Bröbberow

Bröbberow is a municipality in the district of Rostock in Mecklenburg- Vorpommern ( Germany ). The community is managed by the Office Schwaan based in the same city.

Geography

The municipality is situated on the Bröbberow Beke, a left tributary of the lower Warnow. The city Schwaan is about six kilometers away, Rostock about 16 kilometers.

To Bröbberow includes the villages of Bröbberow, Great border and small border.

History

Bröbberow, probably founded as Preberow in the 16th century, was already proven in 1550 to the Official Schwaan. The name of Great border could be derived from the location of the village on the border of the former princely Werle. On May 17, 1278 Great border was and 1283 small border mentioned on February 5, was first documented in a deed of sale of the Prince Heinrich and Johann von Werle to the monastery of Doberan. The area was populated but much earlier. Thus, a native of the Bronze Age woman's jewelry was found in a grave hill on a gravel mountain with small boundary.

After the Reformation and dissolution of the monastery Doberan was large border country splendid Dominialdorf in the Official Schwaan. By the year 1640, the villages rendered or charges to the University of Rostock.

In the Thirty Years' War were seven out of ten peasant farms destroyed and the other three lost their independence. In 1631 stayed in the United boundary of Wallenstein governor Count Berthold von Wallenstein.

Bröbberow was until 1945 Dominialhof the country in the Official Schwaan. Since May 14, 1950 Bröbberow, Great border and small border belong to the unit Bröbberow community. The county jurisdiction changed over the years a few times and since 1994 the church belongs to the district of Bad Doberan, who came up in the district of Rostock in 2011.

In 1945 there were in small ten frontier farmer places Büdnereien three and six cottagers land and a school.

Since 1950 there were the following Major: to 1957, Mr. Brown, Mr. Rose to 1974 until 1999, Mr. Roepke and since then Mr. Marklein.

Attractions

The Evangelical Church in Great border dates from the first half of the 14th century. It is a brick building on a field stone base. The windows are designed in the Gothic Revival style ogival. The attached at the Norwand sacristy dates from around the 19th century. The steeple was demolished in the 20th century. Facilities include a triumphal cross group whose origin is estimated to be the 15th century and bumpered with lions and griffins relief tiles.

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