Haimre is a village in the Estonian rural community of Märjamaa . Located one kilometer from the Tallinn-Pärnu highway.
| Village | |
| Haimre | |
|---|---|
| Haimre | |
| A country | |
| History and Geography | |
| Population | |
| Population | 95 people ( 2005 ) |
Content
History
The village was first mentioned as the Heymer estate in 1420. The founder is a Baltic German , Bishop of Saarema-Wieck. In the 15-17th century, the estate belonged to the Fahrensbachi family. In 1425, William I, after lengthy proceedings with the church, won the estate for his family. The last of the Fahrensbachs owned the estate of Dietrich IV, who died in May 1637. Further, the estate was owned by his eldest daughter, who had a relationship with Wrangels . In 1694 the estate was transferred to the Gastfer family, in 1720 to the Bühl family, 1750 to the first possession of the Ikskuli family, in 1768 the property was transferred to the Goiningen-Güne family, and in 1799 it was returned to the Ikskuli family. Then, in 1898, the estate was transferred to the Buxgewden family, and the Baltic German Stralbon became the last owner.
From 1717 to 1795 a paper mill worked in the village.
During the revolution in Russia in 1905, an attack on Estonian rebels occurred, as a result of which the estate was burned. To date, there are only ruins.
In the middle of the 19th century, a biologist and botanist Heinrich August Dietrich (1820–1897) worked in a spacious park of the estate. Now the park has a reserve.
The most famous native is the first driver in the village of Rein Kaltsenau. Having received a license for a car in 1910, he worked as a driver for 40 years [2] .
Notes
- ↑ Indrek Rohtmets: Kultuurilooline Eestimaa . Tallinn 2004 ( ISBN 9985-3-0882-4 ), S. 102f.
- ↑ Haimre mõisa pargis | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
Literature
Ivar Sakk: Eesti mõisad. Reisijuht. Tallinn 2002 ( ISBN 9985-78-574-6 ), S. 93
Links
- Beschreibung des Ortes (estnisch)
- Jaanus Kiili: Raplamaa mõisaretked. Kolm retke ajaloo- ja kultuurihuvilisele. Vaimõisa-Rapla 2008, S. 53 (link unavailable) (estnisch)