Maasdorf (Bad Liebenwerda)
Maasdorf is a district of the town of Bad Liebenwerda in the Elbe-Elster district of Brandenburg, Germany, located three kilometres northeast of the town on the Kleine Elster river within the Niederlausitzer Heidelandschaft Nature Park.[1]
Maasdorf was part of the Bad Liebenwerda district until its incorporation in 1993 and currently has 464 inhabitants.
Maasdorf | |
|---|---|
District | |
Location of Maasdorf in Bad Liebenwerda | |
| Elevation | 90 m (300 ft) |
| Population | |
• Total | 404 |
| Postal code | 04924 |
| Area code | 035341 |
History
Maasdorf was first documented in 1376 as Mostorph. The origin of the name, likely German, is undocumented, but various spellings have appeared over time: 1376 Mostorph, 1378 Mostorf, 1391 Mannstorf, 1402 Mansdorff, 1442 Mastorff, 1457 Monstorff, 1529 Maßdorff, 1550 Masdorff, and 1752 Maasdorff.[2][3]
The village was originally owned by the Ileburger noble family, part of the Upper Saxon nobility, who controlled Liebenwerda Castle. Residents of Maasdorf were subject to the Dingstuhl court in Dobra, which also governed Dobra, Liebenwerda’s suburbs (Stadtwinkel and Freiwinkel), Zeischa, and Zobersdorf. Frequent flooding from the Kleine Elster (formerly Dober), a tributary of the Schwarze Elster, prompted the construction of a 122.5-ell-long dam in 1789 to protect the village.[3]
Maasdorf suffered multiple devastating fires. In 1457, a fire destroyed the entire village, with reconstruction aided by the Wahrenbrück parish, to which Maasdorf belonged. Lacking a local church, residents attended services in Wahrenbrück and buried their dead there, along a path still called ‘Leichenweg’ (corpse path). After the first church visitation in 1529, Maasdorf was reassigned to the Liebenwerda parish.[3][4] Additional fires in February 1609 destroyed 17 houses, and in January 1856, six farmsteads were lost.[3]
From 1875, the Knissen colony was part of Maasdorf[3] but was incorporated into Thalberg in 1936, becoming an independent municipality with its farmland.[5]
On 22 April 1945, shortly before World War II ended, the Red Army entered Maasdorf, confiscating horses and burning a plot with an abandoned military vehicle. On 11 May 1945, Russian soldiers shot the village schoolteacher, Karl Drechsler, in the school garden in front of his wife.[6]
The land reform in the Bad Liebenwerda district began in the autumn of 1945, expropriating estates over 100 hectares, including buildings, livestock, and equipment. In Maasdorf, 157 hectares, including the estate of Paul Weiland, were redistributed.[7][8] The Mittelhausen Pond estate, owned by the von Kuczkowski noble family, was also affected.[9]
In 1993, during Brandenburg’s district reform, Maasdorf was incorporated into Bad Liebenwerda, alongside Dobra, Kosilenzien, Kröbeln, Lausitz, Möglenz, Neuburxdorf, Oschätzchen, Prieschka, Thalberg, Theisa, Zeischa, and Zobersdorf.[10][11]
Population development
In 1835, Maasdorf had 43 houses, 211 inhabitants, 44 horses, 196 cattle, 425 sheep, 13 goats, and 98 pigs.[12]
| Population development of Maasdorf since 1875[13] | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Residents | Year | Residents | Year | Residents | ||||||||
| 1875 | 500 | 1946 | 623 | 1989 | 522 | ||||||||
| 1890 | 600 | 1950 | 641 | 1990 | 510 | ||||||||
| 1910 | 700 | 1964 | 556 | 1991 | 491 | ||||||||
| 1925 | 837 | 1971 | 546 | 1992 | 494 | ||||||||
| 1933 | 922 | 1981 | 535 | 2005 | 477 | ||||||||
| 1939 | 982 | 1985 | 525 | 2010 | 444 | ||||||||
Culture and places of interest
The Maasdorf manor, known as the ‘Parkschlösschen’ (little park castle), is a notable landmark on the Mühlgraben. Documented around 1701, it was owned by the von Seydewitz noble family before 1692, when Damm Friedrich and Christian Friedrich von Seydewitz sought enfeoffment of the estate.[14] By the mid-19th century, the von Rohrscheidt family owned it,[15] and in 1898, Paul Weiland, owner of the Liebenwerda cement factory, purchased it.[16] His South Tyrolean wife added Italian-style turrets, giving it a castle-like appearance. The manor remained with the Weiland family until the 1945 land reform. The Teichgut Mittelhausen estate (87 hectares)[17] was owned by Wilhelm von Borries-Dalldorf in the 1920s, then by the von Kuczkowski family.[18] In 1984, the manor became the Restaurant Parkschlösschen, now including a hotel.[19][3][8]
The Maasdorf Elster-Natoureum, opened in 2005, showcases the Elbe-Elster region in miniature with the motto “See nature, experience nature, learn from nature.” It includes a 320-meter-long LGB garden railway with a 45 mm track gauge.[20][3]
The Maasdorfer Teiche ponds, built-in 1543 for fish farming near the former Knissen district, are a popular destination for visitors.[5]
The Maasdorf cemetery features a war memorial stele honouring 34 residents who died in World War I and 40 in World War II.[21][3]
Personalities
- Friedrich von Rohrscheidt (1815–1880), Royal Prussian District Administrator of Liebenwerda (1843–1851), lord of the Maasdorf manor, and later Privy Councillor. His descendants owned the Garzau estate.[22]
References
- ^ "Gemeinde- und Ortsteilverzeichnis des Landes Brandenburg" [Directory of municipalities and districts in the state of Brandenburg]. Geobroker (in German). Landesvermessung und Geobasisinformation Brandenburg (LGB). Retrieved 2020-06-22.
- ^ Fitzkow, M. Karl (1962). "Vom Dingstuhl bis zum Kreisgericht" [From the Dingstuhl to the district court]. Heimatkalender für den Kreis Bad Liebenwerda [Local history calendar for the district of Bad Liebenwerda] (in German). Druckerei Aktivist Bad Liebenwerda. p. 28.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Bestek, C. (2007). "Chronik der Stadt Liebenwerda". In Verein für Stadtmarketing und Wirtschaft Bad Liebenwerda e. V. (ed.). Ortsteil Maasdorf [Maasdorf district] (in German). Bad Liebenwerda: Winklerdruck Gräfenhainichen. pp. 258–259. ISBN 978-3-7245-1420-6.
- ^ Bartha, H. (2007). "Chronik der Stadt Liebenwerda". In Verein für Stadtmarketing und Wirtschaft Bad Liebenwerda e. V. (ed.). Ortsteil Dobra [Dobra district] (in German). Bad Liebenwerda: Winklerdruck Gräfenhainichen. pp. 248–249. ISBN 978-3-7245-1420-6.
- ^ a b Schmidt, W. (2007). "Chronik der Stadt Liebenwerda". In Verein für Stadtmarketing und Wirtschaft Bad Liebenwerda e. V. (ed.). Ortsteil Thalberg [Thalberg district] (in German). Bad Liebenwerda: Winklerdruck Gräfenhainichen. pp. 268–269. ISBN 978-3-7245-1420-6.
- ^ Bartholomäus, Jürgen (1995). "Der Tod des Lehrers Karl" [The death of teacher Karl]. Heimatkalender für den Kreis Bad Liebenwerda und das Mückenberger Ländchen [Local history calendar for the district of Bad Liebenwerda and the Mückenberger Ländchen region]. pp. 95–100.
- ^ Lehmann, Torsten (1997). "Die Durchführung der Bodenreform im Altkreis Liebenwerda" [The implementation of land reform in the former district of Liebenwerda]. Heimatkalender für den Altkreis Bad Liebenwerda, das Mückenberger Ländchen, Ortrand am Schraden und Uebigau-Falkenberg [Local calendar for the former district of Bad Liebenwerda, the Mückenberger Ländchen region, Ortrand am Schraden, and Uebigau-Falkenberg]. p. 101.
- ^ a b Wilhelm, Fritz (1966). Sie kämpften für ein besseres Deutschland-Aufzeichnungen über den antifaschistischen Widerstandskampf im Kreis Liebenwerda [They fought for a better Germany—Records of the anti-fascist resistance struggle in the Liebenwerda district] (in German). Bad Liebenwerda. p. 123.
- ^ von Finckenstein, Gottfried Graf Finck; Franke, Christoph; Motte, Dorothee de la; Oettingen, Arved von (1921). Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch Der Adeligen Haeuser Yr 1921 [Gotha Genealogical Pocketbook of Noble Houses, 1921]. Limburg/Lahn. pp. 328–329.
- ^ "Historisches Gemeindeverzeichnis 2005 für Brandenburg" [Historical municipal directory 2005 for Brandenburg] (PDF). Landkreis Elbe-Elster. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-06-17. Retrieved 2026-01-14.
- ^ "Gemeindeverzeichnis-Informationssystem (GV-ISys)" [Municipality Directory Information System (GV-ISys)]. Destatis. Archived from the original on 2012-10-18. Retrieved 2026-01-14.
- ^ "Übersicht der Bevölkerung und des Viehstandes im Jahre 1835" [Overview of the population and livestock in 1835]. Die Schwarze Elster-Unsere Heimat in Wort und Bild [Die Schwarze Elster—Our homeland in words and pictures]. Bad Liebenwerda. 1985. pp. 8–10.
- ^ "Kleines Dorf ganz groß!" [A small village with a big heart!]. badliebenwerda.de (in German). Retrieved 3 June 2025.
- ^ Seydewitz, Otto von (1875). Beiträge zur Geschichte der Familie von Seydewitz, den Zeitraum von 1299 bis 1875 umfassend [Contributions to the history of the Seydewitz family, covering the period from 1299 to 1875]. Görlitz. pp. XIII.
- ^ "Handbuch über den Königlich Preußischen Hof und Staat auf das Jahr 1848" [Handbook on the Royal Prussian Court and State for the Year 1848]. Decker. Geheime Ober-Hofbuchdruckerei.
- ^ Zement und Beton. Illustrierte Fachschrift für Zement- und Betonbau [Cement and concrete. Illustrated technical journal for cement and concrete construction]. Jahrgang. 1910. p. 690.
- ^ Köhler, Oskar; Wesche, Gustav; Krahmer, H. Niekammer's landwirtschaftliche Güter-Adreßbücher [Niekammer's agricultural property address books]. pp. 140–141.
- ^ Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Adeligen Häuser. Alter Adel und Briefadel. 1922 [Gotha Genealogical Pocketbook of Noble Houses. Ancient Nobility and Letter Nobility. 1922]. Gotha. 1921. p. 101.
- ^ "Parkschlösschen Maasdorf" [Maasdorf Park Castle] (in German). Retrieved 2012-08-02.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) - ^ "Das Elster-Natoureum auf der Maasdorfer" [The Elster Nature Centre on the Maasdorf website] (in German). Retrieved 2011-04-12.
- ^ "Maasdorf, Landkreis Elbe-Elster, Brandenburg" [Maasdorf, Elbe-Elster district, Brandenburg]. Denkmal Projekt. Retrieved 2026-01-14.
- ^ Gothaisches Genealigisches Taschenbuch der Briefadeligen Häuser 1909 [Gotha Genealogical Pocketbook of the Letter-bearing Noble Houses 1909]. Gotha. 1968. p. 641.
External links
- Municipality website
- Maasdorf, in the RBB programme Der Landschleicher broadcast on 25 November 2012