Hülseburg

Hülseburg is a municipality in the district of Ludwigsburg pleasure Parchim in Mecklenburg -Vorpommern ( Germany ). It is administered by the Office Hagenow country with headquarters in the city Hagenow.

Geography

History

Presek is how many places in the area, first documented in 1230 in Ratzeburg tithe register and emerged from a Slavic settlement. Hülseburg emerged only in 1571 on an inheritance certificate for the first time and was a foundation on uninhabited land. Both places were once in possession of the landed aristocracy, based on the Good Hülseburg. The Thirty Years War claimed many victims among the residents.

Hülseburg offered the visitors once a magnificent neo-gothic castle (originally at the beginning of the 18th century, built on the western edge in 1860 on behalf of Baron von Campe historicist rebuilt ). However, this burned January 6, 1947 from (presumably by arson ). The remaining exterior walls including the castle towers were blown up in 1948. The former park has a size of 7.7 acres.

Since there was a church in any of the places, the inhabitants had to visit the house of God in Gammelin long time. In the same context with the castle renovation was in 1860 a neo-Gothic chapel grave outside of the village, which was transformed from a state of disrepair out from 1951 to 1953 at a church. Coffins of the family von Campe from the crypt of the chapel were reburied next to the building. The bell tower was demolished in the 1970s, it was a free-standing belfry. Since 1989, at the time again dilapidated chapel is no longer used and is since 1997 owned by the municipality Hülseburg.

The community was dominated by agriculture from time immemorial.

The monuments of the community are included in the list of monuments in Hülseburg.

402871
de