Loissin

Loissin is a municipality in the district of Vorpommern - Greifswald. It is administered by the Office Lubmin based in Lubmin.

Geography and transport

Loissin between Greifswald and Lubmin on the Baltic coast at the Danish Wiek and the Bay of Greifswald. Approximately 15 kilometers west of the municipality is the town of Greifswald and six kilometers to the east is the official residence Lubmin. Through the village runs a county road.

Districts

  • Loissin
  • Gahlkow
  • Ludwigsburg

History

Loissin was first documented in 1248 called as Lodizin. It was a Slavic settlement. Loissin was TafelGUT of the Bishop of Pomerania, but was in 1240 sold to the town of Greifswald who exchanged it with the monastery Eldena. The monastery property passed after the secularization of the State University of Greifswald.

Loissin had 1865 156 inhabitants, 12 houses and 19 outbuildings.

Gahlkow is also a Slavic settlement. It was a manor, before 1809 it had the family of Lühmann, then the family of Vahl.

Gahlkow had 96 inhabitants in 1865, nine houses, one factory and 10 outbuildings.

The finds from the Neolithic period after an excavation in the local situation and in the environment point to a settlement since the Neolithic period. Ludwigsburg has already been mentioned as Darsim 1207 documentary. It is a Slavic foundation and means as much as the wild forest. Darsim belonged to 1534 the monastery Eldena, with the secularization came the village to the Pomeranian dukes. 1577 was Duke Ernst Ludwig the area as a dowry to his newly-married wife, Sophie Hedwig from the house of Brunswick- Lüneburg. It is a field work (Good) was built with building yard and the princely house. The place was named Ludwigshof, which later became Ludwigsburg. The Duchess, now a widow, left the estate with castle in 1609 its creditors, but retained the right to property. Finally it got to the Duchess Anna von Croy and her son, but in 1650 sold to General Mueller of the Lühnen. In 1747 it came by auction to the family of Horn and again in 1776 - then to the family of Klinkowstrom. In 1810 it was purchased by the Greifswald Kaufmann Weissenborn, whose family owned the estate until 1945.

Ludwigsburg had 1865 175 inhabitants, one church, one school, 12 residential buildings ( with key), two factory buildings and 20 outbuildings.

1945 - After a brief Russian occupation, the castle was used as a residence for refugees. In 1975, the house was pulled free and left to decay despite conservation. Dry rot, moisture, wood worm infestation and other damages were the result.

Jörg Weissenborn, a descendant of the family castle and manor repurchased Park in 1993. With a dedicated lock club an agreement to use and care was completed. The club had set a target that last remaining Pomeranian ducal castle to save on German soil and fed into a meaningful use. With the help of the sponge historic preservation restoration was done the roof renewal and other safety measures. This stop was at least the expiry offered. Problem are still the financial hedging.

To the north of Ludwigsburg is a deserted village named Merotiz, it was already mentioned in 1209, but then soon disappeared. The location was documented to cause friction to soil conservationists W. Horne man made 1967 unique finds and was able to locate the deserted village.

Attractions

→ See: List of monuments in Loissin

Ludwigsburg - Church, Portal and Mausoleum

Good Ludwigsburg gate with crest (lbs)

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