Panten

Panten is a municipality in the district of Lauenburg, in Schleswig- Holstein east of Hamburg. The municipality includes the villages hammer and Mannhagen.

History

Northeast of the local part hammer are located directly on the Elbe- Lübeck Canal on the Timmermann mountain the remains of a castle slawischenen Walles, probably from the 9th century. Although the ring wall has only a diameter of 90 meters, it is said to have traded around the main stronghold of Abodrites for the Lauenburg settlement area. Not later than the 10th century, the castle was in conjunction with other fasteners, such as the ring barrier in Farchau, abandoned in favor of a new main castle in Ratzeburg. In the vernacular of the castle wall bears the name Steinburg.

Panten is first mentioned in a charter of Henry the Lion in 1158. The community was mecklenburg to Greater Hamburg Act of 1937 and then came to the then Prussian province of Schleswig -Holstein. In 1938, the merger with Mannhagen and hammer under the name Mannhagen.

In Mannhagen water mills were operated at the Steinau ( Panten ) in the Middle Ages and in early modern copper hammer with up to three. To the owners of the mills was also based in Lübeck and Mecklenburg family Leers. The man Hagen mill east of the town is able to recognize today.

The community 's name was changed on September 19, 1938 in Panten because the community name after the request of the NSDAP district leadership with which the NSDAP group should cover. From 1948 to 1963, the local council took repeated attempts to introduce the original community name again, but each time failed to bureaucratic obstacles.

Policy

Coat of arms

Blazon: " From Blue and Red cleaved by a shield-shaped, fallen golden peak therein under three 1: put 2, eight-pointed green star on the left inverted, dressed in green half shepherd holding a black mallet in his left hand a black horn in his right hand. "

632012
de