Lutter, Thuringia

Lutter is a municipality in the administrative community uder in the Thuringian district of calibration field. The district Fürstenhagen ( calibration field ) is home to the park administration in the Eichsfeld Hainich Werra.

The municipality consists of the villages of Lutter Lutter and Fürstenhagen.

  • 2.1 municipal
  • 2.2 Mayor

History

Lutter

Lutter was first mentioned in 1201 as Lutherans or Luttere documented. The name comes most probably from the same stream Lutter, where the spot is. During the Thirty Years' War in 1626 Lutter burned down completely.

The place belonged to Electoral Mainz until the secularisation, 1802-1945 he was part of the Prussian province of Saxony. 1945-1949 was the place to the Soviet occupation zone and was since 1949 part of the GDR. From 1961 until the turn and reunion 1989/1990 Lutter has been affected by the closure of the nearby German border. Since 1990, a part of the place to Thuringia.

Fürstenhagen

The district Fürstenhagen west was founded in the 18th century of an existing already in the 13th century and again abandoned by 1374 settlement called Indago new. The name comes from a " prince belonging Hagen ". The district has about 70 inhabitants.

Population Development

Development of the population (31 December):

  • 2000: 763
  • 2001: 756
  • 2002: 744
  • 2003: 755
  • 2004: 751
  • 2005: 740
  • 2006: 733
  • 2007: 723
  • 2008: 721
  • 2009: 716
  • 2010: 715
  • 2011: 723
  • 2012: 722

Policy

Parish council

The local council of Lutter is composed of eight council members.

  • CDU: 8 seats

(As at municipal election on June 7, 2009)

Mayor

The honorary mayor Raimund Müller ( CDU) was re-elected on June 6, 2010.

Coat of arms

Blazon: " Angular links divided by a silver bar wave of blue and green; above a silver -armed warrior, holding in his right hand a lance flags, leaning with his left hand on a shield; below a silver mill wheel. "

The Holy Mauritius is the patron saint of the church, which was located until 1952/53, the seal of the municipality. The wavy line symbolizes the river Lutter, where the spot is. The wheel located in the crest symbolizes that by 1950 four mills were driven in place of the Lutter.

Attractions

  • The church bears the name of St. Maurice.
  • The water tower on the former station in Prince Hagen, now headquarters of the park administration.
  • A tree house is located on the former station in Prince Hagen, is the seat of the park administration.
  • Listed timber-framed houses in the Thuringian- Franconian style.
  • In the village there were four mills. The mill was a grist mill hoe on the southeastern outskirts of the village, was named in the 17th century and until 1960 was in operation. The funds mill, a grist mill in the local situation, was mentioned in 1666 and was until 1965. Today it is a residential building. The Spring mill, an oil and grist mill on the southeastern outskirts of the village, was named in the 16th century and until 1953 was in operation. With the acquisition of the property by the LPG dismantling began, outbuildings were laid down. The Untermühle as the fourth grist mill located on the western outskirts of the village, it was named in 1676 and until 1959 was in operation.
535827
de