Prislich

The municipality is part of the Office Prislich Grabow in the district of Ludwigsburg pleasure Parchim in Mecklenburg -Vorpommern ( Germany ).

On 13 June 2004, the hitherto independent Werle was incorporated into Prislich. The municipality also includes the villages of Prislich and Neese. Other settlements are chickens country and Marienhof.

Geography and transport

Prislich is located about three kilometers east of Grabow in southwest Mecklenburg -Vorpommern and is surrounded by arable land with mainly barren sandy soils and forest. On the eastern boundary of the municipality the Tarnitz flows south towards Löcknitz. On the southern border with the Brandenburg Meynbach runs. Through the municipal area, the Hamburg-Berlin railway line runs. The nearest railway station and the main road 5 can be achieved in Grabow.

History

In the field names Atlas of southern West Mecklenburg the place is out in 1424 as Prirtzwelke. Other spellings over the years were Prytzlick ( 1500), Pritzellecke, Pritzlick ( 1545 ) and Pryslych, which means something like " small settlement near the city " means. Prislich is dominated by agriculture has always been, until 1945 it was a purely farming village with large farmers, cottagers and Büdnern. Neese, however, was an estate village.

District Werle

The first mention Werle dates back to 1356. The place was formerly a bag space and farming village. Werle and chicken country were in ritterschaftlichem owned by the seat of power, however, are only parks available. The Church is a Gothic nave, flat-roofed stone church without a tower. After a fire in 1719 it was rebuilt and extended east into timber. The beamed ceiling from 1724 shows an ornament painting. Through the pulpit altar and the pews incurred in the same period a rare stylistic uniformity is obtained. The church is a listed building.

Attractions

→ See also List of monuments in Prislich

  • Village church in Neese as a timber-framed building from 1753
  • Village church in Werle as of late Gothic, flat roofed stone building that has been restored and extended after 1719; Beamed ceiling and furnishings for 1724.
  • Manor House in Neese

Village church in Werle

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