooden barges across the Elbe , Havel and Dosse to Wusterhausen. The close trade relations with the Hanseatic League can still be proven today by the chandeliers in the nave , which are a gift from the Hanseatic League.

The city is on the Berlin – Wilsnack pilgrimage to the Wunderblutkirche in Bad Wilsnack . In the years 1400 to 1541 hundreds of pilgrims took a break in the city every day, which again brought considerable income to the city and church treasury.

Reformation time

On June 29, 1479, the main altar in the new hall church was consecrated, and the town church was named Saint Peter and Paul . In 1524 Wusterhausen came to the Mark Brandenburg as part of the Ruppin rule , was named an electoral immediate city (i.e. a city that is not subject to any local or regional aristocratic rule like a media city, but is in direct relationship with the sovereign) and subordinated directly to the ruling elector. In 1541 the parish of the city acknowledged Martin Luther's theses and became Protestant.

In 1560 the elector abolished the salt justice , i.e. the salt trade, because he had local rock salt mined near Beelitz . The bubbling source of income now dried up and the city lost its importance. Wusterhausen transformed into a town of craftsmen and farmers . The first guild letters for the trades of the line weaver and wheelwright were issued in 1615. - The plague raged in the city from 1618 to 1648. There were a large number of people suffering from and death from the plague. The dead bodies were stored in the Stephanus chapel in the city cemetery and buried separately.

City fires

In 1638 the first big city ​​fire spread . Almost the whole city including the old town hall on the market square fell victim to the flaming inferno. The town had just recovered from the town fire 41 years ago, when in 1679 fires struck again and laid a third of the town in ruins. Wusterhausen had to file for bankruptcy in 1685–1688 due to the devastating city fires and the siege of various armies . After the first economic boom, the next fire occurred in 1758. It was triggered by the glow of a pipe belonging to the arable citizen Michel Hilgendorff. In this fire, two thirds of the Wusterhausen was destroyed, and 169 residential buildings were destroyed in the flames. The only remaining buildings are in today's Kyritzer Straße . Only six years later, on May 17, 1764, the octagonal pointed spire of the church tower burned down by lightning . The bells and the church clock melted in the heat. The inner vault of the tower collapsed and was only repaired in 1996 on the initiative of citizens of Wusterhausen. Since the fire, the tower has been closed by a small pyramid helmet.

Modern times

Brunn manor around 1860,
Alexander Duncker collection

From 1796–1806 the city experienced a new economic boom through the stationing of a squadron cuirassiers , called "Yellow Riders" . In 1800 Wusterhausen had 185 traders and traders, 59 shoemakers and 38 farmers alone . The trades of the shoemakers, cloth makers , tailors and linen weavers lived almost exclusively from work for the garrison located in the city. The large number of shoemakers soon earned the town the nickname “Schusterhausen”.

In 1806 the "Yellow Riders" left the city. In the same year 1806, however, a civil guard was founded on foot to defend Wusterhausen. In 1839 the rifle guild, established in 1713, was re-established . Parts of the 4th Squadron of Uhlan Regiment No. 11 were stationed in Wusterhausen in 1860, but were relocated again in 1875. This ended the economic boom in Wusterhausen after almost seventy years, and the city became an agricultural town again.

In 1884 the imperial post office opened on Berliner Strasse . The post office moved from the post office at market no. 3 (today the home of the local history museum) to the new building. In 1887, with the completion of the Neustadt (Dosse) –Pritzwalk railway line , Wusterhausen received a new transport connection. Originally, the route of the Berlin – Hamburg railway line was to run through Wusterhausen as early as 1844 . Due to the concerns and the negative behavior of the city councilors, the route was implemented via the neighboring town of Neustadt / Dosse . In 1894 the city's voluntary fire brigade was founded and was given premises on the north side of the town hall in the prison extension.

The hospital, first mentioned in 1306, was demolished in 1897 and rebuilt with donations from the industrialist Wilhelm Christof Borchert, who was born in Wusterhausen. The street was renamed Borchertstraße in honor of the donor . The hospital was expanded in 1997.

In 1905 the new city school was built. The old city school was located on the north side of the St. Peter and Paul Church in the former building of the Kalandsbruderschaft , which was demolished around 1906 because there was no longer any need for the premises. In 1919 the Sport-Club Wusterhausen e. V. 1919 with his disciplines football and athletics . (SCW e.V. 1919)

time of the nationalsocialism

At the beginning of National Socialist rule, Wusterhausen celebrated the 700th anniversary of the first mention of the place in 1933, one year late. The climax of the anti-Semitic madness at this time was the tarry and suspension of a “ half-Jewish woman ” on the market square, after the National Socialist-minded pastor reportedly preached the implementation of the pogrom from the pulpit in the Sunday service . There was also a book burning on the Schwenzewiesen ( B 5 in the direction of Kampehl) by citizens of Wusterhausen.

post war period

On 1st / 2nd May 1945 the Red Army marched into Wusterhausen, which had remained almost intact during World War II . The city commander Pyotr Romaschkow took over the first administration before it was transferred back to German positions. The DEFA film Die Brücke was made in 1949, directed by Artur Pohl in Wusterhausen. This film deals with the arrival and settling of war refugees from the former German eastern regions in a small town unscathed by the war.

In the course of the dissolution of the Ruppin district in 1952, Wusterhausen became part of the new Kyritz district in the GDR district of Potsdam .

Many citizens of Wusterhausen joined the popular uprising on June 17, 1953 . They marched through the streets and protested against the communist dictatorship. Wusterhausen was declared a focus of unrest . The rulers posted machine guns on the church tower to suppress the protests and bring calm to the city again. Numerous citizens were persecuted or fled to West Germany because of the expected repression .

In 1958, the citizens of Wusterhausen celebrated the 725th anniversary of the first documentary mention of Wusterhausen in 1232. In consideration of the local festival in Kyritz, which was celebrated there in 1957, the anniversary had been postponed by a year.

In 1962, a comprehensive demolition of entire streets such as Kyritzer Strasse, Borchertstrasse, Domstrasse, Dombrowskistrasse and Alte Poststrasse in the old town began, in order to erect new blocks in their place. Part of the old town with its historic half-timbered houses fell victim to the unsuccessful building policy, and the original character of the city suffered. Originally, the new residential buildings were to be located in the area of ​​today's Seestadion. The sports-loving Mayor Fritz Köpcke , the GDR's first internationally recognized FIFA referee, knew how to convince the planners that a sports field could be built in the building area on the lake instead of the planned apartment blocks.

In 1963, the newly built bypass for trunk road 5 was completed. Long-distance traffic, especially transit traffic , no longer ran through the city's narrow streets. In 1965/68 the city church of St. Peter and Paul was extensively restored with the help of the regional church and the state preservation of monuments. In 1966 the course of the river Dosse was straightened. This allegedly reduced the flow speed of the arms of the Dossier ("Little Venice") running through the city. At the instigation of a citizen of Wusterhausen who worked in the council of the Kyritz district and owned the gravel pit at the lake (sand pit), the arms of the dossier were filled in. The Seestadion was inaugurated in 1967.

Between 1970 and 1990

In 1970 the new lido was inaugurated and in 1976 a new school building was completed behind the old school. In 1982, the city prepared for the upcoming 750th anniversary celebration, with important historical buildings falling victim to the wrecking ball, including the Café Büttner and the former Hotel Zum schwarzen Adler in St.-Petri-Straße. Here was Theodor Fontane during his popular walking tour through Mark Brandenburg slept. In 1983 Wusterhausen celebrated its 750th anniversary in the city, again, like the previous anniversaries, a year late, so that it received its "special significance through the Karl Marx Year 1983".

In 1985 the State Institute for Epizootiology and Animal Disease Control (SIFET) was founded , until 2013 a branch of the Friedrich Loeffler Institute .

On December 19, 1989, at the invitation of Pastor Karl-Ernst Selke , the Kyritzer Round Table met for the first time as a result of the change .

From 1991

On August 21, 1992, the Minister of the Interior of the State of Brandenburg gave his consent to the formation of the Wusterhausen Office (without the addition Dosse ) with its seat in the city of Wusterhausen / Dosse. August 1, 1992 was set as the date on which the office was established. At the time of its founding, the office comprised 15 communities in what was then the Kyritz district (today the Ostprignitz-Ruppin district, Brandenburg): Bantikow, Barsikow, Blankenberg, Brunn, Bückwitz, Dessow, Ganzer, Gartow, Kantow, Lögow, Nackel, Segeletz, Trieplatz, Schönberg and Wusterhausen.

The first official director was Peter Wollert. He was elected mayor of the municipality of Wusterhausen / Dosse in 2001 after the office was dissolved.

In 1997 a sports, cultural and leisure facility, the Dosse Hall, opened .

On May 1, 1997, the Gartow community was incorporated into the city of Wusterhausen / Dosse. On December 31, 1997, the communities of Bantikow, Blankenberg, Brunn, Ganzer, Kantow, Lögow, Schönberg and the city of Wusterhausen / Dosse merged to form the new community of Wusterhausen / Dosse.

On September 27, 1998 the municipality of Segeletz was incorporated into the municipality of Wusterhausen / Dosse, followed by Trieplatz on December 31st.

On July 1, 2001, the last four smaller, officially affiliated communities Barsikow, Bückwitz, Dessow and Nackel were incorporated into the (large) community of Wusterhausen. With this incorporation, the Wusterhausen Office was dissolved with effect from July 1, 2001.

According to the main statute of the municipality of Wusterhausen, Läsikow (formerly part of Nackel), Tramnitz and Wulkow (formerly part of Schönberg), Sechzehneichen (part of Bantikow), Metzelthin (formerly part of Bückwitz) and Emilienhof (previously residential area of ​​Lögow) each received the status of a district.

According to Paragraph 11 (2) of the municipal code for the state of Brandenburg , the newly formed municipality would have the right to continue to use the name city. However, it did not make use of this option and called itself the Wusterhausen / Dosse community . Only the district encompassing the Wusterhausen district was designated as the city ​​of Wusterhausen / Dosse .

The previous city coat of arms was officially confirmed on December 2, 2005 as the coat of arms of the municipality.

In 2006 the steeple of St. Peter and Paul was restored and the church area redesigned.

Diagram of the historical parade for the 775th anniversary

From June 6th to 8th, 2008, the citizens and guests of Wusterhausen celebrated the 775th anniversary of the city. The highlights of the celebrations were the historic councilor meeting, the mediaeval market hustle and bustle in the old town, the dragon boat race on the Klempowsee and the historical parade with almost 75 diagrams at the end of the celebrations. Around 1,300 actors, 60 horses and 3 orchestras took part over a total length of 2 kilometers.

In 2009 the market square was renovated and completely redesigned. In addition, the comprehensive renovation of the Church of St. Peter and Paul including the tower began in summer 2009 . The listed "Herbst'sche Haus" at Markt 3 was also renovated in 2009–2011 and designed as a cultural center, library and museum building.

Population development

year Residents
1875 3 160
1890 3 164
1910 2 807
1925 2,671
1933 2,844
1939 2,863
1946 4040
1950 3 689
year Residents
1964 3 225
1971 3 252
1981 3 168
1985 3 145
1989 3 204
1990 3 125
1991 3,058
1992 3 012
1993 2 999
1994 3 155
year Residents
1995 3 129
1996 3 094
1997 5 156
1998 5 476
1999 5 508
2000 5,467
2001 6 730
2002 6 665
2003 6 650
2004 6 621
year Residents
2005 6 584
2006 6 532
2007 6 411
2008 6 378
2009 6 251
2010 6 227
2011 6 129
2012 6 017
2013 6 015
2014 5,979
year Residents
2015 6 013
2016 5 955
2017 5 885
2018 5 807
2019 5,761

Territory of the respective year, number of inhabitants: as of December 31 (from 1991), from 2011 based on the 2011 census

politics

Community representation

Since the local elections on May 26, 2019, the municipal council has consisted of 18 members and the full-time mayor:

Local elections 2019
Turnout: 53.3%
 %
40
30th
20th
10
0
32.0%
24.0%
17.1%
15.9%
6.1%
5.0%
Lär a
Ide
Schnick
Template: election chart / maintenance / notes
Remarks:
a Voting community in rural areas
c Independent constituency
Party / group of voters Seats
Community of voters in rural areas (LäR) 6th
LEFT 4th
Independent voter community Wusterhausen 3
CDU 3
Individual applicant René Ide 1
Individual applicant Lothar Schnick 1

mayor

  • 1998–2006: Peter Wollert
  • 2006–2010: Ralf Reinhardt
  • 2010-2018: Roman Blank (SPD)
  • since 2018: Philipp Schulz (independent)

Schulz was elected in the mayoral election on October 14, 2018 with 76.6% of the valid votes for a term of eight years.

coat of arms

The municipality's coat of arms was confirmed on December 2, 2005.

Blazon : “Split by red and silver; in front half a silver eagle at the crack and behind half a red lily. "

Theodor Fontane describes the coat of arms:

“What is left is quickly told. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries Wusterhausen belonged to the Plothos, whose castle stood in front of the Kyritz gate. At the end of the last century its ruins were still recognizable; now only the "castle wall". Apart from this remnant, nothing more than the city arms reminds of this earliest historical time: the Plotho lily cut in half by the Brandenburg eagle. "

- Theodor Fontane : Walks through the Mark Brandenburg Volume 1 " The County of Ruppin "

Community partnerships

Attractions

Market ensemble with St. Peter and Paul

The church was built in the middle of the 13th century from field stone blocks in Gothic style as a single-nave cruciform church, later converted into field stone and brick into a late Gothic hall church. Some medieval frescoes (including some grotesques and drolleries ) have been preserved. Worth seeing are the choir stalls with colored relief carvings and the Triumph Cross (1474), the Renaissance pulpit from 1610, the Baroque altar of 1769. The organ from 1742 is one with the surviving organs of the Berlin organ maker Joachim Wagner (1690-1749), the has undergone the fewest changes in its pipe inventory in the past centuries.

The local museum of local history has been housed in a stately half-timbered house, the former “post office” (built in 1764) on the historic market square since 1962. In the years 2009 to 2011 the former office building was extensively renovated, also known as the “Herbst'sches Haus” after the last shopkeeper. In September 2011, following a redesign, the museum was reopened as the “Wusterhausen Path Museum” with a thematic permanent exhibition on paths from the Bronze Age to the modern era . In addition to the pilgrimage route to Wilsnack and the post route Berlin-Hamburg, the inner-German transit route along the former F 5 forms a special focus of the exhibition between 1952 and 1982 and is therefore a unique selling point nationwide. The “Herbst'sche Haus” also houses the library and the “Old Shop” as an event space for around 50 people.

Economy and Infrastructure

Shamrock composite

The city of Kyritz , the Neustadt (Dosse) office , the Wusterhausen / Dosse municipality and the Gumtow municipality have joined together in a cooperation agreement to form the clover leaf network .

traffic

The municipality of Wusterhausen is located on federal highway 5 between Kyritz and Nauen and on federal highway 167 to Neuruppin .

The Wusterhausen (Dosse) stop on the Neustadt – Meyenburg railway line is served hourly by the regional train line RB 73 Neustadt (Dosse) - Pritzwalk .

Wusterhausen can be reached with a PlusBus and other regional bus routes through the Ostprignitz-Ruppiner local public transport company.

The Kyritz airfield is located to the north-west of the Stadt Wusterhausen district. The Segeletz special landing site is located in the southern municipality .

Wusterhausen is a junction in the Prignitz cycle path network .

education

  • Astrid Lindgren Primary School Wusterhausen

Personalities

Sons and daughters of the church

Personalities associated with Wusterhausen

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Population in the State of Brandenburg according to municipalities, offices and municipalities not subject to official registration on December 31, 2019 (XLSX file; 223 KB) (updated official population figures) ( help on this ).
  2. a b Main statutes of the municipality of Wusterhausen / Dosse from February 10, 2009 PDF
  3. ^ Service portal of the state administration / municipalities / district Ostprignitz-Ruppin / municipality Wusterhausen / Dosse
  4. ^ Overview of publications by the Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation / Archeology. Here: No. 165; accessed on October 16, 2010 ( memento from July 20, 2012 in the web archive archive.today )
  5. Publication of the LA Brb. Here: No. 151; accessed on October 16, 2010 ( memento from July 20, 2012 in the web archive archive.today )
  6. ^ Project Wusterhausen, late Slavic burial ground. In: anthropologie-jungklaus.de. Retrieved June 4, 2017 .
  7. Felix Biermann , Franz Schopper (ed.): A late Slavic cemetery with sword graves from Wusterhausen on the Dosse . Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum, Wünsdorf 2012, ISBN 978-3-910011-70-0 .
  8. ^ Karl Altrichter: History of the city of Wusterhausen on the Dosse . Rud. Petrenz, Neu-Ruppin 1888, p. 9 (reprinted by Edition Rieger, Karwe, 2008).
  9. Johannes Iskraut: Fifteen hundred years in the Dosselande . First part. Wusterhausen 1875, p. 19 (part of the Wusterhausen Trail Museum).
  10. ^ Superintendent Röhricht in the Ruppin district calendar of 1920
  11. Karl Jahn: From the prehistoric and early days of Wusterhausen . In: 725 years of Wusterhausen. Local festival of the Kyritz district from 3.-6.VII.1958 . Wusterhausen 1958, p. 18 .
  12. Mayor Techen: Foreword to the commemorative publication “750 Years of Wusterhausen / Dosse. Blossoming small socialist town in the Kyritz district ” . Ed .: Council of the City of Wusterhausen, Festival Committee for the 750th Anniversary Celebration, Agitation-Propaganda Working Group. Wusterhausen 1983, p. 3 .
  13. ^ Formation of the Wusterhausen office. Announcement by the Minister of the Interior of July 21, 1992. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 3, Number 58, August 12, 1992, p. 1017.
  14. ^ Incorporation of the Gartow community into the city of Wusterhausen / Dosse to form the new Wusterhausen / Dosse community. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of April 8, 1997. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 8, Number 19, May 5, 1997, p. 357.
  15. ↑ Amalgamation of the communities of Bantikow, Blankenberg, Brunn, Ganzer, Kantow, Lögow, Schönberg and the city of Wusterhausen / Dosse to form the new community of Wusterhausen / Dosse. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of November 27, 1997. Official Journal for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 8, Number 52, December 30, 1997, p. 1012
  16. ^ Incorporation of the Segeletz community into the Wusterhausen / Dosse community. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of May 6, 1998. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 9, Number 19, May 5, 1997, p. 357.
  17. Incorporation of the Trieplatz community into the Wusterhausen / Dosse community. Announcement of the Ministry of the Interior of October 21, 1998. Official Gazette for Brandenburg - Joint Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 9, Number 48, November 27, 1997, p. 984.
  18. ^ Official Journal for Brandenburg Common Ministerial Gazette for the State of Brandenburg, Volume 12, 2001, Number 25, Potsdam, June 20, 2001, pp. 438–439 PDF
  19. ^ Historical municipality register of the state of Brandenburg 1875 to 2005. Landkreis Ostprignitz-Ruppin . Pp. 26-29
  20. Population in the state of Brandenburg from 1991 to 2017 according to independent cities, districts and municipalities , Table 7
  21. ^ Office for Statistics Berlin-Brandenburg (Ed.): Statistical report AI 7, A II 3, A III 3. Population development and population status in the state of Brandenburg (respective editions of the month of December)
  22. ^ Result of the local election on May 26, 2019
  23. Local elections October 26, 2003. Mayoral elections , p. 30
  24. Jump up to the new office. In: Schweriner Volkszeitung , August 2, 2010
  25. ^ Roman Blank becomes mayor of Wusterhausen. In: Märkische Oderzeitung , October 25, 2010
  26. Brandenburg Local Election Act, Section 74
  27. ^ Result of the mayoral election on October 14, 2018
  28. limited preview in the Google book search
  29. Website of the Protestant parish Wusterhausen (Dosse)
  30. ^ Website of the Wusterhausen Trail Museum
  31. Homepage of the Kleeblatt-Verbund
  32. Dosse-Seen-Land Tourist Association

Web links

Commons : Wusterhausen / Dosse  - collection of images, videos and audio files