Lübben

Lübben (Spreewald)

Lübben (Spreewald)

Town in Brandenburg, Germany


Lübben (Spreewald) (Lower Sorbian: Lubin (Błota), pronounced [ˈlubʲin ˈbwɔta]) is a town of 14,000 people, capital of the Dahme-Spreewald district in the Lower Lusatia region in Brandenburg, in eastern Germany.

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Administrative structure

Districts of the town are:

  • Lübben Stadt (Lower Sorbian: Lubin město)
  • Hartmannsdorf (Hartmanojce)
  • Lubolz (Lubolc)
    • Groß Lubolz (Wjelike Lubolce)
    • Klein Lubolz (Małe Lubolce)
  • Neuendorf (Nowa Wjas)
  • Radensdorf (Radom; Radowašojce)
  • Steinkirchen (Kamjena)
  • Treppendorf (Ranchow)

History

Nieder-Lausitzische Wendische Grammatica, a Lower Sorbian language learning book, published in the town in 1761

The castle of Lubin in the March of Lusatia was first mentioned in an 1150 register of Nienburg Abbey and had received town privileges according to Magdeburg law by 1220. It was located on a trade route from Luckau to Gubin and Poznań.[3] From 1301 the town in the centre of the Spreewald floodplain was in the possession of the monks of Dobrilugk Abbey, who sold it to Duke Rudolph I of Saxe-Wittenberg in 1329. After several conflicts with the Wittelsbach margraves of Brandenburg the March of Lusatia was finally acquired by Emperor Charles IV of Luxembourg in 1367 who incorporated Lübben into the Kingdom of Bohemia. In the 15th century Lübben became the seat of the Bohemian Vogt administrator and the provincial diet (Landtag) of Lower Lusatia.

In 1526 the House of Habsburg inherited the Bohemian kingdom including Lusatia, which in 1623 Ferdinand II of Habsburg had to give in pawn to Elector John George I of Saxony. The Saxon Electorate finally acquired Lübben by signing the 1635 Peace of Prague. After the Napoleonic Wars it fell to the Prussian province of Brandenburg by the final act of the 1815 Congress of Vienna. One of the main escape routes for insurgents of the unsuccessful Polish November Uprising from partitioned Poland to the Great Emigration led through the town.[4]

During World War II, the Oflag III-C and Oflag 8 prisoner-of-war camps for Polish, French, British, Australian, New Zealander, Belgian and Dutch officers, a forced labour subcamp of the Nazi prison in Luckau and a subcamp of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp were located in the town.[5][6][7] Lübben was taken by Soviet troops of the 3rd Guards Army on 27 April 1945.

Demography

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Politics

Seats in the municipal assembly (Stadtverordnetenversammlung) as of 2008 elections:

Lübben is twinned with Wolsztyn in Poland and Neunkirchen, Saarland in Germany.

Neuhaus Manor

Places of interest

  • Spreewald biosphere reserve
  • Lübben Castle, on medieval foundations, rebuilt in the 17th century under the rule of Duke Christian I of Saxe-Merseburg
  • Neuhaus Manor in Steinkirchen, built in 1801, former residence of author Christoph Ernst von Houwald from 1822 on
  • Romanesque St Pancras fieldstone church in Steinkirchen built in the early 13th century, one of the oldest preserved churches in Lower Lusatia
  • Paul Gerhardt Church from the 16th century, where Paul Gerhardt preached from 1669 on
  • Roman Catholic Trinity Church, built in 1862

Notable people

Born in Lübben

  • Hans Peter Bull (born 1936), German constitutional lawyer and jurist
  • Karin Büttner-Janz (born 1952 in Hartmannsdorf), German Olympic medal winner in artistic gymnastics and habilitated doctor
  • Henry Eugene Fritz (1875–1956), American painter
  • Hans Walter Gruhle (1880–1958), German psychiatrist
  • Benno Hann von Weyhern (1808–1890), Prussian General of the Cavalry
  • Louis Klopsch (1852–1910), American author and editor of the Christian Herald
  • Sylvio Kroll (born 1965), German Olympic medal winner in artistic gymnastics
  • Kornelia Kunisch (born 1959), German handball player, 1980 olympic bronze medal with the East German team
  • Christian Lillinger (born 1984), German musician and composer
  • Karl Otto von Manteuffel (1806-1879), German politician, prussian agriculture minister
  • Otto Theodor von Manteuffel (1805–1882), German politician, Minister-President of Prussia
  • Rudolf Marloth (1855–1931), South African botanist, pharmacist and analytical chemist
  • Ella Mensch (1859–1935), German writer, journalist, teacher, feminist and editor
  • Richard Constantin Noschke (1867–1945), diary of his World War I Alexandra Palace internment sufferings in Imperial War Museum, London.
  • Thorsten Rund (born 1976), German cyclist
  • Carl Siegemund Schönebeck (1758–1806), German composer and cellist
  • Lavinia Schulz (1896–1924), German dancer and actress
  • Ingo Spelly (born 1966), East German-German sprint canoer, Olympic champion

References

  1. "Bevölkerungsentwicklung und Bevölkerungsstandim Land Brandenburg Dezember 2022" (PDF). Amt für Statistik Berlin-Brandenburg (in German). June 2023.
  2. Pieradzka, Krystyna (1949). "Związki handlowe Łużyc ze Śląskiem w dawnych wiekach". Sobótka (in Polish). IV (4). Wrocław: 90.
  3. Umiński, Janusz (1998). "Losy internowanych na Pomorzu żołnierzy powstania listopadowego". Jantarowe Szlaki (in Polish). No. 4 (250). p. 16.
  4. Megargee, Geoffrey P.; Overmans, Rüdiger; Vogt, Wolfgang (2022). The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933–1945. Volume IV. Indiana University Press, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 211–212, 235. ISBN 978-0-253-06089-1.
  5. "Außenkommando des Zuchthauseses Luckau in Neuendorf". Bundesarchiv.de (in German). Retrieved 8 November 2023.
  6. Detailed data sources are to be found in the Wikimedia Commons.Population Projection Brandenburg at Wikimedia Commons

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