Bresenitz

Bresenitz in Garder mill

Template: Infobox River / Obsolete

The Bresenitz (partly also: Breesenitz ) is a right tributary of the Mildenitz in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

Course

The Bresenitz springs from Karin Moor on the southwestern outskirts of Reimershagen in the district of Rostock and flows through shortly after the Reimershagener lake. In the upper reaches of strong straightened her way in a northwesterly direction leads to Breeser in the nature reserve lake located Breesensee, which run among other things, the Rotbeck and the surrounding wetland draining ditches. To the west, the also through by the Bresenitz Suckwitzer lake connects. Until Nienhäger the lake waters runs in a southwesterly direction. From there the Bresenitz crosses the natural park Sternberger Lakeland. She turns northwestward and flows through the Garder See in Lohmen. The opening into the Garder See Bollenbach is a right tributary of the Bresenitz dar.

At the inlet to the lake Woseriner the limit is exceeded for the district of Ludwigsburg pleasure Parchim. The articulated through the island located in the middle of waters in three pools lake is left on the southwestern shore. After the passage of the Bresenitzsees and passing under the highway 192 which leads Bresenitz 700 meters southeast of the hamlet of New Borkower Woserin in the Mildenitz, which further dissipates the water over the Warnow in the Baltic Sea.

The Bresenitz overcomes in its course a difference in height of about 21 meters.

History

The creek Bresenitz was first mentioned in the extension of Dobbertiner monastery's possessions in 1237 as Bresenitze. In the deed the Lord operated to Rostock Nicholas the boundaries of the monastery area, including ... the creek Milnitz ( Mildenitz ) from Jawir See ( Dobbertiner lake ) to the lake Wostrowitz ( the drained Klädener and Dobbiner lake ) and on to the Bach Bresenitze ( Bresenitz ) ...

In the area of the former monastery Dobbertin forest was from 1851, a regulation of Bresenitz through the deepening of the riverbed and the site clearance of the margins for the drainage of the surrounding land.

On April 8, 1882 Monastery Captain Christian Joachim Hugo Karl Graf von Bernstorff had the Dobbertiner Forstinspektor Garthe remove a warning sign at the Bresenitz silently and put Schleete (logs ) on the Bresenitz. If Woseriner presume the wood reading, they are repossessing, was his determination.

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